This is part of a constellation of symptoms that I attribute to the Senior Engineer Field Effect. Other symptoms may include being unable to demonstrate misbehavior, losing the requirements out of your head, and solving a bug that has been bugging you for hours.
> The phenomenon that something which was previously working correctly, suddenly does not work correctly when one tries to demonstrate the operation to others.
the same word is also used for the reverse situation, i.e. if something that did not work suddenly works when trying to demonstrate the failure.
think bug reporting e.g. at the car mechanic, warranty claims, etc. if you try to show a reproducible bug to others, it suddenly vanishes...
That could probably be called a Heisenbug[0]: A bug that disappears or alters its behavior when one attempts to probe or isolate it.
Though it depends on the cause - as others in this comment chain said, if it's just that the file isn't actually being updated between tests, but adding a new line forces an update/recompile/etc., I'm not sure what you'd call it.
What's the equivalent word for "Your computer suddenly becomes slow and unresponsive, you try to open Task Manager (or run `top` in a terminal) to see what's bogging down your resources, but the resource monitor itself refuses to respond for a few seconds until the lag vanishes, at which point the utility finally renders and everything under the CPU/Memory utilization appears normal" ?
That's a temporary system stall when some critical part of the system is overloaded or blocked, usually the disk.
Or an out-of-memory condition, the system recovers when the OOM killer has killed a random process. If you were lucky that process was your game hogging ressources and when it went away the system recovered.
And for impressive German words? "Systemaufstauung mit urplötzlicher Lösung" (system bottleneck with sudden resolving), "Speicherüberlastung" (memory overload) or "Prozessabmurkser" (process terminator).
Note that I invented these words (oder auf gut Deutsch, ich habe mir diese Wörter aus den Fingern gesaugt).
If you anticipate that this will happen when you open task manager, possibly because it has happened before, you start chanting in German “watch me, I’m about to pull a trick 17!” before opening task manager, having ensured that the whole room is paying attention whether you succeed. When people ask how you knew or why it worked you just shrug smugly to hide the fact that you don’t actually now, and let everybody bask in your aura.
I wrote this prayer to appease the Demo Gods [1]. Though one might pray, the demo can fail.
O Lambda the Ultimate, bless we who are in this demo...
That our core be functional,
and our functions be pure.
That our data be immutable,
so we may know the value of values.
That our systems be composable,
so they may scale with grace.
That their States only mutate
in pleasantly surprising ways.
That the networks and servers stay up.
Well, at least through this demo.
For otherwise, nothing lives, nothing evolves.
In the name of the \alpha and the \beta and the \eta...
\(\lambda x.x x\) \(\lambda x.x x\) ; eternally
A related thing that happens a lot is when the demo is way slower than it was when you were testing it. But at least this one can be explained by screen sharing applications adding latency to your refresh rate. It really is slower when you share your screen!
Whats the antipode to this, where, as a programmer going to investigate a user bug, my mere presences makes the bug disappear, and the user frustrated at trying to reproduce it for me?
Because this happens a lot to me these days, no kidding. The bug happens, some user delights in calling me over, I take a look, they simply can't reproduce it, I walk away - they get the bug again - and, yeah, I kind of have to race ahead of things to understand the nature of the users situation.
Happen to anyone else? I don't think its quite like Vorführeffekt, and is maybe a bit more like Daseinsvermögung oder etwas ..
It's fascinating to me how German composite words encapsulate an idea like "[failure attributed to] demonstration effect" in a way that just saying "demonstration effect" in English often fails to accomplish.
I also love how German often has useful opposites - schadenfreude vs fremdschamen, for example.
On that note, is there an opposite to this, where someone observes that something's not working, they call in the expert to diagnose the problem, and it functions perfectly under demonstration?
They often occur because we'll say "I just want to fix this one thing before we build the demo". We call this type of commit to the source control system a "break-in" instead of a "check-in".
Back in university, my compsci security project didn't work on the university wifi for some reason, if we used google chrome. Firefox worked fine. Some kind of weird proxy broke the website. But to this day I don't know exactly what happened.
flerchin|1 year ago
All by the mere proximity of a Senior Engineer.
flerchin|1 year ago
dinkblam|1 year ago
the same word is also used for the reverse situation, i.e. if something that did not work suddenly works when trying to demonstrate the failure.
think bug reporting e.g. at the car mechanic, warranty claims, etc. if you try to show a reproducible bug to others, it suddenly vanishes...
jprete|1 year ago
khazhoux|1 year ago
* My code doesn't work and I can't find the bug even after over an hour
* I add a few lines of <whatever code>. Now it works!
* Now, just for comparison, I remove all the code I just added (or, at least I think I reverted back to previous state). But now it still works.
???
maicro|1 year ago
Though it depends on the cause - as others in this comment chain said, if it's just that the file isn't actually being updated between tests, but adding a new line forces an update/recompile/etc., I'm not sure what you'd call it.
[0] http://www.catb.org/~esr/jargon/html/H/heisenbug.html
nope1000|1 year ago
marcosdumay|1 year ago
* The program works flawlessly
* Somebody finds a bug on the code that is executed in a test
* The relevant test now fails consistently
Both are probably because you changed something on the environment when you looked at the code.
woranl|1 year ago
oneshtein|1 year ago
Makefile (or a similar build system which uses timestamps) + a problem with wall clock -> stale files.
flerchin|1 year ago
colkassad|1 year ago
rozenmd|1 year ago
unknown|1 year ago
[deleted]
rendall|1 year ago
https://quentin.delcourt.be/blog/2020-01-22_demo-effect/
https://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=demo%20effec...
knoke|1 year ago
AdmiralAsshat|1 year ago
_nalply|1 year ago
Or an out-of-memory condition, the system recovers when the OOM killer has killed a random process. If you were lucky that process was your game hogging ressources and when it went away the system recovered.
And for impressive German words? "Systemaufstauung mit urplötzlicher Lösung" (system bottleneck with sudden resolving), "Speicherüberlastung" (memory overload) or "Prozessabmurkser" (process terminator).
Note that I invented these words (oder auf gut Deutsch, ich habe mir diese Wörter aus den Fingern gesaugt).
eska|1 year ago
adityaathalye|1 year ago
O Lambda the Ultimate, bless we who are in this demo...
[1] Slide no. 5 here: https://github.com/adityaathalye/slideware/blob/master/n-way...(edit: formatting)
hateful|1 year ago
aa-jv|1 year ago
Because this happens a lot to me these days, no kidding. The bug happens, some user delights in calling me over, I take a look, they simply can't reproduce it, I walk away - they get the bug again - and, yeah, I kind of have to race ahead of things to understand the nature of the users situation.
Happen to anyone else? I don't think its quite like Vorführeffekt, and is maybe a bit more like Daseinsvermögung oder etwas ..
unknown|1 year ago
[deleted]
LeifCarrotson|1 year ago
I also love how German often has useful opposites - schadenfreude vs fremdschamen, for example.
On that note, is there an opposite to this, where someone observes that something's not working, they call in the expert to diagnose the problem, and it functions perfectly under demonstration?
wjholden|1 year ago
ChrisMarshallNY|1 year ago
Now, I have a word for it...
iambateman|1 year ago
bobthepanda|1 year ago
netcoyote|1 year ago
They often occur because we'll say "I just want to fix this one thing before we build the demo". We call this type of commit to the source control system a "break-in" instead of a "check-in".
rpnx|1 year ago
breadwinner|1 year ago
colechristensen|1 year ago
jszymborski|1 year ago
Vore-fyur-effect
satisfice|1 year ago
happytoexplain|1 year ago
knoke|1 year ago
MattPalmer1086|1 year ago
Definitely a thing!
mrcode007|1 year ago
Edit: demo effect?
daft_pink|1 year ago
unknown|1 year ago
[deleted]