Actually, that’s a feature. Did you check for a virus on your system? Even though it doesn’t work, how does it feel? Everything looks fine on my end. How is that possible? I broke that deliberately to do some testing. I can’t make that a priority right now. I can’t test everything. I couldn’t find any examples of how that can be done anywhere online. I couldn’t find any library that can even do that. I did a quick fix last time but it broke when we rebooted. I didn’t anticipate that I would make any errors. I didn’t create that part of the program. I didn’t receive a ticket for it. I forgot to commit the code that fixes that. I have never seen that before in my life. I have too many other high priority things to do right now. I haven’t been able to reproduce that. I haven’t had a chance to run that code yet. I haven’t had any experience with that before. I haven’t touched that code in weeks. I heard there was a solar flare today. I must have been stress-testing our production server. I must not have understood what you were asking for. I thought I finished that. I thought he knew the context of what I was talking about. I thought you signed off on that. I told you yesterday it would be done by the end of today. I usually get a notification when that happens. I was just fixing that. I was told to stop working on that when something important came up. In the interest of efficiency I only check my email for that on a Friday. It can’t be broken, it passes all unit tests. It must be a hardware problem. It must be because of a leap year. It probably won’t happen again. It was working in my head. It works for me. It works, but it’s not been tested. It would have taken twice as long to build it properly. It would take too long to rewrite the code from scratch. It’s a browser compatibility issue. It’s a character encoding issue. It’s a compatibility issue. It’s a known bug with the programming language. It’s a remote vendor issue. It’s always been like that. It’s an unexpected emergent behaviour of several last minute abstractions. It’s just some unlucky coincidence. It’s never done that before. It’s never shown unexpected behavior like this before. It’s not a code problem — our users need more training. I’ll have to fix that at a later date. I’m not familiar with it so I didn’t fix it in case I made it worse. I’m not getting any error codes. I’m not sure as I’ve never had a look at how that works before. I’m still working on that as we speak. I’m surprised it was working at all. I’m surprised it works as well as it does. Management insisted we wouldn’t need to waste our time writing unit tests. Maybe somebody forgot to pay our hosting company. My time was split in a way that meant I couldn’t do either project properly No one told me so I was forced to assume which way to do that. Nobody asked me how long it would actually take. Nobody has ever complained about it. Oh, that was just a temporary fix. Oh, that was only supposed to be a placeholder. Oh, you said you DIDN’T want that to happen? Our code quality is no worse than anyone else in the industry. Our hardware is too slow to cope with demand. Our internet connection must not be working. Our redundant systems must have failed as well. Please ignore that, it’s for debugging Somebody must have changed my code. THIS can’t be the source of THAT. That behaviour is in the original specification. That code seemed so simple I didn’t think it needed testing. That error means it was successful. That feature was slated for phase two. That feature would be outside the scope. That important email must have been marked as spam. That isn’t covered by my job description. That process requires human oversight that nobody was providing. That was literally a one in a million error. That wasn’t in the original specification. That worked perfectly when I developed it. That wouldn’t be economically feasible. That’s already fixed, it just hasn’t taken effect yet. That’s interesting, how did you manage to make it do that? That’s not a bug it’s a configuration issue. That’s the fault of the graphic designer. The accounting department must have cancelled that subscription. The client must have been hacked. The client wanted it changed at the last minute. The code is compiling. The DNS hasn’t propagated yet. The download must have been corrupted. The existing design makes it difficult to do the right thing. The marketing department made us put that there. The person responsible doesn’t work here anymore. The problem seems to be with our legacy software. The program has never collected that information. The project manager said no one would want that feature The project manager told me to do it that way. The request must have dropped some packets. The specifications were ambiguous. The third party documentation doesn’t exist. The user must not know how to use it. There must be something strange in your data. There was too little data to bother with the extra functionality at the time. There’s currently a problem with our hosting company. This code was not supposed to go in to production yet. This is a previously known bug you told me not to work on yet. We didn’t have enough time to peer review the final changes. Well done, you found my easter egg! Well, at least it displays a very pretty error. Well, at least we know not to try that again. Well, that’s a first. What did I tell you about using parts of the system you don’t understand? What did you type in wrong to get it to crash? Where were you when the program blew up? Why do you want to do it that way? You must have done something wrong. You’re doing it wrong. You must have the wrong version.