00:47:20 -!- tromp has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 00:49:55 -!- ais523_ has joined. 00:51:55 -!- ais523_ has changed nick to ais523. 00:52:12 -!- ais523 has changed nick to ais523_. 00:55:49 -!- tromp has joined. 01:03:39 -!- tromp has quit (Ping timeout: 264 seconds). 01:07:23 -!- tromp has joined. 01:12:14 -!- tromp has quit (Ping timeout: 276 seconds). 01:31:25 hmm, you know how a while back we had a conversation here about how "son" and "sun" are spelled differently despite being pronounced the same? apparently this stems from an ambiguity in an old handwriting style, where "u" and "n" looked a lot like || and "m" like |||, so scribes generally changed "un" and "um" to "on" and "om" so that they at least 01:31:26 had a chance of being readable 01:31:51 so both the "son" and "sun" spellings ended up in common use, and ended up being attached to different words 01:32:34 The other day I was reading a poem which rhymed "love" with "prove" and "remove". 01:32:43 (~150 years old.) 01:32:56 I thought the pronunciation of "love" changed, but maybe it's all the other "ove" words that changed instead? 01:34:04 I think in some traditions of poetry it's acceptable to "rhyme" words simply because they look like they should rhyme, regardless of pronounciation 01:34:07 it's known as an "eye rhyme" 01:34:08 And presumably, they only settled on a single spelling much later, and just _picked_ one for each? 01:34:14 not sure if your poem was one of them 01:34:20 I'm kind of skeptical about this specific case. 01:34:34 I've seen it in multiple poems, and this poem didn't have any other cases that looked like that. 01:34:37 pikhq: I wasn't around at the time, I don't know the details 01:35:12 :P 01:55:36 -!- tromp has joined. 02:03:35 -!- tromp has quit (Ping timeout: 250 seconds). 02:13:12 -!- oerjan has joined. 02:18:32 -!- heroux has quit (Ping timeout: 276 seconds). 02:18:56 -!- heroux has joined. 02:43:14 `? towkr 02:43:15 towkr? ¯\(°​_o)/¯ 02:59:14 `icode > maр (10*) [3,1,4 02:59:15 ​[U+003E GREATER-THAN SIGN] [U+0020 SPACE] [U+006D LATIN SMALL LETTER M] [U+0061 LATIN SMALL LETTER A] [U+0440 CYRILLIC SMALL LETTER ER] [U+0020 SPACE] [U+0028 LEFT PARENTHESIS] [U+0031 DIGIT ONE] [U+0030 DIGIT ZERO] [U+002A ASTERISK] [U+0029 RIGHT PARENTHESIS] [U+0020 SPACE] [U+005B LEFT SQUARE BRACKET] [U+0033 DIGIT THREE] [U+002C COMMA] [U+0031 DIGIT ONE] [U+002C COMMA] [U+0034 DIGIT FOUR] 02:59:30 thought so 03:00:11 -!- Phantom_Hoover has joined. 03:08:00 I see, I see. Yes, makes perfect sense 03:09:16 > "maр (10*) [3,1,4" 03:09:18 "ma\1088 (10*) [3,1,4" 03:10:13 HackEso says that these three are now too long <-- weren't they always 03:10:42 `5 w 03:10:44 1/1:le/rn//le/rn makes creating wisdom entries manually a thing of the past. Usage: `le/[/]rn // \ civic duty//Civic duty is your duty to keep your Honda in tip-top shape. \ 01//01 is an abbreviation that 01 understands. \ soup//What soup, Doc? \ group//Groups are just loops with the property of associativity. 03:11:04 I feel like the joke in le/rn should be deleted due to being so out of date. 03:11:30 `cwlprits brilliant 03:11:32 int-̈e oerjän oerjän oerjän 03:11:32 The "[/]" should probably also be deleted. 03:11:41 * oerjan looks sternly at int-e 03:11:57 it's still allowed 03:23:23 I'm not sure I pay a lot of attention here, but if desired could probably deal with clear abuse when spotted <-- you're already an op through the staff cloak btw 03:23:41 assuming we added that correctly 03:24:59 fancy 03:25:50 by the way, I really hope that Dtuser1337 is not another alias of Areallycoolusername <-- i think we established that is not the same person as the bbc village in norway 03:26:32 (don't know a about Dtuser1337, it's ais523_ who knows how to check such things) 03:26:44 -!- zzo38 has quit (Ping timeout: 246 seconds). 03:26:58 I think it's unlikely enough not to need checking 03:27:05 ok 03:27:15 but yes, ARCUN only has one account 03:27:41 i think e really meant a 03:27:42 I was surprised to learn that the accounts were different, but in retrospect there are noticeable differences between the two people you can spot if you look for them 03:27:52 yes, it's a who has all the accounts 03:28:04 i mean, whether e was Dt* 03:28:08 anyway 03:28:25 there sure are a lot of new wiki users 03:28:41 we get new users at a pretty rapid rate 03:28:50 although most disappear after posting one esolang or making one edit 03:28:56 hm 03:29:47 i'm sort of wonder if that discord esolang channel has more users than this channel, i've never used it 03:29:50 *wondering 03:30:16 there are a surprisingly large number of people who refuse to use Discord on principle, I'm one of them 03:30:30 however I am generally OK with bridging bots that connect IRC and Discord channels together 03:31:06 CGCC had an ad to the wiki but it no longer does, so i'm not sure where they're still coming from :P 03:31:23 perhaps next year we should try to bring that ad back 03:31:26 it was a good ad 03:31:45 oerjan: Sorry, all the tentacles and other appendices exceeded my pain threshold. 03:31:46 that said, it'd be nice to make the wiki more non-esoprogrammer-friendly before that 03:31:59 (in particular, some way to find which languages were actually good, more content on the relevant pages, etc.) 03:32:11 the issue being that nobody seems to have the spare time and motivation to put in the work 03:32:18 `zalgo i can't imagine what you mean 03:32:19 i̲͊ ̡̣c̖̞aͤ͘n̮̉'̹̥t͕͏ ̺̬i̘͐m̠̈́a̼̫g̼̒i͚̒n͐̂e̡͇ ̠͂w̟̔ẖ͉á̷t̼ͩ ̓̾y̑ͪo̖ͦuͣ̒ ̒͗m͑̀e̩̱a̗̹n̟̘ 03:32:33 argh 03:32:57 . o O ( i've found int-e's secret weakness MWAHAHAHA ) 03:33:17 This is worse than fn*rds. 03:33:21 fnords 03:33:33 oerjan: Remember when some unknown set of Unicode characters would mess up my terminal? 03:33:36 Good times. 03:33:48 fungot: do you know anything about those? 03:33:49 oerjan: i was busy because of homeworks and projects and so on 03:33:57 apparently not 03:35:54 `? zalgo 03:35:55 zalgo? ¯\(°​_o)/¯ 03:36:33 `le/rn zalgo//The `zalgo` command turns perfectly good text into toxic waste. It violates a multitude of UN conventions. 03:36:35 Learned 'zalgo': The `zalgo` command turns perfectly good text into toxic waste. It violates a multitude of UN conventions. 03:37:02 -!- Phantom_Hoover has quit (Read error: Connection reset by peer). 03:38:34 `slwd zalgo//s/UN/UN(icode)/ 03:38:36 zalgo//The `zalgo` command turns perfectly good text into toxic waste. It violates a multitude of UN(icode) conventions. 03:39:06 what was the sed-last command again btw? 03:40:50 -!- Lord_of_Life has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 03:40:55 -!- Lord_of_Life_ has joined. 03:42:19 -!- Lord_of_Life_ has changed nick to Lord_of_Life. 03:42:35 `` echo bin/sedlast 03:42:36 bin/sedlast 03:42:43 um wait 03:42:49 `` echo bin/*last 03:42:50 bin/sedlast 03:43:04 well it was right, anyway 03:43:24 wow, a logically named command 03:43:31 no wonder I didn't find it 03:44:28 (but tbh I was just too lazy to look... it was less mental effort to use `slwd and retype the entry name) 03:44:40 shocking 03:45:01 "effort" is a bit of a joke here. 03:53:00 `quote lazy 03:53:01 601) elliott: well how will you represent "The dog jumped over the lazy dog" then? 03:53:27 `quote lazi 03:53:27 No output. 03:53:40 i guess no one bothered to add more 03:53:49 `wisdom laz 03:53:50 That's not wise. 03:53:58 `grwp laz 03:53:59 angband:Angband is Morgoth's second dungeon (the first was Utumno). When the greater and lesser people of Middle-Earth together defeated Morgoth in Angband, they were too lazy to go to for 100% completion, so some evil spirits in Angband survived for a sequel, and Morgoth himself recovered and arrived to Numenor. \ kanada:Your bankers' vain plazas never nurtured no one / And your concrete expanses lay fallow in the sun / And your cities all co 03:54:13 plaza. of course. 04:04:37 Do you like conflict-driven clause learning? 04:05:18 shachaf: See the logs. 04:07:49 Is picking out the next variable to branch on one of the trickiest things in SAT solvers? 04:08:03 Or is a rough heuristic about as good as a complicated one? 04:13:28 It's all heuristics. Selecting variables to branch on, when to restart, when to forget learned clauses, which clauses to learn in the first place, splitting clauses into hot and cold clauses of some sort for better locality... 04:13:45 Using lookahead for early branches, blah blah. 04:16:05 Oh, polarity of variables is in there as well (when you branch, do you try false or true first?) 04:16:15 It is kinda weird now seeing the nick "elliott" in quotes. 04:17:31 `quote pikhq 04:17:31 11) First, invent the direct mind-computer interface. Second, you know the rest. \ 12) IN AN ALTERNATE UNIVERSE: First, invent the direct mind-computer interface. Second, learn the rest with your NEW MIND-COMPUTER INTERFACE. \ 25) pikhq: A lunar nation is totally pointless. ehird: consider low-gravity porn fungebob: OK. Now I'm convinced. \ 82) Well yeah, but furthermore u 04:18:10 :) 04:18:45 is fungebob a precursor of fungot? 04:19:15 Nah, I think fungot had a different nick briefly. 04:19:15 pikhq: i almost got a bf interpreter. i'm not into guis at all." 04:20:24 `quote fungebob 04:20:25 25) pikhq: A lunar nation is totally pointless. ehird: consider low-gravity porn fungebob: OK. Now I'm convinced. 04:21:11 sure, I guess 04:21:20 `quote fungot 04:21:20 Hooloovo0: no no no no no. well ok, perhaps that ruined my experience :) just saying that 04:21:21 10) GregorR-L: i bet only you can prevent forest fires. basically, you know. \ 13) Finally I have found some actually useful purpose for it. \ 14) oerjan: are you a man, if there weren't evil in this kingdom to you! you shall find bekkler! executing program. please let me go... put me out! he's really a tricycle! pass him! \ 56) i am sad ( of course 04:34:33 fungebob virtualpants 04:54:23 -!- tromp has joined. 04:59:08 -!- tromp has quit (Ping timeout: 246 seconds). 05:37:17 -!- imode has quit (Ping timeout: 246 seconds). 05:49:02 -!- tromp has joined. 05:53:30 -!- tromp has quit (Ping timeout: 252 seconds). 06:14:33 -!- tromp has joined. 06:52:02 ais523, pikhq, shachaf: see http://www.madore.org/~david/weblog/d.2013-09-29.2161.html on "love" and "prove"; http://www.madore.org/~david/weblog/d.2019-08-29.2618.html on "sun" and "son" which started this conv'n 06:54:50 oerjan: yes, but Areallycoolusername has at least one alias 06:54:56 wait what? 06:55:01 ARCUN only has one account? ok 06:57:20 nah there is a second account, https://esolangs.org/wiki/User:Jussef_Swissen 06:57:43 " ... i'm not sure where they're still coming from" => one user came to the channel and said he came from bfjoust 06:58:02 b_jonas: Hmm, the first page is in French. 06:58:32 " (in particular, some way to find which languages were actually good, more content on the relevant pages, etc.)" => yeah, that would take work 06:59:19 -!- kritixilithos has joined. 07:00:00 I prefer to spend my time writing a little documentation about languages that I find out about from outside the wiki 07:01:20 to be snarky, I could say that we have about 1500 languages on the language list, of which over 200 are languages by A, plus we have like 200 joke languages, so we might start to think of a button that goes to a random non-joke non-A language 07:02:12 " oerjan: Remember when some unknown set of Unicode characters would mess up my terminal?" => hmm, were you the one who catted irc straight into a terminal and complained when anyone typed a control-N? 07:03:53 -!- atslash has quit (Ping timeout: 276 seconds). 07:03:58 b_jonas: ouch how close is that 200 to reality? (Re: A) 07:04:36 That was not me. 07:05:37 int-e: it's definitely over 200. I started counting to be able to definitely say that he has comfortably more languages than ais523 now and if his motivation was to be the creator with the most esolangs then he can stop now, and yes, I could say that 07:05:39 b_jonas: add BF derivatives in too 07:05:52 b_jonas: that is scary. 07:06:12 there's no real problem with creating 200 languages, the problem is with having 200 language ideas and not really fleshing out any of them 07:06:12 int-e: User:A used to have a list 07:06:26 ais523: yes, they're already listed on the joke page 07:06:36 though there are a few interesting bf derivatives of course 07:06:58 there are a surprising number of interesting BF derivatives, just /even more/ uninteresting BF derivatives 07:07:02 yep 07:07:21 b_jonas: I'm trying to ignore the problem. You may recall me talking about suppressing A-related esowiki messages. 07:07:25 in general, if you have a new idea for a command to add to an imperative language, BF makes a familiar base from which to start, and the resulting language probably won't be terrible 07:07:59 I've even seen at least one brainfuck derivative that makes sense to have been created as a bf derivative, as opposed to just being a cool idea that should have been turned to an esolang unrelated to bf 07:08:19 int-e: it's important to have all the edits here so that they can be reviewed, I normally rely on the #esoteric logs to work out what admin actions I need to take (although I do check Special:RecentChanges from time to time too) 07:08:49 ais523_: I wasn't suggesting to suppress them in general. 07:08:58 b_jonas: SMBF, Permanent Brainfuck, DoFuck probably all fall into that category (oddly, I don't think DoFuck's on the wiki) 07:09:10 DoFuck is on the wiki under another name iirc 07:09:36 I'm not convinced that SMBF is even usable 07:10:01 is permanent brainfuck the one where you can only change cells from 0 to 1? there's no article 07:10:03 ais523_: What I meant is that I, personally, have a specially crafted /ignore for that purpose. 07:10:08 in practice, it's mostly used as an efficient way to initialise the tape 07:10:24 yes, permanent BF is 0→1 only (or sometimes, + only with bignums) 07:10:49 there is an article but it's on a page whose intent was to centralise all the computationally interesting BF derivatives, then it didn't really get used 07:11:10 int-e: that's entirely reasonable, in fact I probably would have suggested it if you hadn't done it already 07:12:03 idea: merge all the BF equivalents into a single article 07:12:06 there's https://esolangs.org/wiki/Treehugger which I think is computationally interesting 07:12:31 ais523: there's already one that merges some of them 07:12:59 or used to be one 07:13:13 " ... i'm not sure where they're still coming from" => one user came to the channel and said he came from bfjoust <-- i'm not asking about the channel but about the wiki, which is presumably where they found bfjoust first 07:13:30 maybe it was on a talk page? 07:13:38 there was a BF Joust competition on CGCC 07:13:57 (they got the idea from us but ran mostly independently; however, Lymia won it) 07:13:57 oerjan: I don't know 07:15:01 oerjan: there's a new user Msully4321 who came to do one constructive edit, and he says so on Introduce yourself, which is often a good motivation why people register on wikis, but they don't say how they found the wiki 07:15:51 I think at least one user said that they came from the esolang discord 07:16:33 do we know where kspalaiologos came from? 07:16:40 the real one, not the name-taking spammer 07:17:06 and one user, kmc, came from the ancient past of #esoteric by a time machine or something 07:17:59 I came from http://99-bottles-of-beer.net/ (linked to me by email) via Malbolge and INTERCAL 07:18:42 owo 07:18:45 I don't remember where I came from, possibilities are other freenode channels and via Intercal or unlambda or Piet/Chef. 07:19:05 oh, as for other websites 07:19:07 didn't you follow me from #nethack4? 07:19:49 i think i saw b_jonas on the iwc forum before he came here 07:20:13 i don't remember exactly how i came here but i was on the old esolang mailing list way back 07:20:19 http://rosettacode.org/wiki/Rosetta_Code occasionally has code in esoteric languages. should we try to advertise there, from like the pages of esolangs? 07:20:34 oerjan: that's possible, but I don't see how the iwc forum would direct here other than by Piet/Chef 07:21:04 and I don't think Piet/Chef is discussed on the forum at all other than in one doc bug report that I posted a few months ago 07:21:54 I also wrote obfuscated code in perl (and usually rather stupid ones, there's quite a few that I'm ashamed of, but there's a learning curve) so maybe someone directed me here from that 07:22:25 I don't even remember how I got here. 07:22:32 perlmonks.com is the first website on the web where I was an active contributor 07:22:36 but it was shortly followed by irc 07:22:39 wow, I just discovered a 49333400 byte Makefile on my computer 07:22:41 freenode specifically 07:22:50 ouch 07:22:57 Haha. Somebody put "(Not clickbait)" into a youtube video title... 07:23:01 it looks like some sort of benchmark for make implementations, luckily, rather than being intended to actually generate a useful output 07:23:27 based on the target names, I assume I wrote the script that generated it 07:23:40 (A video that doesn't interest me but that according to youtube is "trending" whatever that means) 07:24:12 "trending" on websites normally means that more people than predicted are visiting it, e.g. the number of views is high and increasing 07:24:16 int-e: yes, that occurs in titles often 07:24:25 (rather than being constantly popular, or just new) 07:24:26 whew 07:24:36 b_jonas: I bet I'll see it more often now that I'm on to this... uhm... trend. 07:25:34 I wonder what proportion of those are actually clickbait 07:26:21 that may depend on your definition 07:26:21 97% 07:27:14 I guess the definition of clickbait is "something which, based on the description of a link, causes someone to click the mouse more times than they would if they were correctly informed" 07:27:26 oerjan: that sounds made up, needs more precision 07:27:29 normally implying that you follow the link out of curiosity then dislike what's on the other end of it 07:27:40 oerjan: 97.3211421%, now we're talking. 07:28:03 OKAY 07:28:14 those things look a lot more convincing if they look like they were rounded from an actual fraction 07:28:27 97.3285714% or the like 07:28:44 ais523_: I know. It was part of the joke. 07:28:47 > 1/7 07:28:48 0.14285714285714285 07:28:58 ais523: right, and if that definition was correct then you should report every clickbait on youtube as having a misleading title or misleading thumbnail 07:29:11 I don't have a YouTube account, so it doesn't let me report things 07:29:22 otherwise, it seems like the sort of thing I would do :-D 07:29:41 ais523_: i'm not sure most people know that pattern (i only guessed) 07:29:54 oerjan: I think more people recognise it than know it 07:30:01 most people have seen it before even if they don't know what causes it 07:30:21 once each I have tried to report things on youtube or on ebay, but I found that even though the entry was clearly something that shouldn't be there, under the report menu there's no choice to report that particular offense among the report reasons 07:30:24 so it gives that feeling of familiarity that makes it more convincing, even if the viewer doesn't know why 07:30:31 so after that I basically gave up 07:30:37 I don't recally what it was for youtube, 07:31:36 but for ebay it was entries where they bunch a really cheap item together with a normal item into the same entry with those select boxes that you normally use to select sizes or colors, the title and first photo describes only the normal item, but the price displayed on the search list describes the very cheap item 07:32:14 they bunch large capacity fast sd cards with cheap sd card readers this way, but I've seen other similar combinations too 07:32:14 hmm, that could in theory be legitimate if the range of sizes were large enough 07:32:26 ais523_: no, because the title is misleading 07:32:41 USB sticks ranging from 256 MB to 256 GB, for example 07:32:48 it's not like "SD card 1 MB 1 GB 2 GB 4 GB 8 GB 16 GB", those are fine 07:33:07 it's "SD card 8 GB 16 GB" (with other qualifiers) and then one of the sizes is "card reader only" 07:33:10 256 MB USB sticks are probably close to worthless nowadays 07:33:21 ais523: no they're not 07:33:34 we use such small sized SD cards for small computers or embedded devices 07:33:42 where they don't have a built-in flash memory 07:33:45 i just realized that trending youtube items seem to be highly regional. i don't like that 07:33:45 hmm, I guess there must be a price floor for storage 07:33:48 but we have to store a small program or data on it 07:34:06 often you don't need much storage to, e.g., just transport single files around 07:34:17 b_jonas: that's nearly always microSD rather than USB, though 07:34:32 yes, there is a floor, but it's below 1 GB for _slow_ sd cards 07:34:52 yes, for USB it's less common these days 07:35:00 everything has micro-sd card readers built in 07:35:29 also, it's a bit odd, micro-sd cards with an sd adapter are cheaper than sd cards of the same parameter 07:35:37 laptops normally have readers for full-size SD cards but nothing smaller, you need the adapter 07:35:45 yes, and adapters are cheap 07:36:00 I've got a lot of them because they give them for practically free with micro-sd cards 07:36:30 I also have sd + micro sd combo readers with usb port, but I did have to buy them 07:36:45 how do SD cards compete with USB sticks for storage size nowadays? 07:37:08 is the only real difference the connection they use, or are microSD cards noticeably different in how they operate? 07:38:11 I think sd/micro sd cards are usually better, and I prefer them. usb sticks can be better when they're very large capacity, or if you want to keep it on a keychain so you don't lose it 07:38:37 I'm doing a backup onto a USB stick right now 07:38:44 I don't notice them being different in how they operate, but maybe I don't use them enough 07:38:59 for backup media, it's best for it to not be too physically small because that makes it easier to lose 07:39:10 yeah 07:40:25 USB sticks probably also have the advantage when it comes to desktop computers 07:40:43 because those often don't have a microSD port (sometimes they have one, sometimes not) 07:42:59 I wanted to say that I'm genrally good at not losing things, but I'm still looking for the red eyeglasses case that I had with me on my vacation 07:43:03 so I don't dare 07:58:27 I'd like to know if Xykon is still using Dorukan's Cloister spell at his current camp in the north 08:01:29 -!- kritixilithos has quit (Quit: leaving). 08:02:00 -!- kritixilithos has joined. 08:02:00 -!- b_jonas has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 08:03:45 -!- kritixilithos has quit (Client Quit). 08:20:42 -!- sprocklem has joined. 08:28:23 -!- kritixilithos has joined. 08:54:42 -!- ArthurStrong has joined. 08:59:34 -!- wib_jonas has joined. 09:12:03 @metar EGSN 09:12:04 No result. 09:12:14 @metar EGSC 09:12:14 EGSC 090850Z 24012KT 200V260 CAVOK 11/08 Q1003 09:13:53 hi Taneb 09:14:19 -!- Frater_EST has joined. 09:14:54 Hello! 09:15:38 -!- Frater_EST has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 09:23:14 @metar ESSB 09:23:15 ESSB 090850Z 10007KT 9999 -DZ BKN016 08/06 Q0999 09:26:12 I was mostly curious whether EGSN had meta data, it's a tiiiiny airport 09:28:54 longitutde: -0.0425... looks fake :) 09:29:42 -!- atslash has joined. 09:30:12 @metar EGBB 09:30:13 EGBB 090920Z 24009KT 210V270 9999 FEW017 11/08 Q1003 09:34:40 -!- atslash has quit (Ping timeout: 268 seconds). 09:35:20 -!- atslash has joined. 09:36:07 wait... the world's tallest living trees are in the US? what the heck are tropical rainforests for then? 09:36:28 deforestation 09:36:33 Density 09:37:22 Also quick, relentless growth. 09:38:53 wow. "Recent reports indicate that trees can survive to be 1000 years old in the Amazonian rain forest." (However, there is very little information on how common these ancient trees are.) 09:50:20 -!- kritixilithos has quit (Ping timeout: 260 seconds). 09:56:18 -!- arseniiv has joined. 10:01:01 -!- Frater_EST has joined. 10:02:36 -!- Frater_EST has left. 11:01:01 -!- ais523_ has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 11:46:53 -!- sftp has quit (Excess Flood). 11:47:16 -!- sftp has joined. 12:33:13 -!- sftp has quit (Ping timeout: 250 seconds). 12:33:13 -!- xylochoron[m] has quit (Ping timeout: 250 seconds). 12:36:01 -!- xylochoron[m] has joined. 12:37:44 -!- sftp has joined. 13:30:20 -!- imode has joined. 13:50:01 -!- hakatashi2 has joined. 13:52:33 -!- clog_ has joined. 13:55:02 -!- izabera1 has joined. 13:55:15 -!- clog has quit (Ping timeout: 268 seconds). 13:55:16 -!- myname has quit (Ping timeout: 268 seconds). 13:55:16 -!- izabera has quit (Ping timeout: 268 seconds). 13:55:17 -!- hakatashi has quit (Ping timeout: 268 seconds). 13:55:17 -!- quintopia has quit (Ping timeout: 268 seconds). 13:55:17 -!- olsner has quit (Ping timeout: 268 seconds). 13:55:17 -!- relrod has quit (Ping timeout: 268 seconds). 13:55:17 -!- kmc has quit (Ping timeout: 268 seconds). 13:55:17 -!- vertrex has quit (Ping timeout: 268 seconds). 13:55:21 -!- kmc_ has joined. 13:56:37 -!- vertrex has joined. 13:56:40 -!- relrod has joined. 13:56:48 -!- vertrex has quit (Changing host). 13:56:48 -!- vertrex has joined. 13:56:59 -!- olsner has joined. 13:57:52 -!- relrod has quit (Changing host). 13:57:52 -!- relrod has joined. 14:00:28 -!- quintopia has joined. 14:02:57 [[Cthulhu]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=66587&oldid=64478 * Dtuser1337 * (-183)
ified, i had a hard time doing these.
14:04:27  [[Cthulhu]]  https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=66588&oldid=66587 * Dtuser1337 * (+40) Adding some category.
14:07:11  [[Cthulhu]]  https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=66589&oldid=66588 * Dtuser1337 * (+26) MOAR Categories
14:08:08 -!- myname has joined.
14:08:18  [[Cthulhu]]  https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=66590&oldid=66589 * Dtuser1337 * (+38) Probably object oriented
14:18:07  [[User:Dtuser1337/Sandbox]]  https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=66591&oldid=66585 * Dtuser1337 * (+29) /* errors */
14:27:06  [[User:Dtuser1337/Sandbox]]  https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=66592&oldid=66591 * Dtuser1337 * (+28) /* commands */
14:29:45  [[User:Dtuser1337/Sandbox]]  https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=66593&oldid=66592 * Dtuser1337 * (+46) /* errors */
14:34:06  [[User:Dtuser1337/Sandbox]]  https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=66594&oldid=66593 * Dtuser1337 * (+31) /* errors */
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22:06:57  found the red glasses case. ok, now I can claim that I'm usually good at not losing my things
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