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HTTP 418: I'm a teapot

The server identifies as a teapot now and is on a tea break, brb

HTTP 418: I'm a teapot

The server identifies as a teapot now and is on a tea break, brb

Trending Memes

Content with better error handling than your exception blocks

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Testing Agile Programming Debugging
10 hours ago 133.3K views 1 shares
Help
The development lifecycle captured in one brutal image. You've got programmers crafting beautiful, pristine code. Then testers come in and absolutely demolish it by finding every edge case you never thought existed. Developers rush in to patch all those bugs the testers found. And just when everyone thinks they're done... The client shows up with a chainsaw to change the requirements, obliterating the entire tree everyone's been carefully working on. Nothing says "software development" quite like rebuilding everything from scratch because someone decided the app should now work on refrigerators too. The cycle never ends. It just repeats with different feature requests and increasingly creative ways to say "that's not what I asked for" during demos.

Guess I Will Use Mongo DB Then

Databases Programming Backend
15 hours ago 121.0K views 1 shares
Guess I Will Use Mongo DB Then
Nothing quite screams "forever alone" like spending Valentine's Day debugging SQL joins while everyone else is out there forming actual human connections. The punchline? Your database has more relationships than you do. So naturally, the solution is to abandon relational databases entirely and switch to MongoDB where everything is just... unstructured chaos. No relations, no problems, right? Just like your love life! The beauty here is that MongoDB doesn't judge you for being commitment-phobic—it literally doesn't enforce relationships between data. It's the perfect database for people who can't even maintain a relationship with their houseplants.

Happy Valentines Day

Bash Programming Linux
7 hours ago 98.1K views 1 shares
Happy Valentines Day
Ah yes, nothing says "I love you" quite like a bash script that recursively nukes your entire filesystem as root. The romantic setup is perfect: a simple yes/no prompt asking someone to be your valentine. If they say yes, you get a sweet message. If they say no (or literally anything else), the script goes full scorched-earth with rm -rf / --no-preserve-root . That's the nuclear option that deletes EVERYTHING from your system root, and the --no-preserve-root flag explicitly tells the system "yes, I really do want to commit digital suicide." The best part? Modern Linux systems actually require that --no-preserve-root flag specifically because too many people accidentally yeeted their entire OS into the void. It's like a safety on a gun, except this person deliberately removed it for maximum romantic devastation. Talk about commitment issues taken to the extreme. "If I can't have you, nobody can have this operating system." 💀

The Gil

Python Programming Backend
12 hours ago 164.1K views 0 shares
The Gil
Python dev gets asked about performance optimization and immediately pivots to literally anything else. The GIL (Global Interpreter Lock) is Python's dirty little secret—it's that lovely threading bottleneck that ensures only one thread executes Python bytecode at a time, even on multi-core processors. So when someone mentions "performance," seasoned Python devs develop selective hearing real fast. It's like asking someone about their ex at a party. Sure, we could talk about how the GIL makes true parallel processing impossible in CPython, or how you need multiprocessing instead of multithreading to actually use those fancy CPU cores... but hey, look over there! Pandas is great! Django is awesome! Let's talk about literally anything except why your CPU-bound code runs like it's 1995.

The Release Of Power

Devops Agile Programming Debugging Testing
23 hours ago 161.6K views 0 shares
The Release Of Power
The Code Refactor holds the One Ring of power—the ability to clean up that spaghetti mess and make everything beautiful. The Product Manager, channeling their inner Sauron, demands you "throw it in the release, deploy it!" because deadlines wait for no hobbit. But the Dev, wise and battle-scarred, simply responds with a firm "No." Because shipping a half-baked refactor to production is basically volunteering to spend your weekend firefighting bugs while the PM enjoys brunch. Sometimes the greatest power move is knowing when NOT to release the Kraken.

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Has No Clue What Bindings Are

Python C++ Programming Backend
12 hours ago 157.7K views 0 shares
Has No Clue What Bindings Are
First-year CS students discovering that C++ exists and suddenly thinking they're performance optimization gurus is peak Dunning-Kruger energy. They'll drop this hot take in a Python Discord, sit back with that smug "I'm playing 4D chess" expression, completely oblivious to the fact that most Python libraries doing heavy lifting are literally C/C++ bindings under the hood. NumPy? C. Pandas? C. TensorFlow? C++. PyTorch? C++. The entire Python ecosystem is basically a fancy wrapper around compiled languages, but sure, go ahead and rewrite that web scraper in C++ to save 3 milliseconds. The real kicker? They haven't even written a Makefile yet, don't know what segmentation faults are, and think pointers are just "spicy variables." But they've definitely figured out the entire software engineering industry is doing it wrong. Genius move, really.

Mini Heart Attack To Boss

Programming
11 hours ago 150.9K views 0 shares
Mini Heart Attack To Boss
That split-second panic when you see "Your name is in Einstein Files" from your boss and your brain immediately goes into full disaster recovery mode. Did I accidentally commit credentials? Push to main? Delete the production database? Nope—turns out someone named Rawbare just wants a job and cleverly used the Einstein Files subject line as a notification hack to stand out in your inbox. The relief is real, but also... respect the hustle. That's some A+ social engineering right there. Your heart rate can return to normal now.

That's Technically Correct...

Java Git Programming Testing Backend
23 hours ago 150.1K views 0 shares
That's Technically Correct...
Someone just replaced an entire elaborate bad words filtering system—complete with global data collectors, streams, maps, and random selection algorithms—with a hardcoded return of "n🍎ger". Like, why even PRETEND to fetch from a restriction list when you can just... return the exact same thing every single time? It's the programming equivalent of building a Rube Goldberg machine that ultimately just flips a light switch. Bonus points for the apple emoji doing the heavy lifting here. The diff shows +1 line, -7 lines, which is the most savage code review flex imaginable. "Your entire architecture? Trash. Here's one line."

I'm Tired Boss

C++ Devops Programming
15 hours ago 140.7K views 0 shares
I'm Tired Boss
You know what's hilarious? C/C++ devs spent decades perfecting their craft, mastering memory management, understanding the dark arts of pointer arithmetic, and building intricate build systems with Make, CMake, Autotools, and whatever other arcane configuration nightmare they could conjure up. And now? They just stare blankly at their screens like they've seen the void itself. Why defend a build system that requires a PhD to configure when you could just... not? The younger devs roll in with their cargo build and npm install and suddenly the 20-line Makefile that took you three days to write feels like overkill. The exhaustion is real. Sometimes you just accept defeat and move on.

We Always Forget The Right Ctrl Exists

Programming Hardware
10 hours ago 136.8K views 0 shares
We Always Forget The Right Ctrl Exists
Left Ctrl is out here doing ALL the heavy lifting—Ctrl+C, Ctrl+V, Ctrl+Z, Ctrl+S—basically running the entire show while Right Ctrl sits in the corner like that one team member who's "present" in standups but never actually commits any code. Your left pinky has probably developed muscle memory so strong it could execute keyboard shortcuts in its sleep, while your right pinky wouldn't even know where Right Ctrl is if you asked it. Honestly, most keyboards could just replace Right Ctrl with a second spacebar and 99% of developers wouldn't notice for months. The ergonomic asymmetry is real.

Friday 13

Javascript Webdev Programming Debugging
14 hours ago 134.9K views 0 shares
Friday 13
Senior developers when they have to deal with JSON: intimidating, powerful, commands respect. Senior developers when they have to deal with JSON.stringify() : adorable crochet doll that looks like it was made by someone's grandmother during a church group meeting. The juxtaposition is chef's kiss—JSON itself is straightforward, but the moment you need to convert an object to a JSON string, suddenly you're this wholesome craft project with blood tears. Probably because you've seen what stringify() does to circular references. Or tried to debug why your dates became strings. Or dealt with undefined values just vanishing into the void. The horror movie villain becomes a sad little yarn person real quick.

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Mamma Mia

Javascript Algorithms Programming
13 hours ago 123.5K views 0 shares
Mamma Mia
Someone's building lasagna with the same architectural philosophy they use for their codebase. Got your pasta layer, your meat sauce layer, your cheese layer, and then just... lasagna.sort() slapped right in the middle like it's a perfectly normal thing to do. Because nothing says "Italian cuisine" quite like randomly sorting your ingredients mid-assembly. What's it sorting by? Deliciousness? Molecular weight? The tears of Italian grandmothers? The function doesn't even have parameters, so it's probably just using the default comparison operator on bolognese chunks. Fun fact: JavaScript's Array.sort() converts elements to strings and sorts them lexicographically by default, which means [10, 2, 1] becomes [1, 10, 2]. So your lasagna layers are probably now arranged in alphabetical order. Buon appetito, I guess?
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