< 1648516638 35822 :sprout!~quassel@2a02:a467:ccd6:1:950:287b:c4be:ac00 QUIT :Ping timeout: 260 seconds < 1648518953 35587 :dnm!uid401311@id-401311.lymington.irccloud.com JOIN #esolangs dnm :dnm < 1648521441 381752 :Keyon!~Keyon@2606:54c0:76e0:ce0::c:31e JOIN #esolangs * :[https://web.libera.chat] Keyon < 1648521461 356825 :Keyon49!~Keyon@2606:54c0:76a0:ce0::c:304 JOIN #esolangs * :[https://web.libera.chat] Keyon < 1648521475 805321 :PyMaster22!~pymaster2@mobile-166-137-149-208.mycingular.net JOIN #esolangs * :PyMaster22 < 1648521488 327756 :PyMaster22!~pymaster2@mobile-166-137-149-208.mycingular.net PRIVMSG #esolangs :Test < 1648521489 694082 :Keyon!~Keyon@2606:54c0:76e0:ce0::c:31e QUIT :Client Quit < 1648521509 284972 :Keyon49!~Keyon@2606:54c0:76a0:ce0::c:304 PRIVMSG #esolangs :Hi! < 1648521546 620678 :Keyon49!~Keyon@2606:54c0:76a0:ce0::c:304 QUIT :Client Quit < 1648521563 357144 :Keyon!~Keyon@2606:54c0:76a0:ce0::c:304 JOIN #esolangs * :[https://web.libera.chat] Keyon < 1648521586 293930 :Keyon!~Keyon@2606:54c0:76a0:ce0::c:304 PRIVMSG #esolangs :Could of not kicked me out 😒 < 1648521661 780794 :Keyon!~Keyon@2606:54c0:76a0:ce0::c:304 QUIT :Client Quit > 1648527817 716005 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07SYNTHESIZE14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=94318&oldid=94188 5* 03Lemonz 5* (+117) 10/* FizzBuzz */ > 1648528434 284730 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07I walk away!14]]4 N10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?oldid=94319 5* 03Lemonz 5* (+2535) 10Created page with "'''I walk away!''' Is an esoteric that does a few things, but the main problem being that when you try to do anything, the console's contents, well, walk away. So trying to us..." > 1648528456 452991 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07User:Lemonz14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=94320&oldid=94251 5* 03Lemonz 5* (+19) 10/* Actually a thing language */ > 1648530881 983722 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Atomless set computation14]]4 N10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?oldid=94321 5* 03Peter 5* (+150) 10Created page with "''Atomless set computation'' (not lowercased unless at the beginning of a sentence) is an [[esoteric programming language]] designed by [[User:Peter]." > 1648530908 109487 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Q-SET14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=94322&oldid=94310 5* 03Peter 5* (-2) 10 > 1648530913 524437 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Q-SET14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=94323&oldid=94322 5* 03Peter 5* (+4) 10 > 1648530948 223645 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Atomless set computation14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=94324&oldid=94321 5* 03Peter 5* (-150) 10Blanked the page < 1648531170 984650 :zzo38!~zzo38@host-24-207-14-22.public.eastlink.ca PRIVMSG #esolangs :Also sometimes if a book contains tables with some numeric data that could also easily be derived in another way, using simple calculations, even if the original text is copyright. < 1648534597 24338 :sprout!~quassel@2a02:a467:ccd6:1:950:287b:c4be:ac00 JOIN #esolangs * :anon < 1648535217 56384 :Everything!~Everythin@37.115.210.35 JOIN #esolangs * :Everything < 1648536309 791165 :Sgeo!~Sgeo@user/sgeo JOIN #esolangs Sgeo :realname < 1648536530 950502 :Sgeo__!~Sgeo@user/sgeo QUIT :Ping timeout: 272 seconds < 1648539556 951298 :Sgeo!~Sgeo@user/sgeo QUIT :Read error: Connection reset by peer < 1648540066 53594 :dyeplexer!~dyeplexer@user/dyeplexer JOIN #esolangs dyeplexer :realname > 1648543522 311462 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Q set14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=94325&oldid=94307 5* 03Peter 5* (+19) 10 > 1648543529 103962 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Q set14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=94326&oldid=94325 5* 03Peter 5* (-19) 10 < 1648544393 52554 :dyeplexer!~dyeplexer@user/dyeplexer QUIT :Ping timeout: 260 seconds < 1648545102 3352 :dyeplexer!~dyeplexer@user/dyeplexer JOIN #esolangs dyeplexer :realname > 1648546773 151706 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Nors14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=94327&oldid=79369 5* 03Kaveh Yousefi 5* (+158) 10Added a hyperlink to my implementation of the Nors programming language on GitHub and changed the category tag Unimplemented to Implemented. > 1648546894 392106 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Nors14]]4 M10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=94328&oldid=94327 5* 03Kaveh Yousefi 5* (+36) 10Amended the formatting by rendering identifiers italic. < 1648548761 950593 :__monty__!~toonn@user/toonn JOIN #esolangs toonn :Unknown < 1648552249 52557 :razetime!~quassel@117.254.35.62 JOIN #esolangs razetime :razetime < 1648555523 41835 :Everything!~Everythin@37.115.210.35 QUIT :Ping timeout: 260 seconds < 1648555614 626011 :Everything!~Everythin@37.115.210.35 JOIN #esolangs * :Everything < 1648556099 926936 :dyeplexer!~dyeplexer@user/dyeplexer QUIT :Ping timeout: 260 seconds < 1648556798 62926 :atrapa!~q@181.202.165.83.dynamic.reverse-mundo-r.com JOIN #esolangs atrapa :q < 1648556955 178136 :Everything!~Everythin@37.115.210.35 QUIT :Quit: leaving < 1648558682 470 :definitelya!~hexagon@host-87-18-180-80.retail.telecomitalia.it JOIN #esolangs * :WRATH < 1648559244 616779 :razetime!~quassel@117.254.35.62 QUIT :Read error: Connection reset by peer < 1648559293 19055 :tromp!~textual@dhcp-077-249-230-040.chello.nl QUIT :Ping timeout: 272 seconds > 1648559861 315178 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Implieses14]]4 M10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=94329&oldid=93800 5* 03Kaveh Yousefi 5* (+36) 10Amended the formatting by rendering identifiers italic. < 1648559933 423373 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :ACTION wonders what fizzie thinks of https://nitter.eu/ariadneconill/status/1508696919786328068#m < 1648559960 380310 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :Without looking, I guessed that was that tirade about the Go standard library. < 1648559986 59278 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :Well, and/or Google SWE interviews. < 1648559989 426330 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :Good guess > 1648560001 264922 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Soul14]]4 M10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=94330&oldid=94311 5* 03Marco Devillers 5* (+16) 10clarity < 1648560006 867596 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :I had read it earlier today. < 1648560074 409398 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :I'm torn on algorithms... it can't hurt to know them but so much software engineering is about understanding interfaces of opaque libraries these days... < 1648560122 912668 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :...and in that context, knowing algorithms just feeds the NIH syndrome. < 1648560159 103519 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :("this isn't quite ideal for what we want, and we *can* implement our own") < 1648560168 590657 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :FWIW, I don't really understand what "that append is probably asymptotic O(n), so you probably want to prepend and then reverse" is trying to say. < 1648560191 683536 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :I didn't understand that either... it's not a linked list < 1648560210 592304 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :if it /were/ a linked list, then it would make sense < 1648560249 709224 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :And the Python example -- list(set(x)) -- is probably much closer to the disparaged "use a map" answer, isn't a Python set basically a hashmap? Well, I guess I don't know that. < 1648560269 281778 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :fizzie: but I really meant the SWE interview part. < 1648560271 955477 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :(Except obviously rather more concise than the version with a Go map.) < 1648560282 980097 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :Well. I've been doing a bunch lately, as it happens. < 1648560312 472040 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :And... obviously this tweet is a shitpost :) < 1648560315 75469 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :I haven't asked about sorting a list, and if I did, I would expect TC to say they'd use their language's sort function. < 1648560348 473732 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :(TC is short for "the candidate", and is the canonical gender-neutral term in our interview feedback.) < 1648560427 903871 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :. o O ( Batcher's odd-even merging on a GPU ) < 1648560470 442868 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :Obviously that's not the default answer :) < 1648560528 172822 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :It's certainly true that we do ask quite a lot of "algorithm" questions. From the interview schedules I've seen, typically 3 out of the 5 interviews for general SWE candidates are one of those. < 1648560621 610445 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :I think the official rationale for the policy is that there's research (both internal and external) saying it's... well, while it's a *bad* predictor for future success, it's not substantially worse than the others people have tried. < 1648560667 919678 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :I suppose it gauges interest in programming to some extent < 1648560725 199759 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :I didn't spend any time preparing for my own interviews back when, FWIW. (I've also pretty much forgotten what I was asked.) < 1648560841 804198 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :At least some subset of those "missing bits of the Go standard library" will probably land in the WIP generic https://pkg.go.dev/golang.org/x/exp/slices package, now that generics are a thing. < 1648560906 269489 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :In particular, Ariadne's dedup is `slices.Sort(in); slices.Compact(in);` with that package. < 1648560952 876365 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :Compact() then... that dedup assumes a sorted input < 1648560966 429810 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :No, it's got a `sort.Strings(in)` in it. < 1648560985 442978 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :Ah, up there. < 1648561008 336213 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :I don't know why I missed it... focussed on the loop I guess. < 1648561013 955595 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :my bad., < 1648561049 829603 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :The standard library `sort` package has a handful of pre-baked functions for special slice types, namely sort.Float64s, sort.Ints and sort.Strings, as a sort of a bankrupt man's generics. < 1648561062 917579 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :(Even less than a poor man's. That's sort.Slice, instead.) < 1648561095 863163 :razetime!~quassel@117.254.35.62 JOIN #esolangs razetime :razetime < 1648561181 936979 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :I wrote `SortBy` the other day to complement slices.Sort and slices.SortFunc, as a sort of a (trivial) exercise to start getting a little familiar with Go generics: https://go.dev/play/p/10B41WQMj_9 < 1648561198 756872 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :The type constraint system feels a little quirky to me. < 1648561267 712205 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :Go really doesn't believe in punctuation, does it... < 1648561286 540844 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :. o O ( U: constraints.Ordered ) < 1648561328 399101 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :Yeah, that's an interface defined in a library as the full set of all primitive types that you can apply < to. ;) < 1648561356 335196 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :I meant the lack of ":" in the actual syntax < 1648561394 622146 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :Yeah. Well, atleast [] type parameters are consistent with () function parameters in the lack of punctuation. < 1648561432 393168 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :yeah and the absence of ; for separating statements and so on < 1648561457 723187 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :It's not /really/ a complaint. But I do find it a bit awkward :P < 1648561467 150237 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :The semicolons are actually there in the formal syntax, they're just inserted by a rule rather than written explicitly in the source. < 1648561479 908343 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :You could write them, but gofmt would keep taking them out as fast as you could type them in. < 1648561492 151465 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :Rust does have colons, and I do prefer that. < 1648561520 919096 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :gofmt even forcibly line-separates `if x { a; b }` into `if x {` newline `a` newline `b` newline `}`. But it is what it is. < 1648561524 167731 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :Also statement separators; I feel less strongly about those because of Python and Haskell I guess. < 1648561553 926918 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :(But it'd be valid Go to write the one with a single line and a semicolon too, just not canonically formatted Go.) < 1648561595 142539 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :Given the de-facto standard nature of gofmt, it's probably a good question on whether it even matters separating statements "manually" by semicolons is valid. Like that tree-in-a-forest-sound thing. < 1648561617 32308 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :Looking at the actual code... how hard would it be to pull off https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schwartzian_transform ? < 1648561661 782764 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :I guess that's a matter of having a generic 'map' function or not... < 1648561686 845175 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs ::t map snd . sort . map (?f &&& id) < 1648561687 883417 :lambdabot!~lambdabot@haskell/bot/lambdabot PRIVMSG #esolangs :(Ord a1, Ord a2, ?f::a2 -> a1) => [a2] -> [a2] < 1648561731 786875 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs ::t map snd . sortBy (comparing fst) . map (?f &&& id) < 1648561733 8245 :lambdabot!~lambdabot@haskell/bot/lambdabot PRIVMSG #esolangs :(Ord a1, ?f::a2 -> a1) => [a2] -> [a2] < 1648561772 230454 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :Yeah, I don't think there's a slices.Map actually. Go folks aren't functional programmers. :) < 1648561787 574968 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :sortBy being SortFunc. Your SortBy is sortOn < 1648561837 735052 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :Hmm, not sure where I got the "by" from, for that. It's called "key" in Python. < 1648561843 706467 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :Rust, somehow, has quite a few functional patterns. It's... nice, really. I'm afraid the compiler isn't doing a great job optimizing them atm though... I should look at some assembly code to confirm. < 1648561931 614170 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/iter/struct.Map.html <-- this gives a `map` on iterators < 1648562040 455365 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :Aw... I thought https://go.dev/play/p/tSwLz-6lZ5l would be the Go-ish way of doing that, but "type declarations inside generic functions are not currently supported". :/ < 1648562043 800789 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :I do think that the choice between `by` and `on` is quite arbitrary here. < 1648562108 327231 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :That's a shame, because it works if you just manually substitute that in: https://go.dev/play/p/G5ZaZlm6-Wg -- but that looks *ridiculous*. < 1648562139 495270 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :I think in practice if you'd want to do that with Go, since it's so "low-level" anyway, you'd just use a separate slice to store the mapped values. < 1648562182 62170 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :but how do you track the association then, hmm < 1648562204 84752 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :unless you're reimplementing the full sorting algorithm I guess < 1648562223 693837 :b_jonas!~x@catv-176-63-4-13.catv.fixed.vodafone.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :oh come on, everyone knows that sort library functions are redundant, you can just write them form array indexing and indexed assignment => https://dpaste.com/DWPH4PLEX < 1648562241 529101 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :ah well... things are happening. maybe Go will be more usable a year from now as a result :P < 1648562278 624467 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :int-e: You could implement sort.Interface, which tells the sort algorithm how to swap, and have it swap both slices in sync. < 1648562320 710898 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :I'm not going to try that out with generics though, because I need to go grocery shopping. < 1648562389 835991 :b_jonas!~x@catv-176-63-4-13.catv.fixed.vodafone.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :it helps here that VBA can assign a whole struct as a single value < 1648562437 64957 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :But I think you could "easily" have a `type slicePair[T any, U constraints.Ordered] struct { vals []T; keys []U }` that implements sort.Interface. < 1648562448 413770 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :Meaning no need for a copy of the original values. < 1648562498 468635 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :b_jonas: ugh... is that a stack-less bottom up merge sort? < 1648562508 451672 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :I think it is... looks nasty < 1648562549 568213 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :(and it explains why the scratch space is twice as big as the input) < 1648562550 626259 :b_jonas!~x@catv-176-63-4-13.catv.fixed.vodafone.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :int-e: something like that, a two-way natural mergesort. the trick for implementing it is to just look it up in Knuth. and be careful if your comparison function is not known to be well-behaved. < 1648562604 447043 :b_jonas!~x@catv-176-63-4-13.catv.fixed.vodafone.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :I think that's what you mean by stackless, there's no index of stacks or fixed (eg. power of two) sizes of runs < 1648562612 713188 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :it should be parsimonious... so there should be no trouble from bad comparison functions [sure, the result won't be sorted, but that's the price you pay] < 1648562629 578247 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :the runs are powers of two < 1648562633 364265 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :that's the rz variable < 1648562662 827614 :b_jonas!~x@catv-176-63-4-13.catv.fixed.vodafone.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :ah you'ree right < 1648562666 867429 :b_jonas!~x@catv-176-63-4-13.catv.fixed.vodafone.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :I have no idea how this thing worked < 1648562671 874791 :b_jonas!~x@catv-176-63-4-13.catv.fixed.vodafone.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :I wrote it like half a year ago < 1648562690 548062 :b_jonas!~x@catv-176-63-4-13.catv.fixed.vodafone.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :yeah, it's a power of two thing, not a natural merge < 1648562692 9572 :b_jonas!~x@catv-176-63-4-13.catv.fixed.vodafone.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :sorry < 1648562732 4837 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :no worries < 1648562794 696777 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :fizzie: ah, having swaps as part of the interface makes sense... but I didn't know go does that (and I'm not sure I've seen anyone else do it either) < 1648562925 535751 :b_jonas!~x@catv-176-63-4-13.catv.fixed.vodafone.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :of course the problem with this is that you have to copy that code for each different type of struct that you define < 1648562955 199312 :b_jonas!~x@catv-176-63-4-13.catv.fixed.vodafone.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :and for each array too, if you want to be able to sort more than one array, or at least write a helper that copies an array to/from the sort buffer < 1648562984 32015 :b_jonas!~x@catv-176-63-4-13.catv.fixed.vodafone.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :mind you, VBA is an interpreted language were you can implement string-eval so you could automate that, but that's nasty < 1648563030 309179 :b_jonas!~x@catv-176-63-4-13.catv.fixed.vodafone.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :and that only works if you make your array public and so assign a unique name < 1648563067 281569 :razetime!~quassel@117.254.35.62 QUIT :Remote host closed the connection < 1648563083 198255 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :int-e: It had to be done: https://go.dev/play/p/NclyObFyha1 < 1648563097 257239 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :But now I do need to go. < 1648563132 49068 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :(In fact, that was surprisingly painless.) < 1648563205 81561 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :FTR, the reason why the constraints are [S ~[]T, T any, U ...] rather than just [T any, U ...] and then making the method take a []T is that with the "approximate" matcher ~, you can also use the function on a new defined type with an underlying type of []T. Otherwise you could only sort a slice, not a `type customThing []foo`. > 1648564043 973457 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[0714]]4 M10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=94331&oldid=94293 5* 03ColorfulGalaxy 5* (+72) 10Today is the first birthday of ColorfulGabrielsp138's account on LifeWiki forum. > 1648564486 851756 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Soul14]]4 M10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=94332&oldid=94330 5* 03Marco Devillers 5* (+38) 10clarify > 1648564505 338561 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Soul14]]4 M10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=94333&oldid=94332 5* 03Marco Devillers 5* (+2) 10typo < 1648564565 661993 :Franciman!~Franciman@mx1.fracta.dev QUIT :Remote host closed the connection > 1648564610 477 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Soul14]]4 M10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=94334&oldid=94333 5* 03Marco Devillers 5* (-1) 10minor < 1648564967 587995 :sprout!~quassel@2a02:a467:ccd6:1:950:287b:c4be:ac00 PRIVMSG #esolangs :right, need to spell everything out < 1648564969 791432 :sprout!~quassel@2a02:a467:ccd6:1:950:287b:c4be:ac00 PRIVMSG #esolangs :ah well < 1648565329 594368 :Sgeo!~Sgeo@user/sgeo JOIN #esolangs Sgeo :realname < 1648565438 619568 :Franciman!~Franciman@mx1.fracta.dev JOIN #esolangs Franciman :Franciman < 1648565743 72639 :razetime!~quassel@117.254.35.62 JOIN #esolangs razetime :razetime < 1648566030 540731 :dyeplexer!~dyeplexer@user/dyeplexer JOIN #esolangs dyeplexer :realname < 1648566788 281831 :atrapa!~q@181.202.165.83.dynamic.reverse-mundo-r.com QUIT :Quit: atrapa > 1648566965 464521 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Soul14]]4 M10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=94335&oldid=94334 5* 03Marco Devillers 5* (+59) 10clarify < 1648568282 487258 :razetime!~quassel@117.254.35.62 QUIT :Remote host closed the connection < 1648568679 814833 :razetime!~quassel@117.254.35.62 JOIN #esolangs razetime :razetime > 1648568857 569105 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Soul14]]4 M10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=94336&oldid=94335 5* 03Marco Devillers 5* (-37) 10old wording was better < 1648569615 932661 :tech_exorcist!13203@user/tech-exorcist/x-0447479 JOIN #esolangs tech_exorcist :he/him - IT, EN > 1648574336 404677 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[0725514]]4 N10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?oldid=94337 5* 03AceKiron 5* (+2066) 10Created page with "{{WIP}} '''255''' is an [[esoteric programming language]] developed by [[User:AceKiron]] where operations are represented by a single byte. Currently available operators are:..." < 1648574368 763461 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :Heh, "need to go", I wasn't even aware that was a pun. > 1648574382 305428 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[0725514]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=94338&oldid=94337 5* 03AceKiron 5* (-49) 10 < 1648574432 869172 :fowl!~fowlmouth@user/fowl PRIVMSG #esolangs :this all seems very esoteric to me < 1648574719 34561 :razetime!~quassel@117.254.35.62 QUIT :Quit: https://quassel-irc.org - Chat comfortably. Anywhere. < 1648575264 471164 :definitelya!~hexagon@host-87-18-180-80.retail.telecomitalia.it QUIT :Remote host closed the connection < 1648575382 61397 :definitelya!~hexagon@host-87-18-180-80.retail.telecomitalia.it JOIN #esolangs * :WRATH < 1648575788 147171 :CATS!apic@brezn3.muc.ccc.de QUIT :Remote host closed the connection < 1648577171 746992 :CATS!apic@brezn3.muc.ccc.de JOIN #esolangs * :A. Pic. - my name since YOLD 3149 > 1648577709 805337 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Q-SET14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=94339&oldid=94323 5* 03Peter 5* (+23) 10 > 1648577715 357136 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Q-SET14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=94340&oldid=94339 5* 03Peter 5* (-2) 10 < 1648577849 507314 :dyeplexer!~dyeplexer@user/dyeplexer QUIT :Ping timeout: 252 seconds > 1648577985 838870 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Q-SET14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=94341&oldid=94340 5* 03Peter 5* (+338) 10 > 1648580107 222423 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07User:AceKiron14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=94342&oldid=88025 5* 03AceKiron 5* (+12) 10 < 1648580394 115592 :PyMaster22!~pymaster2@mobile-166-137-149-208.mycingular.net QUIT :Read error: Connection reset by peer < 1648580967 343886 :atrapa!~q@181.202.165.83.dynamic.reverse-mundo-r.com JOIN #esolangs atrapa :q < 1648581200 354266 :Bluefourier!~Bluefouri@cpc1-cdif17-2-0-cust72.5-1.cable.virginm.net JOIN #esolangs * :[https://web.libera.chat] Bluefourier < 1648581233 104278 :Bluefourier!~Bluefouri@cpc1-cdif17-2-0-cust72.5-1.cable.virginm.net QUIT :Client Quit < 1648584761 970906 :Lord_of_Life_!~Lord@user/lord-of-life/x-2819915 JOIN #esolangs Lord_of_Life :Lord < 1648584817 802501 :Lord_of_Life!~Lord@user/lord-of-life/x-2819915 QUIT :Ping timeout: 246 seconds < 1648584926 140600 :Lord_of_Life_!~Lord@user/lord-of-life/x-2819915 NICK :Lord_of_Life < 1648585981 17336 :tech_exorcist!13203@user/tech-exorcist/x-0447479 QUIT :Quit: Disconnecting < 1648586723 373394 :atrapa!~q@181.202.165.83.dynamic.reverse-mundo-r.com QUIT :Quit: atrapa < 1648586771 339669 :immibis!~hexchat@62.156.144.218 QUIT :Remote host closed the connection < 1648586865 379272 :immibis!~hexchat@62.156.144.218 JOIN #esolangs immibis :realname < 1648587564 548487 :immibis!~hexchat@62.156.144.218 QUIT :Remote host closed the connection < 1648587596 101831 :immibis!~hexchat@62.156.144.218 JOIN #esolangs immibis :realname < 1648589763 756079 :definitelya!~hexagon@host-87-18-180-80.retail.telecomitalia.it QUIT :Quit: h < 1648596493 889501 :__monty__!~toonn@user/toonn QUIT :Quit: leaving > 1648596642 563899 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07I walk away!14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=94343&oldid=94319 5* 03Lemonz 5* (+123) 10/* FizzBuzz */ > 1648597218 294115 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Recusion Limit Gone14]]4 N10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?oldid=94344 5* 03Lemonz 5* (+537) 10Created page with "'''Recusion Limit Gone''' Is an esoteric with no recursion limit and is able to understand human English, it can also support any single esoteric. However, as of writing they..." > 1648597253 607546 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Recusion Limit Gone14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=94345&oldid=94344 5* 03Lemonz 5* (-14) 10 > 1648597362 288257 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Recursion limit gone14]]4 N10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?oldid=94346 5* 03Lemonz 5* (+62) 10Redirected page to [[Recursion Limit Gone]] > 1648597429 198754 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Recursion limit gone14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=94347&oldid=94346 5* 03Lemonz 5* (+342) 10Removed redirect to [[Recursion Limit Gone]] > 1648597444 724571 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Recursion limit gone14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=94348&oldid=94347 5* 03Lemonz 5* (+0) 10 > 1648597474 545206 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Recusion Limit Gone14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=94349&oldid=94345 5* 03Lemonz 5* (-464) 10Redirected page to [[Recursion limit gone]] > 1648597538 38366 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Recusion Limit Gone14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=94350&oldid=94349 5* 03Lemonz 5* (+200) 10 > 1648597658 185832 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07User:Lemonz14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=94351&oldid=94320 5* 03Lemonz 5* (+27) 10/* My focus: joke languages!!! */