Always try sudo

JPDev@programming.dev to Programmer Humor@programming.dev – 1062 points –
97

Doctor of Computer Science

stringly-typed "100%"

yeah that tracks.

Calls a static method on the OldMan class instead of the instance of oldMan that is actually dying.

Tonight's story: Every man older than OldMan.getMinimumAge() has been in perfect *unchanging* health for the last few months‽ To find out why, stay tuned! Our experts chime in to help you understand....

But then they really have no idea and try to convince you it’s from some stupid diet trick fed to them by a sponsor.

That's an instance property

Is this some .NET convention that references to instances start with capital letters?

Yeah, properties (like a field but with a getter and/or setter method, may or may not be backed by a field) are PascalCase

How is OldMan a property here? It's clearly the name of a class

Instance properties are PascalCase.

Yes I know, I've coded in .NET before, but so are class names.

Okay, but this makes more sense as an instance method rather than a static one

WHY IS THE HEALTH INPUT PARAMETER A GODDAMN STRING?????????????

Why are you passing ‘%’ inside said goddamn string?!?! Not to mention the static reference instead of the actual instance.

Shame on you

Also putting sudo in front of what looks like Java code not shell.

I guess its just a reminder that getting a PhD is often more about dedication than it is about practical knowledge.

Because the meme wasn't made by someone with a doctorate in CS or even a bachelor's.

It's not his fault the world is made this way.

He just has to follow it or else that man dies.

Honestly, if someone were to try to safe my life. And I find out he uses a string as a parameter to do so. Just let me die right there.

The high level setter function should be made to handle both string and numeric values.

If it contains "%" it's a percentage value.

If it's a string without a "%" it's an absolute value and needs to be normalized.

If it's a numeric value, it's an absolute value.

If it's a numeric 100, it's 100%.

If it's a subunitary numeric value, it's a percentage.

If it’s a numeric 100, it’s 100%.

absolute lunacy

Absolute (cm)

adding one 0:

100%, automatically changes unit to %

(Word table properties)

Oldman.setHealth("dicktits"); //normalize pls

Oldman.setHealth("-100±1%"); //make percentage pls

Oldman.setHealth(0.0); //it is subunitary, but undefined behavior - will it access the 'numeric value' overload, or the 'subunitary numeric value' overload?

Don't write your own code just yet.

Oldman.setHealth(“dicktits”); //normalize pls

0

Oldman.setHealth(“-100±1%”); //make percentage pls

Reject operations.

Use absolute number to remove the minus. Math.abs()

Oldman.setHealth(0.0); //it is subunitary, but undefined behavior - will it access the ‘numeric value’ overload, or the ‘subunitary numeric value’ overload?

Same result either way, so whatever if branch is first.

Understand the purpose. If you want to kill the old man with 0, then there's no point to leaving it as 0.9%, understand the non-linear characteristics of life and death.

When you're dealing with the low level functions, sure, you can keep it simple. When you're reaching the surface of user input, you're either going to waste time with validation and error reporting, or you're going to waste time with interfaces that can handle more shit without complaining. There's no fool proof either way, but good luck pissing users off with endless docs.

Don’t write your own code just yet.

If your goal in programming is just to be a traffic cop between the user input and the database, all you're doing is building a virtual bureaucracy, the kind that people really hate and is easily generated with coding tools. Or you're just deferring the "smoothing out" burden to the UI developers.

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Yeah, in Ren'py games usually it's character_health=100 or something.

Yes absolutely, the parameter even if not in a strongly typed language should be a specific number and the unit should be implied. Overload the method to support different units if necessary or provide a unit as an additional parameter instead of forcing the method to parse the string for any unit type hints that may or may not be there

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sudo rm /heart/arteries/**/clot

Please forgive my ignorance. What does ** do?

Had to look this up as well. Its not rm specific:

* is a simple, non-recursive wildcard representing zero or more characters which you can use for paths and file names. ** is a recursive wildcard that can only be used with paths, not file names.

More here.

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Goddamn, the joke gets worse the more I inspect each panel.

The font changes like 3 times 👌

They are a doctor of computer science, not a doctor of design. You need a design phd to pick correct fonts.

Can he also fix alzheimer's by hunting down memory leaks.

Yeah, he reimplemented it in Java to get garbage collection. The Alzheimer's is cured but he takes ten minutes to pour a glass of water.

"Wait! We need to get the user story before we start working on a solution!"

See that's the issue, he should have tried stopping the cardiac arrest process instead of just resetting the man to the beginning of it

Patient HP kept dropping to zero after resetting, but we don't have budget to investigate why and this was supposed to be worth only 1 story point, so we set up a microservice that runs a job every 200ms to set HP back to 100. So long as nothing shuts down the service, patient should be fine. Marking as Done.

Whoops, stopped the lungs process instead of the cardiac arrest process.

Actually you really want to restart the heart service, right? sudo systemd restart heart

I wish there was a last panel of the old guy getting revived, I think it would be funny

bash: sudo: command not found

After all, we don't know that he has it installed, especially if he's running a really old distro.

That command syntax looks kind of like how Skyrim's scripting console works, and gods help us if reality is a Bethesda game! (Kind of, if you added string-parsing based overloads and, for some reason, a command-syntax sudo keyword.

MD =/= PHD

MD = Doctor

PHD = not a doctor.

PhD is literally "Philosophy Doctor" or "Doctor of Philosophy"

Also "doctor" means teacher. The specific term for someone who practices medicine is "physician".