> 1699749704 327193 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Vroom14]]4 N10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?oldid=118947 5* 03Rignchen 5* (+4053) 10Created page with "{{infobox proglang |name=Vroom |author=Rignchen |year=[[:Category:2023|2023]] |memsys=stack |dimensions=[[:Category:Multi-dimensional_languages|Three-dimensional languages]] |class=[[:Category:Turing complete|Turing complete]] |refimpl=[https://github.com/Rignchen/Vroom_ < 1699749770 703565 :Noisytoot!~noisytoot@sourcehut/user/noisytoot JOIN #esolangs Noisytoot :Ron < 1699751797 277508 :Lord_of_Life!~Lord@user/lord-of-life/x-2819915 QUIT :Ping timeout: 246 seconds < 1699751823 508652 :Lord_of_Life!~Lord@user/lord-of-life/x-2819915 JOIN #esolangs Lord_of_Life :Lord < 1699752219 130022 :DemonDerg!A_D@libera/staff/dragon QUIT :Quit: ZNC - https://znc.in < 1699752237 232926 :A_Dragon!A_D@libera/staff/dragon JOIN #esolangs ad :Roy Mustang, The Flame Alchemist < 1699753821 320022 :A_Dragon!A_D@libera/staff/dragon NICK :DemonDerg < 1699754050 295062 :GregorR!~GregorR@71.19.155.102 QUIT :Server closed connection < 1699754064 437140 :GregorR!~GregorR@71.19.155.102 JOIN #esolangs GregorR :Gregor Richards < 1699754987 439252 :zzo38!~zzo38@host-24-207-52-143.public.eastlink.ca JOIN #esolangs zzo38 :zzo38 < 1699755070 511550 :raz3time!~razetime@sd202148.hung.ab.nthu.edu.tw JOIN #esolangs razetime :realname < 1699755180 747461 :zzo38_!~zzo38@host-24-207-52-143.public.eastlink.ca JOIN #esolangs * :zzo38 < 1699755292 439816 :zzo38!~zzo38@host-24-207-52-143.public.eastlink.ca QUIT :Ping timeout: 255 seconds < 1699757708 898096 :raz3time!~razetime@sd202148.hung.ab.nthu.edu.tw QUIT :Remote host closed the connection < 1699757733 285988 :raz3time!~razetime@sd202148.hung.ab.nthu.edu.tw JOIN #esolangs razetime :realname < 1699765199 594123 :raz3time!~razetime@sd202148.hung.ab.nthu.edu.tw QUIT :Quit: Go back to your cringe 9 to 5. I'll be gaming. > 1699766842 785716 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Vroom14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118948&oldid=118947 5* 03CreeperBomb 5* (+46) 10Edited punctuation, diction, and grammar/spelling > 1699767037 680307 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Imperator14]]4 M10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118949&oldid=118203 5* 03CreeperBomb 5* (+12) 10/* Syntax */ > 1699767273 211763 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07User:CreeperBomb14]]4 M10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118950&oldid=116944 5* 03CreeperBomb 5* (+13) 10 < 1699767303 770964 :zzo38_!~zzo38@host-24-207-52-143.public.eastlink.ca PRIVMSG #esolangs :If you have a set of i.i.d. random variables, and you have the probability distribution of one of them, what is the resulting probability distribution of one of them once the random variables have been sorted, and how to calculate it from the arbitrary starting probability distribution and how many they are? < 1699767406 766030 :leah2!~leah@vuxu.org QUIT :Server closed connection < 1699767431 163489 :leah2!~leah@vuxu.org JOIN #esolangs leah2 :Leah Neukirchen < 1699767501 175428 :zzo38_!~zzo38@host-24-207-52-143.public.eastlink.ca PRIVMSG #esolangs :(For example, if the probability distribution is zero 50% of the time and one 50% of the time, and there is two of them, then the probability distribution of the lowest one is zero 75% of the time and one 25% of the time. But, that is a simple case and is easy to calculate, since there is only two i.i.d. random variables.) < 1699767551 709456 :zzo38_!~zzo38@host-24-207-52-143.public.eastlink.ca PRIVMSG #esolangs :(Is there a simple way to do more generally, e.g. if you roll 4d6 drop lowest ten times, what is the probability distribution of the second highest result? That is just an example, of course.) < 1699767950 853002 :b_jonas!~x@89.134.28.158 PRIVMSG #esolangs :zzo38_: I think if the distribution of each variable has a continuous PDF of f(x) = P(X 1699777128 18970 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Talk:Whitespace14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118951&oldid=118548 5* 03HaleyHalcyon 5* (+260) 10/* I made a Python thing to make it easier to edit Whitespace code */ < 1699778430 622167 :example99!~example99@2001:9e8:e1c9:cf00:2358:70a8:db16:e3ea QUIT :Ping timeout: 250 seconds < 1699779532 680266 :chiselfuse!~chiselfus@user/chiselfuse QUIT :Ping timeout: 264 seconds < 1699780514 845602 :chiselfuse!~chiselfus@user/chiselfuse JOIN #esolangs chiselfuse :chiselfuse < 1699782133 877476 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :what a bothersome question... apparently < 1699782547 800981 :tromp!~textual@92-110-219-57.cable.dynamic.v4.ziggo.nl QUIT :Quit: My iMac has gone to sleep. ZZZzzz… < 1699782570 318128 :APic!apic@apic.name PRIVMSG #esolangs :😉 < 1699783173 456049 :chiselfu1e!~chiselfus@user/chiselfuse JOIN #esolangs chiselfuse :chiselfuse < 1699783384 680825 :chiselfuse!~chiselfus@user/chiselfuse QUIT :Ping timeout: 264 seconds < 1699783867 820801 :Taneb!~Taneb@runciman.hacksoc.org QUIT :Server closed connection < 1699783882 141920 :Taneb!~Taneb@2001:41c8:51:10d:aaaa:0:aaaa:0 JOIN #esolangs Taneb :Nathan van Doorn < 1699783917 869150 :sprout_!~quassel@2a02-a448-3a80-0-493b-fc12-ea4a-2368.fixed6.kpn.net JOIN #esolangs * :sprout < 1699784131 219907 :sprout!~quassel@2a02-a448-3a80-0-2814-d3e5-77a2-5f1c.fixed6.kpn.net QUIT :Ping timeout: 264 seconds < 1699784822 608248 :example99!~example99@2001:9e8:e1c9:cf00:af2f:fa54:b77b:664c JOIN #esolangs * :[https://web.libera.chat] example99 < 1699785224 761607 :example99!~example99@2001:9e8:e1c9:cf00:af2f:fa54:b77b:664c QUIT :Quit: Client closed < 1699785234 610499 :example99!~example99@2001:9e8:e1c9:cf00:af2f:fa54:b77b:664c JOIN #esolangs * :[https://web.libera.chat] example99 > 1699785270 24176 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Special:Log/newusers14]]4 create10 02 5* 03LTHCTheMaster 5* 10New user account < 1699785288 110413 :example99!~example99@2001:9e8:e1c9:cf00:af2f:fa54:b77b:664c QUIT :Client Quit < 1699785500 963814 :example99!~example99@2001:9e8:e1c9:cf00:af2f:fa54:b77b:664c JOIN #esolangs * :[https://web.libera.chat] example99 > 1699785606 800193 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Esolang:Introduce yourself14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118952&oldid=118879 5* 03LTHCTheMaster 5* (+328) 10 < 1699785657 25075 :example99!~example99@2001:9e8:e1c9:cf00:af2f:fa54:b77b:664c PRIVMSG #esolangs :btw i use 'elite' theme a darkmode that i loooooooove < 1699785668 650079 :example99!~example99@2001:9e8:e1c9:cf00:af2f:fa54:b77b:664c PRIVMSG #esolangs :esolAngs? < 1699786800 452742 :tromp!~textual@92-110-219-57.cable.dynamic.v4.ziggo.nl JOIN #esolangs * :Textual User < 1699786854 608914 :example99!~example99@2001:9e8:e1c9:cf00:af2f:fa54:b77b:664c QUIT :Ping timeout: 250 seconds > 1699787044 280167 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Vroom14]]4 M10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118953&oldid=118948 5* 03Rignchen 5* (+0) 10 < 1699787829 219688 :arseniiv!~arseniiv@193.29.105.187 JOIN #esolangs arseniiv :the chaotic arseniiv < 1699789462 450837 :sprout_!~quassel@2a02-a448-3a80-0-493b-fc12-ea4a-2368.fixed6.kpn.net NICK :sprout < 1699789927 395443 :Sgeo!~Sgeo@user/sgeo QUIT :Read error: Connection reset by peer > 1699791422 161272 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07LRL14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118954&oldid=102077 5* 03ChuckEsoteric08 5* (+0) 10 < 1699791455 54021 :arseniiv!~arseniiv@193.29.105.187 QUIT :Ping timeout: 260 seconds > 1699791485 49273 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07LRL14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118955&oldid=118954 5* 03ChuckEsoteric08 5* (+23) 10 > 1699791727 728813 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07LRL14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118956&oldid=118955 5* 03ChuckEsoteric08 5* (+10) 10 < 1699792333 449519 :__monty__!~toonn@user/toonn JOIN #esolangs toonn :Unknown < 1699792347 566828 :Koen!~Koen@2a01:e34:ec7c:30:7437:2543:904b:8000 JOIN #esolangs * :Koen < 1699794609 492473 :arseniiv!~arseniiv@193.29.105.187 JOIN #esolangs arseniiv :the chaotic arseniiv > 1699794841 22016 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Talk:!English14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118957&oldid=118946 5* 03None1 5* (+121) 10 < 1699795452 466140 :Thelie!~Thelie@2a03:2260:300c:400:61bd:fe2e:1f3c:b90a JOIN #esolangs Thelie :Thelie < 1699796052 12654 :chiselfu1e!~chiselfus@user/chiselfuse QUIT :Quit: leaving < 1699796075 1447 :chiselfuse!~chiselfus@user/chiselfuse JOIN #esolangs chiselfuse :chiselfuse < 1699796246 601338 :chiselfuse!~chiselfus@user/chiselfuse QUIT :Remote host closed the connection < 1699796379 144798 :chiselfuse!~chiselfus@user/chiselfuse JOIN #esolangs chiselfuse :chiselfuse < 1699798628 566759 :ais523!~ais523@user/ais523 JOIN #esolangs ais523 :(this is obviously not my real name) > 1699798749 447331 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07OISC14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118958&oldid=114586 5* 03ChuckEsoteric08 5* (-1) 10/* List of OISCs */ < 1699799512 126177 :ais523!~ais523@user/ais523 QUIT :Quit: sorry about my connection < 1699799526 403022 :ais523!~ais523@user/ais523 JOIN #esolangs ais523 :(this is obviously not my real name) > 1699800030 96363 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Vroom14]]4 M10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118959&oldid=118953 5* 03Rignchen 5* (-6) 10/* Cat program */ < 1699800503 914934 :tromp!~textual@92-110-219-57.cable.dynamic.v4.ziggo.nl QUIT :Quit: My iMac has gone to sleep. ZZZzzz… < 1699800927 429918 :ais523!~ais523@user/ais523 QUIT :Quit: sorry about my connection < 1699800940 107098 :ais523!~ais523@user/ais523 JOIN #esolangs ais523 :(this is obviously not my real name) > 1699801177 486633 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Vroom14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118960&oldid=118959 5* 03Rignchen 5* (+112) 10 < 1699801621 621974 :example99!~example99@2001:9e8:e1c9:cf00:8b5b:fb0:2ac0:96ca JOIN #esolangs * :[https://web.libera.chat] example99 < 1699801653 217519 :example99!~example99@2001:9e8:e1c9:cf00:8b5b:fb0:2ac0:96ca PRIVMSG #esolangs :ACTION slaps ais523 around a bit with a large trout < 1699801656 727428 :tromp!~textual@92-110-219-57.cable.dynamic.v4.ziggo.nl JOIN #esolangs * :Textual User < 1699801716 188354 :tromp!~textual@92-110-219-57.cable.dynamic.v4.ziggo.nl QUIT :Client Quit < 1699801790 786630 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :ACTION frowns < 1699802070 282425 :tromp!~textual@92-110-219-57.cable.dynamic.v4.ziggo.nl JOIN #esolangs * :Textual User < 1699802312 817899 :example99!~example99@2001:9e8:e1c9:cf00:8b5b:fb0:2ac0:96ca PRIVMSG #esolangs :ACTION slaps int-e around a bit with a large trout < 1699802360 450707 :example99!~example99@2001:9e8:e1c9:cf00:8b5b:fb0:2ac0:96ca PRIVMSG #esolangs :int-e: /slap example99 < 1699802438 786555 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :I prefer to have none of that mircy business. < 1699802886 697612 :example99!~example99@2001:9e8:e1c9:cf00:8b5b:fb0:2ac0:96ca PRIVMSG #esolangs :ACTION slaps ME around a bit with a large trout < 1699802903 684459 :example99!~example99@2001:9e8:e1c9:cf00:8b5b:fb0:2ac0:96ca PRIVMSG #esolangs : /SLAP ME < 1699802912 823858 :example99!~example99@2001:9e8:e1c9:cf00:8b5b:fb0:2ac0:96ca PRIVMSG #esolangs :                           /h < 1699802920 300068 :example99!~example99@2001:9e8:e1c9:cf00:8b5b:fb0:2ac0:96ca PRIVMSG #esolangs :#esolangs < 1699802996 811113 :ais523!~ais523@user/ais523 PRIVMSG #esolangs :example99: you are mostly just annoying the ops with this sort of thing < 1699803012 144343 :example99!~example99@2001:9e8:e1c9:cf00:8b5b:fb0:2ac0:96ca PRIVMSG #esolangs :sorry < 1699804123 962404 :ais523!~ais523@user/ais523 QUIT :Quit: sorry about my connection < 1699804138 400900 :ais523!~ais523@user/ais523 JOIN #esolangs ais523 :(this is obviously not my real name) < 1699804456 607839 :example99!~example99@2001:9e8:e1c9:cf00:8b5b:fb0:2ac0:96ca QUIT :Ping timeout: 250 seconds < 1699805065 578286 :ais523!~ais523@user/ais523 QUIT :Quit: quit < 1699806120 44177 :b_jonas!~x@89.134.28.158 PRIVMSG #esolangs :https://www.righto.com/2023/11/reverse-engineering-intel-386.html => whoa, he's tackling the 80386 now? but that is a huge chip, much more complicated than the 8086 and other small chips that he's examined earlier. it has associative caches and a lot of othe magic. < 1699806355 108933 :b_jonas!~x@89.134.28.158 PRIVMSG #esolangs :incidentally, even if you don't care about most of that blog, https://www.righto.com/2023/08/datapoint-to-8086.html is a very useful resource that specifically explains how the originalal 8086 instruction set got its historical baggage from the z80 and even earlier cpus < 1699806442 355791 :b_jonas!~x@89.134.28.158 PRIVMSG #esolangs :retrocomputing is just weird < 1699806480 886302 :b_jonas!~x@89.134.28.158 PRIVMSG #esolangs :and sure, I know we have this kind of decade-long transitive compatibility historical baggage not just in hardware but software < 1699806644 184086 :example99!~example99@2001:9e8:e1c9:cf00:ec54:5f72:af0d:9ca7 JOIN #esolangs * :[https://web.libera.chat] example99 < 1699806644 224833 :example99!~example99@2001:9e8:e1c9:cf00:ec54:5f72:af0d:9ca7 PRIVMSG #esolangs :Scientific papers about thought experiments with several participants often used letters to identify them, A, B, and C, etc. < 1699806644 224906 :example99!~example99@2001:9e8:e1c9:cf00:ec54:5f72:af0d:9ca7 PRIVMSG #esolangs :The first mention of Alice and Bob in the context of cryptography was in Rivest, Shamir, and Adleman's 1978 article "A method for obtaining digital signatures and public-key cryptosystems."[2] They wrote, "For our scenarios we suppose that A and B (also known as Alice and Bob) are two users of a public-key cryptosystem".[2]: 121  Previous to < 1699806644 224964 :example99!~example99@2001:9e8:e1c9:cf00:ec54:5f72:af0d:9ca7 PRIVMSG #esolangs :this article, cryptographers typically referred to message senders and receivers as A and B, or other simple symbols. In fact, in the two previous articles by Rivest, Shamir, and Adleman, introducing the RSA cryptosystem, there is no mention of Alice and Bob.[4][5] Possibly the choice of the first three names came from the film Bob & Carol & Ted & < 1699806644 224994 :example99!~example99@2001:9e8:e1c9:cf00:ec54:5f72:af0d:9ca7 PRIVMSG #esolangs :Alice.[6] < 1699806644 230633 :example99!~example99@2001:9e8:e1c9:cf00:ec54:5f72:af0d:9ca7 PRIVMSG #esolangs :Within a few years, however, references to Alice and Bob in cryptological literature became a common trope. Cryptographers would often begin their academic papers with reference to Alice and Bob. For instance, Michael Rabin began his 1981 paper, "Bob and Alice each have a secret, SB and SA, respectively, which they want to exchange."[7] Early on, < 1699806644 682553 :example99!~example99@2001:9e8:e1c9:cf00:ec54:5f72:af0d:9ca7 PRIVMSG #esolangs :Alice and Bob were starting to appear in other domains, such as in Manuel Blum's 1981 article, "Coin Flipping by Telephone: A Protocol for Solving Impossible Problems," which begins, "Alice and Bob want to flip a coin by telephone."[8] < 1699806645 183220 :example99!~example99@2001:9e8:e1c9:cf00:ec54:5f72:af0d:9ca7 PRIVMSG #esolangs :Although Alice and Bob were invented with no reference to their personality, authors soon began adding colorful descriptions. In 1983, Blum invented a backstory about a troubled relationship between Alice and Bob, writing, "Alice and Bob, recently divorced, mutually distrustful, still do business together. They live on opposite coasts, communicate < 1699806645 683538 :example99!~example99@2001:9e8:e1c9:cf00:ec54:5f72:af0d:9ca7 PRIVMSG #esolangs :mainly by telephone, and use their computers to transact business over the telephone."[9] In 1984, John Gordon delivered his famous[10] "After Dinner Speech" about Alice and Bob, which he imagines to be the first "definitive biography of Alice and Bob."[11] < 1699806646 184169 :example99!~example99@2001:9e8:e1c9:cf00:ec54:5f72:af0d:9ca7 PRIVMSG #esolangs :In addition to adding backstories and personalities to Alice and Bob, authors soon added other characters, with their own personalities. The first to be added was Eve, the "eavesdropper." Eve was invented in 1988 by Charles Bennet, Gilles Brassard, and Jean-Marc Robert, in their paper, "Privacy Amplification by Public Discussion."[12] In Bruce < 1699806646 682778 :example99!~example99@2001:9e8:e1c9:cf00:ec54:5f72:af0d:9ca7 PRIVMSG #esolangs :Schneier's book Applied Cryptography, other characters are listed.[13] < 1699806648 190282 :example99!~example99@2001:9e8:e1c9:cf00:ec54:5f72:af0d:9ca7 PRIVMSG #esolangs :Scientific papers about thought experiments with several participants often used letters to identify them, A, B, and C, etc. < 1699806648 683535 :example99!~example99@2001:9e8:e1c9:cf00:ec54:5f72:af0d:9ca7 PRIVMSG #esolangs :The first mention of Alice and Bob in the context of cryptography was in Rivest, Shamir, and Adleman's 1978 article "A method for obtaining digital signatures and public-key cryptosystems."[2] They wrote, "For our scenarios we suppose that A and B (also known as Alice and Bob) are two users of a public-key cryptosystem".[2]: 121  Previous to < 1699806649 184623 :example99!~example99@2001:9e8:e1c9:cf00:ec54:5f72:af0d:9ca7 PRIVMSG #esolangs :this article, cryptographers typically referred to message senders and receivers as A and B, or other simple symbols. In fact, in the two previous articles by Rivest, Shamir, and Adleman, introducing the RSA cryptosystem, there is no mention of Alice and Bob.[4][5] Possibly the choice of the first three names came from the film Bob & Carol & Ted & < 1699806649 683335 :example99!~example99@2001:9e8:e1c9:cf00:ec54:5f72:af0d:9ca7 PRIVMSG #esolangs :Alice.[6] < 1699806650 184480 :example99!~example99@2001:9e8:e1c9:cf00:ec54:5f72:af0d:9ca7 PRIVMSG #esolangs :Within a few years, however, references to Alice and Bob in cryptological literature became a common trope. Cryptographers would often begin their academic papers with reference to Alice and Bob. For instance, Michael Rabin began his 1981 paper, "Bob and Alice each have a secret, SB and SA, respectively, which they want to exchange."[7] Early on, < 1699806650 683502 :example99!~example99@2001:9e8:e1c9:cf00:ec54:5f72:af0d:9ca7 PRIVMSG #esolangs :Alice and Bob were starting to appear in other domains, such as in Manuel Blum's 1981 article, "Coin Flipping by Telephone: A Protocol for Solving Impossible Problems," which begins, "Alice and Bob want to flip a coin by telephone."[8] < 1699806654 199438 :ChanServ!ChanServ@services.libera.chat MODE #esolangs +q :*!*@2001:9e8:e1c9:cf00:ec54:5f72:af0d:9ca7 < 1699806668 966584 :ChanServ!ChanServ@services.libera.chat MODE #esolangs +o :int-e < 1699806688 536081 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu MODE #esolangs -q+b *!*@2001:9e8:e1c9:cf00:ec54:5f72:af0d:9ca7 :*!*@2001:9e8:e1c9:cf00:* < 1699806692 526111 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu KICK #esolangs example99 :example99 < 1699806696 446074 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu MODE #esolangs -o :int-e < 1699806725 165687 :b_jonas!~x@89.134.28.158 PRIVMSG #esolangs :eh, like leave it on quiet < 1699806730 281083 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :" hi! pls unquiet me that was just a test for huge messages" < 1699806813 417298 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :they've played around with /cycle earlier and +q doesn't prevent that < 1699806834 286773 :b_jonas!~x@89.134.28.158 PRIVMSG #esolangs :some of the historical quirks are annoying. like a very long time ago, C or unix, I don't know which, decided that it's OK if divison by zero or overflow in integer division raises a trap that might kill the process. I don't know if this comes from a hardware implementation of divison. it's inconvenient, it would be much better for everyone if integer division never raised a trap, but we can't get rid < 1699806838 819135 :Swyrl!sid553797@user/wryl QUIT :Server closed connection < 1699806840 299072 :b_jonas!~x@89.134.28.158 PRIVMSG #esolangs :of it now. \ < 1699806847 839303 :Swyrl!sid553797@user/wryl JOIN #esolangs Wryl :Wryl < 1699806856 716775 :b_jonas!~x@89.134.28.158 PRIVMSG #esolangs :int-e: oh, I didn't notice that. then fine. < 1699806931 718883 :b_jonas!~x@89.134.28.158 PRIVMSG #esolangs :and now, because of that stupid legacy, I can crash our production system by just computing &H80000000&\-1 in the badly implemented VBS interpreter. < 1699807032 786026 :b_jonas!~x@89.134.28.158 PRIVMSG #esolangs :VBS raises an error for divison by zero, but for some reason not in that case. why would they program it like that? probably originally because the whole giant industrial software was put together by cheap intern code monkeys, and then for the next three decades they don't dare to modify any part of it in later releases, only add new things, because they fear breaking compatibility with existing code. < 1699807072 841075 :b_jonas!~x@89.134.28.158 PRIVMSG #esolangs :because https://xkcd.com/1172/ , every change is an incompatible change < 1699807105 246924 :b_jonas!~x@89.134.28.158 PRIVMSG #esolangs :and my dayjob is to try to work around this stupid huge software that crashes all the time and I have no way to know why < 1699807152 203315 :b_jonas!~x@89.134.28.158 PRIVMSG #esolangs :I don't think the VBS divison overflow has come up in the actual system, that was just something I discovered when experimenting, the crashes are much less reproducable and so much harder to isolate sadly. < 1699807486 471165 :b_jonas!~x@89.134.28.158 PRIVMSG #esolangs :... or maybe the 386 doesn't actually have an associative cache for general data/code, only for paging and segmenting. oops < 1699807496 228695 :b_jonas!~x@89.134.28.158 PRIVMSG #esolangs :for some reason I thought it had general data cache. < 1699807514 526682 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :FWIW the IP isn't stable so I suppose they'll be back tomorrow. < 1699807534 153215 :b_jonas!~x@89.134.28.158 PRIVMSG #esolangs :sure < 1699808037 621643 :tromp!~textual@92-110-219-57.cable.dynamic.v4.ziggo.nl QUIT :Quit: My iMac has gone to sleep. ZZZzzz… < 1699809652 812454 :tromp!~textual@92-110-219-57.cable.dynamic.v4.ziggo.nl JOIN #esolangs * :Textual User > 1699810159 735482 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Simplier14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118961&oldid=118885 5* 03Rignchen 5* (+483) 10/* Examples */ < 1699811484 738376 :zzo38_!~zzo38@host-24-207-52-143.public.eastlink.ca PRIVMSG #esolangs :What do you think would be better for division by zero? (I had been writing my own ideas about operating system design, that it can be one differently if it is possible with the instruction set, although note that different instruction sets are possible.) > 1699811884 368602 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Vroom14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118962&oldid=118960 5* 03Rignchen 5* (+6) 10 < 1699811975 21174 :zzo38_!~zzo38@host-24-207-52-143.public.eastlink.ca PRIVMSG #esolangs :(This is, if the program is still written in C; although, I am not sure there is a better way in C) < 1699812076 34168 :zzo38_!~zzo38@host-24-207-52-143.public.eastlink.ca PRIVMSG #esolangs :(since if the program continues from where the error occurs, then that can also be a problem as well as not knowing what the result of a division by zero is (although uxn defines division by zero to be zero)) > 1699812819 469288 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07User:Quito056714]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118963&oldid=118483 5* 03Quito0567 5* (+30) 10 < 1699813201 114775 :tromp!~textual@92-110-219-57.cable.dynamic.v4.ziggo.nl QUIT :Quit: My iMac has gone to sleep. ZZZzzz… < 1699813308 290375 :b_jonas!~x@89.134.28.158 PRIVMSG #esolangs :https://www.righto.com/2023/10/intel-386-die-versions.html is explicit about the no data/code cache < 1699813398 146160 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :yeah you just had the prefetch queue < 1699813493 982006 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :Which was like 16 bytes long? You could actually measure it with self-modifying code because memory writes would not invalidate the prefetched data < 1699814018 966367 :ais523!~ais523@user/ais523 JOIN #esolangs ais523 :(this is obviously not my real name) < 1699814056 587716 :b_jonas!~x@89.134.28.158 PRIVMSG #esolangs :zzo38: if you were to design it anew, then in a C-like language it would be better if integer division by zero or division overflow just gave some integer result. it would be nontrivial to do this now, because on existing systems, a program can actually rely on the division trap, eg. catch the unix signal and handle it in a definte way. it might still be possible with some library stack unrolling magic < 1699814062 763634 :b_jonas!~x@89.134.28.158 PRIVMSG #esolangs :in the signal handler, but might not be worth. in a new high-level interpreted language, I think the best would still be to return some integer, but raising a high-level exception would also work. for the VBS implementation that I complained about, probably just change it to raise a division by zero error, it's much better than a crash. < 1699814248 565161 :ais523!~ais523@user/ais523 QUIT :Client Quit < 1699814261 142262 :ais523!~ais523@user/ais523 JOIN #esolangs ais523 :(this is obviously not my real name) < 1699814328 475620 :zzo38_!~zzo38@host-24-207-52-143.public.eastlink.ca PRIVMSG #esolangs :Uxn (which is not a C-like language) does define division by zero to result in zero; it is defined like that so that error traps are not possible. < 1699814812 741275 :Thelie!~Thelie@2a03:2260:300c:400:61bd:fe2e:1f3c:b90a QUIT :Quit: Leaving. < 1699814858 962142 :arseniiv!~arseniiv@193.29.105.187 QUIT :Quit: gone too far < 1699814934 540117 :tromp!~textual@92-110-219-57.cable.dynamic.v4.ziggo.nl JOIN #esolangs * :Textual User > 1699815216 260296 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07GotoScript14]]4 N10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?oldid=118964 5* 03Quito0567 5* (+2874) 10Created page with "{{infobox proglang |name=GotoScript |author=[[User:Quito0567]] |year=[[:Category:2023|2023]] |files=.goto }} '''GotoScript''' is an [[esoteric programming language]] devised by [[User:Quito0567]] in early November 2023. Its control flow consists of o > 1699815259 656033 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07GotoScript14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118965&oldid=118964 5* 03Quito0567 5* (+39) 10 < 1699815605 979981 :ais523!~ais523@user/ais523 PRIVMSG #esolangs :declarative languages have a very good solution to division by zero: division of a nonzero number by zero fails, division of zero by zero produces an unbound variable < 1699815624 205557 :ais523!~ais523@user/ais523 PRIVMSG #esolangs :(and presumably dividing an unbound variable by zero binds that variable to 0, although I don't think I've ever tested that case) > 1699815660 495822 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07GotoScript14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118966&oldid=118965 5* 03Quito0567 5* (+2) 10 > 1699816969 736883 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Simplier14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118967&oldid=118961 5* 03Rignchen 5* (+166) 10/* Examples */ > 1699817161 990122 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07GotoScript14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118968&oldid=118966 5* 03Quito0567 5* (+412) 10 > 1699817179 513465 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07GotoScript14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118969&oldid=118968 5* 03Quito0567 5* (+5) 10 > 1699817245 821979 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07GotoScript14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118970&oldid=118969 5* 03Quito0567 5* (+0) 10 > 1699817276 136041 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07GotoScript14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118971&oldid=118970 5* 03Quito0567 5* (-4) 10 > 1699817407 240362 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07GotoScript14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118972&oldid=118971 5* 03Quito0567 5* (+29) 10 > 1699817584 601004 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07GotoScript14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118973&oldid=118972 5* 03Quito0567 5* (-11) 10 > 1699817693 914231 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07FizzBuzz14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118974&oldid=115838 5* 03Quito0567 5* (+438) 10 < 1699817794 268821 :tromp!~textual@92-110-219-57.cable.dynamic.v4.ziggo.nl QUIT :Quit: My iMac has gone to sleep. ZZZzzz… < 1699818532 422958 :zzo38_!~zzo38@host-24-207-52-143.public.eastlink.ca PRIVMSG #esolangs :What programming language does that? (I can understand the sense of doing that, but I don't know what programming language that is?) < 1699818715 715103 :tromp!~textual@92-110-219-57.cable.dynamic.v4.ziggo.nl JOIN #esolangs * :Textual User < 1699819005 419312 :b_jonas!~x@89.134.28.158 PRIVMSG #esolangs :ais523: that sounds great in theory, until you try to write a prolog program that does a conditional on a numeric comparison like (B, C < D -> E ; F), some unrelated code before the comparison fails to match unexpectedly, and your program now silently behaves as if that numeric comparison gave false, and you hunt the bug for hours. this is one of several reasons why my Olvashato transpiler gives such < 1699819011 428657 :b_jonas!~x@89.134.28.158 PRIVMSG #esolangs :ugly prolog code: it tries to avoid that failure mode really hard, and add an abort after every =/2 match or arithmetic comparison, and since it's a very simple transpiler, it can basically never prove that the abort can be eliminated. < 1699819061 615674 :b_jonas!~x@89.134.28.158 PRIVMSG #esolangs :It can't prove deconsing matches irrefutable because that would require implementing an algebraic type system. < 1699819157 865140 :b_jonas!~x@89.134.28.158 PRIVMSG #esolangs :zzo38: prolog mostly, also languages that inherit prolog failure semantics, namely Oz and Brachylog < 1699819196 903632 :b_jonas!~x@89.134.28.158 PRIVMSG #esolangs :for Brachylog there'd be no problem because it's a golf language so unexpected silent weird semantics for errors is acceptible < 1699819210 630151 :b_jonas!~x@89.134.28.158 PRIVMSG #esolangs :but Prolog is used for serious programming too, and there it's not < 1699819477 421467 :b_jonas!~x@89.134.28.158 PRIVMSG #esolangs :there might be also a language that inherits prolog's failure and retries semantics but doesn't have prolog's recursive term unification, but I haven't seen such a language < 1699819556 934886 :b_jonas!~x@89.134.28.158 PRIVMSG #esolangs :it'd still need prolog-like variable that are single-assignment but unassigned on a rollback from failure < 1699819595 118022 :b_jonas!~x@89.134.28.158 PRIVMSG #esolangs :just, like, without such variables appearing in any slot argument of a term < 1699819847 565396 :b_jonas!~x@89.134.28.158 PRIVMSG #esolangs :https://www.righto.com/2023/10/intel-386-die-versions.html => OH! that explains a lot about the 386 SX versus 386 DX. I assumed they were the same thing except that one had the equivalent of the 80287 coprocessor built in, but they are actually much more different. < 1699819907 107254 :Sgeo!~Sgeo@user/sgeo JOIN #esolangs Sgeo :realname < 1699820059 15383 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :No. The SX and DX that were almost the same were the 486DX and the 486SX that lacked coprocessor support. Oh and early 487 coprocessors were also essentially full 486DX, IIRC. Also IIRC the 486SX were 486DX whose FPU was faulty (didn't pass quality control). < 1699820109 685694 :b_jonas!~x@89.134.28.158 PRIVMSG #esolangs :hmm < 1699820432 836711 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :But I didn't know that their primary reason for the 386 SX was chip packaging... that's wild. > 1699820434 655332 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07GotoScript14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118975&oldid=118973 5* 03Quito0567 5* (-92) 10 < 1699820454 706579 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :Then again so is the thought of a 64 bit RAM for $99. > 1699820593 632542 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07GotoScript14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118976&oldid=118975 5* 03Quito0567 5* (+27) 10 < 1699820809 24485 :b_jonas!~x@89.134.28.158 PRIVMSG #esolangs :ah, so apparently the 486 DX is the ones that has a 80287-equivalent coprocessor built into it, whereas the 487 SX doesn't < 1699820828 411201 :FireFly!~firefly@glowbum/gluehwuermchen/firefly QUIT :Server closed connection < 1699820852 821696 :FireFly!~firefly@glowbum/gluehwuermchen/firefly JOIN #esolangs FireFly :firefly < 1699820857 333673 :b_jonas!~x@89.134.28.158 PRIVMSG #esolangs :"early 487 coprocessors" => did those exist? I assumed that by that time the coprocessor is either built-in or software-emulated, no point to have it as a separate chip. > 1699821061 145242 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07GotoScript14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118977&oldid=118976 5* 03Quito0567 5* (+301) 10 < 1699821130 166183 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X87#80487 > 1699821142 572351 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07GotoScript14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118978&oldid=118977 5* 03Quito0567 5* (+0) 10 < 1699821151 116569 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu PRIVMSG #esolangs :b_jonas: You're not wrong: "When installed into an i486SX system, the i487 disabled the main CPU and took over all CPU operations." :-P > 1699821309 395216 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07GotoScript14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118979&oldid=118978 5* 03Quito0567 5* (+0) 10 > 1699821324 393716 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07GotoScript14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118980&oldid=118979 5* 03Quito0567 5* (+0) 10 > 1699821346 833676 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07GotoScript14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118981&oldid=118980 5* 03Quito0567 5* (+1) 10 < 1699821368 420808 :b_jonas!~x@89.134.28.158 PRIVMSG #esolangs :... > 1699821571 600772 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07GotoScript14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118982&oldid=118981 5* 03Quito0567 5* (+48) 10 > 1699821601 547137 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07GotoScript14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118983&oldid=118982 5* 03Quito0567 5* (+14) 10 > 1699821626 993895 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07GotoScript14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118984&oldid=118983 5* 03Quito0567 5* (+1) 10 < 1699821631 394347 :__monty__!~toonn@user/toonn QUIT :Quit: leaving > 1699823099 501995 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07A very minimal esolang with a very few amount of instructions14]]4 N10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?oldid=118985 5* 030ptr 5* (+24443) 10Created page with "'''A very minimal esolang with a very few amount of instructions''' is a very minimal esolang with a very few amount of instructions. '''A very minimal esolang with a very few amount of instructions''' has: - An array > 1699823154 336725 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Truth-machine14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118986&oldid=118370 5* 03Quito0567 5* (+127) 10 > 1699823172 681145 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Truth-machine14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118987&oldid=118986 5* 03Quito0567 5* (+2) 10 > 1699823199 691356 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Language list14]]4 M10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118988&oldid=118927 5* 030ptr 5* (+68) 10 > 1699823311 517995 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07A very minimal esolang with a very few amount of instructions14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118989&oldid=118985 5* 030ptr 5* (+0) 10 > 1699823338 929156 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Factorial14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118990&oldid=116311 5* 03Quito0567 5* (+193) 10 > 1699823484 363448 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07User:Quito0567/InDev14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118991&oldid=116800 5* 03Quito0567 5* (-148) 10 > 1699823573 111671 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07ErrorFull14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118992&oldid=114920 5* 03Quito0567 5* (+1) 10 > 1699823577 746395 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07A very minimal esolang with a very few amount of instructions14]]4 M10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118993&oldid=118989 5* 030ptr 5* (-47) 10remove the \uFFFF instruction > 1699823588 500617 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07ErrorFull14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118994&oldid=118992 5* 03Quito0567 5* (+3) 10 > 1699823752 775978 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Super Yellow14]]4 N10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?oldid=118995 5* 03LTHCTheMaster 5* (+7016) 10Created page with "{{infobox proglang |name=Super Yellow |author=LTHCTheMaster |year=[[:Category:2023|2023]] |memsys=variables |dimensions=One-dimensional languages |refimpl=[https://github.com/LTHCTheMaster/Super-Yellow Super Yellow] |files=.redgreen }} '''Super Y > 1699823928 622441 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Super Yellow14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118996&oldid=118995 5* 03LTHCTheMaster 5* (+0) 10/* Fibonacci Sequence */ > 1699823944 875938 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Super Yellow14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118997&oldid=118996 5* 03LTHCTheMaster 5* (+0) 10/* 99 Bottles Of Beer */ > 1699823947 899940 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07A very minimal esolang with a very few amount of instructions14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118998&oldid=118993 5* 03Quito0567 5* (+171) 10 > 1699823968 706340 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07A very minimal esolang with a very few amount of instructions14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=118999&oldid=118998 5* 03Quito0567 5* (+0) 10 > 1699824147 468938 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Super Yellow14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=119000&oldid=118997 5* 03LTHCTheMaster 5* (+142) 10/* Commands */ > 1699824237 265272 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Super Yellow14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=119001&oldid=119000 5* 03LTHCTheMaster 5* (-138) 10/* Commands */ > 1699824288 30115 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Super Yellow14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=119002&oldid=119001 5* 03LTHCTheMaster 5* (+2) 10/* Commands */ < 1699824900 914251 :tromp!~textual@92-110-219-57.cable.dynamic.v4.ziggo.nl QUIT :Read error: Connection reset by peer < 1699827112 736892 :j-bot!~jbot@irc.supplies QUIT :Server closed connection < 1699827126 886060 :j-bot!~jbot@irc.supplies JOIN #esolangs * :jevalbot > 1699828991 694626 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Special:Log/newusers14]]4 create10 02 5* 03PiggyPig 5* 10New user account > 1699829272 990103 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Esolang:Introduce yourself14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=119003&oldid=118952 5* 03PiggyPig 5* (+109) 10/* Introductions */ > 1699829334 262824 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07User:PiggyPig14]]4 N10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?oldid=119004 5* 03PiggyPig 5* (+19) 10Created page with "Hello, i'm a Groink" > 1699830096 668121 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Super Yellow14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=119005&oldid=119002 5* 03LTHCTheMaster 5* (+18) 10 > 1699830626 278404 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07GotoScript14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=119006&oldid=118984 5* 03Quito0567 5* (+78) 10 > 1699830666 784144 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07GotoScript14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=119007&oldid=119006 5* 03Quito0567 5* (+6) 10 > 1699830696 869664 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07GotoScript14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=119008&oldid=119007 5* 03Quito0567 5* (+4) 10 > 1699830816 681779 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07GotoScript14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=119009&oldid=119008 5* 03Quito0567 5* (-23) 10 > 1699830849 665629 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07GotoScript14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=119010&oldid=119009 5* 03Quito0567 5* (+18) 10 > 1699831104 603986 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07GotoScript14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=119011&oldid=119010 5* 03Quito0567 5* (-2) 10 > 1699831169 546826 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Super Yellow14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=119012&oldid=119005 5* 03LTHCTheMaster 5* (+296) 10 < 1699831571 567536 :ChanServ!ChanServ@services.libera.chat MODE #esolangs +o :int-e < 1699831585 916234 :int-e!~noone@int-e.eu MODE #esolangs -bo *!*@2001:9e8:e1c9:cf00:* :int-e > 1699831668 431833 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Linecode14]]4 N10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?oldid=119013 5* 03PiggyPig 5* (+5507) 10Created page with "{{infobox proglang |name=Linecode |author=PiggyPig |year=[[:Category:2023|2023]] |memsys=variable |dimensions=One-dimensional languages |refimpl=[https://github.com/PiggyPigCute/linecode] |files=.linecode }} The '''LineCode''' is the project of programin > 1699831843 21312 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Linecode14]]4 M10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=119014&oldid=119013 5* 03PiggyPig 5* (-3) 10small formating changes > 1699831922 705948 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Linecode14]]4 M10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=119015&oldid=119014 5* 03PiggyPig 5* (-26) 10small formating changes > 1699831954 191308 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Linecode14]]4 M10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=119016&oldid=119015 5* 03PiggyPig 5* (+0) 10small formating changes < 1699832089 612967 :Quito0567!~Quito0567@50.47.238.241 JOIN #esolangs * :[https://web.libera.chat] Quito0567 < 1699832105 904074 :Quito0567!~Quito0567@50.47.238.241 PRIVMSG #esolangs ::D < 1699832115 116482 :Quito0567!~Quito0567@50.47.238.241 QUIT :Client Quit > 1699832239 461816 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Linecode14]]4 M10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=119017&oldid=119016 5* 03PiggyPig 5* (+275) 10small formating changes > 1699832564 203458 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07GotoScript14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=119018&oldid=119011 5* 03Quito0567 5* (-1) 10 > 1699832681 348706 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07User:Quito056714]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=119019&oldid=118963 5* 03Quito0567 5* (-51) 10 > 1699832837 476624 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07User:Quito056714]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=119020&oldid=119019 5* 03Quito0567 5* (+43) 10 > 1699832869 833242 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07User:Quito056714]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=119021&oldid=119020 5* 03Quito0567 5* (-14) 10 > 1699832887 162057 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07User:Quito056714]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=119022&oldid=119021 5* 03Quito0567 5* (-1) 10 > 1699832924 397110 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07User:Quito056714]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=119023&oldid=119022 5* 03Quito0567 5* (+1) 10 > 1699833003 7948 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07User:Quito056714]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=119024&oldid=119023 5* 03Quito0567 5* (+0) 10 > 1699833007 693735 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07Super Yellow14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=119025&oldid=119012 5* 03LTHCTheMaster 5* (+129) 10 > 1699833023 784499 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07User:Quito056714]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=119026&oldid=119024 5* 03Quito0567 5* (+0) 10 > 1699833039 374420 PRIVMSG #esolangs :14[[07GotoScript14]]4 10 02https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=119027&oldid=119018 5* 03Quito0567 5* (-6) 10