Pagination Memes

Posts tagged with Pagination

Frontend License Revoking Offense

Frontend License Revoking Offense
You've got pagination looking all professional and menacing, "Load More" button trying to act tough, and then there's... THAT ONE. The absolute psychopath who thought "hey, what if we just dump EVERYTHING into one endless scroll and bury all the important footer links where nobody will EVER find them?" Somewhere, a UX designer just felt a disturbance in the force and doesn't know why. The accessibility team is crying. The SEO specialist is having a breakdown. And users? They're scrolling for eternity trying to find your contact page like they're searching for the meaning of life itself. It's giving "I learned CSS yesterday and chaos is my design philosophy" energy. Your frontend license? Revoked. Confiscated. Burned. The ashes scattered to the wind.

Web Development In A Nutshell

Web Development In A Nutshell
Ah yes, the classic pagination system that absolutely nobody uses. Those suspiciously precise version numbers masquerading as page numbers? That's what happens when the backend developer is also in charge of UI design. Nine decimal places of precision for page numbers is exactly what users need! And that "Go" button? It's just sitting there, judging your life choices, knowing damn well nobody's typing "page 3.023809523809" in that input field. This is what happens when you ask for "pagination" in the requirements doc without specifying further details. The developer technically delivered what was asked for... just with the UX sensibilities of a calculator.

Stay Tuned For More Bugs

Stay Tuned For More Bugs
Ah, corporate wisdom strikes again. Management thinks forcing developers to use cursor-based pagination will give them the energetic Duracell bunny—all that efficiency and power. What they actually get is just Bugs Bunny—endless bugs hopping around the codebase. Nothing says "I don't understand technical decisions" quite like mandating specific implementation details without understanding the consequences. The rabbit hole of debugging goes much deeper than expected.