> 1631837182 34873 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Cammy14]]4 M10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=88084&oldid=88083 5* 03Corbin 5* (+355) 10/* Functors */ Remove formerly-primitive functors and explain how to define custom functors. < 1631837536 343657 :arseniiv_!~arseniiv@136.169.204.31 QUIT :Ping timeout: 252 seconds < 1631838797 538102 :oerjan!oerjan@sprocket.nvg.ntnu.no QUIT :Quit: Nite < 1631841039 575790 :joast!~rick@cpe-98-146-112-4.natnow.res.rr.com QUIT :Quit: Leaving. < 1631841418 350020 :joast!~rick@cpe-98-146-112-4.natnow.res.rr.com JOIN #esolangs joast :purple < 1631842511 989899 :delta23_!~delta23@user/delta23 JOIN #esolangs delta23 :delta23__ < 1631842561 843660 :delta23!~delta23@user/delta23 QUIT :Ping timeout: 252 seconds < 1631842569 154263 :delta23_!~delta23@user/delta23 NICK :delta23 < 1631843396 16909 :delta23!~delta23@user/delta23 QUIT :Remote host closed the connection < 1631843420 989646 :delta23!~delta23@user/delta23 JOIN #esolangs delta23 :delta23__ < 1631844000 999928 :delta23!~delta23@user/delta23 QUIT :Remote host closed the connection < 1631844043 973565 :delta23!~delta23@user/delta23 JOIN #esolangs delta23 :delta23__ < 1631845021 245724 :zzo38!~zzo38@host-24-207-14-22.public.eastlink.ca PRIVMSG #esolangs :What I can think of for when you want to insert one item in a proper sorted position in a double linked list can be: you can start on one end, or you can start on both ends, or you can start on the middle. < 1631845130 134204 :zzo38!~zzo38@host-24-207-14-22.public.eastlink.ca PRIVMSG #esolangs :Is there a better way? < 1631846611 404738 :op_4!~op_4@user/op-4/x-9116473 QUIT :Ping timeout: 252 seconds < 1631846852 752700 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :Sometimes people do that thing where they keep a pointer to the single most recently added (or used) node, so that when they need to find an item (or a place) in the list, they can pick as start points either one of the ends or that most recently added item, depending on which is "closest" (assuming that can be measured). The thinking is, often things that get added close to each other are < 1631846854 361286 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :related. < 1631846994 759447 :zzo38!~zzo38@host-24-207-14-22.public.eastlink.ca PRIVMSG #esolangs :OK, that make sense < 1631847864 953026 :delta23!~delta23@user/delta23 QUIT :Ping timeout: 265 seconds < 1631848235 597684 :Bowserinator!Bowserinat@hellomouse/dev/bowserinator QUIT :Ping timeout: 260 seconds < 1631848300 982609 :Bowserinator!Bowserinat@hellomouse/dev/bowserinator JOIN #esolangs Bowserinator :No VPS :( < 1631848346 642069 :shachaf!~shachaf@user/shachaf PRIVMSG #esolangs :By the way, what do you do about the fact that "naively" inserting into a B-tree in sorted order produces a maximal-space (every node half-full) tree? < 1631848371 856247 :shachaf!~shachaf@user/shachaf PRIVMSG #esolangs :I've seen people address it with a special case behavior for inserting at the very last element of the tree. < 1631848406 202393 :shachaf!~shachaf@user/shachaf PRIVMSG #esolangs :But I'd like something more general that can also address inserting in reversed order, and probably fancier patterns. < 1631848920 633896 :hendursaga!~weechat@user/hendursaga QUIT :Ping timeout: 276 seconds < 1631848925 635299 :hendursa1!~weechat@user/hendursaga JOIN #esolangs hendursaga :weechat < 1631849557 985789 :delta23!~delta23@user/delta23 JOIN #esolangs delta23 :delta23__ < 1631849559 959190 :zzo38!~zzo38@host-24-207-14-22.public.eastlink.ca PRIVMSG #esolangs :The latest issue of 2600 mentions post-quantum cryptography, and they mention ambiguous keys. It says: "Block cipher systems which have ambiguous keys generally have the property that the key size is larger than the block size." < 1631849617 355118 :zzo38!~zzo38@host-24-207-14-22.public.eastlink.ca PRIVMSG #esolangs :Well, I think, if you use a hash function in CFB, OFB, or CTR mode, then the key can be as longer as you want to be, or maybe even combining these modes < 1631849748 45364 :zzo38!~zzo38@host-24-207-14-22.public.eastlink.ca PRIVMSG #esolangs :They also mention putting random data in a part of the block before encryption. I also had a similar idea but my idea was to use irregular and misaligned random padding, including codes (part of the text before being encrypted) to detect this. < 1631850028 198722 :zzo38!~zzo38@host-24-207-14-22.public.eastlink.ca PRIVMSG #esolangs :Depending on what requirements, there are other possibilities such as to somehow shuffle the message before encrypting it (but after applying the random padding and codes), in a way which can be reversed < 1631850234 277650 :sebbu!~sebbu@user/sebbu QUIT :Quit: Quitte < 1631853472 51659 :ecs!ecs@user/ecs QUIT :Remote host closed the connection > 1631853489 395748 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Brainfuck14]]4 M10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=88085&oldid=87637 5* 03Pipythonmc 5* (+43) 10/* Self-interpreters */ Fix dead link (changed to wayback machine snapshot) < 1631854275 647714 :ecs!ecs@user/ecs JOIN #esolangs ecs :ecs < 1631854547 450137 :sebbu!~sebbu@user/sebbu JOIN #esolangs sebbu :sebbu > 1631855782 831032 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Brainfuck14]]4 M10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=88086&oldid=88085 5* 03Pipythonmc 5* (+42) 10/* External resources */ Fix broken link (change to wayback archived page) < 1631857534 324486 :imode!~imode@user/imode QUIT :Ping timeout: 252 seconds < 1631859202 938926 :tromp!~textual@dhcp-077-249-230-040.chello.nl JOIN #esolangs * :Textual User < 1631859819 150457 :tromp!~textual@dhcp-077-249-230-040.chello.nl QUIT :Quit: My iMac has gone to sleep. ZZZzzz… < 1631861332 315352 :tromp!~textual@dhcp-077-249-230-040.chello.nl JOIN #esolangs * :Textual User < 1631862311 539872 :Sgeo!~Sgeo@user/sgeo QUIT :Read error: Connection reset by peer < 1631862325 451215 :Sgeo!~Sgeo@user/sgeo JOIN #esolangs Sgeo :realname < 1631862867 980201 :delta23!~delta23@user/delta23 QUIT :Remote host closed the connection < 1631862886 652345 :delta23!~delta23@user/delta23 JOIN #esolangs delta23 :delta23__ < 1631863758 746816 :Sgeo!~Sgeo@user/sgeo QUIT :Read error: Connection reset by peer < 1631865148 603958 :Trieste!T@user/pilgrim JOIN #esolangs pilgrim :T < 1631865955 634235 :hendursaga!~weechat@user/hendursaga JOIN #esolangs hendursaga :weechat < 1631866158 629276 :hendursa1!~weechat@user/hendursaga QUIT :Ping timeout: 276 seconds < 1631866782 645862 :imode!~imode@user/imode JOIN #esolangs imode :imode < 1631868905 938706 :Koen!~Koen@77.192.201.77.rev.sfr.net JOIN #esolangs * :Koen < 1631869751 257271 :riv!~river@tilde.team/user/river QUIT :Quit: Leaving < 1631869836 339402 :riv!~river@tilde.team/user/river JOIN #esolangs river :river < 1631870280 159274 :b_jonas!~x@catv-176-63-3-104.catv.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :oh great, they're back under a slightly different name < 1631870299 439263 :b_jonas!~x@catv-176-63-3-104.catv.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :the date md5 checksum guy that is < 1631870425 685751 :riv!~river@tilde.team/user/river PRIVMSG #esolangs :omg < 1631870429 689871 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :md5 checksum... oh the programming puzzle stuff < 1631871229 653744 :b_jonas!~x@catv-176-63-3-104.catv.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :int-e: yes. the spec as quoted doesn't explicitly state md5, but it gives a full checksum and there's a matching solution if you use md5 so I assume they just left out that part < 1631871362 630084 :imode!~imode@user/imode QUIT :Ping timeout: 260 seconds < 1631871382 395749 :b_jonas!~x@catv-176-63-3-104.catv.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :I have a weird idea. you know these modern language models that the AI research folks are experimenting with, like GPT-2 or the ones that generate faces or dog pictures? you could use those to make the modern equivalent of a Chef/Piet style language. take a model and make sure it can be decoded then encoded losslessly by throwing in an arithmetic coder if necessary, write your program in a golfing < 1631871388 764416 :b_jonas!~x@catv-176-63-3-104.catv.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :language and *decode* it with the model to get your actual source code, bang you have an esolang that represents programs as English text or machine-generated dog pictures. < 1631871457 623859 :b_jonas!~x@catv-176-63-3-104.catv.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :for #esolangs purposes, we probably have to use one of fungоt's (or words's) models, since they've been stable for years and widely used so can be considered canonical. then we'd get a programming language where the source code looks like a European parliament speech or an IRC conversation about Scheme < 1631871532 296542 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :b_jonas: eh I'm just glad they (apparently) decided that #esolangs isn't for them < 1631871637 116702 :b_jonas!~x@catv-176-63-3-104.catv.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :int-e: possible, but I wouldn't be so hasty in that conclusion. they may just have learned not to ask the same question on many channels at the same time, so that they can continue saying the "my solution in is" thing with higher probability < 1631871654 379005 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :the language model thing... feels squishy (eww). < 1631871683 826338 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :true, social engineering is hard < 1631871738 62290 :b_jonas!~x@catv-176-63-3-104.catv.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :if you don't want anything modern, I could use my old steganography thing https://www.perlmonks.com/?node_id=877696 , to have an esolang where your source code can look like your favourite text, and only the whitespace in the source code matters for the actual program meaning < 1631871941 752625 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :oh another thought... aren't you just reinventing copilot ;-) < 1631871957 560065 :b_jonas!~x@catv-176-63-3-104.catv.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :you could even train a model on corporate style Java programs, or programs on github, or code on StackOverflow, and use that model to make a language whose source code looks like Java. of course there are easier and more practical ways to make a language that looks like Java. < 1631871962 487365 :b_jonas!~x@catv-176-63-3-104.catv.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :int-e: yeah, possible\ < 1631872011 642342 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :My issue is, I prefer things to have a clear specification. Putting a NN in the pipeline utterly destroys that property. < 1631872073 688218 :b_jonas!~x@catv-176-63-3-104.catv.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :int-e: it doesn't need to be a NN. fungot's models don't use an NN. < 1631872073 952201 :fungot!fungot@2a01:4b00:82bb:1341::a PRIVMSG #esolangs :b_jonas: ( just as the important thing here is that i'm trying to < 1631872090 606700 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :It's bad enough that "real" programming language specifications are ludicrously big. < 1631872114 55021 :b_jonas!~x@catv-176-63-3-104.catv.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :int-e: but in that case, I point again to https://www.perlmonks.com/?node_id=877696 , which does have a simple specification, though it's not quite obvious what it is because I deliberately wrote the interpreter is an obfuscated style < 1631872135 791257 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :fungot: Wait a sec, what exactly are you trying to use a neural net for? < 1631872136 50689 :fungot!fungot@2a01:4b00:82bb:1341::a PRIVMSG #esolangs :fizzie: some find them interesting and educational, and i've clearly gone loopy. < 1631872150 999435 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :I can't argue with that. < 1631872154 196516 :b_jonas!~x@catv-176-63-3-104.catv.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :(also it's inefficient for long source code) < 1631872168 123432 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :(Actually, I have C and C++ in mind in particular... Java too... ECMAscript is noticably shorter but growing. How are the newcomers like Rust doing on that front?) < 1631872187 577327 :b_jonas!~x@catv-176-63-3-104.catv.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :int-e: Rust is no exception, it's growing too < 1631872235 693437 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :that was an excellent reply, fungot < 1631872236 57175 :fungot!fungot@2a01:4b00:82bb:1341::a PRIVMSG #esolangs :int-e: yet k is called with any argument, which is an sxml-based thumbnail gallery script that does that < 1631872237 567228 :b_jonas!~x@catv-176-63-3-104.catv.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :technically there's also my own model that makes fake (and sometimes accidentally real) town names in Hungary, but I can't really use that because I wrote it for work < 1631872274 304449 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :https://golang.org/ref/spec is pretty reasonable lengthwise, I've always thought. < 1631872285 878649 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :wtf is sxml *googles* oh must be from the scheme channel? < 1631872395 157767 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :(I've certainly seen SXML before, it just never seemed relevant.) < 1631873805 598345 :Taneb!~Taneb@runciman.hacksoc.org PRIVMSG #esolangs :ACTION hello < 1631875833 937430 :Koen!~Koen@77.192.201.77.rev.sfr.net QUIT :Remote host closed the connection < 1631875922 338964 :Koen!~Koen@77.192.201.77.rev.sfr.net JOIN #esolangs * :Koen < 1631876226 479352 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu JOIN #esolangs b_jonas :[https://web.libera.chat] wib_jonas < 1631876365 80574 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :what I said is actually a straightforward application of Shannon's theorem, which tells us that if you want to encode codegolf problems to food recipes, you don't need to have DMM's double domain specific insights on how the concepts of programming map to the concept of cooking (eg. variables to mixing bowls), you can get the same asymptotic < 1631876365 580990 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :density if you make an encoder from codegolf problems to coinflip sequences, and separately make a decoder from coinflip sequences to food recipes < 1631876402 969454 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :that doesn't count as modern as esolangs go (though may count as modern as mathematics goes) < 1631876821 380270 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :by the way, as for modern mathematics, have you noticed how on the list of Hilbert's problems from 1900, there's the one about diophantic equations which asks about computability, even though computability or algorithms weren't defined until Church–Turing invented them in 1930–1936? < 1631876897 273699 :leah2!~leah@vuxu.org QUIT :Ping timeout: 250 seconds < 1631876911 439613 :riv!~river@tilde.team/user/river PRIVMSG #esolangs :that's interesting < 1631876938 383842 :riv!~river@tilde.team/user/river PRIVMSG #esolangs :of course the notion of a method to solve things that didn't require extra insights would have been known < 1631877124 267346 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :that kind of thing is hardly unique of course, Gauss–Bolyai–Lobačevskij in the 1830s tried to figure out if Euclid's parallel postulate is independent from the rest of the axioms in the plane, and Beltrami–Klein proved that it is independent around 1860, but people didn't actually know how to work with mathematical proofs from a precise < 1631877124 767156 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :axiom system until Frege figured it out around 1980; < 1631877134 597235 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :not to mention all the things that eventually Taneb invented < 1631877139 12124 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :`? tanebventions/math < 1631877141 140247 :HackEso!~h@techne.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :tanebventions/math? ¯\(°​_o)/¯ < 1631877144 630382 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :`? tanebventions < 1631877146 240348 :HackEso!~h@techne.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :Tanebventions include necessity, Go, submarine jousting, Fueue, the universe, metar, sand, dragons, persistence, the BBC, _46bit, progress, sanity, the hug, Italian, the grace period, the limerick, ruin, and this sentence. See also tanebventions: maths or tanebventions: foods. He never invents anything involving sex. < 1631877156 55229 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :`? tanebventions: maths < 1631877157 952406 :HackEso!~h@techne.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :Mathematical tanebventions include D-modules, Chu spaces, the torus, Stephen Wolfram, Klein bottles, string diagrams, linear logic, the reals, Lambek's lemma, Curry's paradox, Stone spaces, algebraic geometry, locales, and histograms. < 1631877273 444580 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :mathematicians tried to use real numbers even before Taneb invented them < 1631877330 870192 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :`? kayak polo < 1631877332 537955 :HackEso!~h@techne.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :kayak polo? ¯\(°​_o)/¯ < 1631877347 849284 :tech_exorcist!txrcst@user/tech-exorcist/x-0447479 JOIN #esolangs tech_exorcist :he/him < 1631878077 356101 :leah2!~leah@vuxu.org JOIN #esolangs leah2 :Leah Neukirchen < 1631879423 619060 :arseniiv_!~arseniiv@136.169.204.31 JOIN #esolangs * :the chaotic arseniiv < 1631879963 545455 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :plausible idea < 1631880328 214818 :nakilon!~nakilon@user/nakilon PRIVMSG #esolangs :02:14:37 olist//#!/bin/bash \ set -e; n=$*; [[ $n = +([0-9]) ]] < 1631880335 463337 :velik!~velik@nakilon.pro PRIVMSG #esolangs :thread error < 1631880353 943806 :nakilon!~nakilon@user/nakilon PRIVMSG #esolangs :this is exactly why I did [wiki ...] and not [[...]] < 1631880357 979331 :nakilon!~nakilon@user/nakilon PRIVMSG #esolangs :_-- < 1631880440 499747 :nakilon!~nakilon@user/nakilon PRIVMSG #esolangs :00:34:13 The requested page title contains invalid characters: "[". < 1631880461 238708 :nakilon!~nakilon@user/nakilon PRIVMSG #esolangs :I'll catch it later < 1631880722 433555 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :Evil, GG, evil. How am I supposed to focus on that statue's face... < 1631880893 318392 :nakilon!~nakilon@user/nakilon PRIVMSG #esolangs :oh btw, guys < 1631880920 995846 :nakilon!~nakilon@user/nakilon PRIVMSG #esolangs :I'm imagining the website for RASEL golf and kind of solved most of the security but < 1631881024 470756 :nakilon!~nakilon@user/nakilon PRIVMSG #esolangs :I don't understand how to prevent that hacker hacks into my webserver and can now send his own solutions to the interpreter server pretending he's another user < 1631881109 386459 :nakilon!~nakilon@user/nakilon PRIVMSG #esolangs :2FA via IRC bot would be too tedious for user experience < 1631881134 814990 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :um < 1631881148 361232 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :does that bot just react to [[double brackets]] ? < 1631881149 865490 :nakilon!~nakilon@user/nakilon PRIVMSG #esolangs :and delayed, since velik isn't "listening" to requests anyway < 1631881150 82677 :velik!~velik@nakilon.pro PRIVMSG #esolangs :https://esolangs.org/wiki/Patternfuck < 1631881158 130860 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :yes it does. that's probably not a very good idea. < 1631881162 29369 :tromp!~textual@dhcp-077-249-230-040.chello.nl QUIT :Quit: My iMac has gone to sleep. ZZZzzz… < 1631881169 565652 :nakilon!~nakilon@user/nakilon PRIVMSG #esolangs :lol it was your idea < 1631881170 315322 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :how about [[double opening] bracket with] separate single closing? < 1631881174 958426 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :my idea? now ay < 1631881185 389013 :nakilon!~nakilon@user/nakilon PRIVMSG #esolangs :then another guy said the same so I made it finally < 1631881232 23509 :nakilon!~nakilon@user/nakilon PRIVMSG #esolangs :idk how to search in channel logs but it must be somewhere in the first day when the [wiki ...] was implemented < 1631881259 383752 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :I just said [[Brainfuck]] is how we usually denote wiki links. < 1631881260 507173 :velik!~velik@nakilon.pro PRIVMSG #esolangs :https://esolangs.org/wiki/Brainfuck < 1631881270 210411 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :it's kind of lucky that [[...]] and [...] do the same thing in Brainfuck so the former doesn't usually come up in that context. < 1631881270 963103 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :And then someone else did re-suggest it later on. < 1631881301 752083 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :I think I was imagining it to work with [[Foo]] only for exact title matches though, and be silent when not. < 1631881302 450980 :nakilon!~nakilon@user/nakilon PRIVMSG #esolangs :maybe < 1631881302 642188 :velik!~velik@nakilon.pro PRIVMSG #esolangs :https://esolangs.org/wiki/Foo < 1631881316 938778 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :If you want to implement it that way, be my guest. :) And then [wiki ...] can be a general search. < 1631881348 759453 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :Of course we _would_ have a page titled "Foo". < 1631881418 362226 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :nakilon: I said that even the bot reacting to [wiki: inside the line is a bad idea], and I suggest that the bot should only react if there's an invocation sequence right at the *start* of the message < 1631881439 114991 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :The two ends of the spectrum, I guess. < 1631881451 843727 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :nakilon: this lets us avoid botloops by bots putting something at the start of the line, like a space or a control-O or whatever that was, so that it doesn't match any bot invocation sequence < 1631881478 105856 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :and yes, fungоt goes against this rule, and it gets a pass, life isn't fair < 1631881514 38030 :nakilon!~nakilon@user/nakilon PRIVMSG #esolangs :this particular reply replies only with URLs so it's harder to make a bot loop unless you put fungot in it and teach fungot to do [[]] < 1631881514 199834 :fungot!fungot@2a01:4b00:82bb:1341::a PRIVMSG #esolangs :nakilon: i was busy dying with a fever! :) < 1631881520 375251 :velik!~velik@nakilon.pro PRIVMSG #esolangs :thread error < 1631881544 91321 :nakilon!~nakilon@user/nakilon PRIVMSG #esolangs :woah, broke the empty query somehow < 1631881556 754975 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :hmm [[ꙮ]] < 1631881557 901632 :velik!~velik@nakilon.pro PRIVMSG #esolangs :https://esolangs.org/wiki/1CP%3D1ICL < 1631881638 351812 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :Oh I see, it's because that article actually contains the letter ꙮ. < 1631881646 847581 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :Heh, Chrome's find-on-page search highlights both ꙮ and ꙩ when I search for ꙮ. < 1631881666 278602 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :`unidecode ꙮꙩ < 1631881667 452441 :HackEso!~h@techne.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :​[U+A66E CYRILLIC LETTER MULTIOCULAR O] [U+A669 CYRILLIC SMALL LETTER MONOCULAR O] < 1631881682 579435 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :"Close enough." < 1631881690 562124 :nakilon!~nakilon@user/nakilon PRIVMSG #esolangs :case insensitivity < 1631881691 764373 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :nakilon: yes, it's not easy to get a botloop with just the bots we have now, but surely you've seen those very annoying title-printer bots that try to retrieve any http url they see even in the middle of the line, and can imagine how that together with your bot can cause a loop < 1631881709 831646 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :right, if you squint, closing 6 of your 7 eyes < 1631881747 92533 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :and yes, I know that some of the wikimedia channels have a bot that reacts to [[double square brackets]] and outputs a URL to the article, and those are a bad idea too < 1631881748 277850 :velik!~velik@nakilon.pro PRIVMSG #esolangs :https://esolangs.org/wiki/Roco < 1631881768 676978 :nakilon!~nakilon@user/nakilon PRIVMSG #esolangs :lol < 1631881801 895264 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :I have no problem with a command to search on the wiki, but use an invocation prefix for that < 1631881812 489104 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :[[pandemonium]] < 1631881813 969393 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :similarly we have a command to retrieve a URL and get its title but it uses a prefix < 1631881822 369874 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :perlbot get https://esolangs.org/wiki/Roco < 1631881825 711577 :perlbot!~perlbot@perlbot/bot/simcop2387/perlbot PRIVMSG #esolangs :wib_jonas: Roco - Esolang : RocoFrom EsolangJump to navigation Jump to searchRoco is programming language using a form of coroutines, designed by Lode Vandevenne in 2007. The coroutines are very basic, they have no input or output parameters, and their instruction pointer is never copied or reset. If a coroutine doesn't call ("ca" or "ac") or yield ("yi") an... [Output truncated. http://perl.bot/p/aujzqv ] < 1631881827 125654 :nakilon!~nakilon@user/nakilon PRIVMSG #esolangs :but there is already a search via \wiki < 1631881849 583911 :nakilon!~nakilon@user/nakilon PRIVMSG #esolangs :then I'll leave the search only for \wiki < 1631881851 694816 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :Pfft, no pandemonium? I'm disappointed. < 1631881855 155600 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :nakilon: thank you < 1631881857 678583 :nakilon!~nakilon@user/nakilon PRIVMSG #esolangs :and that would do exact match < 1631881862 661031 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :\wiki double square brackets < 1631881863 855936 :velik!~velik@nakilon.pro PRIVMSG #esolangs :nothing was found < 1631881872 848790 :nakilon!~nakilon@user/nakilon PRIVMSG #esolangs :_Oo < 1631881888 427784 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :arguably the semantics of those two are the wrong way around < 1631881900 97486 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :\wiki is a deliberate command so it can search wide < 1631881918 318122 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :[[...]] is a casual quote so it should search narrowly < 1631881922 254041 :nakilon!~nakilon@user/nakilon PRIVMSG #esolangs :\wiki roco < 1631881923 391518 :velik!~velik@nakilon.pro PRIVMSG #esolangs : Roco is programming language using a form of coroutines, designed by Lode Vandevenne in 2007. The coroutines are very basic, they have no input or output parameters, and their instruction pointer is never copied or reset. If a coroutine doesn't call ("ca" or "ac") or yield ("yi") another coroutine, it simply loops forever: if the instruction pointer reaches the end of a coroutine, it goes back to its beginning an... https://esolangs.org/wiki/Roco < 1631881944 673812 :nakilon!~nakilon@user/nakilon PRIVMSG #esolangs :lol perlbot's "jump to navigation" < 1631881957 712971 :riv!~river@tilde.team/user/river QUIT :Quit: Leaving < 1631882095 359227 :riv!~river@tilde.team/user/river JOIN #esolangs river :river < 1631882222 318109 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :Oh, a busy beaver game... https://www.gog.com/game/timberborn (scnr). < 1631882569 898130 :nakilon!~nakilon@user/nakilon PRIVMSG #esolangs :looks like Towns but with water physics < 1631882774 287111 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :https://esolangs.org/wiki/Brainfuck/w/index.php%3Ftitle%3DTalk:Brainfuck/index.php what the heck < 1631882795 8005 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :"a language invented in a newly-awaken stupor" ok fair < 1631883009 264313 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :nakilon: yeah it looks like an ordinary game... I'm not buying it. Just couldn't resist the BB connection. < 1631883888 234617 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :fact macro wikisearch is {eval ($r,)=split" ",{quote d {get {eval use URI;use URI::QueryParam;$o=URI->new("https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?title=Special%3ASearch&fulltext=1"); $o->query_param("search",{arg d});"$o"} //*[@class='mw-search-exists'or@class='mw-search-result-heading' ]//a/@href}};$r=~m(^/)?"https://esolangs.org$r":"null:"} < 1631883904 484063 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :wikisearch beaver < 1631883908 944541 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :\wiki beaver < 1631883910 119311 :velik!~velik@nakilon.pro PRIVMSG #esolangs : The goal: given a program length, find the brainfuck program of that length that calls the . command the greatest (finite) number of times. https://esolangs.org/wiki/BF_busy_beaver < 1631883914 358649 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :perlbot wikisearch beaver < 1631883914 750402 :perlbot!~perlbot@perlbot/bot/simcop2387/perlbot PRIVMSG #esolangs :wib_jonas: No factoid found. Did you mean one of these: [who's jeremy] < 1631883920 119224 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :perlbot fact macro wikisearch is {eval ($r,)=split" ",{quote d {get {eval use URI;use URI::QueryParam;$o=URI->new("https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?title=Special%3ASearch&fulltext=1"); $o->query_param("search",{arg d});"$o"} //*[@class='mw-search-exists'or@class='mw-search-result-heading' ]//a/@href}};$r=~m(^/)?"https://esolangs.org$r":"null:"} < 1631883920 369680 :perlbot!~perlbot@perlbot/bot/simcop2387/perlbot PRIVMSG #esolangs :wib_jonas: Stored wikisearch is {eval ($r,)=split" ",{quote d {get {eval use URI;use URI::QueryParam;$o=URI->new("https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?title=Special%3ASearch&fulltext=1"); $o->query_param("search",{arg d});"$o"} //*[@class='mw-search-exists'or@class='mw-search-result-heading' ]//a/@href}};$r=~m(^/)?"https://esolangs.org$r":"null:"} < 1631883923 508945 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :perlbot wikisearch beaver < 1631883927 165347 :perlbot!~perlbot@perlbot/bot/simcop2387/perlbot PRIVMSG #esolangs :wib_jonas: https://esolangs.org/wiki/BF_busy_beaver < 1631883946 348971 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :there. < 1631883968 866166 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :programmable bots can do everything custom bots can, it's just much harder to implement the commands < 1631884006 478137 :Koen!~Koen@77.192.201.77.rev.sfr.net QUIT :Remote host closed the connection < 1631884115 754034 :nakilon!~nakilon@user/nakilon PRIVMSG #esolangs :https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2021/sep/16/home-computing-pioneer-sir-clive-sinclair-dies-aged-81 < 1631884189 587591 :tromp!~textual@dhcp-077-249-230-040.chello.nl JOIN #esolangs * :Textual User < 1631884224 373215 :nakilon!~nakilon@user/nakilon PRIVMSG #esolangs :can you add a not yet installed third-party library to perlbot with those commands? < 1631884236 215415 :nakilon!~nakilon@user/nakilon PRIVMSG #esolangs :since velik uses gem Infoboxer < 1631884256 831340 :nakilon!~nakilon@user/nakilon PRIVMSG #esolangs :to parse wiki properly < 1631884270 540441 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :nakilon: you could if it's written in perl so you can run it in the eval sandbox < 1631884365 661148 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :perlbot eval system(q[ruby -e'14.times{|k|p k}']) # doesn't even really need to be written in perl, you just need a suitable perl wrapper < 1631884367 230719 :perlbot!~perlbot@perlbot/bot/simcop2387/perlbot PRIVMSG #esolangs :wib_jonas: 31 < 1631884429 819409 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :why does that print 31? < 1631884459 936103 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :ah, probably there's no ruby installed < 1631884471 852941 :tech_exorcist!txrcst@user/tech-exorcist/x-0447479 QUIT :Ping timeout: 252 seconds < 1631884521 561614 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :eval system(q[awk 'BEGIN{for(k=0;k<14;k++){printf("%s ",k)}}'])||"" < 1631884529 554625 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :perlbot eval system(q[awk 'BEGIN{for(k=0;k<14;k++){printf("%s ",k)}}'])||"" < 1631884531 181323 :perlbot!~perlbot@perlbot/bot/simcop2387/perlbot PRIVMSG #esolangs :wib_jonas: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 < 1631884537 279520 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :that then < 1631884545 84942 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :can be written in awk or anything you can run in its sandbox < 1631884587 251478 :nakilon!~nakilon@user/nakilon PRIVMSG #esolangs :the whole library or at least a relevant piece of it would take day(s) to extract and a hundred of messages to eval < 1631884624 26006 :nakilon!~nakilon@user/nakilon PRIVMSG #esolangs :hundred even in case you've already golfed it all < 1631884641 524555 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :nakilon: no, you don't have to send it through IRC < 1631884660 10234 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :nakilon: you can download it from an external url, sort of like when we download things to hackeso, though the syntax for this is not obvious at all < 1631884669 319239 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :or you can upload it through perlbot's web interface < 1631884716 684871 :nakilon!~nakilon@user/nakilon PRIVMSG #esolangs :so it's just more complicated way of building < 1631885257 258799 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :or you could try to ask simcop to help, just like you can ask fizzie to install stuff to HackEso since that's sometimes easier than installing inside the sandbox, especially if there's a package in the debian version that HackEso's sandbox uses < 1631885605 945856 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :Oh, I should probably upgrade that from buster to bullseye at some point. < 1631885756 18653 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :sure, and I should upgrade my home computer. it will happen within months. < 1631886271 126853 :Sgeo!~Sgeo@user/sgeo JOIN #esolangs Sgeo :realname < 1631887726 843978 :tech_exorcist!txrcst@user/tech-exorcist/x-0447479 JOIN #esolangs tech_exorcist :he/him < 1631888676 941575 :Koen!~Koen@77.192.201.77.rev.sfr.net JOIN #esolangs * :Koen < 1631888850 214715 :nakilon!~nakilon@user/nakilon PRIVMSG #esolangs :I would upgrade Windows only for WSL if I was coding on it < 1631888956 206593 :nakilon!~nakilon@user/nakilon PRIVMSG #esolangs :and I'll probably update macOS when this macbook explode sinceit's already getting spherical < 1631889078 224256 :Koen!~Koen@77.192.201.77.rev.sfr.net QUIT :Remote host closed the connection < 1631889165 762253 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :nakilon: spherical as in https://xkcd.com/1422/ < 1631889296 800818 :nakilon!~nakilon@user/nakilon PRIVMSG #esolangs :yeah smth like that < 1631889310 516416 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :The test phone on my desk at the office (that had spent the last 1+ years waiting on the "allow debugging from this host?" prompt) had gone slightly spherical by the time I got back. < 1631889336 272761 :nakilon!~nakilon@user/nakilon PRIVMSG #esolangs :my macbook appeared to be from 2017 when there were some bad batteries and there is an apple program of replacement for free < 1631889351 397693 :nakilon!~nakilon@user/nakilon PRIVMSG #esolangs :but for some reason my serial number says that my macbook isn't affected < 1631889381 73850 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :My PPC iBook had its battery recalled and replaced. Chemistry seems to be hard. < 1631889398 963324 :nakilon!~nakilon@user/nakilon PRIVMSG #esolangs :so I have to spent time to figure it out with local apple centers and if they say that unfortunately it's not free I need to pay for it and I don't have money right now so it's like a ticking bomb lol < 1631889533 990254 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :fizzie: nah, all the products that they make in east Asia are like that, hard to make, it's just that a few things like battery, mains power contact safety, things that can theoretically strangle a baby, are considered important enough that the product gets recalled when they mess it up. < 1631889621 894132 :Corbin!~Corbin@c-73-67-140-116.hsd1.or.comcast.net PRIVMSG #esolangs :All products are like that, period. Modern batteries are extremely intricate inside and it's easy for the chemical reaction to interact badly with the battery housing's geometry. < 1631889623 687866 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :it used to be christmas lights that shock you, but that went out of fashion since we have leds and solid state power supplies, so now it's just mains power extension cord and sockets where either the grounding is broken or the live wire can get touched < 1631889645 268682 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :that's in Europe I mean; in US it's the default that mains power connectors make the live wire easy to touch < 1631889670 827687 :Corbin!~Corbin@c-73-67-140-116.hsd1.or.comcast.net PRIVMSG #esolangs :Look at tetraethyl lead (TEL) for a fun example. Blaming just one jurisdiction for shoddy products both ignores their lax trading partners and stokes us-vs-them rhetoric. < 1631889714 519691 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :I've also got one of those portable battery packs, and for the life of me I can't remember if it was *designed* to be slightly thicker from the middle, or if it's doing the battery thing. Because it's really not very pronounced, so it could be it was never entirely flat. < 1631889771 165189 :fizzie!irc@selene.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :It'd be easier if one of the seams would split, since that sounds unlikely to be by design. < 1631889960 881373 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :I think I also mentioned that when you board a plane, besides the instructions about your seat belt and the emergency exit, they now tell you not to charge your batteries during takeoff and to call the crew immediately if your batteries are on fire, instead of the older warnings that you should turn off your electronic devices during takeoff and < 1631889961 381247 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :landing, and before that, that all of the airplane is non-smoking. < 1631890035 432931 :nakilon!~nakilon@user/nakilon PRIVMSG #esolangs :maybe I had to buy mac mini < 1631890046 180922 :nakilon!~nakilon@user/nakilon PRIVMSG #esolangs :but would also need the keyboard and trackpad < 1631890066 171306 :nakilon!~nakilon@user/nakilon PRIVMSG #esolangs :and I don't want to bother with replacing those little batteries < 1631891013 414716 :dyeplexer!~dyeplexer@user/dyeplexer JOIN #esolangs dyeplexer :t b k ky jt h bc < 1631891104 396354 :p_____!~dyeplexer@user/dyeplexer JOIN #esolangs dyeplexer :t b k ky jt h bc < 1631891112 557514 :p_____!~dyeplexer@user/dyeplexer QUIT :Remote host closed the connection < 1631891293 13849 :simcop2387!~simcop238@perlbot/patrician/simcop2387 PRIVMSG #esolangs :perlbot: jail < 1631891293 305773 :perlbot!~perlbot@perlbot/bot/simcop2387/perlbot PRIVMSG #esolangs :simcop2387: No factoid found. Did you mean one of these: [jql] [joel] [fail] [japh] [java] [.il] [.jm] [.jo] [.jp] [js] < 1631891306 297131 :simcop2387!~simcop238@perlbot/patrician/simcop2387 PRIVMSG #esolangs :hmm thought i had a factoid < 1631891314 130070 :simcop2387!~simcop238@perlbot/patrician/simcop2387 PRIVMSG #esolangs :perlbot: seach perlbot-jail < 1631891344 823713 :simcop2387!~simcop238@perlbot/patrician/simcop2387 PRIVMSG #esolangs :perlbot: search perlbot-jail < 1631891345 330040 :perlbot!~perlbot@perlbot/bot/simcop2387/perlbot PRIVMSG #esolangs :simcop2387: No matches. < 1631891352 100883 :simcop2387!~simcop238@perlbot/patrician/simcop2387 PRIVMSG #esolangs :perlbot: search perlbuut-jail < 1631891352 500223 :perlbot!~perlbot@perlbot/bot/simcop2387/perlbot PRIVMSG #esolangs :simcop2387: No matches. < 1631891411 494336 :simcop2387!~simcop238@perlbot/patrician/simcop2387 PRIVMSG #esolangs :nakilon: https://github.com/perlbot/perlbot-jail make a pr for this and it'll get put into the sandbox for playing < 1631891682 546711 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :simcop: it's all hypothetical of course, because nakilon already has a bot running, so it's easier for them to add a command to that bot than to try to figure out how perlbot works < 1631891755 256039 :simcop2387!~simcop238@perlbot/patrician/simcop2387 PRIVMSG #esolangs :of course, just wanted to point out how the sandbox works to add data or small libraries < 1631892045 429913 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :sure. and nakilon did ask after all. < 1631892085 398330 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :this is one of the commands that we can't currently implement in HackEso, because there's no hole on the sandbox that lets us send queries to the wiki website < 1631892098 501983 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :(nor a local wiki dump or anything like that) < 1631892131 873278 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu PRIVMSG #esolangs :not that it would be needed for HackEso < 1631892847 198394 :dutch!~DutchIngr@user/dutch QUIT :Quit: WeeChat 3.0.1 < 1631893018 868831 :dutch!~DutchIngr@user/dutch JOIN #esolangs DutchIngraham :dutch < 1631894685 273653 :tromp!~textual@dhcp-077-249-230-040.chello.nl QUIT :Quit: My iMac has gone to sleep. ZZZzzz… < 1631895102 150265 :imode!~imode@user/imode JOIN #esolangs imode :imode < 1631896135 46348 :wib_jonas!~wib_jonas@business-37-191-60-209.business.broadband.hu QUIT :Quit: Client closed < 1631896450 590733 :arseniiv_!~arseniiv@136.169.204.31 QUIT :Ping timeout: 260 seconds < 1631897166 120507 :arseniiv_!~arseniiv@136.169.204.31 JOIN #esolangs * :the chaotic arseniiv < 1631897490 575687 :tromp!~textual@dhcp-077-249-230-040.chello.nl JOIN #esolangs * :Textual User < 1631897822 668837 :riv!~river@tilde.team/user/river QUIT :Quit: Leaving < 1631897916 601013 :riv!~river@tilde.team/user/river JOIN #esolangs river :river < 1631899549 348772 :tromp!~textual@dhcp-077-249-230-040.chello.nl QUIT :Quit: My iMac has gone to sleep. ZZZzzz… < 1631900841 612703 :src!~src@user/src JOIN #esolangs src :realname < 1631901649 440130 :archenoth!~archenoth@2604:3d09:681:f00:8173:355d:3407:7897 JOIN #esolangs Archenoth :archenoth < 1631901656 931250 :riv!~river@tilde.team/user/river QUIT :Quit: Leaving < 1631901775 144174 :riv!~river@tilde.team/user/river JOIN #esolangs river :river < 1631901826 614494 :Oshawott!~archenoth@2604:3d09:681:f00:a4ca:327d:3946:a076 QUIT :Ping timeout: 260 seconds < 1631902780 544032 :delta23!~delta23@user/delta23 QUIT :Ping timeout: 240 seconds < 1631903078 178864 :tech_exorcist!txrcst@user/tech-exorcist/x-0447479 QUIT :Quit: see you tomorrow < 1631903332 647189 :Noisytoot!~noisytoot@sourcehut/user/noisytoot QUIT :Ping timeout: 245 seconds < 1631903388 591280 :Noisytoot!~noisytoot@sourcehut/user/noisytoot JOIN #esolangs Noisytoot :Ron < 1631903505 650981 :tromp!~textual@dhcp-077-249-230-040.chello.nl JOIN #esolangs * :Textual User < 1631903858 351405 :Lord_of_Life!~Lord@user/lord-of-life/x-2819915 QUIT :Ping timeout: 268 seconds < 1631903858 549983 :dyeplexer!~dyeplexer@user/dyeplexer QUIT :Remote host closed the connection < 1631903909 141863 :Lord_of_Life!~Lord@user/lord-of-life/x-2819915 JOIN #esolangs Lord_of_Life :Lord < 1631904776 903633 :tromp!~textual@dhcp-077-249-230-040.chello.nl QUIT :Quit: My iMac has gone to sleep. ZZZzzz… < 1631904920 117812 :tromp!~textual@dhcp-077-249-230-040.chello.nl JOIN #esolangs * :Textual User < 1631906934 305790 :tromp!~textual@dhcp-077-249-230-040.chello.nl QUIT :Quit: My iMac has gone to sleep. ZZZzzz… < 1631908927 123531 :oerjan!oerjan@sprocket.nvg.ntnu.no JOIN #esolangs oerjan :Ørjan Johansen > 1631910817 510197 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Brainfuck14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=88087&oldid=88086 5* 03Oerjan 5* (-35) 10Use template (and fix error) < 1631911176 817479 :oerjan!oerjan@sprocket.nvg.ntnu.no PRIVMSG #esolangs :`addquote fungot: Wait a sec, what exactly are you trying to use a neural net for? fizzie: some find them interesting and educational, and i've clearly gone loopy. I can't argue with that. < 1631911177 92508 :fungot!fungot@2a01:4b00:82bb:1341::a PRIVMSG #esolangs :oerjan: it doesn't? it used to do boldface text with write(*,*) ' fnord _ ' bummer) < 1631911179 465182 :HackEso!~h@techne.zem.fi PRIVMSG #esolangs :1335) fungot: Wait a sec, what exactly are you trying to use a neural net for? fizzie: some find them interesting and educational, and i've clearly gone loopy. I can't argue with that. > 1631912526 73147 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Special:Log/newusers14]]4 create10 02 5* 03Arnyx 5* 10New user account < 1631912640 133971 :Lord_of_Life!~Lord@user/lord-of-life/x-2819915 QUIT :Ping timeout: 268 seconds < 1631912672 351826 :Lord_of_Life!~Lord@user/lord-of-life/x-2819915 JOIN #esolangs Lord_of_Life :Lord < 1631913808 58771 :Lord_of_Life!~Lord@user/lord-of-life/x-2819915 QUIT :Excess Flood < 1631913826 249047 :Lord_of_Life!~Lord@user/lord-of-life/x-2819915 JOIN #esolangs Lord_of_Life :Lord < 1631914994 335766 :tromp!~textual@dhcp-077-249-230-040.chello.nl JOIN #esolangs * :Textual User < 1631915579 967013 :immibis_!~hexchat@62.156.144.218 QUIT :Ping timeout: 265 seconds < 1631915663 676756 :tromp!~textual@dhcp-077-249-230-040.chello.nl QUIT :Quit: My iMac has gone to sleep. ZZZzzz… < 1631917231 335514 :tromp!~textual@dhcp-077-249-230-040.chello.nl JOIN #esolangs * :Textual User < 1631918310 660242 :tromp!~textual@dhcp-077-249-230-040.chello.nl QUIT :Quit: My iMac has gone to sleep. ZZZzzz… < 1631918525 199038 :tromp!~textual@dhcp-077-249-230-040.chello.nl JOIN #esolangs * :Textual User < 1631921062 68361 :tromp!~textual@dhcp-077-249-230-040.chello.nl QUIT :Quit: My iMac has gone to sleep. ZZZzzz… < 1631921150 128063 :arseniiv_!~arseniiv@136.169.204.31 QUIT :Ping timeout: 268 seconds