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Q: Why Do Programmers Get Christmas and Hallowe'en Mixed Up? A: Because Oct(31) = Dec(25)

Created by purple octopus. Last Edited by purple octopus. Tagged as: Humor
Q: Why Do Programmers Get Christmas and Hallowe'en Mixed Up? A: Because Oct(31) = Dec(25)

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Members that think Q: Why Do Programmers Get Christmas and Hallowe'en Mixed Up? A: Because Oct(31) = Dec(25) is the best!

Pudfker AnissinaLovesArashi boxer`s_girl lackadaisy Red Darkness Finrod chocolatebar lorencia mijiturka Karupin Dio veremita vtYojr

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NimbleMarmoset
NimbleMarmoset posted about 1 year ago

Ohhhh, jeez.

Finrod
Finrod posted about 1 year ago

What a bizarre coincidence!

NomiLove
NomiLove posted about 1 year ago

And here I thought it was because they’d been watching too much Tim Burton.

lackadaisy
lackadaisy posted about 1 year ago

Hilarious!

Finrod
Finrod posted about 1 year ago

Take five merits, Nomi! I recognised that reference to the Nightmare before Christmas.

And your virtual cookies were delicious and not at all filling.

 

(You know... we're all wasted here!)

gbman
gbman posted about 1 year ago

Oh sure, notice the Nighmare Before Christmas reference, but treat my A Christmas Story reference like common trash Yell.

Very nice NomiLove.

-bailey-
-bailey- posted about 1 year ago

That's the most marvelously nerdy thing I've heard in a long time. Bravo.

Finrod
Finrod posted about 1 year ago
Calm yourself, gb! I honestly didn't have a clue what you were on about. I've neither seen nor heard of the film in question.
gbman
gbman posted about 1 year ago

Of that I was sure. I was never uncalm, I just felt like getting loud that's all. 

Finrod
Finrod posted about 1 year ago

As we all do from time to time... I'm going to see if I can think up something geekier.

I hope I can't. 

gbman
gbman posted about 1 year ago
I'll be pulling for you... either way. Wink
Pudfker
Pudfker posted about 1 year ago

This is Cool!

Finrod
Finrod posted about 1 year ago

Ah! Not quite in the same league, but...

 

I offer this up to people who like solving puzzles. 

The following can be interpreted as a sensible and logical English sentence:

 

If B mt put : if B . putting : 

 

As a clue... the resulting sentence doesn't contain the word fire, but it does contain the name of a formerly almost universal domestic fuel. At least in the UK.

 

A man called John Julius Norwich used it on a TV show many years ago. So many that the Atlantic was probably slightly narrower. 

Vano
Vano posted 12 days ago

I do not get it.