The Daily WTF Branon‘s boss, Steve, came storming into his cube. From the look of panic on his face, it was clear that this was a full
The Daily WTF Donald was cutting a swathe through a jungle of old Java code, when he found this: protected void waitForEnd(float time) { // do
The Daily WTF FreeBSDGuy sends us a VB .Net snippet, which layers on a series of mistakes: If (gLang = “en”) Then If
The Daily WTF Inability to properly program dates continued to afflict various websites last week, even though the leap day itself had passed.
The Daily WTF Today, John sends us a confession. This is his code, which was built to handle ISO 8583 messages. As we’ll see from some
The Daily WTF Today’s submitter identifies themselves as pleaseKillMe, which hey, c’mon buddy. Things aren’t that bad. Besides,
The Daily WTF It’s a nearly universal experience that the era of our youth and early adulthood is where we latch on to for nostalgia. In
The Daily WTF In the great olden times, when Classic ASP was just ASP, there were a surprising number of intranet applications built in it. Since
The Daily WTF Not exactly once, I sincerely hope. That would be tragic. “Apparently, today’s leap day is causing a denial of service
The Daily WTF Brian was working on landing a contract with a European news agency. Said agency had a large number of intranet applications of