• Zagorath@aussie.zone
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      7 months ago

      Why comment here at all

      Because we’re programmers, and programmers are infamous for being rules-/logic-driven.

      If, as a comment below suggests, the joke is that it’s meant to be read in order 3, 1, 2, that violates the rule that race conditions typically don’t cause an entirely different program to produce the output. So if the joke is meant to be “lol we have a race condition”, bubbles should be mixed up for one person, not mixed between people.

      People don’t get the joke because the joke violates its own internal rules.

        • Zagorath@aussie.zone
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          7 months ago

          Why are you all overengineering the joke this much?

          Because I’m literally an engineer?

          Honestly, this isn’t me artificially coming in and doing something weird. It’s just me trying to explain how my brain naturally interpreted it. It never occurred to me to include the left guy’s speech bubble in the race condition until I saw someone else’s comment explaining it.

    • arandomthought@sh.itjust.works
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      7 months ago

      In case you are serious: It’s probably not.
      When you’re not careful with parallel processing / multithreading, you can run into something called a “race condition”, where results of parallel computations end up in the wrong order because some were finished faster than others.
      The joke here is that whoever “programmed” this commic is bad at parallel progmming and got the bubbles in the wrong order because of that.
      The image makes perfect sense if you read it in the order 3, 1, 2.

        • Jaccident@lemm.ee
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          7 months ago

          I think that’s part of the joke too. Like the whole comic has been written out of order due to race conditions; rather than just the father represents race conditions.

          It’s one degree of humour too far though, if that’s the case, doesn’t really land.

          • Simon@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            7 months ago

            It definitely landed for me. The aspect of one thread coming out of a totally different routine for no reason was extra funny.

      • BeigeAgenda@lemmy.ca
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        7 months ago

        🤦🏽‍♀️ Thanks for explaining, my brain must have corrected the race condition.

        Regarding threads: I have had good experience with using thread safe queues everywhere to exchange data between threads, it’s the right tool in many cases, but I doubt queues to be useful when coding for performance.

        • expr@programming.dev
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          7 months ago

          Umm, queueing is standard practice particularly when a task is performance intensive and needs limited resources.

          Basically any programming language using any kind of asynchronous runtime is using queues in their scheduler, as well.