Editing 2200: Unreachable State

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Sometimes, cautious developers will identify states that, in theory, should never be reachable ''at all'' - if they were, it would imply that something has gone fundamentally wrong. A paranoid developer might still decide to handle this case anyway, perhaps including a note that the situation should ''theoretically'' never happen, but they aren't confident enough to state with absolute certainty that it cannot.
 
Sometimes, cautious developers will identify states that, in theory, should never be reachable ''at all'' - if they were, it would imply that something has gone fundamentally wrong. A paranoid developer might still decide to handle this case anyway, perhaps including a note that the situation should ''theoretically'' never happen, but they aren't confident enough to state with absolute certainty that it cannot.
  
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This comic shows [[Cueball]] reading (or possibly writing) just such an error message from a program he is using. The developer has evidently written this text while tired (possibly from sleep deprivation), and did not trust themself enough to be sure that the state is truly unreachable. The hopeless tone of the message supports this lack of confidence in their work.
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This comic shows [[Cueball]] reading (or possibly writing) just such an error message from a program he is using. The developer has evidently written this text while tired (possibly from overwork), and did not trust themself enough to be sure that the state is truly unreachable. The hopeless tone of the message supports this lack of confidence in their work.
  
 
The title text refers to the common trope of a character being given a "magic" item and winning something because of it, then being told that the item was not actually magic and that the magic was {{tvtropes|MagicFeather|inside them all along}}. It is often used as a fable to tell people to follow their dreams. The title text puts the fable in a place where it doesn't belong, saying that finding the "unreachable state" that is the error code implies that the finder can do anything.
 
The title text refers to the common trope of a character being given a "magic" item and winning something because of it, then being told that the item was not actually magic and that the magic was {{tvtropes|MagicFeather|inside them all along}}. It is often used as a fable to tell people to follow their dreams. The title text puts the fable in a place where it doesn't belong, saying that finding the "unreachable state" that is the error code implies that the finder can do anything.

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