The Daily WTF Every once in awhile, someone sends us some code from a game. Now, I’ve never delved deep into game development, aside from
The Daily WTF Stella needs to interface with a cloud-hosted marketing automation system. The documentation isn’t particularly great, and
The Daily WTF Susi inherited some code which she fortunately wasn’t expected to maintain. She had a worse problem: she was expected to
The Daily WTF “Balmuda’s marketing has a lot to say about their products in Japan…just not in Japanese…or really in Latin
The Daily WTF Dictionaries/Maps are usually implemented on top of some sort of hashing system. This isn’t precisely required, but it allows
The Daily WTF A long time ago, George G started at Initech’s downtown office. They had just rented a few floors in an old office building
The Daily WTF Chaz had a pretty sweet gig as a software architect at a tech-based toy company. Being able to play around with computers AND toys
The Daily WTF Benjamin inherited some code from a fellow developer. The original author of this code wrote a lot of code for the company, and
The Daily WTF “Just a friendly confirmation that I really stayed with them 2 months ago,” Jeremy W. writes, “Maybe they just
The Daily WTF In Java-land, it’s still extremely common for problems to be solved by application of XML. Nowhere is this more true than in