The Daily WTF It’s time to round up a few minor WTFs today. Some are bad, some are just funny, and some make you wonder hat the meaning of
The Daily WTF Over twenty years ago, Matt‘s employer started a project to replace a legacy system. Like a lot of legacy systems, no one
The Daily WTF No, it’s generally not nice to pick on people who fumble a second language. But TDWTF isn’t here to be nice, it’s
The Daily WTF Apolena supports an application written by contractors many years ago. It tracks user activity for reporting purposes, as one does.
The Daily WTF We’ve talked about Microsoft’s WebForms in the past. Having used it extensively in the era, it was a weird mismatch, an
The Daily WTF There once was a developer who had a lot of hustle. They put out a shingle as a contractor, knocked on doors, made phone calls, and
The Daily WTF Inheritance is often described as a tool for code reuse, and those discussions inevitably wander down an alley parsing out the
The Daily WTF To balance out last week’s errant Error’d, this week we’re giving you 20% extra at no additional charge. For
The Daily WTF I frequently write bad code. I mean, we all do, but I frequently write bad code with full knowledge that it’s bad, because I
The Daily WTF Database administrators tend to be pretty conservative about how databases are altered. This is for good reason- that data is