programmers
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Good programmers never read manuals and rarely use online help - they easily get a grasp of a new program, simply because they have already tried every single program in this field before.
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Good programmers never pay for the software. They either crack it or buy those wonderful CDs with tons of cracked software that are sold for $5 bucks in every major city.
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Good programmers are always on the cutting edge of software development - they use the latest versions of the best tools available - it’s easy, since there is no need to pay.
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Good programmers are very experienced in hardware. They will take your computer apart and build it back in a matter of minutes. They remember the jumpers settings for most boards, hard drives and other devices. They never forget what interrupts and base memory addresses are currently used up in their computers.
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Good programmers keep upgrading their computers until there are no more available interrupts, no room for additional memory and no free bay slots. If they can’t upgrade it any more they buy a new one and tie both old and new computer into a LAN.
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Good programmers program on all levels, beginning with the processor codes, table of which they hold for the reference on their desk. They usually remember by heart the list of functions of Int21H.
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Good programmers remember by heart keyboard layouts. You can ask them in the middle of the night what key is between A and L and you’ll hear surprised: “What do you mean - they are 7 keys apart?”.
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Good programmers hate Microsoft and Microsoft tools, but keep using them
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Good programmers prefer Borland tools and install Microsoft compilers only for their nice Help files on Windows API.
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Good programmers feel themselves very comfortable on the Internet. They are always online - just in case they need something urgently.
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Good programmers only work when they are in the right mood. Programming is a creative process and it cannot be pushed.
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Good programmers are always in the mood for programming. There are two kinds of Good programmers - the ones that hate Windows and program on Unix and the ones that hate Windows and still program on Windows. Macintosh programmers aren’t real programmers - they are more often referred to as “users”.
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Good programmers hate to code somebody else’s ideas. Each program is written personally and from scratch.
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Good programmers always have a copy of Doom, Duke Nukem or Quake on their hard drives. They play nights over the network in a Deathmatch mode.
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Good programmers never use joystick. Keyboard is a dangerous weapon in their fast hands.
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Good programmers never give up. They will hunt down bugs in their programs forgetting to eat and sleep.
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Good programmers’ wives are never happy. They get no attention whatsoever as long as the computer is in the same house.
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There are two kinds of Good programmers - the ones that bring profit by actually doing something, and the ones that bring better profit by not interfering with anything.
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Good programmers are always underpaid. There is no money in the world that amounts to what they are really worth.
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Big bosses don’t like Good programmers. Who likes a smart ass that knows everything?
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Big bosses will never fire a Good programmer. They know that even working 10 hours a week and being half-drunk
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Good programmer will accomplish more than a Ph.D both in the short and in the long run.
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Good programmers never prototype the code. They write on inspiration, sometimes without sleep, driven by the urge to see the new program run as soon as possible. When the program finally runs without glitches they drop on the floor and sleep for 20-30 hours happily smiling in their dreams.
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Good programmers never approach programming methodically. Every program is a piece of art and is usually written in a highly inconvenient time when deadlines for other projects are around the corner.