Let’s play a game of “Fortunately, Unfortunately“. Respond the previous post (the first comment below this post) by replying this post (not the previous post!)
I’ll start with: “I found this website.“
next week would be my final final exam
unless if final exams are a thing in college
It seems like I’ve posted less in wasteof and the TBGs now
I just don’t have anything to say left
Our class lost in our English debate semi-final since our contestant (as Opposition) doesn’t understand the motion (about how telepathy could ruin human relationship) at all
Am I the only one that uses namespace
and std::vector
on my ESP32
You know what? Answering "the hardest programming language" with Malbolge is becoming a programmer cliche at this point. Why not we devise an esolang so hard to program on, not even supercomputers could brute-force it to get the desired output?
Some sketching of an agent programming language (in a much more literal sense).
It’s very… verbose.
agent Main traits [Runnable Stateful].
-- Runnable: this agent can be run from an outside initiator (e.g. your terminal)
-- Stateful: this agent stores some states (defines the actions [(set name) (to value)] and [(get name)])
use "IO:Output" as Output.
use "Number:Operations" as Number-OP.
use "Text:Operations" as Text-OP.
-- The syntax for the agent selector are "Protocol:Link/To/Agent"
-- Each protocol has their own unique actions.
-- This defines an action which can be asked by other agents.
-- For this one, it also acts as the entry point for the initiator.
on [(run args)] do {
set i to 1.
-- Repeatedly does the instructions until a reply is given.
loop {
set out to "".
get i. ask Number-OP to {mod it with 3. reply it.}.
if it is 0 do {
get out. ask Text-OP to {add it with "Fizz". reply it.}. set out to it.
}.
get i. ask Number-OP to {mod it with 5. reply it.}.
if it is 0 do {
get out. ask Text-OP to {add it with "Buzz". reply it.}. set out to it.
}.
get out.
if it is "" do {
ask Number-OP to {textify it. reply it.}.
ask Output to {write it. reply it.}.
}.
get i. ask Number-OP to {add it with 1. reply it.}. set i to it.
get i. ask Number-OP to {compare it with 100. reply it.}.
-- Number-OP's compare action replies the flags [equal greater less].
if it is equal do {
reply 0.
}.
}.
reply it.
}.
I’ve just found out that SethBling—that YouTuber who made an Atari 2600 emulator in Minecraft, done a ~200 bytes ACE in Super Mario World, and trained an LSTM model to play Super Mario Kart—made CBScript; a proglang that transpiles to Minecraft datapacks kinda like the mockup I made back then.
Oh well.
is there a programming language that doesn’t support else if
at all
not even as the sneaky “second if
is inside else
”
how does a human caput placed atop the bowl of a defecation transportation apparatus become humorous
i don’t get it
Been using Swift for this day
infix operator => : NilCoalescingPrecedence
extension Bool {
static func => (p: Bool, q: Bool) -> Bool {
return !p || q
}
}
Apparently this is a thing?
I’ve made known that some movements applies their beliefs too far
You might have seen Markov chains, but have you heard about hidden Markov models?