00:22:35 -!- calamari has joined. 00:22:46 hi 00:33:07 hi 01:10:24 -!- Wildhalcyon has joined. 01:10:53 Am I the only one having trouble checking out the logs on meme.b9? 01:11:32 My internet connection has been on the fritz today, and Im trying to keep caught up. 01:17:12 -!- Wildhalcyon has quit (Read error: 104 (Connection reset by peer)). 01:17:55 -!- Wildhalcyon has joined. 01:22:46 halcyon.. yeah doesn't seem to be loading 01:23:46 http://tunes.org/~nef/logs/esoteric/05.09.23 01:23:49 that works tho 01:26:55 Thanks Calamari 01:28:51 np 01:29:23 Phew, nothing new. I hate missing out on stuff 01:29:28 * calamari got the new console working.. of course to do it I had to tear down 10 other things 01:30:12 the code is definitely better than it was before,.. so I'm happy 01:30:28 I think you're really in love with your esoshell 01:30:45 -!- cmeme has joined. 01:30:54 it won't even compile on gcj now tho :) 01:31:31 halcyon: it feels like the OS project that I wanted to have last semester, but was denied 01:31:56 waste of a class 01:36:32 -!- Wildhalcyon has quit (Read error: 104 (Connection reset by peer)). 01:36:56 -!- Wildhalcyon has joined. 01:40:08 -!- Wildhalcyon has quit (Read error: 104 (Connection reset by peer)). 01:40:28 -!- Wildhalcyon has joined. 01:42:39 -!- Arrogant has quit (" HydraIRC -> http://www.hydrairc.com <- Go on, try it!"). 01:46:26 -!- Wildhalcyon has quit (Read error: 104 (Connection reset by peer)). 01:46:51 -!- Wildhalcyon has joined. 01:50:46 Calamari, why wont it compil on gcj now? 01:54:32 -!- Wildhalcyon has quit (Read error: 104 (Connection reset by peer)). 01:54:59 -!- Wildhalcyon has joined. 01:56:23 Alright.. I dont think this is going to work well tonight. I'm callin it an evening. G'night folks. 01:56:39 -!- Wildhalcyon has quit (Client Quit). 01:59:25 -!- Sgep has quit. 02:01:55 -!- grim_ has joined. 02:12:28 -!- grim__ has quit (Read error: 110 (Connection timed out)). 02:21:25 -!- grim__ has joined. 02:28:24 -!- grim_ has quit (Read error: 110 (Connection timed out)). 03:09:08 -!- grim__ has quit (Read error: 110 (Connection timed out)). 03:21:14 -!- GregorR-L has joined. 04:23:47 -!- calamari has quit (Read error: 110 (Connection timed out)). 04:38:46 -!- puzzlet has joined. 05:56:53 Let us initiate a conversation. 07:07:00 No. 07:08:05 Clearly :-P 07:59:59 -!- clog has quit (ended). 08:00:00 -!- clog has joined. 08:18:44 -!- calamari has joined. 08:25:14 I can't think of a good idea for a new esolang. 08:27:45 hehe 08:28:14 that reminds me of 7th or 8th grade where I ran out of ideas for things to program 08:29:04 I just recently wrote a cool web version of a card game 8-D 08:29:26 url? 08:29:34 http://www.codu.org/crackpipe/ol/ 08:30:56 A card game ... that I was a codeveloper of :-P 08:35:20 I clicked a few cards, but I guess I'd need to learn the rules and get cable :) 08:35:32 Heheh 08:35:37 http://www.codu.org/crackpipe/ < the rules 08:36:03 And hopefully the speed of your connection shouldn't be too much of a problem ... 08:36:42 I'm downloading the java jdk 1.22 atm, so that's really why it was slow 08:36:48 Ah 08:36:57 Umm, isn't JDK 1.22 rather olde? 08:37:04 yeah 08:37:10 So why 1.22? 08:37:18 And why that particular esoteric programming langugae? 08:37:20 *language 08:37:36 because it seems more reasonable as far as classpath / gcj are concerned 08:37:53 Ah 08:38:08 if it works in 1.22 then if it doesn't in the others, oh well :) 08:59:17 -!- grim_ has joined. 09:56:54 -!- GregorR-L has quit ("Chatzilla 0.9.68.5 [Firefox 1.0.6/20050716]"). 10:35:04 -!- jix has joined. 12:13:00 -!- Keymaker has joined. 12:13:11 'ello 12:13:37 grrh, i can never remember how c works -- 12:13:58 if there is int a[100] before main(), will all a-cells be 0? 12:14:14 or did it have to be inside main()? i can never remember this 12:14:38 -!- calamari has quit (Read error: 110 (Connection timed out)). 12:15:25 Keymaker: i always memset it to be sure it is zero 12:15:51 aha 12:16:11 i'm too lazy to do that :} 13:07:09 jix: any idea how i could store text into array? including new lines 13:07:17 like when the program starts 13:07:28 it would set data to array 13:07:47 i mean without {44,22,33} way 16:09:17 -!- nooga has joined. 16:09:22 hello 16:09:47 hello 16:11:42 haskell is a funny language 16:12:11 i like the type system 16:15:18 heh 16:20:00 i just edited my user: page in the wiki ;p 16:21:09 good 16:25:10 now 16:25:20 i'll update SADOL's page 16:25:26 ok 16:27:46 oh, and maybe write 99bottles ... ;] 16:28:59 cool 16:32:04 ok, i made a digital root calculator in befunge. it's not as cool as the 9-character one that's in esowiki, but this mine uses the other input way -- the one in esowiki asks user to input a value, this reads value as ascii and so on; 16:32:06 > > ~ :#v_$68*+v 16:32:06 ^%9_^#`9:+-*86<@,*52,< 16:32:47 hmm, i hope this opera irc client didn't parse spaces.. 16:35:01 in case it did, just add the needed spaces there to get the up pointing arrows connected with the left going. 16:38:59 i think it's correct 16:39:31 ok, good. i just couldn't check since the logs archive didn't work for some reason.. 16:47:18 heh 16:47:26 g2g 16:47:29 bye 16:47:44 bye 16:47:48 -!- nooga has quit. 16:48:00 on a sidenote, i need to go too.. :\ 16:48:01 bbl 16:48:04 -!- Keymaker has left (?). 17:29:55 -!- nooga has joined. 17:30:01 hi :-) 17:34:51 -!- nooga has quit ("leaving"). 17:47:24 -!- nooga has joined. 17:47:27 :D 17:47:34 tokigun: r u there 17:47:36 ' 17:47:38 ?? 18:17:50 -!- nooga has quit ("Lost terminal"). 19:19:20 -!- sp3tt has joined. 19:20:59 -!- sp3tt has quit (Client Quit). 19:43:33 -!- Wildhalcyon has joined. 19:45:38 -!- Wildhalcyon has quit (Read error: 104 (Connection reset by peer)). 19:47:02 -!- Wildhalcyon has joined. 21:26:09 I'm thinking of writing a short essay on the esolang community and submitting it to a literary magazine 21:26:18 good idea 21:26:38 although, why? 21:26:44 if you don't mind my asking? ;) 21:27:59 Just.. its an iteresting group, with an interesting design philosophy 21:28:27 Its almost as if hackers have a sort of post-modern counter culture 21:29:23 I was thinking of doing interviews with some of the more well-known developers and programmers [in the genre] 21:29:47 I guess I'm interested in what sort of audience there would be 21:30:12 it seems to me an even more obscure topic than esolangs are themselves 21:30:28 but hey, you seem to know what you want to say 21:30:58 I like the idea of a post-modern counter-culture to hackers :) 21:31:21 I guess the intended audience would be a bunch of people who aren't terribly familiar with programming 21:31:54 Have you ever heard of McSweeny's? 21:36:02 The article will be like a serious look at esolangs. Why they're closer to programming as an art medium, and a means of self-expression with a valued and complex diversity 21:37:59 Why is it that, as a community, we're generally concerned with more ways of solving problems (writing new esolangs to "compute" hello world) than solving more complex problems using the same tools? 21:39:53 ... probably because its simply more difficult to write a BF operating system. 21:40:51 Anyhow, I have an incredibly crappy un-fulfilling job to go to now. 21:42:01 Talk with you all when Im free of my customer service personal hell 21:42:41 oh dear 21:42:47 bad luck dude 21:59:38 -!- calamari has joined. 21:59:52 hi 22:08:09 -!- grim_ has left (?). 22:59:28 -!- calamari has quit ("Leaving"). 23:23:35 -!- int-e has joined.