00:41:41 -!- razetime has joined. 00:42:27 [[Special:Log/newusers]] create * Kotnen * New user account 00:45:53 [[Esolang:Introduce yourself]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113363&oldid=113296 * Kotnen * (+197) i (rax) introduced myself 00:56:19 -!- Soni has quit (Quit: http://quassel-irc.org - Chat comfortably. Anywhere.). 00:56:53 -!- Soni has joined. 00:57:14 -!- Soni has quit (Client Quit). 00:57:53 -!- Soni has joined. 01:20:41 -!- razetime has quit (Quit: https://quassel-irc.org - Chat comfortably. Anywhere.). 01:51:34 -!- Noisytoot has quit (Quit: ZNC 1.8.2 - https://znc.in). 01:52:03 -!- Noisytoot has joined. 02:37:00 -!- SGautam has joined. 02:39:15 -!- FreeFull has quit. 02:39:46 -!- Noisytoot has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 02:41:04 -!- Noisytoot has joined. 02:46:54 -!- Noisytoot has quit (Ping timeout: 256 seconds). 02:50:56 I found a page where ESR calls Amiga cooperative, even though it's usually called pre-emptive. Is that ESR just using Linus Torvalds's argument or is he just wrong? 02:51:37 http://www.catb.org/~esr/writings/taouu/html/ch02s05.html 02:52:39 -!- Noisytoot has joined. 03:31:40 -!- Noisytoot has quit (Ping timeout: 256 seconds). 03:41:08 -!- Noisytoot has joined. 03:56:26 -!- Noisytoot has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 04:03:23 -!- Noisytoot has joined. 04:07:34 -!- Noisytoot has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 04:13:56 -!- Noisytoot has joined. 04:30:40 I notice in the picture, it says: "Red-Copy, Yel-Copy/Rename, Blue-Delete". Are there colours of mouse buttons? 04:35:38 And, I think the device on the left is used for chorded input (perhaps similar to the Baudot code, although maybe it uses a different code), and not a touch tablet. (Actually I think I read somewhere that is what it is, but I do not remember the details) 04:36:39 [[StupidStackLanguage]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113364&oldid=82888 * Lebster * (-4) /* Hello World */ 04:37:13 [[Hello world program in esoteric languages (N-Z)]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113365&oldid=112939 * Lebster * (-4) /* StupidStackLanguage */ 04:50:25 -!- Noisytoot has quit (Ping timeout: 246 seconds). 04:57:36 -!- Noisytoot has joined. 04:58:35 [[StupidStackLanguage]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113366&oldid=113364 * Lebster * (-71) Remove C++ interpreter (it was missing some instructions and a new version will be created soon) 05:14:41 -!- bgs has joined. 06:26:26 -!- SGautam has quit (Quit: Connection closed for inactivity). 06:35:35 -!- chiselfuse has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 06:35:51 -!- chiselfuse has joined. 06:39:41 -!- tromp has joined. 07:11:58 [[Psychairefatback (Archive)]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113367&oldid=68846 * PythonshellDebugwindow * (+24) Category 07:30:16 -!- tromp has quit (Quit: My iMac has gone to sleep. ZZZzzz…). 08:12:52 -!- Sgeo has quit (Read error: Connection reset by peer). 08:45:58 -!- Noisytoot has quit (Ping timeout: 246 seconds). 09:03:00 -!- Noisytoot has joined. 09:50:30 -!- Lord_of_Life has quit (Ping timeout: 246 seconds). 09:51:02 -!- Lord_of_Life has joined. 10:32:47 [[Hello world program in esoteric languages (N-Z)]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113368&oldid=113365 * None1 * (+61) /* Qugord */ QuineFuck 10:35:06 [[BFFuck]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113369&oldid=113362 * None1 * (+5) It is WIP, but still quite powerfull 10:36:53 [[BFFuck]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113370&oldid=113369 * None1 * (+28) Tell that collaborators are welcomed 10:38:49 [[BFFuck]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113371&oldid=113370 * None1 * (+36) /* How it works */ 10:39:37 -!- b_jonas has quit (Ping timeout: 260 seconds). 10:41:46 [[User:None1]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113372&oldid=113332 * None1 * (+82) 10:44:26 [[Language list]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113373&oldid=113292 * None1 * (+16) /* Q */ 11:56:30 [[BFFuck]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113374&oldid=113371 * None1 * (+932) /* Examples */ Added Finite Fibonacci sequence 11:56:46 [[BFFuck]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113375&oldid=113374 * None1 * (+0) /* Fibonacci sequence */ 11:59:08 [[BFFuck]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113376&oldid=113375 * None1 * (+259) /* How it works */ 12:03:14 [[User:None1]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113377&oldid=113372 * None1 * (+178) A refactor of my user page because it is too messy 12:03:28 [[User:None1]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113378&oldid=113377 * None1 * (+30) /* My GitHub Profile */ 12:04:13 [[User:None1]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113379&oldid=113378 * None1 * (+27) /* My Esolangs */ 12:05:21 [[LstackG]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113380&oldid=111263 * None1 * (+0) /* Offline Interpreters */ ambiguity 12:11:23 [[User:None1]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113381&oldid=113379 * None1 * (+424) Added a part that introduces what I like and hate 12:13:22 [[User:None1]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113382&oldid=113381 * None1 * (+28) /* What I like */ 12:13:29 [[User:None1]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113383&oldid=113382 * None1 * (+1) /* What I like */ 12:14:05 [[User:None1]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113384&oldid=113383 * None1 * (+24) /* What I dislike */ 12:14:20 [[User:None1]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113385&oldid=113384 * None1 * (-19) /* BFFuck (WIP) */ 12:21:51 [[Brainfuck algorithms]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113386&oldid=113353 * None1 * (+263) /* while (x) { code } */ Added brainfuck do-while loop 12:43:45 [[BFFuck]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113387&oldid=113376 * None1 * (+3260) /* External Resources */ Added online interpreter 12:45:31 [[BFFuck]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113388&oldid=113387 * None1 * (-30) /* External Resources */ Fixed 12:45:46 [[BFFuck]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113389&oldid=113388 * None1 * (+2) /* External Resources */ 12:46:04 [[BFFuck]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113390&oldid=113389 * None1 * (+16) /* External Resources */ 12:46:36 [[BFFuck]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113391&oldid=113390 * None1 * (+8) /* External Resources */ 13:19:11 [[BFFuck]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113392&oldid=113391 * None1 * (+60) /* Syntax */ Horray, BFFuck now has one-branch if statements! 13:21:21 [[BFFuck]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113393&oldid=113392 * None1 * (+839) /* Examples */ Added a [[Truth Machine]] example 13:21:47 [[BFFuck]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113394&oldid=113393 * None1 * (+16) /* Truth Machine] */ 13:24:09 [[BFFuck]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113395&oldid=113394 * None1 * (+67) /* External Resources */ 13:25:10 -!- wib_jonas has joined. 13:27:19 [[BFFuck]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113396&oldid=113395 * None1 * (+189) /* External Resources */ Fixed online compiler link since the compiler has changed 13:27:41 Sgeo: I'm not sure because I only know Amiga from rumors, never used one, but I think it has normal programs that aren't even cooperative multitasking with each other because only the one in the active window is ever running (I don't know how they multitask towards the kernel, but I presume that is preemptive using hardware interrupts); but also 13:27:42 applets which I think are preemptive towards each other and the one running normal program, but I think in exchange they can use a more restricted OS interface. 13:28:04 you'll have to find someone who actually knows the Amiga to know for sure. plus perhaps this might differ between versions of the OS too. 13:31:02 from the article that you listed "Cooperative multitasking was an economy measure. It meant the hardware platform could omit an expensive MMU (memory-management unit) from its parts list." that is ridiculous, memory protection vs pre-emptive time sharing are orthogonal, and you need hardware interrupts for pre-emption, not a memory management 13:31:02 units, and almost all computer hardware support hardware interrupts for ages. 13:31:28 I wouldn't trust that article if it writes something like that 13:33:28 "On the other hand, it meant that the latency of interfaces was minimal and constant, never disturbed by random interrupts or scheduler-introduced jitter. This made for a smooth, predictable user experience even on relatively underpowered hardware." if there were no interrupts then the mouse cursor would be updated on the display only when the 13:33:28 application is idle, which would be the opposite of "a smooth, predictable user experience". try, if you wish, Age of Mythology on a slow computer, make it lag, and you'll see what it's like when you can only see your mouse cursor move once every redraw and the lag causes redraws only 10 or 20 times a second. it makes it really hard to use the 13:33:29 mouse! 13:33:37 [[BFFuck]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113397&oldid=113396 * None1 * (+0) /* External Resources */ Typo, fixed 13:34:13 [[Random]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113398&oldid=46912 * Kaveh Yousefi * (+190) Added a hyperlink to my implementation of the Random programming language on GitHub. 13:34:40 [[BFFuck]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113399&oldid=113397 * None1 * (+1) /* Reson why creating it */ Typo, fixed 13:35:01 sounds like a journalist who doesn't know much about retrocomputing (ChatGPT being the prime suspect) wrote the article. 13:35:47 you can have interrupts and cooperative multi-tasking 13:36:00 [[BFFuck]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113400&oldid=113399 * None1 * (+1) /* Reson why creating it */ Typo, fixed 13:37:00 [[BFFuck]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113401&oldid=113400 * None1 * (+16) /* How it works */ 13:37:28 So nothing is really stopping you from having a smooth mouse cursor. It helps dramatically if it's a hardware sprite. 13:39:38 I guess when you write "no interrupts" and mean "no interrupts that cause noticable latency" then technical accuracy is no longer part of the picture. 13:40:03 int-e: yes, but it specifically says that the user interface was "never disturbed by random interrupts" 13:40:52 yes, you can have interrupts to the kernel, but cooperative multitasking among programs 13:41:54 you can even have cooperative multitasking among some programs but preemptive to others, which is what you get in Windows 3.1 in 386 mode: cooperative among 16-bit Windows programs, preemptive to DOS windows, but in exchange the DOS windows can't use Windows system calls and so can't really interact with windows programs such as use the clipboard 13:42:51 I remember that you could hang that with `cli; hlt` in a dosbox... not so preemptive or sandboxed 13:43:00 probably more of the latter than the former 13:43:10 and then this got more complicated in Windows 95 OSR2 or Windows 98 (I don't recall which) which allows you to use that model for 16-bit windows programs but also allows to sandbox a 16-bit windows program so it runs preemptive 13:43:16 (i.e., it's more about lack of isolation) 13:43:34 int-e: that's in 268 mode (which you can still start on a 386 with a command-line argument); in 386 advanced mode it won't happen\ 13:43:57 int-e: you can tell the difference because 386 advanced mode is the only one that can run dos programs in windowed mode instead of full screen 13:43:59 Hmm, are you sure? 13:44:03 not quite 13:44:35 I'm not sure either though... it's been a long time. I /think/ I tried this on an i386 at home and it hung the system. 13:44:38 I'm sure there are two modes, out of necessity since boxing the programs needs a 386, but I'm not sure how cli|hlt behaves 13:45:07 it's quite possible that cli|hlt does hang a DOS program even in 386 advanced mode 13:45:08 But the only instance I actually remember was on a computer I don't know the processor model of. 13:45:47 int-e: that's why I'm telling about the windowed mode. on 286 you only get full screen, since the DOS program will often want to access the real video buffer directly 13:46:15 The model must be preemptive of course, but as I recall it, it was tied to the timer interrupt (what else) and `cli` wasn't emulated but simply allowed. 13:46:19 * int-e shrugs 13:46:24 possible 13:46:26 It was in windowed mode, that I'm certain of. 13:46:37 okay 13:46:52 [[Bffuck]] N https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?oldid=113402 * None1 * (+20) Redirected page to [[BFFuck]] 13:47:12 -!- Sgeo has joined. 13:47:12 As I also said, this is really a failure of isolating the host from the client, rather than a lack of preemption. 13:47:29 yeah, so it's preemptive, but it's not a full memory protection box, just accidentally protects memory accesses because of virtual-8086 mode 13:48:01 the 16-bit programs don't get any memory protection at all, a stray pointer can crash the whole system, also changed in I think Windows 98 13:51:03 also there's additional magic so that Windows 3.1 in 386 advanced mode can run not only real-mode DOS programs, but also mostly real-mode DOS programs that use extended memory, and even programs running in a 32-bit DOS extender. this too, of course, requires some co-operation between the himem / dos extender drivers and windows, which may be why 13:51:04 Windows ships with an updated HIMEM.SYS that differs from the one that ships with DOS 13:52:12 and the fun part when you emulate it on modern machines is that nothing can make use of more than 64 megabytes of memory, because why would anyone make the APIs more complicated to support a hypothetical configuration that no computer has 13:52:17 XMS was so arcane 13:52:56 the XMM doesn't surprise me as much as the dos extenders 13:54:21 also the program that runs dos extender can change to SVGA video modes, and Windows can correctly switch between those video modes and Windows's own fancy video SVGA modes. it's really well executed. 13:55:43 imagine trying to save and restore a video mode back when video cards were all different, needing separate Windows drivers per brand, and they were so primitive that you often couldn't just autodetect them, the user had to tell the configuration, like how much RAM the video card has, to the Windows setup, or else Windows will just use the video 13:55:44 card wrong 13:55:55 Emulating int 10h and int 15h APIs. I'm hazy on whether DOS extenders really worked... I guess whatever API EMM386 implemented could also be emulated. 13:56:16 But hmm. 13:57:08 I guess you can also have magic for detecting common implementations? Like dos4gw.exe... 13:57:11 * int-e shrugs 13:57:11 int-e: *some* DOS extender programs work. possibly not all. I know because back when I emulated OpenTTD in Bochs, it only worked if I ran it in Windows 3.11, program because of some bug in Bochs or in the rom that it sues 13:57:21 I forgot a lot of that stuff. 13:57:39 int-e: or windows support in dos4gw itself, I honestly don't know how all that magic works 13:57:44 There was a second very common one and I can't remember. 13:58:06 (besides dos4gw I mean) 13:58:30 just search the channel logs for dos4gw, it's probably come up at some point 14:00:24 emx was another... probably not /that/ common but I was exposed to it because of (La)TeX 14:01:52 Oh, right... "DPMI" is the keyword... that standardized interface which was also provided by Windows. 14:02:13 (I found https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DOS_extender#DOS_extenders ) 14:03:42 So I guess CauseWay was the other common one I couldn't remember. 14:04:26 and I've seen cwsdpmi too 14:06:44 so can you answer Sgeo's OQ about Amiga? 14:07:11 I never had an Amiga. 14:07:20 So no incentive to look at internals. 14:07:36 you could have emulated it to run games... 14:07:48 but okay 14:08:39 there must be other retrocomputing experts on the channel 14:15:14 I had an Amiga enthusiast friend, but never got too deeply involved. 14:16:00 But I think ESR was just generally muddling together the coöperative vs. preëmptive multitasking distinction with having or not having memory protection between programs. 14:16:30 From the same sentece you quoted about the MMU. 14:19:44 If you trust https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exec_(Amiga) it sounds like it would be fair to say Amiga(OS) had preëmptive multitasking, even if it would have just supported one "main" application (don't know if that was really the case) and if it does allow the application to opt out from being preëmpted for an indefinite period (which seems to be the case). 14:28:57 [[User:None1]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113403&oldid=113385 * None1 * (+2) /* My Article */ plural 14:33:19 [[BFFuck]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113404&oldid=113401 * None1 * (+0) /* How it works */ 14:36:06 [[BFFuck]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113405&oldid=113404 * None1 * (+194) /* How it works */ 14:36:39 [[BFFuck]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113406&oldid=113405 * None1 * (-1) /* How it works */ 14:50:44 fungot, is a "weatherspoon" the propeller thing under a weathercock that spins to show how fast the wind is? 15:18:22 well fungot isn't here 15:23:28 Oof. It refuses to obey me, because I've picked up a ~ in my username. 15:23:52 (The "who's your admin" check is just an exact string equality test, not a pattern match.) 15:24:51 My VPS was having some network trouble, probably the indent check just failed temporarily. 15:39:21 -!- razetime has joined. 15:41:27 -!- razetime has quit (Client Quit). 15:47:53 -!- tromp has joined. 16:21:10 -!- tromp has quit (Quit: My iMac has gone to sleep. ZZZzzz…). 16:56:35 ooh nice! I sent a non-software bug report to someone and they replied, on the same day, not only that they have fixed the mistakes, but also that they just realized they hadn't acted on my previous bug report but now they fixed that too 17:19:00 -!- wib_jonas has quit (Quit: Client closed). 17:27:09 -!- tromp has joined. 17:44:26 A library I wrote was audited negatively because of unresolved issues. I should probably do something about that. 17:48:57 -!- tromp has quit (Quit: My iMac has gone to sleep. ZZZzzz…). 17:56:44 -!- gugu256 has joined. 17:59:31 -!- gugu_ has joined. 17:59:58 -!- gugu_ has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 18:18:25 -!- tromp has joined. 18:20:51 -!- gugu256 has quit (Ping timeout: 245 seconds). 18:20:59 -!- SGautam has joined. 18:27:12 -!- FreeFull has joined. 18:40:22 -!- tromp has quit (Quit: My iMac has gone to sleep. ZZZzzz…). 18:49:26 -!- b_jonas has joined. 18:52:40 -!- gugu256 has joined. 19:07:42 -!- gugu256 has quit (Ping timeout: 244 seconds). 19:22:11 -!- tromp has joined. 19:24:54 Sgeo: close them all with not a bug status! 19:25:37 close as "inactive" because there hasn't been any activity on them for 3 days 19:26:30 Hmm my latest instance was "closed because the package is being deprecated". It was a 2 year old ticket that I rememebred nothing about :) 19:27:07 Which... is good, really. It means that I wasn't personally affected. 19:28:25 so closed as wontfix status? 19:29:04 is it deprecated because nobody wants to maintain it, or because it's obsolete or badly designed and it's not worth to use even if someone maintained it? 19:29:06 Taking a look, it's a potential resource leak in an API no one uses because my crate is only know for a different function 19:30:06 ...the person didn't file an issue, just a pull request 19:32:14 so you know that the C++ standard standardized an interface for the Mersenne Twister mt19937 random generator, which was previously available with a simlar interface from boost and a different interface from GSL, right? only, TIL that the standardized interface isn't complete, it doesn't support the method to initialize the generator from a variable length array, so either you initialize it with a 19:32:20 32-bit seed (clearly inadequate), or in a nonstandard way different from what was specified for the original mt19937. 19:32:45 it's possible that I'm misunderstanding this, but this seems rather silly. the workaround is obvious, just use the boost version and pass it an array of eight integers. 19:33:02 -!- tromp has quit (Quit: My iMac has gone to sleep. ZZZzzz…). 19:33:10 boost does have the initializing constructor, though I haven't verified that it does the same as the original mt19937. 19:54:37 -!- tromp has joined. 20:03:23 -!- tromp has quit (Quit: My iMac has gone to sleep. ZZZzzz…). 20:07:58 -!- gugu256 has joined. 20:12:49 -!- mla has joined. 20:14:38 -!- bgs has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 20:18:31 -!- tromp has joined. 20:28:22 -!- tromp has quit (Quit: My iMac has gone to sleep. ZZZzzz…). 20:45:11 Which library did you write and what is the unresolved issue? 20:45:51 For my own projects, hardly anyone had ever added any issue reports at all 20:48:16 -!- tromp has joined. 21:02:06 -!- tromp has quit (Quit: My iMac has gone to sleep. ZZZzzz…). 21:07:46 -!- tromp has joined. 21:14:02 "Infeasible", "Obsolete", "Not reproducible" and "Intended behaviour" are our four not-a-bug statuses. 21:14:52 isn't "infeasable" a wontfix status? 21:17:55 -!- gugu256 has quit (Read error: Connection reset by peer). 21:18:52 Yes, maybe "not-a-bug" wasn't a good word. 21:19:23 -!- FireFly has quit (Quit: Leaving). 21:19:37 -!- FireFly has joined. 21:19:48 There are also feature requests. You might also specify "Illogical", "Out of scope for this project", "Deferred", etc 21:20:10 In fact, the full names of all four in our tracker might even be "Won't fix (Infeasible)", "Won't fix (Obsolete)", "Won't fix (Not reproducible)" and "Won't fix (Intended behavior)". 21:21:29 -!- Melvar has quit (*.net *.split). 21:21:30 -!- rodgort has quit (*.net *.split). 21:21:30 -!- op_4 has quit (*.net *.split). 21:22:07 -!- Melvar has joined. 21:22:45 -!- op_4 has joined. 21:23:03 -!- rodgort has joined. 21:29:00 Is there bug report tracker with NNTP? 21:31:13 I think there's a Jira - NNTP bridge of some sort. 21:34:58 Although it may no longer exist. 21:40:10 many bug trackers can send email, and I assume you can send that to an email to news bridge 21:40:46 usually a double conversion like that is a bad idea, but in this case it probably doesn't hurt much 21:43:24 -!- tromp has quit (Quit: My iMac has gone to sleep. ZZZzzz…). 21:56:06 -!- tromp has joined. 22:10:33 wontfix reminds me of https://xkcd.com/1172/ 22:12:04 I think I appreciate that strip better now that I'm on the other side of it, having to deal with changes that my co-workers make 22:13:40 -!- tromp has quit (Quit: My iMac has gone to sleep. ZZZzzz…). 22:19:38 Maybe the one should be made up which is designed to use with NNTP 22:40:25 [[)0,1(]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113407&oldid=92578 * Rphii * (-1) /* Abbreviations */ typo 22:52:57 [[Brainfuck]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113408&oldid=112933 * None1 * (+33) /* Cat */ Added a cat program that never terminates 22:53:29 [[Brainfuck]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113409&oldid=113408 * None1 * (+1) /* Cat */ 22:59:44 [[BOOMOP]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113410&oldid=108865 * Rphii * (+8) fix some typos 23:06:27 [[Division]] N https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?oldid=113411 * None1 * (+646) Created page with "Division is a stupid language created by [[User:None1]]. ==Syntax== Any valid program in Division looks like this: a/b a and b are non-negative decimal numbers. Any invalid program raises a syntax error: Syntax error For a valid program, if b is 0, it raises an error 23:13:30 [[Division]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113412&oldid=113411 * None1 * (+431) Implemented 23:14:30 -!- FreeFull has quit. 23:17:37 [[Division]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113413&oldid=113412 * None1 * (+6) /* Interpreter */ 23:20:40 [[Joke language list]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113414&oldid=113344 * None1 * (+73) /* General languages */ 23:25:07 [[User:None1]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113415&oldid=113403 * None1 * (+73) /* My Esolangs */ 23:27:17 [[Joke language list]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113416&oldid=113414 * None1 * (-1) /* General languages */ 23:29:48 [[Talk:AAAAAAAAAAAAAAaaaaaaaaaEEEEEEEaaaaaaaaaaaa]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113417&oldid=113305 * Linker-Error * (+235) 23:30:10 [[Talk:AAAAAAAAAAAAAAaaaaaaaaaEEEEEEEaaaaaaaaaaaa]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113418&oldid=113417 * Linker-Error * (+2) 23:30:17 [[Talk:AAAAAAAAAAAAAAaaaaaaaaaEEEEEEEaaaaaaaaaaaa]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113419&oldid=113418 * Linker-Error * (-1) 23:30:54 [[User:Linker-Error]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113420&oldid=113321 * Linker-Error * (+10) 23:32:20 [[Text]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113421&oldid=113109 * None1 * (+410) /* See also */ Added Text compiler to [[StupidStackLanguage]] 23:32:35 [[Text]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113422&oldid=113421 * None1 * (-1) /* See also */ 23:34:50 [[SSL]] N https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?oldid=113423 * None1 * (+33) Redirected page to [[StupidStackLanguage]] 23:37:15 [[Text]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=113424&oldid=113422 * None1 * (+30) /* Development of a compiler */ Added Befunge compiler