palordrolap

joined 4 months ago
[–] palordrolap@kbin.run 37 points 2 months ago (2 children)

⊃))⁠・⁠▽⁠・(⁠(⊂

[–] palordrolap@kbin.run 8 points 2 months ago

Yes it does bother me a little that the letters in the latter half of my username can't be written backwards. (Well, some can, and the p can become a q, but then it's not a p any more.)

[–] palordrolap@kbin.run 8 points 2 months ago

The last thing I messed around with choked on some wide characters that weren't in the current locale, so I guess picture the top half of the burger bun, about two thirds of the top part of the patty, a small pile of raw ingredients off to the side and some inexplicable six-inch nails through the raw meat, maybe.

Most of the rest of the stuff I do could be compared to those nouvelle cuisine jokes that have been running since the 1980s. Large plate, inexplicably small serving of something allegedly gourmet but is probably a cube of the cheapest pâté from the closest supermarket that was flash frozen and then stylishly drizzled in jus de menthe or something.

Bon appetit

[–] palordrolap@kbin.run 32 points 2 months ago (3 children)

"Uh, Boss, our customers are sending us the invoices for their RAM purchases."

[–] palordrolap@kbin.run 22 points 2 months ago (2 children)

"Just a heads up that we'll be shipping your machine to the client, since it's the only machine on Earth known to support the software. You're getting the spare machine out of the basement. Super fast Cyrix processor. Looks like it boots to Windows 11 release 3, but they've written it 3.11 for some reason."

[–] palordrolap@kbin.run 7 points 2 months ago (1 children)

O((2^(n^2))!) or bust.

[–] palordrolap@kbin.run 35 points 2 months ago (3 children)

YFW you realise Grandpa isn't wearing a tie.

[–] palordrolap@kbin.run 2 points 2 months ago

If Python has anything like Perl's source code filters, then anything's up for grabs, but Perl is kind of weird in a way that Python was specifically designed not to be. Or at least Python 1 was. Things may have changed in the intervening couple of decades.

If it's just plain overloading, then whitespace is probably off the table. Spaces, even required spaces, aren't so much syntax as they are structure. You could argue that the curly braces of some other languages are more syntactic than Python's whitespace, because it's actually Python's magic colon and the first unindented line (lack of whitespace!) that serve that specific syntactic purpose.

Examples of Perl's source code filters range from turning a program into binary representation of the syntax tree and still having it be executable, to new syntax, to writing programs entirely in Latin or something that looks almost but not entirely unlike it, anyway.

[–] palordrolap@kbin.run 10 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Was going to say that I don't have the energy to be passionate about anything these days, but then I realised I'm quite happy - almost passionate, you might say - to turn that dispassion towards large organisations like Microsoft.

Buy our products!

"No."

[–] palordrolap@kbin.run 6 points 2 months ago (1 children)

It isn't just JavaScript (or Java which uses the "Hashmap" name).

There are, of course, languages that don't have an equivalent structure, but for those that are sufficiently popular, it's almost certain that someone has written a library that emulates associative arrays and then fairly certain that that library, in turn, has been used in production somewhere.

File this under "If it's stupid but it works..."

[–] palordrolap@kbin.run 115 points 2 months ago (3 children)

"I used to be able to Google like you, but then they changed what Google was and now what I can do doesn't work, and what you have to do seems weird and scary to me."

[–] palordrolap@kbin.run 0 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) (1 children)

They still don't like to talk about the fact that it's Greenwich and not Paris that's the prime meridian.

But sure, I didn't explicitly connect the dots.

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