ComedyCode: Funny programming code. Programmers can submit their own code and rate the work of others.
Computer Programming Humor: Jokes, oneliners, and prank definitions.
Computer Stupidities: Collection of stupid chunks of C source code and reports of encounters with less-than-bright apprentice programmers.
Epigrams in Programming: List of 120 programming-related aphorisms.
Fifty Ways to Hose Your Code: A song kind of by Paul Simon.
Hacker's Wisdom: Collection of programming humor and computer folklore classics.
Hello, World Page: Collecting examples of "Hello World" programs for as many languages and related programming environments (shells) as possible.
Holger's Humor Page: Why is C++ programming like teenage sex? What's the difference between a software developer and a drug dealer? When will operator overloading be added to Java? This page has the answers.
How to Shoot Yourself in the Foot: Showcases how to shoot yourself in the foot using several programming languages.
Jargon File: Programmer slang dictionary, containing more than 2000 not-quite-serious definitions and a number of programmer folklore anecdotes. Hosted by Eric S. Raymond.
Laugh Along with GNU: Designed to provide some laughs to the working hackers - large collection of GNU/programming humor.
Life of Programmer: Humorous observations and stories of dealing with computers and their users.
Programming is a Weird and Wacky World: Collection of jokes, satirical articles, and parodies on popular song lyrics.
Programming Languages are Like Women: Mildly sexist metaphorical languages lineup.
Quotes about Programmers: Quotations about programmers, software and programming languages.
Real Programmers Don't Use Pascal: Classic Datamation article by Ed Post.
Reflections on Trusting Trust: An ACM classic: UNIX coinventor Ken Thompson reports on how he hacked his own C compiler.
Softpanorama Humor Archive: Open-source related humor, dissing (among others) Linus Torvalds, RMS, ESR, vi, and Perl.
Softwarequotes.com: Quotations from various programmers about programming. Includes a quotes search, newsletter, and index of quotes by person quoted.
The Algorithm of an Average Taxpayer's Life: A structured biography in 483 pseudo-coded subroutines, as logical outcome of random events and processes during lifetime.
The Commentator: A program for generating comments automatically, customizable by FUD factor, profanity, self-importance, verbosity, humor level, and bitterness.
The Evolution of a Programmer: Programming style and how it evolves as programmers mature from junior high students to senior managers.
The Retrocomputing Museum: Eric S. Raymond's list of outdated, obscure, or deliberatly unusable programming languages, compilers, and interpreters.
The Tao Of Programming: Koan-style advice to apprentice programmers.
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