You add breakpoints. You check the API response. You print the variable to the console.
And you whisper to yourself: Never again. ls0tls0g
At first, you think it is a typo. Perhaps your cat walked across the keyboard. But as you look closer, a cold realization washes over you. This isn't a bug in your code . You add breakpoints
You delete the 47 console.log statements. You close the 18 Stack Overflow tabs. And you whisper to yourself: Never again
I have interpreted this as a —the moment you realize a bug isn't in your logic, but in the raw data or encoding. If you meant something else, let me know and I will adjust it! Title: The ls0tls0g Moment: When Your Code Isn't Wrong (But Your Data Is)
We have all been there. You have been staring at the screen for three hours. The logic is sound. The syntax is flawless. The tests should be passing.
It is the ghost in the pipeline. The moment your UTF-8 decoder hiccuped. The forgotten \0 byte that turned your clean string into digital roadkill. Stage 1: Denial "You must have typed it wrong. Let me just re-run the migration." (The migration fails again. ls0tls0g stares back at you.)