< 1608424622 464658 :Lykaina!~lyka@unaffiliated/schrodingerscat PRIVMSG #esoteric :working on a fizzbuzz program for echidna 0006e > 1608425228 455269 PRIVMSG #esoteric :14[[07Dynamic Contraction System14]]4 M10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=79508&oldid=68228 5* 03PythonshellDebugwindow 5* (-19) 10Not stub < 1608425271 743748 :Lykaina!~lyka@unaffiliated/schrodingerscat PRIVMSG #esoteric :well, i've got a 1-100 working... < 1608425541 137299 :adu!~arobbins@c-76-111-99-194.hsd1.md.comcast.net JOIN :#esoteric < 1608425796 352329 :Lykaina!~lyka@unaffiliated/schrodingerscat PRIVMSG #esoteric :34 commands in 9 different "subs" < 1608425868 872121 :Lykaina!~lyka@unaffiliated/schrodingerscat PRIVMSG #esoteric :797 bytes < 1608425935 110723 :Lykaina!~lyka@unaffiliated/schrodingerscat PRIVMSG #esoteric :had it smaller, but i wanted it more optimised < 1608427594 130633 :Lykaina!~lyka@unaffiliated/schrodingerscat PRIVMSG #esoteric :yay! FizzBuzz done < 1608427933 595413 :Lykaina!~lyka@unaffiliated/schrodingerscat PRIVMSG #esoteric :http://thor.lesidhetree.com/sara/echidna/arduino/progs%20(0006e)/ is the example programs < 1608429083 134275 :Lord_of_Life_!~Lord@unaffiliated/lord-of-life/x-0885362 JOIN :#esoteric < 1608429145 91826 :Lord_of_Life!~Lord@unaffiliated/lord-of-life/x-0885362 QUIT :Ping timeout: 240 seconds < 1608429164 50286 :Lord_of_Life_!~Lord@unaffiliated/lord-of-life/x-0885362 NICK :Lord_of_Life > 1608429459 360702 PRIVMSG #esoteric :14[[07Pi Calculus14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=79509&oldid=78157 5* 03D 5* (+260) 10Don't know where I heard of this extension, but added for completeness > 1608429657 70179 PRIVMSG #esoteric :14[[07Pi Calculus14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=79510&oldid=79509 5* 03D 5* (+88) 10 > 1608429823 213691 PRIVMSG #esoteric :14[[07Pi Calculus14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=79511&oldid=79510 5* 03D 5* (+113) 10/* Examples */ > 1608430402 975416 PRIVMSG #esoteric :14[[07Pi Calculus14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=79512&oldid=79511 5* 03D 5* (+374) 10 > 1608430557 916496 PRIVMSG #esoteric :14[[07Pi Calculus14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=79513&oldid=79512 5* 03D 5* (+291) 10/* Equations */ > 1608430959 62750 PRIVMSG #esoteric :14[[07Pi Calculus14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=79514&oldid=79513 5* 03D 5* (+100) 10/* Extensions */ > 1608431069 348584 PRIVMSG #esoteric :14[[07Pi Calculus14]]4 M10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=79515&oldid=79514 5* 03D 5* (-24) 10/* Extensions */ > 1608431319 984359 PRIVMSG #esoteric :14[[07Pi Calculus14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=79516&oldid=79515 5* 03D 5* (+396) 10/* Extensions */ > 1608431471 495297 PRIVMSG #esoteric :14[[07Pi Calculus14]]4 M10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=79517&oldid=79516 5* 03D 5* (+36) 10 > 1608431533 666634 PRIVMSG #esoteric :14[[07Pi Calculus14]]4 M10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=79518&oldid=79517 5* 03D 5* (-88) 10/* External resources */ Realized that it's not a good link anyway. > 1608431851 436339 PRIVMSG #esoteric :14[[07Pi Calculus14]]4 M10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=79519&oldid=79518 5* 03D 5* (+0) 10/* Add one function */ < 1608434492 217845 :Lykaina!~lyka@unaffiliated/schrodingerscat PRIVMSG #esoteric :is anyone actually interested in my arduino-based sd-read language? < 1608434584 262184 :Lykaina!~lyka@unaffiliated/schrodingerscat PRIVMSG #esoteric :i get the feeling it's not very esoteric, but i still want comments < 1608435404 9469 :zzo38!~zzo38@host-24-207-14-22.public.eastlink.ca PRIVMSG #esoteric :I don't have any Arduino; maybe someone who does have may be interested in such a thing, I suppose. < 1608435486 695329 :Lykaina!~lyka@unaffiliated/schrodingerscat PRIVMSG #esoteric :i linked documentation and a folder with examples < 1608436920 762489 :nakilon!~nakilon@62.241.154.104.bc.googleusercontent.com PRIVMSG #esoteric :try posting to /r/arduino or something < 1608437854 576062 :Lykaina!~lyka@unaffiliated/schrodingerscat PRIVMSG #esoteric :the echidna language can easily be implemented in c < 1608437900 285259 :Lykaina!~lyka@unaffiliated/schrodingerscat PRIVMSG #esoteric :it's not arduino-dependant < 1608438055 5326 :Lykaina!~lyka@unaffiliated/schrodingerscat PRIVMSG #esoteric :sorry for implying otherwise < 1608438100 778245 :Lykaina!~lyka@unaffiliated/schrodingerscat PRIVMSG #esoteric :http://thor.lesidhetree.com/sara/echidna/arduino/progs%20(0006e)/ is the example programs. how do they look? > 1608438178 85963 PRIVMSG #esoteric :14[[07Pi Calculus14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=79520&oldid=79519 5* 03D 5* (+77) 10/* Introduction */ Add stuff from the paper > 1608438353 831843 PRIVMSG #esoteric :14[[07Pi Calculus14]]4 M10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=79521&oldid=79520 5* 03D 5* (+39) 10/* Equations */ < 1608439500 55367 :zzo38!~zzo38@host-24-207-14-22.public.eastlink.ca PRIVMSG #esoteric :OK < 1608443373 897913 :adu!~arobbins@c-76-111-99-194.hsd1.md.comcast.net QUIT :Quit: adu < 1608443666 262755 :delta23!~deltaepsi@d179-68-39-184.evv.wideopenwest.com QUIT :Quit: Leaving < 1608444212 84394 :adu!~arobbins@c-76-111-99-194.hsd1.md.comcast.net JOIN :#esoteric < 1608444288 988713 :adu!~arobbins@c-76-111-99-194.hsd1.md.comcast.net QUIT :Client Quit < 1608445359 123983 :zzo38!~zzo38@host-24-207-14-22.public.eastlink.ca PRIVMSG #esoteric :I look, it look like OK to me < 1608445525 545760 :zzo38!~zzo38@host-24-207-14-22.public.eastlink.ca PRIVMSG #esoteric :Still I wanted to see if someone is interested in the projects I have made too, though; not only you. < 1608445655 524185 :zzo38!~zzo38@host-24-207-14-22.public.eastlink.ca PRIVMSG #esoteric :I looked at the echidna reference; it look like OK to me, but is PDF needed, or I would expect plain text might do just as well? < 1608445796 79101 :zzo38!~zzo38@host-24-207-14-22.public.eastlink.ca PRIVMSG #esoteric :(Also, a better explanation of some things might help, too.) < 1608446244 597916 :adu!~arobbins@c-76-111-99-194.hsd1.md.comcast.net JOIN :#esoteric < 1608447768 401313 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esoteric :Hrm, I don't understand why today's AoC is so twisty... intuitively the first part seems much harder than the twist. < 1608447773 371278 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esoteric :In practice... < 1608447807 910720 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esoteric :> (2142+470)/470 < 1608447809 947972 :lambdabot!~lambdabot@haskell/bot/lambdabot PRIVMSG #esoteric : 5.5574468085106385 < 1608447851 586318 :shachaf!~shachaf@unaffiliated/shachaf PRIVMSG #esoteric :I wish they showed the twists without an account after the leaderboard filled up. < 1608447867 312194 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esoteric :there are private leaderboards too < 1608448132 583410 :shachaf!~shachaf@unaffiliated/shachaf PRIVMSG #esoteric :I guess so. < 1608449883 887406 :arseniiv!~arseniiv@136.169.228.48 JOIN :#esoteric < 1608450400 140127 :spruit11!~unknown@86-82-44-193.fixed.kpn.net QUIT :Ping timeout: 272 seconds > 1608452081 820793 PRIVMSG #esoteric :14[[07Nopfunge14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=79522&oldid=79287 5* 03Quintopia 5* (+2759) 10Add implementation > 1608452143 102281 PRIVMSG #esoteric :14[[07Nopfunge14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=79523&oldid=79522 5* 03Quintopia 5* (+22) 10repair code block formatting < 1608452323 206397 :spruit11!~unknown@86-82-44-193.fixed.kpn.net JOIN :#esoteric < 1608453572 850427 :imode!~linear@unaffiliated/imode QUIT :Quit: Batsharks are people too! < 1608453788 347584 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 JOIN :#esoteric < 1608453802 370375 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :an esoquestion that has come up multiple times (including now) and I still haven't found a satisfactory answer to < 1608453834 33304 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :suppose you have a string of Unicode characters, and want to display it to a person < 1608453853 630267 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :outputting it unchanged is inappropriate because some Unicode characters are control codes that will have weird effects if you try to output them, so you have to replace them < 1608453890 467472 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :with C0 control codes (+ DEL and NEL), the correct course of action is fairly obvious: just use the corresponding Unicode control picture to represent it < 1608453892 353792 :zzo38!~zzo38@host-24-207-14-22.public.eastlink.ca PRIVMSG #esoteric :The way to do it depends on the context. Sometimes there is no good way. < 1608453903 885124 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :however, I haven't found a satisfactory solution for C1 control codes < 1608453989 834803 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :well, I'm ideally looking for a general solution because I need to tell a computer how to do it, and computers often don't have that much sense of context < 1608454097 545770 :zzo38!~zzo38@host-24-207-14-22.public.eastlink.ca PRIVMSG #esoteric :You must have some kind of context, at least. For example, if it is being output as a part of a HTML document, I think there is a command in HTML 5 to isolate the effect of Unicode control characters. < 1608454127 612010 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric : isolates directional override characters < 1608454134 350590 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :but those are not considered control characters in Unicode < 1608454134 597886 :zzo38!~zzo38@host-24-207-14-22.public.eastlink.ca PRIVMSG #esoteric :But if nothing else works, best might be to just display printable ASCII characters only, and to display the Unicode codepoint numbers where non-ASCII or non-printable characters are present. < 1608454183 282662 :zzo38!~zzo38@host-24-207-14-22.public.eastlink.ca PRIVMSG #esoteric :HTML also has a &# command, in case you want to escape any character, I suppose < 1608454191 101525 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :the only Unicode "control characters" (\p{Cc} in a regex) are U+0000 to U+001F inclusive and U+007F to U+009F inclusive < 1608454221 272577 :zzo38!~zzo38@host-24-207-14-22.public.eastlink.ca PRIVMSG #esoteric :You could also display some kind of substitute for C1 controls I suppose, if wanted to do < 1608454300 553478 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :using an &# numeric entity for a control character is actually defined to be an error in HTML < 1608454354 419146 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :although, the HTML specification provides a specific error recovery action, which is to interpret the given number as a Windows-1252 codepoint rather than a Unicode codepoint < 1608454437 254015 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :actually, the HTML specification's error recovery is really dubious in some respects < 1608454451 296280 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :e.g. a literal C0 control code is an error, but the error recovery action is to treat it literally (???) < 1608454461 386834 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :so there are erroneous HTML documents that parse to something that cannot be expressed in a valid HTML document < 1608454497 526853 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :and this has come up in practice on websites like TIO, where I frequently want to input text that contains control characters, and the website then tries to echo it back to me < 1608454531 77917 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :oh, on a side note, a quirk of encoding means that "set tab stop" is in Unicode but "delete tab stop" isn't < 1608454549 668768 :zzo38!~zzo38@host-24-207-14-22.public.eastlink.ca PRIVMSG #esoteric :Many people will try to use Unicode for everything; that is not a good idea, I think. For some things it works OK. They also want to use HTML for everything, which also isn't the best idea, either. < 1608454562 418090 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :if they both were, it is possible that it would be Turing-complete (assuming an implicit loop around the program) using set tab stop, delete tab stop, space, backspace, tab and carriage return < 1608454630 693747 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :well, the current situation where this came up is that I'm in a situation where I need to use HTML, so I'm trying to write a safe HTML generation library that's restricted to a set of HTML that behaves sanely and is secure < 1608454645 508769 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :to avoid needing to try to generate it directly and probably making a mistake < 1608454678 564866 :zzo38!~zzo38@host-24-207-14-22.public.eastlink.ca PRIVMSG #esoteric :Can you figure out such a thing? Make a character set including a "delete tab stop" control and the other five listed, figure out if it is Turing-complete or not, maybe write in esolang wiki about such thing if you figure out anything about that < 1608454756 816501 :zzo38!~zzo38@host-24-207-14-22.public.eastlink.ca PRIVMSG #esoteric :One thing you could do, if you only care about C0 and C1 controls, perhaps is to replace the controls by something such as 9F or whatever < 1608454774 23580 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :that doesn't work inside attributes, like title= < 1608454812 352221 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :anything other than C0 and C1 controls is either safe to output literally given appropriate bidirectional isolation, or else is so obviously an error that you can just replace it with a replacement character < 1608454838 464157 :zzo38!~zzo38@host-24-207-14-22.public.eastlink.ca PRIVMSG #esoteric :O, yes, you are right. Inside of attributes you may need something else. If the attribute is a URL, you can use percent encoding, but if it isn't, then you will need to do something else; you could use Windows-1252, or just use replacement characters maybe, I don't know < 1608454842 152469 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :so C0 and C1 controls are just the hard part < 1608454954 3618 :zzo38!~zzo38@host-24-207-14-22.public.eastlink.ca PRIVMSG #esoteric :I don't like those error handling either I think that a better idea might be to ignore Unicode character properties entirely and instead for the implementation to use whatever is specified in the font tables; the web browser could include a font with Windows-1252 characters in the C1 controls area in order to satisfy the HTML specification, I suppose < 1608455052 561056 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :in retrospect, it was probably a mistake to include control characters in Unicode at all; Unicode itself should have restricted itself to non-control characters, and control characters should have been specified as part of the encoding not as part of the character repertoire < 1608455085 387326 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :but, it is very commonplace to store control characters literally in strings… < 1608455101 379578 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :incidentally, I tested out some percent-encodings on my webserver < 1608455105 418177 :zzo38!~zzo38@host-24-207-14-22.public.eastlink.ca PRIVMSG #esoteric :Yes, that may have been better < 1608455139 228340 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :it seems to be happy to percent-decode any byte in a URL, including treating %2F as a directory separator, with the exception of %00 which causes a "bad request" error (400) < 1608455153 78532 :zzo38!~zzo38@host-24-207-14-22.public.eastlink.ca PRIVMSG #esoteric :I also think that it would be better that isolates everything, not only directional override but also ligatures, kerning, variation selectors, etc. < 1608455182 539066 :adu!~arobbins@c-76-111-99-194.hsd1.md.comcast.net QUIT :Quit: adu < 1608455199 817355 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :I am not convinced that this corresponds to the specification < 1608455212 812741 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :hmm, I would expect *any* tag to isolate things like variation selectors < 1608455220 839746 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :although possibly not kerningg < 1608455247 460121 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :although, I seem to remember there was a big discussion by one of the browser vendors about what they should do in terms of rendering if a combining character is a different color from the character it combines onto < 1608455282 987168 :zzo38!~zzo38@host-24-207-14-22.public.eastlink.ca PRIVMSG #esoteric :Actually, depending on how the kernings are encoded in the font, and on the direction of the kernings, it may be OK that and other tags do not isolate kerning in all cases < 1608455347 286731 :rain1!~My_user_n@unaffiliated/rain1 JOIN :#esoteric < 1608455357 965994 :zzo38!~zzo38@host-24-207-14-22.public.eastlink.ca PRIVMSG #esoteric :About combining characters, I should think probably it should disregard any ligatures between characters of different colours, so if any combinations are implemented with ligatures, those combinations will not work if they are different colours. < 1608455421 522812 :zzo38!~zzo38@host-24-207-14-22.public.eastlink.ca PRIVMSG #esoteric :But if it is implemented only with changing the positions, it ought to still work, I should expect. (Although, I think that should probably disregard commands in the font for repositioning combining characters too) < 1608455503 482016 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :Firefox seems to block combining characters at the edge of a < 1608455519 78883 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :so would definitely block combining < 1608455762 433586 :zzo38!~zzo38@host-24-207-14-22.public.eastlink.ca PRIVMSG #esoteric :OK < 1608455838 183137 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :hmm, so apparently UTF-5 can encode C1 control codes but not C0 control codes < 1608455861 979695 :sprocklem!~sprocklem@unaffiliated/sprocklem QUIT :Ping timeout: 256 seconds < 1608455866 716662 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :even more impressively, I tried looking up the IPs for some addresses containing C1 control codes in dig, and it rejected them due to containing invalid characters < 1608455881 955794 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :(an example is xn--a-a.com) < 1608456132 480309 :zzo38!~zzo38@host-24-207-14-22.public.eastlink.ca PRIVMSG #esoteric :Did you write "xn--a-a.com" or did you write something that will be converted as that? Also, does it depend on the locale at all? The man page says that you can add a IDN_DISABLE environment variable if you want to disable IDN, though. < 1608456162 784006 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :I wrote xn--a-a.com directly (it encodes a U+0080 character followed by an "a") < 1608456230 851333 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :(which in turn would in theory be equivalent to an ASCII "a", except that the standard that would have defined that removed it before being standardised and so now it's just an unused control code) < 1608456237 370460 :zzo38!~zzo38@host-24-207-14-22.public.eastlink.ca PRIVMSG #esoteric :On my computer, I get no message about it being rejected, although there seems to be no such domain name < 1608456295 513752 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :…actually, I am really bothered by SS2 and SS3 in particular being in Unicode < 1608456302 314411 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :these are encoding control characters < 1608456322 174085 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :the correct way to translate a file containing them in Unicode is to follow their instructions about what encoding the file is in < 1608456330 485641 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :not to translate them literally < 1608456860 5850 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :I've tried rendering C1 control codes by putting combining characters on the C0 control pictures < 1608456868 738106 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :but, most text renderers don't produce anything particularly meaningful for that < 1608456924 586816 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :in particular the control picture often isn't centered correctly < 1608457157 543338 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :actually, combining circumflex looks fairly good on my computer, even though it's offset < 1608457163 785520 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :how does http://nethack4.org/pastebin/82.html look for the people here? < 1608457229 505435 :zzo38!~zzo38@host-24-207-14-22.public.eastlink.ca PRIVMSG #esoteric :It looks like OK to me < 1608457499 379299 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :of course, the names of the C0 control characters don't match the C1 control characters very well < 1608457505 619054 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :but simply being able to show something is helpful < 1608458074 392483 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :ooh, I think I just found a bug in nginx < 1608458098 200584 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :according to the specification, example.com/a%2Fb/../c should be equivalent to example.com/c, but nginx interprets it as equivalent to example.com/a/c < 1608459572 509276 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 QUIT :Quit: quit < 1608460294 267580 :Sgeo!~Sgeo@ool-18b98aa4.dyn.optonline.net QUIT :Read error: Connection reset by peer < 1608464854 964440 :rain1!~My_user_n@unaffiliated/rain1 QUIT :Quit: WeeChat 2.9 < 1608465670 378942 :arseniiv!~arseniiv@136.169.228.48 PRIVMSG #esoteric : actually, combining circumflex looks fairly good on my computer, even though it's offset how does http://nethack4.org/pastebin/82.html look for the people here? => offset for me too; the control character itself is displayed as “DC4” run diagonally ↘ (Firefox on windows) < 1608467669 782196 :NeverBorn!~NeverBorn@93-41-17-168.ip79.fastwebnet.it JOIN :#esoteric < 1608467776 24184 :NeverBorn!~NeverBorn@93-41-17-168.ip79.fastwebnet.it QUIT :Remote host closed the connection > 1608470778 884066 PRIVMSG #esoteric :14[[07Archway14]]4 M10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=79524&oldid=53673 5* 03PythonshellDebugwindow 5* (-1) 10/* Changes in Archway2 */ and->or > 1608470992 681547 PRIVMSG #esoteric :14[[07Chris Barker14]]4 M10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=79525&oldid=63799 5* 03PythonshellDebugwindow 5* (+10) 10What about Zot? < 1608472532 21595 :fizzie!fis@unaffiliated/fizzie PRIVMSG #esoteric :int-e: One contributing factor is possibly that you can do part 1 without actually reassembling the image. < 1608472560 136838 :fizzie!fis@unaffiliated/fizzie PRIVMSG #esoteric :int-e: That's what I did, and I haven't actually gotten around to part 2 yet, need to do some things before the daylight is all gone. < 1608472635 717433 :fizzie!fis@unaffiliated/fizzie PRIVMSG #esoteric :(Just count the number of matching edges; corner tiles are the ones that have the least.) < 1608472850 987551 :delta23!~deltaepsi@d179-68-39-184.evv.wideopenwest.com JOIN :#esoteric > 1608472961 122215 PRIVMSG #esoteric :14[[07Machine code14]]4 M10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=79526&oldid=74761 5* 03PythonshellDebugwindow 5* (+14) 10Nor > 1608472975 277555 PRIVMSG #esoteric :14[[07Assembly code14]]4 M10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=79527&oldid=74760 5* 03PythonshellDebugwindow 5* (+13) 10Nro < 1608474245 183085 :Bowserinator!Bowserinat@hellomouse/dev/Bowserinator QUIT :Quit: Blame iczero something happened < 1608474346 248717 :Bowserinator!Bowserinat@hellomouse/dev/Bowserinator JOIN :#esoteric < 1608474752 930183 :diverger!~div@185.242.4.164 QUIT :Remote host closed the connection < 1608474871 659989 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esoteric :fizzie: Oh I thought I had tested for that property (no duplicate edges) earlier... apparently I messed up. Makes sense. < 1608474903 94058 :b_jonas!~a@catv-176-63-12-34.catv.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esoteric :ais523: "with C0 control codes ... just use the corresponding Unicode control picture to represent it / however, I haven't found a satisfactory solution for C1 control codes" => there are control pictures for those as well. < 1608475061 991395 :diverger!~div@45.87.213.214 JOIN :#esoteric < 1608475165 44932 :b_jonas!~a@catv-176-63-12-34.catv.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esoteric :or wait... are there? I might be confused < 1608475169 587329 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esoteric :fizzie: thanks! < 1608475284 896330 :rain1!~My_user_n@unaffiliated/rain1 JOIN :#esoteric < 1608475319 739131 :b_jonas!~a@catv-176-63-12-34.catv.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esoteric :hmm no, maybe there aren't. I'm not sure < 1608475381 31254 :b_jonas!~a@catv-176-63-12-34.catv.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esoteric :there aren't. < 1608475387 263340 :Arcorann_!~awych@159-196-65-46.9fc441.mel.nbn.aussiebb.net QUIT :Ping timeout: 260 seconds < 1608475596 978949 :b_jonas!~a@catv-176-63-12-34.catv.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esoteric :"anything other than C0 and C1 controls is either safe to output literally ... or else is so obviously an error" => but C1 controls are safe to output either literally or ampersane-escaped: that's allowed in both XML 1.0 and XML 1.1, unlike some C0 controls < 1608475619 852517 :b_jonas!~a@catv-176-63-12-34.catv.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esoteric :I think they're still allowed literally in an XML attribute value < 1608475773 9485 :b_jonas!~a@catv-176-63-12-34.catv.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esoteric :ais523: yes, tags definitely shouldn't always break up kerning. that would look ugly, sometimes you want an a or abbr tag for a word without changing the font, and the kerning should be right between words. < 1608475809 332583 :b_jonas!~a@catv-176-63-12-34.catv.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esoteric :UTF-5? what the heck is that? < 1608475847 290927 :b_jonas!~a@catv-176-63-12-34.catv.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esoteric :probably even ligatures should be allowed through a tag, but combining characters probably not < 1608475851 693703 :b_jonas!~a@catv-176-63-12-34.catv.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esoteric :I'm not sure < 1608475877 296772 :b_jonas!~a@catv-176-63-12-34.catv.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esoteric :"even more impressively, I tried looking up the IPs for some addresses containing C1 control codes in dig, and it rejected them due to containing invalid characters" => yes, even a lot of non-ascii punctuation is invalid in domain names < 1608475906 87321 :b_jonas!~a@catv-176-63-12-34.catv.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esoteric :and which ones differ between different versions of the spec for them apparently < 1608475956 833807 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esoteric :int-e: So basically, I failed to keep things simple this time. Oh well, it happens. < 1608475965 516259 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esoteric :hah < 1608475971 146181 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esoteric :fizzie: ^^ < 1608475998 779574 :b_jonas!~a@catv-176-63-12-34.catv.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esoteric :see http://www.madore.org/~david/weblog/d.2011-03-10.1857.html#d.2011-03-10.1857 where David Madore complains about how he bought a domain name, then it later turned out to be invalid, so the registry refused to register it or unregistered it, which is fine, but then they refused to repay him the money, even as credits < 1608476299 71886 :b_jonas!~a@catv-176-63-12-34.catv.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esoteric :"in retrospect, it was probably a mistake to include control characters in Unicode at all; Unicode itself should have restricted itself to non-control characters, and control characters should have been specified as part of the encoding not as part of the character repertoire" => um, what actual difference would that make? isn't it just difference in naming? < 1608476316 724571 :user24!~user24@2a02:810a:1440:7304:9c19:e4eb:716f:5df3 JOIN :#esoteric < 1608476340 798263 :b_jonas!~a@catv-176-63-12-34.catv.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esoteric :or would that imply that even C1 controls would be invalid in XML because they're not characters? that would be rather annoying < 1608476698 670897 :b_jonas!~a@catv-176-63-12-34.catv.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esoteric :exactly because of the problem you describe: anyone who outputs user-submitted content in XML format would have to filter out those characters, because XML readers would reject them < 1608476722 199609 :b_jonas!~a@catv-176-63-12-34.catv.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esoteric :we currently have to do this with either most C0 controls, or at least NUL, depending on whether the reader is XML 1.0 or XML 1.1 reader < 1608476786 225447 :b_jonas!~a@catv-176-63-12-34.catv.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esoteric :at least some XML readers actually refuse to read � just as specified in the standards < 1608477331 215181 :b_jonas!~a@catv-176-63-12-34.catv.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esoteric :also, as I learned, in XML attribute values, you must escape newlines, because a literal newline in an attribute value represents a space -- unlike in PCDATA, where it represents a newline. this is stupid, but you have to do it for compatibility with readers. < 1608479851 877514 :LegionMammal978!181e4e3e@c-24-30-78-62.hsd1.ga.comcast.net JOIN :#esoteric < 1608479903 828934 :LegionMammal978!181e4e3e@c-24-30-78-62.hsd1.ga.comcast.net PRIVMSG #esoteric :int-e: Regarding the twistiness of today's AoC, the first part is actually easier than I expected when writing my program. < 1608479933 402564 :LegionMammal978!181e4e3e@c-24-30-78-62.hsd1.ga.comcast.net PRIVMSG #esoteric :As it turns out, there will never be a choice regarding which edge can match to another edge. < 1608479968 589937 :LegionMammal978!181e4e3e@c-24-30-78-62.hsd1.ga.comcast.net PRIVMSG #esoteric :Therefore, you only have to find the tiles for which only two other tiles match any of its edges (forwards or in reverse). < 1608480010 586448 :LegionMammal978!181e4e3e@c-24-30-78-62.hsd1.ga.comcast.net PRIVMSG #esoteric :In the second part, however, you actually have to determine all of the individual positions and rotations. < 1608480144 230516 :LegionMammal978!181e4e3e@c-24-30-78-62.hsd1.ga.comcast.net PRIVMSG #esoteric :Originally, I had constructed a graph of all tiles with common edges, expecting that I'd to enumerate through all of the grid subgraphs. < 1608480213 225737 :LegionMammal978!181e4e3e@c-24-30-78-62.hsd1.ga.comcast.net PRIVMSG #esoteric :When I looked at the visualized graph, though, I saw that there was exactly one grid. < 1608480420 657547 :LegionMammal978!181e4e3e@c-24-30-78-62.hsd1.ga.comcast.net PRIVMSG #esoteric :b_jonas: I'd imagine that the control-character ranges would be left unassigned, just like most characters outside the BMP. < 1608480844 36934 :b_jonas!~a@catv-176-63-12-34.catv.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esoteric :LegionMammal978: ok, but I don't see why that would be better than officially assigning them to the ASCII and C1 controls < 1608481010 241623 :LegionMammal978!181e4e3e@c-24-30-78-62.hsd1.ga.comcast.net PRIVMSG #esoteric :b_jonas: Nobody ever really uses them for that, though, apart from CR, LF, and TAB. Perhaps they'd have been able to come up with some better use. < 1608481410 290513 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 JOIN :#esoteric < 1608481476 799699 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric : um, what actual difference would that make? isn't it just difference in naming? ← it would mean that each encoding would only need to be able to express control codes that were appropriate for the encoding < 1608481523 868591 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :and that control codes couldn't be passed "as text" from one program to another, you would need a side channel (this would be a good thing IMO because there's no particular reason why two Unicode users would want the same control codes) < 1608481609 587186 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :as a simple example, the string ESC % @ is a standardised control code sequence whose meaning indicates that the following text is not Unicode < 1608481628 785145 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :so it doesn't make much sense for Unicode to be able to encode it, it shouldn't logically be able to appear in a Unicode character stream < 1608481657 830698 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :but, Unicode encodings would want to be able to recognise it so that they know to switch to some other decoding mechanism < 1608481771 912618 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :oh, it's also worth mentioning that one of the three most common whitespace characters, tab, is ambiguous < 1608481801 780348 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :the traditional meaning was "tab to tab stop", and it still means that in most contexts, but in programming contexts the meaning is more like "indentation space" which is much narrower < 1608482069 507745 :LegionMammal978!181e4e3e@c-24-30-78-62.hsd1.ga.comcast.net PRIVMSG #esoteric :Really, CR and LF are also ambiguous, considering Windows' CRLF vs. Linux's LF vs. early Mac's CR < 1608482141 230492 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :I think CR to move to the next line is dead at this point < 1608482146 189822 :LegionMammal978!181e4e3e@c-24-30-78-62.hsd1.ga.comcast.net PRIVMSG #esoteric :I recall writing a patch that would always fail even after copying from the diff, and it was due to a trailing CR not surviving the copy < 1608482162 915099 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :but LF is still ambiguous between "move down one line" and "move to the start of the next line" < 1608482229 350906 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :that ambiguity got fixed via splitting LF into IND and NEL, neither of which is used very often (NEL is seen on rare occasion, IND almost never) < 1608482237 119914 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :and then made more confusing with the addition of LS < 1608482339 95487 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :hmm, Wikipedia says that IND was deprecated in 1988 and removed in 1992, maybe that's why I never see it in practice :-D < 1608482371 933887 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :that said, it is listed in the documentation for the Linux console, and thus presumably still works there < 1608482837 407568 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :gnome-terminal seems to understand both IND and NEL (encoded via either the 7-bit fallback mechanism or UTF-8) < 1608482890 891704 :LegionMammal978!181e4e3e@c-24-30-78-62.hsd1.ga.comcast.net PRIVMSG #esoteric :7-bit fallback? < 1608482914 289170 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :LegionMammal978: control codes are used for a range of different purposes, one of which was historically setting the 8-bit-ness of a terminal connection < 1608482972 750862 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :so in order to avoid a problem with trying to send a C1 control (high bit set) over a 7-bit connection, there are digraphs starting with C0 control codes that mimic the C1 control codes < 1608482977 583265 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :sort of like trigraphs in C < 1608483024 722116 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :nowadays this is the normal way to write C1 control codes when you're using them for their control-code usages, because C0 control codes have much more consistent behaviour between platforms < 1608483043 139184 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 PRIVMSG #esoteric :(also, it comes to the same number of bytes in UTF-8) < 1608483387 277869 :ais523!~ais523@unaffiliated/ais523 QUIT :Quit: quit < 1608483502 488228 :NeverBorn!~NeverBorn@93-41-17-168.ip79.fastwebnet.it JOIN :#esoteric > 1608485396 197271 PRIVMSG #esoteric :14[[07Multiply14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=79528&oldid=79198 5* 03LegionMammal978 5* (-64) 10/* Implementation */ fixed buffer overflow < 1608485960 740385 :NeverBorn!~NeverBorn@93-41-17-168.ip79.fastwebnet.it QUIT :Remote host closed the connection < 1608485979 289264 :NeverBorn!~NeverBorn@93-41-17-168.ip79.fastwebnet.it JOIN :#esoteric < 1608486272 210747 :NeverBorn!~NeverBorn@93-41-17-168.ip79.fastwebnet.it QUIT :Ping timeout: 272 seconds < 1608486298 69635 :b_jonas!~a@catv-176-63-12-34.catv.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esoteric :fungot, how will you commiserate Brexit day? < 1608486298 409318 :fungot!~fungot@unaffiliated/fizzie/bot/fungot PRIVMSG #esoteric :b_jonas: mr president, i must mention the predominantly mediterranean nature of this issue but it seems right to add, however, is that this act should be considered properly. we also call upon the commission and i personally cannot give my approval with an unequivocal " yes" vote but it seems to me that there have not been able to get here either. < 1608487091 874041 :kmc!~beehive@unaffiliated/kmcallister PRIVMSG #esoteric :i wonder if scotland will become independent from the (formerly) United Kingdom and rejoin the EU < 1608487095 144424 :kmc!~beehive@unaffiliated/kmcallister PRIVMSG #esoteric :it will be funny if brexit leads to the UK losing territory they've controlled since 1707 < 1608487735 845167 :fizzie!fis@unaffiliated/fizzie PRIVMSG #esoteric :fungot: I'm sorry to disagree, but I don't think Brexit is a predominantly mediterranean issue. < 1608487736 235201 :fungot!~fungot@unaffiliated/fizzie/bot/fungot PRIVMSG #esoteric :fizzie: mr president, i recognize that the impact of the palace killings on the stability of the future financial perspectives, mr colom i naval has suggested, then tell us off for trying to shorten the procedures as much as he talked about parliament's and the council's resolution, i also said in this house are extremely important, the intention of the commission also supports the idea of doubling the european and internationa < 1608487808 503965 :LegionMammal978!181e4e3e@c-24-30-78-62.hsd1.ga.comcast.net QUIT :Remote host closed the connection < 1608488174 130530 :b_jonas!~a@catv-176-63-12-34.catv.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esoteric :fungot, how old is Microsoft Bob? < 1608488174 344767 :fungot!~fungot@unaffiliated/fizzie/bot/fungot PRIVMSG #esoteric :b_jonas: it has recently been the case, this is deferred punishment for its lack of harmony with the principles set out in the framework of the federal republic of yugoslavia. < 1608488207 318466 :b_jonas!~a@catv-176-63-12-34.catv.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esoteric :`? bob < 1608488210 2922 :HackEso!~h@unaffiliated/fizzie/bot/hackeso PRIVMSG #esoteric :bob? ¯\(°​_o)/¯ < 1608488210 623811 :b_jonas!~a@catv-176-63-12-34.catv.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esoteric :`? microsoft bob < 1608488211 922619 :HackEso!~h@unaffiliated/fizzie/bot/hackeso PRIVMSG #esoteric :microsoft bob? ¯\(°​_o)/¯ < 1608489119 447318 :delta23!~deltaepsi@d179-68-39-184.evv.wideopenwest.com PRIVMSG #esoteric :microsoft bob is fun < 1608489124 274171 :delta23!~deltaepsi@d179-68-39-184.evv.wideopenwest.com PRIVMSG #esoteric :i like it < 1608490172 929217 :user24!~user24@2a02:810a:1440:7304:9c19:e4eb:716f:5df3 QUIT :Ping timeout: 260 seconds < 1608490478 751163 :kmc!~beehive@unaffiliated/kmcallister PRIVMSG #esoteric :i had fun playing with it when i was young < 1608490985 578187 :xelxebar!~xelxebar@gateway/tor-sasl/xelxebar QUIT :Remote host closed the connection < 1608491020 229313 :xelxebar!~xelxebar@gateway/tor-sasl/xelxebar JOIN :#esoteric < 1608492234 250769 :adu!~arobbins@c-76-111-99-194.hsd1.md.comcast.net JOIN :#esoteric > 1608492263 190193 PRIVMSG #esoteric :14[[07Ais52314]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=79529&oldid=75392 5* 03Quintopia 5* (-120) 10remove dead external link < 1608492875 717888 :delta23!~deltaepsi@d179-68-39-184.evv.wideopenwest.com QUIT :Quit: Leaving < 1608493406 498183 :Sgeo!~Sgeo@ool-18b98aa4.dyn.optonline.net JOIN :#esoteric < 1608494215 509730 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esoteric :@tell LegionMammal978 Thanks! fizzie had already pointed out what the shortcut is. < 1608494215 756632 :lambdabot!~lambdabot@haskell/bot/lambdabot PRIVMSG #esoteric :Consider it noted. < 1608495427 79489 :aaaaaa_!~ArthurStr@188.163.100.177 JOIN :#esoteric < 1608495454 421860 :aaaaaa_!~ArthurStr@188.163.100.177 QUIT :Client Quit < 1608495483 381353 :aaaaaa_!~ArthurStr@188.163.100.177 JOIN :#esoteric < 1608495506 870719 :aaaaaa_!~ArthurStr@188.163.100.177 QUIT :Client Quit < 1608495526 131185 :ArthurStrong!~ArthurStr@188.163.100.177 JOIN :#esoteric < 1608495584 544569 :ArthurStrong!~ArthurStr@188.163.100.177 PRIVMSG #esoteric :Hi all. Why denormalized/subnormalized numbers are exists at all? How they are used? (IEEE 754). < 1608495747 535621 :delta23!~deltaepsi@d179-68-39-184.evv.wideopenwest.com JOIN :#esoteric < 1608496127 694027 :dionys!dionys@gateway/shell/blinkenshell.org/x-uyltobwfoexpwewh QUIT :Quit: dionys < 1608496146 981474 :dionys!dionys@gateway/shell/blinkenshell.org/x-cmbyynfwnzrwdxod JOIN :#esoteric < 1608496455 221637 :myname!~myname@2001:41d0:1:766f::1 PRIVMSG #esoteric :how else would you add to floats with different exponent? < 1608496461 143688 :myname!~myname@2001:41d0:1:766f::1 PRIVMSG #esoteric :*two < 1608496607 170578 :grumble!~Thunderbi@freenode/staff/grumble NICK :SeasonsBeatings < 1608496762 455526 :ArthurStrong!~ArthurStr@188.163.100.177 PRIVMSG #esoteric :Dunno. Smallest float would be discarded? < 1608496895 958512 :jess!jess@freenode/staff/jess NICK :sandy-claws < 1608497092 384432 :b_jonas!~a@catv-176-63-12-34.catv.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esoteric :ArthurStrong: read the final 4th edition of TAOCP volume 2, it will explain it .... oh wait < 1608497120 462969 :b_jonas!~a@catv-176-63-12-34.catv.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esoteric :in that case, wait twenty years, then read the final 4th edition of TAOCP volume 2 < 1608497307 173223 :ArthurStrong!~ArthurStr@188.163.100.177 PRIVMSG #esoteric :b_jonas: OK < 1608497314 647631 :ArthurStrong!~ArthurStr@188.163.100.177 PRIVMSG #esoteric :ACTION forgot about DEK < 1608497966 807198 :Lykaina!~lyka@unaffiliated/schrodingerscat PART :#esoteric < 1608497980 718514 :myname!~myname@2001:41d0:1:766f::1 PRIVMSG #esoteric :ArthurStrong: so you think if i do 1 + 2 = 1*2^0 + 1*2^1 it would be perfectly fine to just drop the smaller one and return 2 as a result? < 1608498007 431528 :ArthurStrong!~ArthurStr@188.163.100.177 PRIVMSG #esoteric :myname: I just don't know. < 1608498062 743085 :ArthurStrong!~ArthurStr@188.163.100.177 PRIVMSG #esoteric :myname: but support of denormalized numbers wasn't always there. Somehow, FPUs added numbers before? < 1608498071 564729 :ArthurStrong!~ArthurStr@188.163.100.177 PRIVMSG #esoteric :So what is the difference? < 1608498075 424966 :myname!~myname@2001:41d0:1:766f::1 PRIVMSG #esoteric :ArthurStrong: well, you _could_ just make it 1*2^0 + 2*2^0 = 3*2^0 < 1608498320 286702 :TheLie!~TheLie@2a02:8106:215:3300:7285:c2ff:fe0b:917f JOIN :#esoteric > 1608499073 132333 PRIVMSG #esoteric :14[[07If the question specifies that the number of the words should be less than 3, and the number of words in your answer is larger than 3, your answer is automatically wrong.14]]4 M10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=79530&oldid=78111 5* 03PythonshellDebugwindow 5* (+2) 10/* Syntax */ Assignment > 1608499307 158801 PRIVMSG #esoteric :14[[07Viktor's amazing 4-bit processor14]]4 M10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=79531&oldid=46460 5* 03PythonshellDebugwindow 5* (+23) 10/* Other implementations */ Cat < 1608499468 238308 :Lord_of_Life!~Lord@unaffiliated/lord-of-life/x-0885362 QUIT :Excess Flood < 1608499522 220435 :Lord_of_Life!~Lord@unaffiliated/lord-of-life/x-0885362 JOIN :#esoteric > 1608499573 95251 PRIVMSG #esoteric :14[[07Cod14]]4 M10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=79532&oldid=78609 5* 03PythonshellDebugwindow 5* (+57) 10/* External resources */ cats > 1608499584 518375 PRIVMSG #esoteric :14[[07Cod14]]4 M10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=79533&oldid=79532 5* 03PythonshellDebugwindow 5* (+25) 10/* External resources */ cat > 1608499634 311145 PRIVMSG #esoteric :14[[07Kvikkalkul14]]4 M10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=79534&oldid=51382 5* 03PythonshellDebugwindow 5* (+18) 10/* External resources */ wayback < 1608499641 311607 :sprocklem!~sprocklem@unaffiliated/sprocklem JOIN :#esoteric > 1608499719 695604 PRIVMSG #esoteric :14[[07Special:Log/newusers14]]4 create10 02 5* 03Tape 5* 10New user account > 1608499898 103421 PRIVMSG #esoteric :14[[07Esolang:Introduce yourself14]]4 M10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=79535&oldid=79462 5* 03Tape 5* (+118) 10 < 1608499989 327224 :adu!~arobbins@c-76-111-99-194.hsd1.md.comcast.net QUIT :Quit: adu < 1608500008 891107 :arseniiv!~arseniiv@136.169.228.48 QUIT :Ping timeout: 260 seconds < 1608501714 153659 :FreeFull!~freefull@defocus/sausage-lover JOIN :#esoteric < 1608502316 561 :imode!~linear@unaffiliated/imode JOIN :#esoteric < 1608503089 185723 :adu!~arobbins@c-76-111-99-194.hsd1.md.comcast.net JOIN :#esoteric < 1608503946 819427 :adu!~arobbins@c-76-111-99-194.hsd1.md.comcast.net QUIT :Quit: adu > 1608504416 797715 PRIVMSG #esoteric :14[[07(())14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=79536&oldid=70058 5* 03Tape 5* (+988) 10 > 1608504519 538652 PRIVMSG #esoteric :14[[07(())14]]4 M10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=79537&oldid=79536 5* 03Tape 5* (+50) 10 > 1608504808 156647 PRIVMSG #esoteric :14[[07(())14]]4 M10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=79538&oldid=79537 5* 03Tape 5* (+15) 10 > 1608504894 100614 PRIVMSG #esoteric :14[[07(())14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=79539&oldid=79538 5* 03Tape 5* (+2) 10/* Interpreter */ > 1608505424 425097 PRIVMSG #esoteric :14[[07Trivial brainfuck substitution14]]4 M10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=79540&oldid=77816 5* 03Tape 5* (-1) 10/* Example Members of the TrivialBrainfuckSubstitution family */ fixed an error < 1608505578 986447 :Arcorann_!~awych@159-196-65-46.9fc441.mel.nbn.aussiebb.net JOIN :#esoteric < 1608507256 618798 :FreeFull!~freefull@defocus/sausage-lover QUIT :Quit: Rebbbooot < 1608507420 155412 :FreeFull!~freefull@defocus/sausage-lover JOIN :#esoteric < 1608508390 492136 :adu!~arobbins@c-76-111-99-194.hsd1.md.comcast.net JOIN :#esoteric