The Daily WTF This week’s edition of Err’d gets off to a flying start with one that came in “over the transom” as
The Daily WTF Austin‘s team received a bug report. When their C# application tried to load certain settings, it would crash. Now, since
The Daily WTF In the endless quest to get asynchronous operations right, we’re constantly changing approaches. From callbacks, to promises,
The Daily WTF Lacy‘s co-worker needed to collect groups of strings into “clusters”- literally arrays of arrays of strings. Of
The Daily WTF Giles‘s company has a hard time with doing things in the database. In today’s example, they attempt the very
The Daily WTF We’ve had a rash of train troubles lately. If only I had saved them all, we could have enjoyed a first class special edition
The Daily WTF Carolyn‘s company has a bunch of stringly-typed enums. That’s already a problem, even in Python, but the other problem
The Daily WTF Steve‘s predecessor knows: sometimes, stuff happens that makes you go “WTF”. While Steve was reviewing some
The Daily WTF When companies reinvent their own accounting software, they usually start from the (reasonable) position of just mirroring basic
The Daily WTF Shery sends us perfectly innocent looking Java class, marked up with some annotations. The goal of this class is to have an object