00:10:51 <esolangs> [[Microwave]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169767&oldid=137054 * PhilipNaveenn * (+2356) Updated Docs.
00:11:38 <esolangs> [[Microwave]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169768&oldid=169767 * PhilipNaveenn * (+13) /* External Resources */
00:11:59 <esolangs> [[Microwave]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169769&oldid=169768 * PhilipNaveenn * (+7) /* External Resources */
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05:08:29 <esolangs> [[User:Jk.NDC]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169772&oldid=169771 * Jk.NDC * (+0) /* semi-Weekly Riddle */
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10:23:27 <esolangs> [[Underun]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169773&oldid=169730 * Yayimhere2(school) * (+0) /* Rewrite rules */
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10:41:53 <ais523> I can't think of any recently (apart from the ones Keymaker just posted)
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10:47:19 <b_jonas> Yayimhere: Bytepusher, and think about how you can set up arithmetic on it with just a bunch of 256 byte long tables without needing a full 65536 byte sized table
10:47:36 <b_jonas> I think it's an interesting exercise and when I first read about the machine I hadn't realized yet that it's possible
10:48:13 <b_jonas> I still don't quite like the machine, but I hate it less than when I had thought you'd be wasting your precious address space on several full 64 kilobyte sized tables
10:49:26 <b_jonas> TODO: add Bytepusher to my list
10:51:12 <b_jonas> Yayimhere: also maybe just look at the short notes in https://esolangs.org/wiki/User:B_jonas/List and read whichever language has a short description catches your fancy, though I admit those descriptions are often rather opaque to anyone but me
10:51:30 <ais523> the descriptions seem fine to me
10:51:50 <Yayimhere> b_jonas: as i am not the biggest fancier of virtual machines, im just gonna do that
10:51:59 <ais523> fwiw I think oerjan proved Countercall sub-TC but can't remember how the proof worked
10:53:03 <ais523> Xigxag used to be lumped with Dupdog as members of the "this is probably non-TC but hard to prove" family, they're fairly similar languages (but Xigxag is a lot more elegant)
10:56:23 <ais523> actually Dupdog is pretty reminiscent of Smullyan's esolangs, but I don't think it has enough commands to be TC
11:05:09 <Yayimhere> has anyone made like an "operator solving language"
11:05:34 <Yayimhere> a language that creates operators by describing them by other operators
11:05:43 <Yayimhere> and "solves" for them by those descriptions
11:10:38 <b_jonas> you'll probably want a few 4k (or at least 1k) byte sized tables for speed, but everything together should take no more than even on 64k table
11:11:30 <b_jonas> ais52#: thank you, but you may have more of the necessary background than Yayim
11:11:50 <b_jonas> wait, oerjan proved Countercall sub-TC? this I'll be interested to hear
11:11:56 <ais523> Yayimhere: that idea reminds me of https://esolangs.org/wiki/Clue_(oklopol)
11:12:17 <ais523> b_jonas: I think the proof might be in the logs somewhere, I don't remember what it was and didn't write it odwn
11:12:34 <Yayimhere> ais523: thats pretty close to what ive begun work on
11:13:29 <ais523> I think Clue might have been the first time we had two esolangs with the same name
11:14:13 <b_jonas> yeah, I'm guilty about that too, I think I proved that dofuck without io (brainfuck without ui with bracket loops executing at least once) is turing-complete and you can translate brainfuck to it reasonably, but haven't written the proof down, there's only a few details in the chat logs
11:15:23 <Yayimhere> is there any name for a stack operator that, for the stack elements `A,B,C,D` returns `A,D,C,B`?
11:15:28 <ais523> b_jonas: I think I did that too
11:15:37 <ais523> Yayimhere: which end's the top of the stack?
11:15:55 <Yayimhere> ais523: the rightmost element in this case
11:16:09 <ais523> I vaguely remember seeing that before but don't know offhand whether it has a name
11:17:10 <b_jonas> ais523: yes, that's been independently proved multiple times
11:17:45 <b_jonas> I also haven't written down much about some of the restricted Amycus and Amicus variants, and I've forgotten what I found by now
11:18:28 <b_jonas> there's at least one interesting variant where I couldn't determine how much power it has
11:21:23 <esolangs> [[Turing tarpit]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169774&oldid=169718 * None1 * (-50) /* Survey */
11:39:24 <ais523> @pl \f x y z -> f z y x
11:40:39 <lambdabot> (a1 -> a2 -> b -> c) -> a1 -> b -> a2 -> c
11:41:20 <ais523> of course, functions parameters aren't actually stacks, usually
11:41:25 <ais523> but the terminology can be similar sometimes
11:41:44 <ais523> I've experimented with implementing a stack as a long list of function arguments
11:42:22 <Yayimhere> is that not quite similar to the underload-as-rewriting rule table?
11:42:26 <ais523> it almost works but there are practical problems with handling the bottom of the stack and doing things other than stack processing
11:42:39 <ais523> it is, it's very similar, that's what made me experiment with it
11:44:15 <Yayimhere> I think just have made my language uncomputable
11:50:22 <Yayimhere> I wonder if underload is tc if : is replaced with :*
11:50:32 <HackEso> :*`? No such file or directory
12:02:29 <ais523> hmm, that's interesting
12:02:48 <ais523> I think it's still TC with :* because you could do a:*^ as the equivalent of :
12:03:08 <ais523> ^ul (a)(b)a:*^S(-)SS(-)SS
12:03:31 <ais523> and with :^ I think you can do a:^~^~
12:03:50 <ais523> ^ul (a)(b)a:^~^~S(-)SS(-)SS
12:04:29 <ais523> there's some amount of slack in Underload to make new commands by combining other commands
12:04:56 <ais523> 7 makes use of that, it arranges the commands somewhat differently from Underload but you can still (sort of) go back and forth
12:05:29 <Yayimhere> I wonder if there exists a turing complete "oisc" of underload
12:10:26 <ais523> OISCs kind-of need arguments to work correctly
12:10:50 <ais523> otherwise as soon as you have a non-halting program, all longer programs also have to be non-halting
12:11:09 <Yayimhere> in `m^` m is sort of the only argument
12:11:55 <ais523> I suspect there are lots of fundamentally different ways to write a 2ISC without arguments
12:12:39 <ais523> TISC could be either two or three (or possibly ten)
12:13:17 <ais523> I think the names are jokes/parodies on RISC and CISC
12:13:47 <ais523> it's a processor where the machine code instructions are individually simple, and usually also orthogonal
12:13:59 <ais523> so you can use any command with any argument
12:14:25 <ais523> whereas CISCs tend to have both individually complicated instructions and lots of special cases
12:15:14 <ais523> CISC mostly ended up winning because modern processors tend to translate the machine code into a different format internally anyway, so the only real effect that the instruction format has is to change how small or large programs are
12:15:27 <ais523> and CISC is usually better-compressed
12:16:15 <ais523> that said, the two most popular processor architectures nowadays are x86-64 (CISC) and AArch64 (which is historically based on a RISC processor but I'm not sure how RISCy it still is)
12:16:58 <ais523> a few years ago basically everyone was on x86-64, but AArch64 has become surprisingly popular in a fairly short length of time and now they're both pretty reasonable architectures to target
12:19:13 <ais523> (this is for laptop/desktop computers, rather than smartphones)
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12:56:59 <fizzie> `blsq "L68 L30 R48 L5 R60 L55 L1 L99 R14 L82"wd 50Pp{g_**2&&-.jri.*pP.+100.%Pp}m[vvp\CL:z?L[ " not an auspicious beginning "vv
13:05:01 <ais523> at a wild guess, is this related to Advent of Code?
13:05:49 <ais523> I don't have any definitive evidence of this, but programs out of the blue in rarely-used languages in early December generally raise my suspicions
13:05:49 <fizzie> Yeah, it's the only reason I ever interact with Burlesque.
13:35:02 <esolangs> [[+-)]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169775&oldid=148396 * None1 * (+2) /* + */
13:36:45 <esolangs> [[Load]] N https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?oldid=169776 * None1 * (+2496) Created page with "{{lowercase}} '''load''' is yet [[oxen|another]] 4-instruction esolang invented by [[User:None1]], this time a real [[Turing tarpit]]. ==Memory== Seven accumulators: A-G are used. They contain unbounded ''signed'' integers. At first, A is 1 and others are 0. ==Commands== loa
13:37:09 <esolangs> [[Load]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169777&oldid=169776 * None1 * (+3) /* Commands */
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13:54:34 <esolangs> [[Talk:Load]] N https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?oldid=169778 * I am islptng * (+255) Created page with "Have a look at [[LinearModulo2]], also with 4 instructions(actually operators). There's also [[StackLinearModulo2]] which is likely more powerful but different. ~~~~"
13:56:37 <sorear> RISC and CISC are marketing terms from the early 1980s. Don't use them, they're actively harmful to understanding anything except that part of history
14:01:38 <sorear> RISC and CISC were ways of talking around VAX, a machine where a perfectly normal ADDL3 instruction can make 6 independent memory accesses, and the MIPS R2000, which was one of the first cut down enough for a single-chip implementation, even leaving out multiplies
14:02:24 <sorear> it was also one of the first single-chip microprocessors to use a pin grid array package large enough for a full 32-bit bus, which I think was more impactful than anything in the logical design
14:02:35 <sorear> nothing that exists today even slightly resembles either of them
14:03:22 <sorear> kids mentally map "x86" to "CISC" and "arm" to "RISC" and then try to apply the "lessons of the 1980s" in ways that don't actually make sense
14:07:02 <esolangs> [[ELEMENTARY]] N https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?oldid=169779 * Ais523 * (+8020) about time this was documented it's likely of interest to a range of esoprogrammers, despite not having been constructed as an esolang in the traditional sense
14:07:30 <esolangs> [[Language list]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169780&oldid=169753 * Ais523 * (+17) /* E */ +[[ELEMENTARY]]
14:09:06 <sorear> early MIPS had fairly terrible code size partly because that was how things factored out with the 32 bit/cycle off-chip cache and partly because people weren't optimizing for "you want the bus to be idle as much as possible to save power" back then. 68k was suffering from a narrow bus so they had a much more immediate benefit from variable-length instructions
14:13:43 <esolangs> [[ELEMENTARY]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169781&oldid=169779 * Ais523 * (+3) /* Syntax */ two typo fixes
14:14:23 <esolangs> [[Unfunge]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169782&oldid=161516 * JIT * (+29)
14:16:35 <ais523> hmm, now I'm wondering whether the semi-serious language list's inclusion criterion should be "the language must be complete for a non-arbitrary computational class", so Turing-complete, PDA-complete, LBA-complete, ELEMENTARY-complete, or the like
14:17:06 <ais523> even FSM-complete languages are probably usually interesting, even though most of our finite-state languages aren't
14:17:35 <ais523> (and we should continue to allow languages that are almost TC but fail due to integer size / memory size limits)
14:27:23 <Yayimhere> though I think it might be hard for some languages, to *prove*
14:28:03 <ais523> right, I didn't realize BuzzFizz was LBA-complete until someone else pointed it out
14:28:12 <ais523> (I knew it was an LBA but not that it was complete, and thought it wasn't)
14:29:28 <ais523> linear-bounded automaton
14:32:56 <Yayimhere> how rare is it for a language to fall into its own computational class category
14:33:38 <ais523> it's pretty rare for it to do that in an interesting way
14:34:04 <ais523> uninteresting examples are common, though, example-based languages often have their own computational class
14:34:25 <ais523> because they only support one or two specific programs
14:35:34 <sorear> Is the type of reduction relevant or is that fully determined by the X-complete?
14:36:29 <ais523> Yayimhere: https://esolangs.org/wiki/Feed_the_Chaos most recently
14:37:07 <ais523> sorear: I think it's mostly obvious/uninteresting in practice, but I'm not sure it always is in theory, and there have been some awkward cases like the 2,3 Turing machine
14:40:18 <sorear> particularly awkward case since the nontrivial background puts it outside the usual _problem_ definition for turing machines; what I had in mind was more "Turing or Karp and what are the complexity limits on the reducer"
14:41:19 <ais523> for TC reductions you can usually just say "the reducer has to terminate" and then it's only an interesting problem in cases where it doesn't
14:41:36 <ais523> for lower computational classes that isn't necessarily enough, but it's pretty rare for people to try to cheat on that
14:41:56 <ais523> and I think it might still be enough for PDA/LBA but I'm not 100% sure (it isn't for FSM)
14:43:36 <sorear> I think "FSM" is only really interesting in the presence of I/O, so you can say that the reducer doesn't have access to I/O and handle it that way
14:44:04 <sorear> for LBAs you get into questions like "linear in what"
14:46:10 <ais523> I agree that FSMs are only interesting if they do I/O
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15:03:21 <esolangs> [[I/M Machine]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169783&oldid=158916 * TBPO * (+38) /* Computational class */
15:04:05 <esolangs> [[4gn/]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169784&oldid=167314 * JIT * (+7)
15:07:45 <esolangs> [[User:TenBillionPlusOne]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169785&oldid=159083 * TBPO * (-140) /* Current strategy */
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15:08:06 <esolangs> [[User:TenBillionPlusOne]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169786&oldid=169785 * TBPO * (-288) /* Users */
15:08:13 <Yayimhere> I remembrered I made this a while ago, I wonder if its turing complete: https://esolangs.org/wiki/Turtle_just_want_to_dig
15:09:10 <esolangs> [[Turtle just want to dig]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169787&oldid=140162 * Yayimhere2(school) * (-27) /* how it works */
15:09:22 <esolangs> [[Topple/Topple 1]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169788&oldid=168106 * H33T33 * (+51)
15:11:15 <ais523> Yayimhere: I'm not sure if there's a way to have the value of a counter affect control flow
15:12:45 <Yayimhere> and can have multiple values since there can be multiple holes
15:13:52 <ais523> right, I meant the unbounded counter
15:14:12 <Yayimhere> you can also technically move the õ to the left and right
15:14:27 <Yayimhere> which mayhaps can be used as *some* sort of weird control flow
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15:15:43 <ais523> I think that probably doesn't work because if the top õ is in a position to move left or right, it can no longer be pushed downwards
15:16:08 <Yayimhere> ais523: it can, since the place moved two could be one where it could be pushed down
15:16:29 <ais523> Yayimhere: doesn't it prefer to move sideways rather than downwards, if it has a choice?
15:17:25 <ais523> so as long as there's space beside it (e.g. a space it just moved from) it'll always prefer to go back to that space rather than moving downwards
15:18:09 <ais523> this is the sort of thing I look for when trying to prove an esolang non-Turing-complete
15:18:31 <ais523> it is called the "arbitrary effect at an arbitary point" problem – the commands that make the language TC might exist, but you have no way to cause them to run at the correct moment
15:20:18 <Yayimhere> I think that mayhaps some interesting things are doable when using `>` since the pointer doesnt move let or right *with* the bug
15:28:18 <esolangs> [[Turtle just want to dig]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169789&oldid=169787 * Yayimhere2(school) * (+198) /* how it works */ add two commands that would be *very* useful.
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15:30:01 <ais523> I agree those are useful, but they don't help with TCness because eventually the bug will be pushed below all the ( and ) commands
15:30:44 <ais523> I'm wondering what would happen if the bugs preferred to go down rather than sideways
15:30:44 <Yayimhere> but im unsure if its too much modification too the point where it isnt close enough to the original language
15:30:55 <Yayimhere> ais523: that is interesting actually
15:31:03 <ais523> I'm still not sure it's TC but there are at least some interesting interactions between bugs then
15:33:17 <Yayimhere> maybe I did actually include it as such in the original definition
15:34:59 <esolangs> [[Turtle just want to dig]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169790&oldid=169789 * Yayimhere2(school) * (+50) /* how it works */
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15:54:55 <esolangs> [[User talk:Ais523]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169791&oldid=169687 * * (+403) /* User:TBPO */ new section
15:57:03 <esolangs> [[User talk:Ais523]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169792&oldid=169791 * Ais523 * (+320) /* User:TBPO */ probably the same person
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16:04:36 <esolangs> [[User talk:TBPO]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169793&oldid=156721 * * (+86) /* Hey */ new section
16:04:48 <esolangs> [[User talk:TBPO]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169794&oldid=169793 * * (+82) /* Hey */
16:15:25 <esolangs> [[Template:BG]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169795&oldid=163973 * * (+6)
16:17:21 <esolangs> [[User:/Template:SignBRZ]] N https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?oldid=169796 * * (+209) Created page with "{{SUBST:BG|green|[[User:|{{SUBST:FontColor|white|mario}}]]}}{{SUBST:BG|red|[[User talk:|{{SUBST:FontColor|white|maker}}]]}}"
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16:24:58 <esolangs> [[User:/Template:SignBRZ]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169797&oldid=169796 * * (+1535)
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16:26:38 <esolangs> [[User talk:]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169798&oldid=168649 * * (+1545)
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16:27:13 <esolangs> [[User talk:]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169799&oldid=169798 * * (+12)
16:28:23 <esolangs> [[User talk:]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169800&oldid=169799 * Ais523 * (+597) /* Signature length */ new section
16:29:58 <esolangs> [[User talk:]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169801&oldid=169800 * * (+1817)
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16:32:01 <esolangs> [[User talk:]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169802&oldid=169801 * Ais523 * (+445) an example of the length issue
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16:36:23 <esolangs> [[User talk:]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169803&oldid=169802 * * (+592)
16:38:42 <esolangs> [[User:/esolangs]] N https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?oldid=169804 * * (+237) Created page with "[[!itoe]] [[]] [[100]] [[15]] [[Plushie-incomplete]] [[Nullinullinull]] [[Egg]] [[Brainbonk]] [[Ntsomgivl]] [[Bomberman]] [[Brainfuck, but every + is replaced with the FitnessGram Pacer Test]] [[Gstvnts]] [[Q!?]] [[M]]"
16:39:11 <esolangs> [[User talk:]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169805&oldid=169803 * * (+0)
16:40:07 <esolangs> [[User:/Template:SignBRZ]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169806&oldid=169797 * * (-1243)
16:46:04 <esolangs> [[User:Aadenboy]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169807&oldid=168793 * Aadenboy * (-33) /* anything else */
16:46:35 <esolangs> [[User:Aadenboy]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169808&oldid=169807 * Aadenboy * (+7) /* anything else */
16:47:26 <esolangs> [[User:Aadenboy]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169809&oldid=169808 * Aadenboy * (+0) /* anything else */ update date
16:49:03 <esolangs> [[Abyssal-9]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169810&oldid=168509 * * (+98) Undo revision [[Special:Diff/168381|168381]] by [[Special:Contributions/Sawyer.go0923|Sawyer.go0923]] ([[User talk:Sawyer.go0923|talk]])
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16:56:13 <esolangs> [[User:Aadenboy/Live stats]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169811&oldid=158554 * Aadenboy * (+3) we're now past 1,000 joke esolangs!
16:58:27 <esolangs> [[User:Aadenboy/Zerons]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169812&oldid=165101 * Aadenboy * (+2) /* Solving */ rationalize fractions
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17:00:19 <esolangs> [[User:Aadenboy]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169813&oldid=169809 * Aadenboy * (+47) /* anything else */ extra
17:01:41 <ais523> OK, I hadn't seen https://esolangs.org/wiki/User:Aadenboy/Live_stats before and it's kind-of terrifying
17:02:13 <ais523> I knew there had been a lot of (mostly poor-quality) esolangs created, but hadn't really taken in the rate at which it's happening
17:05:03 <esolangs> [[Esolang talk:Categorization]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169814&oldid=169757 * Ais523 * (+468) /* Befunge derivatives */ a couple of reasons why this might not work
17:11:23 <esolangs> [[User:Aadenboy/Self-equaling squares]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169815&oldid=163283 * Aadenboy * (+173)
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17:59:44 <lambdabot> https://oeis.org/A002110 Primorial numbers (first definition): product of fi...
17:59:44 <lambdabot> [1,2,6,30,210,2310,30030,510510,9699690,223092870,6469693230,200560490130,74...
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18:02:50 <int-e> oh that still works, nice
18:12:33 <esolangs> [[Talk:Turing tarpit]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169816&oldid=169752 * Ractangle * (+243) /* BinaryLanguage should not be a tarpit */
18:14:10 <esolangs> [[Talk:Turing tarpit]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169817&oldid=169816 * Ractangle * (+1) /* BinaryLanguage should not be a tarpit */ I meant "hard"
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18:35:34 <esolangs> [[Collatz Multiverse]] N https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?oldid=169818 * 5anz * (+2520) Created page with "The Collatz Conjecture suggests that if you take any number, and apply the rules that if it's odd, you multiply it by 3 and add 1, and if it's even, divide it by 2, you eventually get stuck in a 4-2-1-4-2-1 loop. The Collatz Multiverse is the concept that instea
18:37:39 <esolangs> [[Special:Log/upload]] upload * * uploaded "[[File:Helloworldimagery.png]]"
18:42:41 <esolangs> [[Special:Log/upload]] upload * * uploaded "[[File:Rule110.png]]"
18:42:52 <esolangs> [[IMAGERY]] N https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?oldid=169821 * * (+283) Created page with "'''IMAGERY''' is an esolang made by [[User:]] to program with images. == Examples == === Hello, world! === [[File:Helloworldimagery.png|thumb]] === Nope. === [[File:Nope.png|thumb]] === Rule 110 === [[File:Rule110.png|thumb
18:43:30 <esolangs> [[IMAGERY]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169822&oldid=169821 * * (+69)
18:44:50 <esolangs> [[User:B jonas/List]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169823&oldid=168080 * B jonas * (+250) BytePusher
18:45:25 <b_jonas> perlbot oeis_r 2,6,30,210,2310
18:45:36 <perlbot> b_jonas: A002110 Primorial numbers (first definition): product of first n primes. Sometimes written prime(n)#. (Formerly M1691 N0668)1, 2, 6, 30, 210, 2310, 30030, 510510, 9699690, 223092870, 6469693230, 200560490130, 7420738134810, 304250263527210, 13082761331670030, 614889782588491410, 32589158477190044730, 1922760350154212639070, 117288381359406970983270, 7858321551080267055879090
18:45:52 <esolangs> [[User:/esolangs]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169824&oldid=169804 * * (+13)
18:46:10 <esolangs> [[User:5anz]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169825&oldid=155098 * 5anz * (+130) /* Rhombitrihexagonal */
18:46:11 <b_jonas> int-e: ^ I recently added a user-defined implementation into perlbot. the builtin command oeis also works, but why rely on that when I can just define my own? this is a programmable bot after all
18:46:49 <b_jonas> hmm, there should be a space after the right parenthesis. I guess the HTML doesn't always have a space there so I should add one manually when there isn't
18:46:50 <esolangs> [[User:5anz]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169826&oldid=169825 * 5anz * (+22) /* External recourses */
18:47:01 <int-e> b_jonas: you've only mentioned this a dozen times, I KNOW
18:47:04 <esolangs> [[User:5anz]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169827&oldid=169826 * 5anz * (-1) /* External recourses */
18:47:06 <esolangs> [[Talk:Turing tarpit]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169828&oldid=169817 * * (+610) /* BinaryLanguage should not be a tarpit */
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18:57:15 <esolangs> [[Talk:Turing tarpit]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169829&oldid=169828 * Corbin * (+231) /* BinaryLanguage should not be a tarpit */
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19:04:52 <esolangs> [[NumbersPlusWhat]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169830&oldid=150192 * TheCatFromGithub * (+2) typos
19:05:28 <esolangs> [[Og]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169831&oldid=85865 * TheCatFromGithub * (+1) typo
19:05:51 <esolangs> [[OUI]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169832&oldid=156561 * TheCatFromGithub * (+1) typo
19:06:16 <esolangs> [[Replace]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169833&oldid=66875 * TheCatFromGithub * (+1) typo
19:06:58 <esolangs> [[Use of AI in esoteric languages]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169834&oldid=139414 * TheCatFromGithub * (+1) typos
19:07:37 <esolangs> [[Drw]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169835&oldid=164206 * TheCatFromGithub * (+1) typo
19:08:17 <esolangs> [[FuckTheBit]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169836&oldid=167443 * TheCatFromGithub * (+1) typo
19:08:52 <esolangs> [[Strang]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169837&oldid=169138 * TheCatFromGithub * (+1) typo
19:09:16 <esolangs> [[CFCK]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169838&oldid=167828 * TheCatFromGithub * (+1) typo
19:09:36 <esolangs> [[SMIL]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169839&oldid=43393 * TheCatFromGithub * (+1) typo
19:10:00 <esolangs> [[MineFriff]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169840&oldid=99079 * TheCatFromGithub * (+1) typo
19:14:57 <esolangs> [[Bytemap]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169841&oldid=74878 * TheCatFromGithub * (+2) typos
19:15:47 <esolangs> [[APOL]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169842&oldid=93141 * TheCatFromGithub * (+0) typo
19:20:59 <esolangs> [[Definition]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169843&oldid=162903 * Ractangle * (-55)
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19:51:45 <esolangs> [[LIMITED]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169844&oldid=169674 * DadoDev * (+502) Added command set shrinking concept
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20:48:55 <esolangs> [[UnicodeLang]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169845&oldid=169751 * Esolangist alt * (+111) Esolangist alt
20:54:08 <esolangs> [[UnicodeLang]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169846&oldid=169845 * Esolangist alt * (+133) Esolangist alt
21:37:27 <esolangs> [[UnicodeLang]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169847&oldid=169846 * * (+379)
21:54:58 <esolangs> [[Language list]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169848&oldid=169780 * Buckets * (+10)
21:55:21 <esolangs> [[User:Buckets]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169849&oldid=169755 * Buckets * (+9)
21:55:35 <esolangs> [[Ags]] N https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?oldid=169850 * Buckets * (+1288) Created page with "Ags Is An Esoteric programming language Created by [[User:Buckets]] in 2021. {| class="wikitable" |- ! Commands !! Instructions |- | PUSH m || It will Push the Next item Given To the program To stack m. |- | "" || Within the Quotes is a String and Will Be given To the prog
21:58:49 <zzo38> I used the name "translation list" for the key/value list where the keys specify languages, according to your suggestion of "translation database".
22:18:51 <esolangs> [[User:Deltayelta]] N https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?oldid=169851 * Deltayelta * (+90) It's me :)
22:19:35 <esolangs> [[User:Deltayelta]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169852&oldid=169851 * Deltayelta * (+1) Why do you have to do two newlines to get one???
22:21:48 <esolangs> [[Use of AI in esoteric languages]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169853&oldid=169834 * Hakerh400 * (+15) /* Other AI-related esolangs */ Add the missing language
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22:27:34 <esolangs> [[Talk:Use of AI in esoteric languages]] N https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?oldid=169854 * Corbin * (+290) Created page with "So, is this supposed to be a historical collection akin to [[prehistory of esoteric programming languages]] or [[timeline of esoteric programming languages]], or is it a clearinghouse for language-model output? ~~~~"
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22:32:45 <esolangs> [[Iterate]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169855&oldid=168623 * Aadenboy * (+68) /* Loop amounts */ define undefined behavior
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22:52:48 <esolangs> [[Talk:Use of AI in esoteric languages]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169856&oldid=169854 * RaiseAfloppaFan3925 * (+497) this page is probably a hub for everything AI-related in esolanging
22:56:56 <esolangs> [[User:RaiseAfloppaFan3925]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=169857&oldid=169766 * RaiseAfloppaFan3925 * (+212)
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23:05:26 <esolangs> [[User:Deltayelta/Dredge]] N https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?oldid=169858 * Deltayelta * (+476) Created page with "{{infobox proglang |name=Dredge |paradigms=imperative |author=[[User:Deltayelta]] |year=[[:Category:2025|2025]] |memsys=registers |dimensions=one-dimensional |class=[[:Category:Unknown computational class|Unknown]] |influence=[[wikipedia:LOOP (programmi
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