The Daily WTF “When inventory drops below the re-order level, we automatically order more,” was how the product owner described the
The Daily WTF Microsoft Access represents an “attractive nuisance”. It’s a powerful database and application development
The Daily WTF In November of 2020, the last IE release happened, and on June 15th of this year, the desktop app officially lost support on
The Daily WTF So much cringe here today. Obviously, the first submission below just reeks of professional sycophantry on so many levels. I
The Daily WTF CSS classes give us the ability to reuse styles in a meaningful way, by defining, well, classes of styling. A common anti-pattern
The Daily WTF Annie works in a bioinformatics department. There’s a lot of internally developed code, and the quality is… special. But
The Daily WTF I started writing a paragraph about why this code Gilda found was bad, and then I had to delete it all, because I wasn’t
The Daily WTF Lets say you have a simple problem. You have a string variable, and you’d like to store that string in another variable. You
The Daily WTF This week we bring you a whole set of submissions that prove, once again, that web programmers just can’t keep track of time.
The Daily WTF Managing datasets is always a challenging task. So when Penny‘s co-worker needed to collect a pile of latitude/longitude