There are some long lists of false beliefs that programmers hold. isn't because programmers are especially likely to be more wrong than anyone else, it's just that programming offers a better opportunity than most people get to find out how incomplete their model of the world is.
I'm posting about this here, not just because this information has a decent chance of being both entertaining and useful, but because LWers try to figure things out from relatively simple principles-- who knows what simplifying assumptions might be tripping us up?
The classic (and I think the first) was about names. There have been a few more lists created since then.
Time. And time zones. Crowd-sourced time errors.
Addresses. Possibly more about addresses. I haven't compared the lists.
Gender. This is so short I assume it's seriously incomplete.
Networks. Weirdly, there is no list of falsehoods programmers believe about html (or at least a fast search didn't turn anything up). Don't trust the words in the url.
Distributed computing Build systems.
Poem about character conversion.
I got started on the subject because of this about testing your code, which was posted by Andrew Ducker.
Well, they are saying this on the 'net. That qualifies, right? But they are not addressing Alice directly. It's third-person, not second. Alice might or might not stumble on their remarks.
Yes, but will you call Charlie "aggresive"? Duncan?
And let's throw in a parallel example. As you well know, Christians expect atheists to burn in hell forever. Would there be an "aggressive" and a "non-aggressive" way of pointing this out on the 'net? Still talking in third person, not saying "you".
It's a difference is specificity. "Delusional and hallucinating" is a specific kind of "mentally ill". Unless you are talking metaphorically, I don't see why a specific description would be more aggressive than general. If I believe, for example, that Alice is a schizophrenic, both sentences -- "Alice is mentally ill" and "Alice is a schizophrenic" sound very similar to me from aggression point of view.
Is "hostile" necessarily "aggressive"? These are somewhat different things to me.
I also notice that you haven't mentioned the word "intent" yet. Do you think intent matters?
Ah, but that's the consequence of a the anti-stupid tilt :-) Neo-reactionaries, by and large, are not stupid at all. You may object to their value system, but they are capable of reason. Most of the inhabitants of the relevant Tumblr neighbourhoods are stupid and prone to form large screaming lynch mobs. There are good reasons why LW would reroute them to the woodchipper :-)
Some Christians do. I know some [EDITED: previous word was "one" before; don't know why I did that] who don't. Anyway: yes, there are more and less aggressive ways for someone who believes that to say it. Of course however you say it it's a much much nastier thing than anything VoR has ever said about transgender people ("these guys are likely to suffer worse torture than a million Auschwitzes, and it will be exactly what they deserve"), and contrariwise in many cases the person say... (read more)