The subreddit r/ProgrammerHumor is where coders and seasoned developers come to share funny content about their everyday lives. We’ve featured this community many times on Bored Panda over the years, so, this is the best-of-all-time edition. Whether you’re a beginner or an experienced programmer whose impeccably clean code can make grown men weep, I’m sure you’ll find something for yourself down below! The subreddit also has a few rules people have to follow if they want to be a part of the community. Posters have to share content that is funny or relatable to programmers, students, and anyone who aspires to be a programmer. “If somebody who has nothing to do with programming can see the humor in your post in the same way that a programmer would, then it’s not programmer humor,” the group’s rules state. Indeed, not all people who work in tech are programmers. People can say they work in tech and be IT project managers, UX/UI designers, citizen developers, information architects, and AI operators. People often assume that programmers are just IT guys. r/ProgrammerHumor usually doesn’t accept posts if they don’t take a programmer to understand. Follow Bored Panda on Google News! Follow us on Flipboard.com/@boredpanda! Please use high-res photos without watermarks Ooops! Your image is too large, maximum file size is 8 MB.