The Daily WTF Mike‘s company likes to make sure their code is well documented. Every important field, enumeration, method, or class has a
The Daily WTF Linda found some C# code that generates random numbers. She actually found a lot of code which does that, because the same method
The Daily WTF Jani P. relates “I ran into this appropriate CAPTCHA when filling out a lengthy, bureaucratic visa application form.”
The Daily WTF Alan was recently reviewing some of the scriptlets his company writes to publish their RPM installers. Some of the script quality
The Daily WTF As a general rule, don’t invent your own file format until you have to, and even then, probably don’t. But sometimes,
The Daily WTF “I work with very bad developers,” writes Henry. It’s a pretty simple example of some bad code: If
The Daily WTF Mike fired up a local copy of his company’s Java application and found out that, at least running locally, the login
The Daily WTF This week at Errr’d we return with some of our favorite samples. A screwy message or a bit of mojibake is the ordinary thing;
The Daily WTF “Retry on failure” makes a lot of sense. If you try to connect to a database, but it fails, most of the time
The Daily WTF Anastacio knew of a programmer at his company by reputation only- and it wasn’t a good reputation. In fact, it was bad enough