javascript Memes

How The Fuck

How The Fuck
So you run the audit, fix the "non-critical" stuff, and somehow end up with MORE high severity vulnerabilities than you started with? 5 became 6. That's not math, that's black magic. The --force flag is basically npm's way of saying "I'll fix your problems by creating new ones." It's like going to the doctor for a headache and leaving with a broken arm. The dependency tree looked at your audit fix and said "bet, let me introduce you to some transitive dependencies you didn't know existed." Welcome to JavaScript package management, where the vulnerabilities are made up and the version numbers don't matter. At this point, just ship it and hope nobody notices. 🔥

My Value Is Massively Underrated At This Company

My Value Is Massively Underrated At This Company
Junior dev trying to prove their worth by showing off their "super important function" that's basically a 100,000-iteration loop with callbacks nested deeper than their imposter syndrome. The Sr Dev's blank stare says everything: they've seen this exact performance disaster about 47 times this quarter alone. Nothing screams "I don't understand Big O notation" quite like a function that literally logs "Doing very important stuff..." while murdering the call stack. And that cherry on top? The comment declaring "This is not a function" after defining a function. Chef's kiss of self-awareness, really. Pro tip: if you need to convince people your code is important by adding comments about how important it is, it's probably not that important. The best code speaks for itself—preferably without crashing the browser.

Hell Yeah

Hell Yeah
Someone finally found a legitimate reason to enable JavaScript on a website. Only took about 30 years and a medical miracle, but here we are. The fact that you need JavaScript enabled just to read this absolutely unhinged headline is the cherry on top of this absurdist cake. Nothing says "essential web functionality" quite like gating bizarre medical news behind a script requirement. The internet remains undefeated in finding new ways to justify its existence.

Trying To Explain Javascript

Trying To Explain Javascript
JavaScript's type coercion is basically a fever dream wrapped in syntax. So "0" == 0 is true because JavaScript looks at that string and goes "yeah sure, close enough bestie" and converts it. Then [] == 0 is also true because an empty array becomes an empty string becomes 0 in JavaScript's absolutely UNHINGED conversion logic. But THEN "0" == [] is false because apparently JavaScript draws the line somewhere??? The language literally can't keep its own story straight. It's like JavaScript is that friend who says they're "fine" but their actions say otherwise. No wonder Gru looks progressively more disturbed with each panel – that's the exact face you make when trying to explain why triple equals (===) exists and why you should always use it to maintain what's left of your sanity.

Multi Platform Mobile Development

Multi Platform Mobile Development
Flutter developers and React Native developers screaming at each other about which framework is superior while Unity developers sit there with galaxy brain energy, casually shipping their mobile apps with a game engine designed for 3D rendering. Because nothing says "efficient mobile development" quite like bringing an entire physics engine to display a login form. To be fair, if your app needs to run on iOS, Android, a smart fridge, and probably a toaster, Unity's got you covered. Overkill? Maybe. Does it work? Unfortunately, yes.

How True Is This?

How True Is This?
Ah yes, the classic framework wars bait. Someone created a function that returns 'Angular' as the worst framework, and honestly, the audacity is chef's kiss. The function name doesn't lie—it's literally called getWorstFramework() , so there's zero ambiguity about the developer's feelings here. What makes this extra spicy is that it's sitting in a file path that screams "production code" with Users > lydia > JS > index.js, meaning someone actually committed this opinion to their codebase. The real question isn't whether it's true, but rather how long until the Angular devs find this file and start a holy war in the PR comments. React and Vue developers are probably cackling somewhere while eating popcorn.

Might Be A Form Of Jevons Paradox

Might Be A Form Of Jevons Paradox
Computers got 15x faster, yet somehow Electron apps still take 3 seconds to open and Chrome still eats RAM like it's a competitive sport. The cruel irony? All that extra computing power just means devs can pile on more frameworks, dependencies, and bloated abstractions until your M2 MacBook feels like a 2010 netbook running Crysis. Jevons Paradox is an economics concept: when you make something more efficient, people just use MORE of it, canceling out the gains. In our case, faster hardware just gave us permission to write slower software. Why optimize when you can just tell users to "upgrade their machine"? Shoutout to the devs still writing tight, efficient code while the rest of us ship a 300MB React app to display a todo list.

That's Some Other Dev's Problem

That's Some Other Dev's Problem
Junior dev sees a confetti effect on a website and thinks it requires some arcane CSS wizardry involving transforms, animations, and probably sacrificing a goat to the browser gods. Meanwhile, senior dev just casually drops npm install confetti and calls it a day. Why reinvent the wheel when someone else already reinvented it, packaged it with 47 dependencies, and uploaded it to npm? The real skill isn't writing code—it's knowing which package to install so you can go back to scrolling Twitter. Fun fact: The npm registry has over 2 million packages. Statistically speaking, whatever you're trying to build, someone has already built it, abandoned it, and left it with 3 years of unpatched security vulnerabilities. Ship it!

Front End Pain

Front End Pain
Your actual codebase: a tiny warrior with a sword. The node_modules folder: literally a massive concrete slab that could crush a small building. The ratio is scientifically accurate—your 50 lines of React code somehow requires 847MB of dependencies, half of which are just different ways to check if something is an array. The best part? Delete node_modules and your project weighs 2KB. Run npm install and suddenly you're downloading the entire internet, including 47 versions of lodash and a package called "is-odd" that depends on "is-even" which depends on "is-number." Modern frontend development is just carrying around a concrete monument to dependency hell while pretending everything is fine.

A Perfectly Stable Technology Stack

A Perfectly Stable Technology Stack
So the entire internet is basically a Jenga tower held together by C developers who still think dynamic arrays are black magic, a Linux foundation that somehow hasn't collapsed yet, unpaid open-source maintainers (bless their souls), AWS charging you $47 for breathing, Cloudflare doing the actual work, and Rust evangelists launching themselves into space. Meanwhile, you're up there at the top with your WASM and V8, blissfully unaware that your entire existence depends on left-pad not getting deleted again, CrowdStrike deciding to push untested updates on a Friday, Microsoft doing... whatever Microsoft does, and DNS being held together by what appears to be an underwater cable and prayers. But sure, your React app is "production-ready." Sleep tight.

Fuck Haskell Long Live Java Script

Fuck Haskell Long Live Java Script
So someone decided to implement functional programming in JavaScript by... literally just calling functions recursively and pretending they're doing Haskell. The isEven function checks if a number equals zero (true) or one (false), then recursively calls isOdd with n-1. The isOdd function just... calls isEven back. This is the programming equivalent of asking your roommate if they're hungry, and they respond by asking if YOU'RE hungry, and this continues until someone starves or the call stack explodes. Instead of using the modulo operator like a normal human being ( n % 2 === 0 ), this genius decided to torture the JavaScript engine with mutual recursion. The irony? Haskell would actually handle this elegantly with tail call optimization. JavaScript? It'll blow up your stack faster than you can say "Maximum call stack size exceeded." So yeah, "long live JavaScript" indeed—until you try to check if 10000 is even.

Ultimate Source Protection

Ultimate Source Protection
Oh honey, someone really said "I'm gonna protect my JavaScript code" and then wrote it entirely in CLASSICAL CHINESE. Like, forget minification and obfuscation—just throw in some ancient dynasty poetry and call it a day! 😭 This is literally the nuclear option of code protection. You've got arrays, sorting algorithms, and what appears to be a quicksort implementation, but it's all written using traditional Chinese characters with classical grammar. It's like someone took their CS homework and decided to cosplay as a Tang Dynasty scholar. The best part? This would ACTUALLY work as protection because even Chinese-speaking developers would need a degree in ancient literature to decode this masterpiece. Good luck to the junior dev who has to maintain this code. They'll need a dictionary, a history textbook, and possibly a time machine.