A blue rubberduck with an Australian flag and the text Australia printed on it, positioned on a white cup

  • Xariphon
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    541 year ago

    My wife is the programmer.

    Instead of a rubber duck, I gave her a plush frog for her desk.

    To help her catch all the bugs.

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    I was using a nice firefighter duck named Cleo, but he was underperforming so he had to be let go. Now I have Rufus:

    I was afraid a mouse wouldn’t be able to do a duck’s job, but he threatened to sue so I had to give him a shot. Glad I did, he’s proven as capable as any duck I’ve known.

  • @enshu
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    111 year ago

    I have this.

  • @Pajama
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    1 year ago

    My Kiryu duck.

    Edit: no idea why my image is sideways

      • @Pajama
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        11 year ago

        I think they’re called Tubbz?

        Sorry about the late reply. Sync finally decided I was worthy of notificarions.

  • zer0
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    101 year ago

    I can’t post a picture of my wife, I wonder if she ever will understand it

  • @[email protected]
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    91 year ago

    Two of my coworkers got carried away and kept bringing in more and more ducks, creating “The Great Rubber Duck War”

    many many ducks on office desks

  • @[email protected]
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    91 year ago

    I should probably post a picture of myself. I don’t have count on how many times people have asked me for help but figuring it out while explaining it to me. Or me to them probably just as often.

    • @cynar
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      21 year ago

      Tiny rubber ducks are actually dirt cheap from china. Keep a few in your pocket/desk, and hand them out when it happens.

  • λλλ
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    1 year ago

    Okay, this is the second thing I’ve seen about rubber duck debugging. What does this mean? Am I a bad developer?

    • @cynar
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      71 year ago

      When working on complex tasks, it’s easy to get sucked into it and not see the wood for the trees. One of the best solutions is to talk it through with someone. Often, as you are explaining it, you will realise that it’s not doing what you just said, but something different. You also sometimes realise that your solid logic is far less logical than it seemed, inside your own head.

      Critically, none of these actually require the knowledge or interaction of the person you are talking to. Rather than explaining it to a colleague, and wasting their time, some people use an inanimate object. A rubber duck has become a common method. It’s small, easy to source, and can sit on top of a monitor etc, with a face to talk too. Other personified toys also work just as well, as do pets, babies, or life partners etc.

      Basically, it’s a method of breaking a bad cycle, by getting out of your own head, and so realise where you keep f*****g up.

      • Rick Rae
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        11 year ago

        @cynar

        At home, I rely on Kizuna AI, who offers the added benefit of having the same confused expression on her face that I probably do, if I’m reduced to explaining a tech issue to her.

        Helps me feel as if it’s not just me…

        Image flagged sensitive due to (inanimate) eye contact.

        @lambda