00:00:15 so the differences are probably not even considered a bug 00:00:19 -!- copumpkin has quit (Quit: Textual IRC Client: www.textualapp.com). 00:02:40 all my attempts at googling rectangular blocks of text seem to give pages talking about putting text inside a rectangle, which may still wrap arbitrarily there. 00:04:00 or about wrapping text _around_ a rectangle. 00:05:09 You may as well just manually break the lines, unless that's prohibited in this language... 00:06:38 monotone: all my recent css changes were to programs that cannot have whitespace in them 00:06:53 not without major redesign, anyway 00:08:18 -!- augur has quit (Read error: Connection reset by peer). 00:08:34 i wonder if text-wrap:suppress would have worked if any browsers supported it 00:08:53 or wait, unrestricted 00:09:19 the danger is that the browser would still prefer normal break points. 00:09:20 -!- augur has joined. 00:10:49 oh hm let's try this 00:14:00 dammit setting word-break still makes it prefer the usual break points. 00:27:34 -!- augur has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 00:34:36 Bike: can you look at http://esolangs.org/wiki/Hello_world_program_in_esoteric_languages#dupdog again? 00:35:25 i managed to find http://jsbin.com/bulletproof-responsive-pre/2/edit 00:36:08 and adding the IE line from their made it look good to me 00:36:11 *from there 00:36:30 that CSS hack ;_; 00:36:59 elliott: it the \9 something fiendish? 00:37:17 yeah, I think it's exploiting a parser bug 00:37:21 or at least a parser disagreement 00:37:51 lots of evil like this circa the early 2000s: http://tantek.com/CSS/Examples/boxmodelhack.html 00:37:53 anyway, it's the first thing i found that seems to even understand my problem :P 00:38:23 oh that guy (Tantek Çelik) sits next to me at Mozilla SF 00:39:02 i showed him some videos of trains. 00:39:09 what guy? 00:39:20 the owner of the domain elliott just linked to 00:39:21 oh that link 00:41:22 elliott: ok it's a hack but does the result look ok? 00:41:50 in Chrome, yes 00:42:22 sorry i'm too busy dealing with printers to help 00:42:34 the attack of the zombie printers 00:42:40 27 jobs in queue and the first is from an hour but hell if i can fix anything!! 00:42:41 go for their brain! 00:43:09 i think i'll just print in another lab that doesn't suspect anything 00:43:14 anyone else with firefox? 00:43:33 oerjan: can I interest you in a firefox installer? :P 00:44:17 maybe later. 00:44:35 now to make pizza, i think 00:44:51 i see oerjan is an experienced web programmer 00:48:09 http://www.jerkcity.com/jerkcity896.html 00:52:07 obviously not, there's no way the two lines are compatible without some serious hacking. 00:56:06 -!- Phantom_Hoover has quit (Read error: Connection reset by peer). 00:57:40 wait scratch that, the solution is obvious: just bring your children and register them as web developers. that automatically implies the rest. 01:00:53 -!- fungot has quit (Ping timeout: 248 seconds). 01:10:47 https://i.cloudup.com/YTMd2VkRWl-2000x2000.jpeg Fox explains github 01:14:07 elliott: i put it in a class definition, since it's pretty long and at least then we can replace it if we find something better. 01:15:32 -!- nisstyre has quit (Read error: Connection reset by peer). 01:22:03 "e-note" 01:22:06 "edit rights" 01:22:27 I mean 01:22:37 The rest is twitch-worthy, but more or less right =P 01:22:44 But the "pull request"... Nope 01:22:53 gotta request a pull on that reposotory 01:23:06 =P 01:23:30 What, is Github going public? 01:24:03 https://github.com/blog/53-github-services-ipo maybe? 01:26:37 "879 forks" 01:26:38 Bike: that's a blog post from 2008 and it says the title is a lie in the first sentence... :p 01:26:39 Wow 01:27:40 elliott: the fox image is undated!! 01:37:52 -!- Bike has quit (Ping timeout: 256 seconds). 01:38:54 -!- nisstyre has joined. 01:40:30 -!- audioPhil has quit (Read error: Operation timed out). 01:45:10 elliott: the atrocities have now been properly documented. 01:53:15 -!- Bike has joined. 01:58:39 oerjan: you're good at the admin thing 01:58:44 doing all this work for me. 01:59:49 I agree 02:00:13 yay! 02:01:39 well, this is a new and exciting printer problem, it interprets everything i print as one blank page. 02:01:42 fuck everything. 02:02:05 why would you want to fuck a blank page 02:02:33 because it's there 02:02:43 paper cuts are nasty, man 02:03:54 in the mean time, you might take a hard reload on http://esolangs.org/wiki/Hello_world_program_in_esoteric_languages#dupdog to confirm the latest hack works in firefox too. 02:03:56 Not when your dick's made out of metal 02:04:02 Although I should really get that checked 02:04:21 (it needs to reload common.css) 02:05:39 (it _should_ work, since i stole it from elsewhere.) 02:06:37 (it might not work in less common browsers since i only stole one line of it.) 02:08:02 in particular i did not steal the line with a webkit comment. 02:09:02 -!- Bike has quit (Ping timeout: 256 seconds). 02:10:39 -!- Bike has joined. 02:17:24 `reload common.css 02:17:25 Reload of common.css complete. 02:17:29 There 02:17:41 `cat bin/reload 02:17:43 echo Reload of $1 complete. 02:18:05 Yes, it's primitive 02:18:08 Roujo: i'm afraid that will only work for HackEgo's browser. 02:18:16 That's all we need 02:18:27 We just need to install lynx there and browse via him, over IRC 02:18:34 `run install lynx 02:18:36 `run version 02:18:38 install: missing destination file operand after `lynx' \ Try `install --help' for more information. 02:18:39 bash: version: command not found 02:18:50 `run install lynx lynx 02:18:52 install: cannot stat `lynx': No such file or directory 02:18:55 Aww 02:18:57 Oh well 02:19:00 `run wget hats 02:19:02 ​--2013-09-13 02:19:02-- http://hats/ \ Connecting to 127.0.0.1:3128... connected. \ Proxy request sent, awaiting response... 403 Forbidden \ 2013-09-13 02:19:02 ERROR 403: Forbidden. 02:19:14 `run wget http://psychose.ca 02:19:17 ​--2013-09-13 02:19:15-- http://psychose.ca/ \ Connecting to 127.0.0.1:3128... connected. \ Proxy request sent, awaiting response... 403 Forbidden \ 2013-09-13 02:19:16 ERROR 403: Forbidden. 02:19:22 Ah, okay 02:19:26 It's blocked altogether 02:19:28 Good thing, imo 02:19:44 hint: HackEgo has a whitelist for web access. 02:20:00 hint 2: `fetch works around it. 02:20:27 `fetch http://psychose.ca 02:20:28 ​ http://psychose.ca: Scheme missing. 02:20:32 oops 02:20:36 `fetch http://psychose.ca 02:20:38 2013-09-13 02:20:37 URL:http://psychose.ca/ [78/78] -> "index.html" [1] 02:20:46 `cat index.html 02:20:48 ​ \ \ Psychose \ \ \ Yayyyy! \ 02:21:28 the catch is that `fetch is not useable from other commands. 02:30:16 http://imgur.com/7tImjmw 02:33:24 -!- mnoqy has quit (Quit: hello). 02:34:15 i was about to ask fungot but he's gone again. 02:34:39 which raises the question: has fungot ever been seen together with that thing 03:11:15 -!- tswett has joined. 03:11:57 So I pondered how this Hylisk program would translate into Haskell: "module Main where main :: World -> World; main = \x -> x" 03:12:17 I concluded that "\x", "->", and "x" would translate to "return ()", ">>", and "return ()", respectively. 03:12:27 Thus, "module Main where main :: IO (); main = return () >> return ()" 03:12:29 Efficient. 03:12:38 Elegant. 03:12:40 Extraordinary. 03:14:24 If "\x -> x" were to be translated into a Haskell type a -> a instead of a Haskell type IO a, it would, of course, translate as "id . id" 03:15:20 O KAY 03:15:37 Yeah, man, dang, amirite. 03:41:54 sometimes irc 'help' channels really make me rage 03:42:20 gotta love it when you get a guy who's doing everything he can to show he's smarter than you instead of actually doing something simple like pasting a link 03:42:42 freenode y u!!! 03:44:11 you'll just have to change to doing everything in haskell 03:44:37 ok they'll still show they're smarter than you, but they'll _also_ try to help. 03:46:46 "Hey, I'm having trouble working through Linux From Scratch." "Do it in Haskell." 03:48:08 accurate. 03:56:54 -!- Bike has quit (Ping timeout: 264 seconds). 04:00:10 -!- conehead has quit (Quit: Computer has gone to sleep.). 04:08:34 -!- Bike has joined. 04:15:25 This reminds me, I should do Linux From Scratch 04:16:08 does LFS give you a modern Linux desktop or is it @90s_Linux_User all the way 04:16:59 Doesn't matter, I'm not planning on using it as a 'real' system 04:17:23 it matters as far as whether it teaches you "how things really work" 04:18:06 -!- oklopol has quit (Read error: Connection reset by peer). 04:18:23 -!- oklopol has joined. 04:20:10 -!- Ghoul_ has quit (Ping timeout: 261 seconds). 04:20:53 kmc: LFS proper gives you a fairly sane build environment *for* a modern Linux desktop that just happens to be missing nearly every dependency. 04:21:07 BLFS describes how to build stuff you'd care about, like, say, XFCE. 04:21:50 pikhq: do you still like Tcl? 04:21:55 Sgeo: Yes. 04:22:00 :) 04:22:04 * Sgeo is currently on a Tcl kick 04:22:22 ok cool 04:22:26 -!- myndzi has quit (Excess Flood). 04:22:40 I consider it a fairly good example of how to do language minimalism without making something utterly impractical. 04:23:37 I mean really, you can do a Tcl implementation in like 500 lines of not-crazy C. 04:24:01 Can a Tcl be done in a little bit of not-crazy LSL? 04:24:05 -!- myndzi has joined. 04:24:05 I should attempt to do that 04:24:13 I dunno, maybe? 04:24:37 Although, this 500 not-crazy C implementation, might not be as efficient as the official implementation? 04:24:51 The official implementation doesn't internally do EIAS 04:24:53 Nowhere *near*. 04:25:34 The official implementation is a bytecode compiler, and does more "everything can be a string" than EIAS. 04:25:58 Can a suspended coroutine be a string? 04:26:09 Hmmm. 04:26:23 I'm imaginine everything in the Tcl universe being serializable... except suspended coroutines 04:36:37 just keep a serializable continuation. 04:36:44 -!- Ghoul_ has joined. 04:40:43 tcl hhas coroutines? 04:43:33 Not to my knowledge. 04:44:07 Though you could probably hack it in via stack inspection. :) 04:44:22 Shame the call stack isn't actually first class. 04:49:21 -!- SingingBoyo has joined. 04:51:29 -!- SingingBoyo has quit (Client Quit). 04:51:54 kmc: pikhq: new to 8.6: http://www.tcl.tk/man/tcl8.6/TclCmd/coroutine.htm 04:52:35 Ah. 04:56:55 Also, there's a built-in OO system in 8.6 04:57:19 Intended more to be a framework on which to make OO systems, but usable independently in and of itself 04:57:37 how would the call stack being first class work 04:58:15 In Tcl specifically, or in general? 04:58:22 Sgeo: That was 8.5. 04:58:28 I think 8.6 added to it though. 04:58:35 in general, i guess 04:58:40 Oddly. 04:58:55 http://wiki.tcl.tk/18152 04:59:08 Bike: not sure how, but Smalltalk does it 04:59:35 Sgeo: Ah, yes, a wrapper for the constructs 8.5 had. 04:59:45 pikhq: I think there was an independent package for 8.5 and it became part of core in 8.6 04:59:47 i mean the data structure's simple to imagine. a stack made up of frames. 05:02:52 -!- SingingBoyo has joined. 05:04:42 -!- Bike has quit (Ping timeout: 264 seconds). 05:08:08 -!- carado has joined. 05:08:53 -!- jconn has quit (Ping timeout: 248 seconds). 05:15:40 -!- Bike has joined. 05:49:31 -!- FreeFull has quit. 06:04:07 -!- tswett has left ("http://quassel-irc.org - Chat comfortably. Anywhere."). 06:06:09 -!- jconn has joined. 06:07:19 -!- douglass has quit (Read error: Operation timed out). 06:28:04 -!- douglass has joined. 06:48:50 -!- CADD has joined. 06:49:02 `slist 06:49:04 slist: Taneb atriq Ngevd Fiora nortti Sgeo ThatOtherPerson alot 06:50:14 -!- Bike has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 06:57:28 -!- Bike has joined. 07:01:15 `olist 918 07:01:17 olist 918: shachaf oerjan Sgeo FireFly 07:16:44 -!- douglass has quit (Ping timeout: 256 seconds). 07:17:04 -!- Bike has quit (Ping timeout: 246 seconds). 07:19:10 -!- carado has quit (Ping timeout: 246 seconds). 07:24:21 -!- Bike has joined. 07:32:02 -!- Bike has quit (Ping timeout: 256 seconds). 07:37:23 -!- Bike has joined. 07:42:17 -!- Bike has quit (Ping timeout: 256 seconds). 07:48:37 -!- Bike has joined. 07:52:27 the bikes keep rolling past 07:56:58 -!- Bike has quit (Ping timeout: 246 seconds). 08:04:08 -!- Bike has joined. 08:11:35 -!- Bike has quit (Ping timeout: 260 seconds). 08:32:21 http://sprunge.us/Pcjf?c best macro? 08:37:45 Enough includes 08:38:22 !c printf("%d", 01001); 08:38:26 513 08:39:11 fizzie: can it just use 16 macros B_0000..B_1111 and make B4(x) expand to the expansion of B##x? 08:39:13 couldn't it just use* 08:39:32 !c print("%d",(((01001)&1)|(((01001)>>2)&2)|(((01001)>>4)&4)|(((01001)>>6)&8))); 08:39:34 Does not compile. 08:39:39 oops 08:39:43 !c printf("%d",(((01001)&1)|(((01001)>>2)&2)|(((01001)>>4)&4)|(((01001)>>6)&8))); 08:39:45 9 08:39:58 ...oh right 08:41:15 Deewiant: It's the standard set on that bot. 08:41:29 !c printf("%d", 0b1001); /* the power of GCC extensions */ 08:41:31 9 08:42:00 geordi or something like that? 08:42:03 candide 08:44:24 And sure, it's easy enough to use 16 macros for B4 -- but the octal approach can go up to a B22. 08:44:52 (01111111111111111111111 is less than 2^64.) 08:45:24 -!- Bike has joined. 08:50:17 -!- Bike has quit (Ping timeout: 256 seconds). 08:50:39 TIL: a cow is more likely to stand up in the next 15 minutes the longer it has been lying down, but not any more likely to lie down in the next 15 minutes the longer it has been standing up. 08:51:00 (2013 Ig Nobel Prices were given out recently.) 08:51:44 (Also learned: our university library agreements include the Applied Animal Behaviour Science journal.) 08:54:43 so cows stand up exponentially 08:54:47 wait 08:54:51 *lie down 08:55:29 fizzie: is that from an elsevier bundle? 08:55:34 Probably. 08:55:42 It's an Elsevier journal, anyway. 08:56:05 also, can you guess what is currently missing... 08:56:38 -!- fungot has joined. 08:56:40 No idea. 08:56:41 -!- Bike has joined. 08:56:48 OKAY 08:57:27 probably bike, he's very on and off today 09:08:18 -!- Bike has quit (Ping timeout: 264 seconds). 09:10:03 -!- Bike has joined. 09:15:17 -!- MindlessDrone has joined. 09:17:24 -!- MindlessDrone has quit (Client Quit). 09:20:16 -!- SingingBoyo has quit (Ping timeout: 256 seconds). 09:23:26 -!- Bike has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 09:25:11 -!- CADD has quit (Ping timeout: 246 seconds). 09:44:29 http://sprunge.us/VeGL "lies, more lies, and documentation." 09:47:10 -!- oerjan has quit (Quit: Later). 10:06:12 -!- MindlessDrone has joined. 10:13:31 -!- audioPhil has joined. 10:13:31 -!- audioPhil has quit (Changing host). 10:13:31 -!- audioPhil has joined. 10:29:35 -!- Bike has joined. 10:41:18 -!- Bike has quit (Ping timeout: 256 seconds). 10:43:11 -!- Bike has joined. 10:58:26 -!- epicmonkey has joined. 11:21:26 fizzie: it doesn't say that it doesn't turn on other optimizations 11:22:30 Details, schmetails. 11:25:25 -!- Bike has quit (Ping timeout: 263 seconds). 11:29:47 -!- yorick has joined. 11:31:29 -!- Sgeo has quit (Read error: Connection reset by peer). 11:39:54 -!- nisstyre has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 11:48:40 -!- Bike has joined. 12:02:27 -!- Phantom_Hoover has joined. 12:17:07 -!- boily has joined. 12:40:38 -!- metasepia has joined. 12:56:13 Roujo: http://pastebin.ca/2449462 13:24:18 -!- mnoqy has joined. 13:25:27 fizzie: There is a flag to get gcc to give you all the flags that -Owhatever expands into. 13:27:34 hm. there is such a thing as Objective-C++. 13:27:53 Yes, it's for gluing objc to C++ 13:28:42 oh. I was confused for a moment because of the clashing object models. 13:29:34 It basically exists so that Safari can be written using an Objective-C UI and C++ VM ;) 13:30:55 now I'm disgusted. 13:48:31 Next up, Object-PL/I++ 13:48:42 Nowait, Objective-Fortran++ 13:50:27 I think Object-PL/I++ is the most terrifying. 13:51:13 Objective-COBOL++Script.NET? 13:52:36 * boily runs away from Gregor. “AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAH!” 13:52:58 -!- conehead has joined. 14:02:12 -!- Taneb has joined. 14:04:10 the Igs are in! http://www.improbable.com/ig/winners/#ig2013 14:07:54 Beauty Is in the Eye of the Beer Holder 14:09:19 ok i'm pretty honestly impressed by the archaelogy one 14:10:04 -!- conehead has quit (Quit: Computer has gone to sleep.). 14:10:20 huh, i see one of the 2012 winners on twitter all the time. didn't know they did the eiffel study 14:12:32 parboiling a dead shrew. what the fungot where they thinking. 14:12:32 boily: must be canadia 14:12:46 well, in fact, it is. 14:14:15 that's just it, it's actually a pretty good idea 14:14:23 i mean how else would you tell which bones would survive? 14:17:02 -!- rodgort has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 14:18:56 -!- rodgort has joined. 14:25:06 Bike: that's besides the main problem of why would you voluntarily eat a parboiled dead shrew. 14:25:50 boily, guess what I had to drink with my lunch 14:27:29 -!- AnotherTest has joined. 14:27:46 Taneb: I'm curious. or in that case, I think you are the one who was curioused. 14:28:03 @localtime Taneb 14:28:03 Local time for Taneb is Fri Sep 13 15:28:06 14:28:20 I think your thought patterns are along the right line, as indeed I was curious 14:28:31 And my drink satisfied my curiosity 14:29:12 Hello 14:29:19 Anothello! 14:30:16 Taneb: an argentinian coworker supplies me with mate tea-bags while we wait for another argentinian coworker to replenish the main mate stock. 14:30:36 boily, getting colder 14:31:19 it was only a tangential beverage. I still support the Hexhamite Botanical Infusion Hypothesis. 14:34:11 boillo =) 14:39:48 @ask boily What would you recommend to me re: learning Japanese? 14:39:48 Consider it noted. 14:51:15 I'm still here. only having weird python errors. 14:52:15 Roujo: I'd say the “Minna no Nihongo” textbooks, because they are popular, and we went through them in uni. 14:52:51 @tell boily I know you're here, I just wanted to ask you something so I @asked it 14:52:52 Consider it noted. 14:58:13 -!- Fiora has quit (Ping timeout: 248 seconds). 14:59:03 -!- Fiora has joined. 15:08:20 @tell Roujo you vile bot abuser. 15:08:21 Consider it noted. 15:08:45 @messages-loud 15:08:45 boily said 24s ago: you vile bot abuser. 15:08:49 Well that's nice 15:09:09 boily: Also, thanks fot the tip, I'll look into those ^^ 15:10:01 Roujo: as I said yesterday, I can lend you mine. 15:10:30 fungot: sing me a song 15:10:31 kmc: i never found the original paper on syntactic closures? syntax-case ( obviously not... :) 15:10:31 Ah, I missed that =P 15:10:32 Sorry 15:10:38 ^theme hats 15:10:47 Did I mess it up again? 15:10:48 ^style hats 15:10:49 Not found. 15:10:52 There we go 15:10:53 Thanks 15:10:55 ^style 15:10:55 Available: agora alice c64 ct darwin discworld enron europarl ff7 fisher fungot homestuck ic irc* iwcs jargon lovecraft nethack pa qwantz sms speeches ss wp youtube 15:11:03 ^style europarl 15:11:03 Selected style: europarl (European Parliament speeches during approx. 1996-2006) 15:11:07 fungot: sing me a song of eurocrats 15:11:10 kmc: mr president, this report reflects the policy consensus between the partners, a process that began in 1989 with the first phase of the pig cycle. one thing is certain: we should insist that other contributors fulfil their commitments. otherwise the gap between levels of prosperity in the region? to my way of thinking, mrs ghilardotti, particularly, within the framework of protectionism. moreover, this draft, in its opinion 15:11:23 Is it possible for us to add themes to the list? 15:11:37 ^help 15:11:37 ^ ; ^def ; ^show [command]; lang=bf/ul, code=text/str:N; ^str 0-9 get/set/add [text]; ^style [style]; ^bool 15:11:41 ^bool 15:11:42 No. 15:11:44 Okay 15:13:54 fizzie: I think Roujo wants you to add a new fungostyle. 15:14:31 Yeah, I think the RFCs might be pretty cool to markov from ^^ 15:14:43 ^style fungot 15:14:43 Selected style: fungot (What I've said myself) 15:14:50 This might get redundant 15:15:02 fungot: do you redund with a runcible spoon? 15:15:03 boily: just to help an fnord archive) 15:15:51 ^style rfc 15:15:51 Not found. 15:15:58 ^style not found 15:15:58 Not found. 15:16:06 ^bool | ^style 15:16:15 Welp 15:22:57 There are some instructions about the style-making machinery. 15:23:25 The RFCs do not sound like a bad idea. 15:24:56 I'm more inclined to add things if someone else does the necessary preprocessing into the "one full IRC comment per line, no ASCII art and page numbers and such" format, though. 15:32:01 Sure, that was my original question: 15:32:08 <+Roujo> Is it possible for us to add themes to the list? 15:32:25 I was ready to do the work needed, I just wanted to know if I had the rights to do it 15:32:37 -!- oerjan has joined. 15:32:47 Well, no. It needs the editing of some files. 15:32:54 I see ^^ 15:33:02 What do you mean by "one full IRC comment per line"? 15:33:26 I mean, one example of the sort of a thing it should generate as a single comment. 15:33:45 The "can stop here" flags are set based on that. 15:34:13 (The comment length model is particularly cruddy.) 15:34:20 Okay, so it's not a pure markov thing 15:34:21 Nice 15:34:26 It's a ngram model. 15:34:27 s/pure/simple/ 15:34:47 It's more or less the same, just the viewpoint is slightly different. 15:35:08 an ngram model is just a markov model with a sliding window state 15:35:17 I have sliding windows at home 15:36:00 `run echo "An ngram model is just a markov model with a sliding window state" >wisdom/'ngram model' 15:36:04 No output. 15:36:19 hm should markov be capitalized 15:36:40 `run echo "An ngram model is just a Markov model with a sliding window state" >wisdom/'ngram model' 15:36:44 No output. 15:36:54 Roujo: http://lib.tkk.fi/Diss/2007/isbn9789512288946/article4.pdf‎ -- that's what it uses. 15:37:08 Woot =) 15:37:29 i suppose this would be technically falls if the ngram model had n unbounded. but i don't think fizzie does that. 15:37:33 *false 15:37:52 i cannot even blame autocorrection. 15:38:06 oerjan: I don't. But it is a variable-length ngram model. 15:39:14 (Still, that's mostly a representation detail.) 15:39:56 i suppose you could have variable width windows. 15:40:27 obviously the width won't increase by more than 1 each step. 15:40:59 Roujo: If you *really* want to "do the work", you can go all the way to the actual model files used by fungot. But that requires getting some software. 15:41:00 fizzie: so, let's say i call them mindless games. if we hit every stupid person, any person going to the theater of others. god keep. i will walke my selfe, richard. then, heaven, i love thee well; and, by my friend, c 15:41:26 ^style 15:41:27 Available: agora alice c64 ct darwin discworld enron europarl ff7 fisher fungot* homestuck ic irc iwcs jargon lovecraft nethack pa qwantz sms speeches ss wp youtube 15:41:29 Oh. 15:42:14 i wonder if any of that was not shakespeare. 15:42:39 I don't think "hit every stupid person" was necessarily Shakespeare. 15:44:07 I'm mostly wondering what an actualt "prepared" document looks like. Stripping the page number, table of contents and such is easy enough, but I'm not sure I see what the lines are supposed to look like 15:44:49 Do you still have one of those from the other styles for me to take a look at? =) 15:46:16 for irc it's simple enough i assume, just use the part after : in the PRIVMSG 15:47:00 or after > in our usual style logs 15:47:27 So... just sentences? 15:47:39 for a book there'd be the question of how big blocks to use. maybe entire paragraphs. 15:47:52 you'd want it to be able to continue after a period, after all. 15:48:59 there's nothing really preventing you joining the whole book into line (well, maybe there's a length limit) but that would probably give some unnatural jumps. 15:49:08 across chapters and stuff. 15:49:15 *into one line 15:49:37 Roujo: Well, I mean, it's really a matter of taste. 15:49:57 basically any point in the book where you want the model to be able to go from one word to the next, you want the two words on the same line. 15:50:03 What kind of things would you like the bot to output as a single reply, pretty much. 15:50:25 ^style 15:50:25 Available: agora alice c64 ct darwin discworld enron europarl ff7 fisher fungot* homestuck ic irc iwcs jargon lovecraft nethack pa qwantz sms speeches ss wp youtube 15:50:27 I've used sentences for some styles. 15:50:32 ^style europarl 15:50:32 Selected style: europarl (European Parliament speeches during approx. 1996-2006) 15:50:42 fungot: i bet not for this one 15:50:43 oerjan: mr president, people outside this house. in the column on the right were disappointed that these were not in a position to consider that although the minutes mentioned specifically the epp group will therefore not support any initiative which stresses the importance of the human race in general and the prospects of enlargement and the report, the european union 15:51:12 fungot: that had disturbingly few periods. 15:51:14 oerjan: madam president, i also believe that the introduction of profit sharing through the exchange of information, also exercise control of this house surely has so little room for manoeuvre. what is worse, it has been under intense discussion for days if not weeks. that confirms how right parliament was to start both the accession and negotiation procedures. as a general question. could you not arrange for people to work in 15:51:24 oerjan: It's not exactly strict, because it always has the zero-length context to fall back on. 15:52:19 The stopping is not strictly from the ngram model, it doesn't stop when the sentence-end token happens to be generated (like you might expect). 15:52:23 oh, so it can use that other than at the beginning? 15:52:56 =P 15:53:00 oerjan: More than that: it can't use that at the beginning, because the context at beginning is the sentence-start token, and that always has some possible ways to continue. 15:53:13 oh right 15:53:43 um, but that means the zero length context would be even less continuity than starting a new sentence. 15:53:48 Yes. 15:54:07 (It's just the overall word frequencies.) 15:54:15 But technically if it ends up generating a word that has never been followed by anything, but it decides not to stop there, I think it'll use that. 15:55:14 it feels like it would be more natural to use the sentence-start token for it. 15:55:30 Yes, but I don't think it does. 15:55:40 This is all from memory, it might work slightly differently. 15:55:54 -!- nooodl has joined. 15:56:06 -!- augur has joined. 15:56:14 It's also possible that it actually contains the sentence-end tokens and always stops if one of those is generated, and the extra ad-hoc rules were just an extra on top of that. 15:56:18 I can't quite recall. 15:56:47 oh well 15:57:04 fungot: i guess you talk well enough, anyhow. 15:57:05 oerjan: mr president, during your final six months as decided at the copenhagen summit in two minutes all i can say that the reason for this is the only possible decision. allow me, on the early warning system was set up in nairobi. 15:57:52 fungot: that does not sound like very good time management. 15:57:54 oerjan: mr president, naturally i will be happy to keep parliament fully informed to the greatest possible interest in ensuring that we have failed to keep its position for the future, when it comes to this parliament: is the crisis of which the discharge has been shown with regard to preparations which are not their own personal interests. if a man campaigns for the withdrawal of troops and hardware to be deployed and allowing 15:57:57 As for Europarl, the units for that were single statements made by one speaker. 15:58:03 (They are quite long.) 15:58:13 shocking 15:58:18 So there's continuity over sentences there. 15:58:43 And there are some styles where the preprocessing has been quite rudimentary, and there are leftover line breaks, and it sometimes stops right in the middle. 15:58:46 ^style c64 15:58:46 Selected style: c64 (C64 programming material) 15:58:49 fungot: Was this one of those? 15:58:50 fizzie: memtop 65061, 65433 ( decimal). if you know that it is set to 0 15:59:04 fungot: ...if I know that, then what? 15:59:04 fizzie: searching for game timers, and do not count when it is necessary to select the keyboard. 15:59:06 looks like it 15:59:52 Still, extracting sentences is one reasonable thing to do. 16:00:57 Next up, Object-PL/I++ <-- i'm thinking of Objectivist-B. you have to start at B, because A is A. 16:01:57 (objectivist-C is of course well known already.) 16:03:23 ooh igs 16:04:06 Yeah, the stopping rule -- assuming the Perl prototype matches fungot -- is, in fact, "for each point where $prefix->{canstop}, stop if rand(20) < (number of generated words)/5 + 1". So it depends partly on the model ('canstop' is set if the sentence-end token is possible in that context), but the probability for generating it is explicitly set based on the current length instead of using its frequency. 16:04:07 fizzie: once you've made a sprite onto the stack entries made by for, loading, and change the number of the number is written to with a secondary address of the logical file 16:06:07 In retrospect I really should've used either just the sentence token (and accepted the somewhat bad length distribution modeling), or used a proper separate length model (say, one Gaussian) with parameters set from the data. 16:06:42 Still, "it works", as an engineer would say. 16:06:53 fungot: are you any good at generating gaussians? 16:06:53 oerjan: purpose: set ieee bus. remember, that is filled. it is an arbitrary starting point similar to def fn. def fn a(x)=x+7 with a secondary command, it can be reset to 0 16:07:24 I don't think that's how you generate Gaussian random numbers. 16:10:41 * oerjan vaguely recalls that they were simplest to generate in pairs. 16:11:12 The good old Box-Muller. 16:11:18 Or Marsaglia polar. 16:11:34 Both do make a pair of norma deviates from a pair of uniformly distributed numbers. 16:11:53 Another fungot deficiency: it always selects the longest context with words, instead of using the backoff weights. (That's one reason for those loops.) 16:11:53 fizzie: by looking at the time, the 6566/ 6567 fetches data from. 16:12:49 istr you removed one of the reasons 16:13:12 Yes, there was also a bug, the details of which I forgot. 16:13:36 something about it only looking at a limited subset of the options, iirc 16:14:13 Yes, the number of ? iterations (each iteration generates 2 bits) was too low for the varikn-generated models. 16:15:21 (The frequencies I get out from varikn are just numbers in the [0, 1] range, which I multiplied with some big constant K because the bot works with integers -- the old styles had actual word counts there, and the numbers were generally smaller.) 16:18:30 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ziggurat_algorithm 16:19:46 That's the fancy one. 16:21:21 -!- Koen_ has joined. 16:21:57 -!- conehead has joined. 16:22:52 Roujo: Getting back on track, http://git.zem.fi/fungot/blob/HEAD:/varikn/readme.txt has the instructions if you want to actually make a model (in which case you get to do the parameter-tweaking); or you can skip step 0 and stop at step 1, because the rest is really quite mechanistic. 16:22:52 fizzie: large amounts of data is permanently read into these three bits are used to read the output of the sprite's 21-line length. 16:23:08 (If you do want to fiddle with it, the -D and -E parameters in those instructions are "wrong".) 16:23:25 fizzie: Alright, thanks ^^ 16:24:33 ...I forgot that step #7 was still there... 16:32:43 oerjan: did you actually modify the dupdog program or is the diff thingy just confused? 16:35:24 Koen_: i took away all the newlines 16:35:45 that's what I thought 16:36:01 and eventually added a pre with the new class 16:36:31 I just wanted to make sure this wasn't "oh hey btw here is an optimization" 16:36:48 Koen_: the idea was to make the formatting by css instead, so that you can cut and paste it correctly. 16:37:26 since the actual program definitely should not have newlines in it. 16:37:38 correct 16:41:07 -!- Koen_ has quit (Read error: Connection reset by peer). 16:41:11 -!- Koen__ has joined. 16:48:07 -!- douglass has joined. 16:52:50 "Bank robbery is punishable by 20 years in federal prison" 16:52:52 TIL 16:53:24 Roujo: did you listen to the whole thing? 16:53:35 I've just gotten to that point 16:54:03 can somebody link to this damn song 16:54:07 -!- Koen__ has quit (Quit: The struct held his beloved integer in his strong, protecting arms, his eyes like sapphire orbs staring into her own. "W-will you... Will you union me?"). 16:54:27 -!- Koen_ has joined. 16:54:34 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n7JAns3PsB0 16:54:36 Phantom_Hoover: the whole shebang → http://youtu.be/MIDuZq7RVAM?list=PLTUlTwlsdlFQhHsAoG7sCxumrigHW-qJk 16:54:38 ^ Phantom_Hoover 16:54:39 There 16:54:41 Oh 16:54:44 Even more 16:54:45 Wooo 16:57:25 I have also the puddle version, but it's OVER 9000 decamyriabytes! 16:57:42 (aka. 900 MB) 16:58:01 ... 16:58:11 -!- FreeFull has joined. 16:58:17 * Roujo smacks boily around with a calisse de grosse truite 16:59:02 What is calisse de grosse truite? 16:59:17 "Fucking big trout" =P 16:59:20 `relcome FreeFull 16:59:22 Roujo: MWAH AH AH! moéssi I can make bilingual mauvais jeux de mots! 16:59:23 ​FreeFull: Welcome to the international hub for esoteric programming language design and deployment! For more information, check out our wiki: http://esolangs.org/wiki/Main_Page. (For the other kind of esoterica, try #esoteric on irc.dal.net.) 16:59:25 -!- augur has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 16:59:53 -!- augur has joined. 17:00:05 Well, I też can mówić w dwóch językach. 17:00:48 Nani? =P 17:01:03 English + Polish =P 17:01:11 my tongue. it is not happy. 17:01:23 Roujo: puddle. flaque. make the connection. 17:01:26 * FreeFull massages boily's tongue 17:01:35 boily: I know. Believe me, I know. 17:01:40 * boily “hghbhmmmmhghh” 17:01:55 * FreeFull finishes 17:02:23 * boily “hmhmggnghanks” 17:03:26 -!- Bike has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 17:03:57 `thanks hghbhmmmmhghh 17:03:58 Thanks, hghbhmmmmhghh. Tghbhmmmmhghh. 17:04:26 -!- augur has quit (Ping timeout: 264 seconds). 17:05:26 * oerjan swats Roujo and boily for making him listen to this painful thing -----### 17:05:37 * kmc hugs douglass 17:05:39 -!- Bike has joined. 17:05:51 * boily hides behind Bike to dodge oerjan's swat. 17:06:16 * Roujo build a shed around Bike 17:06:19 oerjan: if you think that's painful... 17:06:30 * Roujo then debates about the most suitable color for the shed 17:06:39 boily: well it's a job where you go to syria to look at centuries-old garbage. 17:06:39 orange 17:06:40 it's my favorite color 17:06:47 orange! that's right! 17:06:48 not even a question tbh...... 17:06:58 that's right 17:07:15 elliott: oh i'm sure there are far worse things. 17:07:41 my shirt is orange. 17:08:19 we're bad at bikeshedding. we need something more... disagreement-prone. 17:09:40 elliott: but there were these words they mentioned that i tried to listen until i found, but it was impossible to hear the words said _and_ having the counting song be at a bearable volume at the same time. 17:09:47 `run cat cat | cat 17:09:48 Meow~~ 17:10:04 ^ Discuss 17:10:31 `cat bin/run 17:10:32 echo run 17:10:47 `run cat run 17:10:49 cat: run: No such file or directory 17:11:26 Right 17:11:29 `run rm bin/run 17:11:33 No output. 17:11:45 "| cat" is kind of awesomely pointless 17:11:56 Is it, though? =P 17:12:05 "| echo" would be 17:12:21 | echo wouldn't even work 17:12:29 `run cat cat | echo 17:12:30 No output. 17:12:33 Well crap 17:12:40 what! it should echo a newline 17:12:43 `run cat cat | cat | cat | cat | cat 17:12:44 Meow~~ 17:12:57 i think that worked perfectly 17:13:24 Koen_: HackEgo strips final newlines. 17:13:39 oh 17:13:51 `run echo -n '' 17:13:53 No output. 17:14:54 test 17:14:59 ^def ul (That's interesting!)S 17:14:59 Defined. 17:15:14 \input insert \x0a 17:15:32 ^ what do you think about this? 17:15:38 darn. 17:15:42 ^show 17:15:42 echo reverb rev rot13 rev2 fib wc ul cho choo pow2 source help hw srmlebac uenlsbcmra scramble unscramble asc ord prefixes tmp test celebrate wiki chr ha rainbow rainbow2 welcome me tell eval elikoski list ping def a 17:15:51 ^show a 17:15:51 +13[.] 17:16:05 ^show def 17:16:05 (hai)S 17:16:17 oerjan: Hmm. 17:16:38 ^show list 17:16:38 (Taneb atriq Ngevd Fiora nortti Sgeo ThatOtherPerson alot)S 17:16:42 oops 17:16:49 ^ignore 17:16:50 ^show ping 17:16:50 (That Pong alone cannot stop!)S 17:16:51 :( 17:17:37 -!- Taneb has quit (Quit: Leaving). 17:17:52 we have found a bug arising from the fact that Rust macros are not hygenic wrt named loop break labels 17:17:55 o_O 17:18:09 lol 17:18:18 are rust macros just c style or what 17:18:23 what actually is rust 17:18:31 c++ for nerds 17:18:57 is rust trying to have scheme style hygienic macros 17:19:02 Fun fact. "`run echo rofl" != "`run `which echo` rofl" 17:19:05 And I have no idea why 17:19:12 `which echo 17:19:13 ​/hackenv/bin/echo 17:19:23 `run echo rofl 17:19:25 rofl 17:19:28 `run `which echo` rofl 17:19:30 No output. 17:19:32 `run which echo 17:19:33 ​/hackenv/bin/echo 17:19:48 echo's normally special-cased by the shell isn't it 17:19:49 Bike: no they are closer to Scheme macros although only recently partially hygenic http://static.rust-lang.org/doc/tutorial-macros.html 17:19:49 `run `which cat` cat 17:19:51 Meow~~ 17:19:52 Roujo: echo is normally intercepted by the shell for efficiency. 17:19:56 Nice 17:20:05 `cat bin/echo 17:20:06 kmc: oh, nice. 17:20:07 echo No output. 17:20:15 >_< 17:20:42 well i don't get this syntax at all but whatever 17:20:47 i kinda don't like these special purpose macro languages. just lemme run code at compile time and spit out an AST! 17:21:01 crazy talk 17:21:39 you can't expose compiler things like the AST at compile time! the world would go mad 17:21:45 but it works out ok so far 17:21:51 ah but that's why you use lisp 17:22:02 because it doesn't have syntax, obviously 17:22:03 ASTs are such a poor interface though 17:22:10 lisp more like shitsp 17:22:12 (not that I really have a better suggestion) 17:22:22 what's wrong with asts 17:22:35 Phantom_Hoover: Rust is a systems language that provides explicit control over allocation, but in a way where the compiler can prove memory safety 17:23:21 so it has a few novel features supporting that, and the rest is just like "let's design a systems language for 2013 not 1970" so things like pattern matching, macros, real module system, etc 17:24:15 did Phantom_Hoover just successfully troll kmc? :p 17:24:37 troll? i thought he just asked what rust was and kmc answered 17:24:38 maybe 17:24:50 it's not like it took me long to compose that answer ;P 17:24:58 since people keep asking me that 17:25:02 u mad kmc??? 17:25:06 oh 17:25:13 I thought it was in response to 17:25:14 18:21:51 ah but that's why you use lisp 17:25:14 18:22:01 because it doesn't have syntax, obviously 17:25:15 kmc probably has a macro to explain rust. 17:25:17 which was obvious kmcbait 17:25:18 if you really want to troll ask "how is this better than Go?" 17:25:24 that's too obvious\ 17:25:44 Go is a completely different language for a completely different niche, and yet people can't stop comparing Rust to it for some reason 17:25:51 Ást er góð 17:25:52 kmc trolls himself 17:26:30 kmc, and if you added monads it would basically be haskell 17:26:32 oerjan: naturellement, mais pourquoi en ce moment-ci? 17:26:48 ah, now there's a half-decent troll 17:26:51 Phantom_Hoover: to Go or Rust? 17:26:56 both 17:26:57 lol 17:27:04 -!- conehead has quit (Quit: Computer has gone to sleep.). 17:27:24 recipe for Haskell: add monads to water and season according to taste 17:27:38 don't forget the purity! 17:27:50 one day, the majority of languages will have monads in them. 17:27:53 even assembly! 17:27:59 a beautiful future 17:28:08 what's the recipe for the strathclyde haskell enhancement 17:28:16 random thought: when did "assembly" become a monolithic thing 17:28:25 is it just a bunch of seasoning 17:28:26 since it's, not. 17:29:11 Bike: maybe it's like, it's a monolithic thing to people who are kind of outside of it? 17:29:14 nooodl, stab yourself a few times 17:29:17 Bike: yes is. 17:29:19 and don't really understand it 17:29:21 Fiora: well yes, but why 17:29:23 Instant Haskell: Just Add Water! (Ingredients: Pure Monad Powder) 17:29:25 or when rather 17:29:32 Phantom_Hoover: is that a recipe or a personal thing 17:29:35 Bike: maybe it's like, how "functional languages" are a monolithic thing to some peole 17:29:42 it's a strathclyde thing 17:29:45 like they're al lisp or something I don't know (?) 17:29:52 well i mean that's taken as a group 17:29:59 they're probably vaguely aware that ML and Lisp have differences 17:30:09 I think lisp suffers from that itself 17:30:10 but people talk about "assembly" as if it as one language 17:30:18 suffers from what, being seen as monolithic? 17:30:19 like people lump all the languages with lots of parens into one thing 17:30:21 yeah 17:30:24 yes it's silly 17:30:42 boily: because Bike asked what's wrong with it 17:30:44 the whole "lisp is god" thing doesn't help, but whatever 17:30:46 it might just be a thing people do in general, "C/C++" and so on... 17:30:48 * boily gives a stainless bloodless machine-washable ceramic stabbing salt-shaker with nice floral motifs 17:30:56 yeah the space of languages looks really different depending on where you are 17:31:02 I guess assembly kind of has it the worst given that it's not even really a language family so much as a type of language 17:31:17 people will argue forever about the differences between Python and Ruby and JavaScript and they all seem kinda the same to me 17:31:21 at least c++ is "almost" a superset of C. scheme and common lisp and elisp are pretty damn different 17:31:33 what's a little dynamic scope between friends, i guess 17:31:43 * boily gives the aforementioned salt-shake to noodl. you know, verb target and stuff... 17:31:49 s/ke/ker/ 17:31:51 Bike: the whole point of "Lisp" is that you get to cherry-pick the language attributes you like from Common Lisp, Scheme, Clojure, etc. to support whataver point you're trying to make 17:31:52 i just wish we could compile any source into a binary module and link wildly with other so compiled modules. 17:31:58 kmc: :/ 17:32:04 Bike: hey wanna add C++ FFI to Rust? 17:32:08 that would really help us out 17:32:09 thanks 17:32:13 sincerely, servo team 17:32:24 i know a guy who's trying to make a CL implementation with a C++ ffi, presumably because he's crazy 17:32:29 presumablyp 17:32:43 I don't think you can do C++ FFI in general without outputting lots of C++ code and compiling it 17:32:49 yeah that's what he's doing >_< 17:32:56 well then at least he's on the right track!! 17:33:06 i mean, i just feel like this whole language separation thing is kind of wrong 17:33:25 yeah, unfortuantely languages tend to have type systems / memory models that are hard to reconcile 17:33:38 which is why we resort to lowest common denominator: C types or JSON or such 17:33:42 you could have a binary object file that defines calling convention and so on, and have a universal symbol something 17:33:49 i dunno 17:34:01 plus, like, stuffing a bunch of language runtimes into the same process can be tricky 17:34:39 i guess i don't know enough about that 17:34:46 don't even know many languages where the runtime is a .so 17:34:47 trying to force every language to play together nicely kinda just homogenises the languages you can use 17:35:29 you can sorta go for only really supporting one kind of language well but having really good tight integration between everything, or supporting a wider variety of languages but everything is kinda taped together haphazardly, unix is more the latter 17:35:56 maybe i'm just annoyed at rubygems and whatever working by downloading source. 17:36:38 oh well. not my field. fuck computers. 17:37:59 why is a biologist in #esoteric anyway??? 17:38:13 because i have an adamatzky fetish 17:39:12 is that something to do with battlestar galactica 17:39:15 Phantom_Hoover: Bike wants all of the pain of CS without any of the money (;_;) 17:39:29 that's a ;_; in parens!! not a ;_; on a face 17:39:42 Could be both, really 17:39:46 ((;_;)) 17:40:01 how much do neuroethologists get paid... what do neuroethologists even do?? 17:40:15 well pretty soon i'm going to be a lab monkey 17:40:25 i imagine it involves electrodes 17:40:31 oh, did you get one of the research jobs? 17:40:32 all the money, and none of the pain because none of my supervisors and employers care about how bad my code is if it works 17:40:50 kmc: interview today, but even if i don't get that one i'm pretty set on getting /a/ lab job 17:40:55 cool, good luck 17:41:32 it will probably involve simulating the activity of muscle proteins, but that's just a guess 17:48:27 ~duck neuroethology 17:48:28 Neuroethology (from Greek - neuron "nerve" and & - ethos "habit or custom") is the evolutionary and comparative approach to the study of animal behavior and its underlying mechanistic control by the nervous system. 17:49:02 Greek language is weird. how in fungot can you utter a ½... 17:49:02 boily: there are several filter controls to set the system clock. 17:49:07 &¸¿Â, yes 17:49:45 ~duck neurotheology 17:49:45 Neurotheology, also known as spiritual neuroscience, attempts to explain religious experience and behaviour in neuroscientific terms. 17:49:50 what the. 17:49:53 ttants 17:49:59 WELP! 17:50:04 avoid neuroetheology, hth. 17:50:18 wow good misspelling. 17:50:34 ~duck neuroeology 17:50:34 --- No relevant information 17:50:37 Aww 17:51:07 well there is neurology, if you like. 17:51:15 Bike: I was curious if neurotheology existed. it does. I am disturbed. 17:51:26 it's not that great. 17:51:39 it seems like a totally good and reasonable thing to study...................... 17:51:42 if a kind of dumb name 17:51:44 ~duck neurogeriatology 17:51:44 --- No relevant information 17:51:47 phew. 17:51:53 ~duck neuroscatology 17:51:54 --- No relevant information 17:52:02 ~duck neuropathology 17:52:02 Neuropathology is the study of disease of nervous system tissue, usually in the form of either small surgical biopsies or whole autopsy brains. 17:52:20 kmc: most of what i know aboutit involves stupid arguments about how shocking one part of the brain making people more religious means something something dawkins fanboyism 17:52:25 yeah 17:52:28 I don't care about any of that 17:52:39 i'd like a rationalistic view of the weird shit I've experienced on drugz 17:52:53 I don't think it'll happen any time soon, though 17:53:02 it's probably Hard Problem complete 17:53:04 ~duck neurosociology 17:53:04 Neurosociology is the application of neurobiology to the study of society. 17:53:09 WOW 17:53:23 The more we know =P 17:53:23 is this surprising people 17:53:33 "neuro-" is like "computational" in terms of sticking it in front of everything 17:53:42 s/is this/are these/ 17:53:51 Answer: Maybe, I haven't met them yet 17:54:02 ~duck computational neurology 17:54:02 --- No relevant information 17:54:09 neurology is doctoring 17:54:12 Greek language is weird. how in fungot can you utter a ½... <-- you still haven't fixed that unicode bug? 17:54:12 oerjan: preparatory routines: talk, a special reversed character appear in the 17:54:13 ~duck neurocomputer 17:54:13 --- No relevant information 17:54:15 ~duck compoutational neuroscience 17:54:15 --- No relevant information 17:54:18 ~duck neurocomputing 17:54:18 --- No relevant information 17:54:22 compoutineational 17:54:25 ~duck reposotory 17:54:25 --- No relevant information 17:54:38 kmc: but yeah most of this stuff seems like trying to understand the principles of word processor design by examining logic gates. 17:54:41 to me. 17:54:42 ~duck neuroprogramming 17:54:43 --- No relevant information 17:54:50 can we stop with the ~duckspam 17:54:57 `? okay 17:54:58 Roujo: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neuromorphic_engineering 17:54:59 okay? ¯\(°_o)/¯ 17:54:59 | 17:54:59 o/`¯º 17:56:26 oerjan: *LA LA LA* can't hear you through the encoding problems *LA LA LA* 17:56:45 ~duck duckspam 17:56:45 --- No relevant information 17:56:48 :D 17:56:58 ~duck spam 17:56:58 A trademark used for a canned meat product consisting primarily of chopped pork pressed into a loaf. 17:57:00 COME ON 17:57:39 ~duck baloney 17:57:39 --- No relevant information 17:57:41 meh. 18:00:03 -!- Bike has quit (Quit: Reconnecting). 18:00:15 -!- Bike has joined. 18:01:23 soon, there will be no psychology topic i cannot gesticulate angrily about. MWA HA HA HA HA 18:01:42 Wooo 18:01:43 keep your gesticles in your pants, tia 18:01:55 I don't see how that's going to fix your connection, but eh 18:02:06 perhaps bonghits will fix your connection 18:02:14 it's a thought 18:02:22 Bike: Most things are 18:02:24 You would know 18:02:51 #wow #whoa 18:03:06 such thought 18:03:09 neurodoge 18:03:15 wow wrong meme 18:03:19 to the corner with you 18:03:26 #nope 18:04:15 #balls 18:06:40 -!- augur has joined. 18:10:54 I realized a couple of days back that every single IRC channel can be read as an hashtag 18:11:29 !! 18:11:43 what about ##doublehashtagschannels 18:12:06 you can make hashtags about hashtags can't you 18:12:13 «"Burdens are the foundations of ease, & bitter things the forerunners of pleasure" #Rumi #Spiritual #Quote #Esoteric #Mystic #Sufi #Wisdom» 18:12:39 Yup 18:12:48 And it gets even better when you think of the # channels 18:12:55 #Esoteric : If you keep presenting yourself as a slave, you are a slave because you obey 18:13:05 Because apparently, # is a valid channel name 18:13:23 hashtag nothing 18:13:24 # on freenode was crap last I went there, though 18:13:45 Should We Consider the Symbolism of Monster Energy Drinks as Being Satanic? 18:14:02 is # a requirement of the protocol or of the servers? or just common practice? 18:14:10 it means something specific 18:14:14 there are also &channels and stuff 18:14:17 nobody cares though 18:14:42 what if I held a server on my computer? what if I cared? 18:14:44 #channels are network-wide, &channels are server-specific 18:14:54 there's emphasis on this "I" as I put in in caps 18:14:54 But yeah, they're required by the RFC, AFAIR 18:14:57 i just said you don't care koen 18:15:36 what if my name is nobody 18:15:38 The Hidden (And Not So Hidden) Messages in Stanley Kubrick's "Eyes Wide Shut" 18:16:38 https://twitter.com/Illumine_Nation good 18:16:46 -!- Taneb has joined. 18:26:22 ~fortune 18:26:22 Genius, n.: 18:26:22 A chemist who discovers a laundry additive that rhymes with "bright." 18:26:43 soap fight 18:28:06 greco-roman extreme ironing. 18:44:32 -!- variable has changed nick to trout. 18:51:47 Roujo: apparently, # is indeed a valid channel name. but is it «#», or «##»? 18:52:01 Just # 18:52:06 ## is yet another channel 18:53:23 uhm. you, like, have, like, joined them all, like. 18:54:26 -!- Phantom_Hoover has quit (Read error: Connection reset by peer). 18:55:25 =P 18:55:29 I used to hang in # 18:55:32 Not anymore =P 18:55:56 -!- Phantom_Hoover has joined. 18:56:30 But yeah, I do tend to join # on every network I'm on 18:57:11 is # a thing? 18:57:21 oh it is 18:58:25 It's a thing on most networks 18:58:35 But it's banned on some =P 18:58:55 I think Coldfront just says "This channel may not be used" 19:02:48 -!- Bike has quit (Ping timeout: 256 seconds). 19:03:24 Roujo: trying out the various punctuational channels. I got autokicked from «_». 19:04:17 Nice 19:04:21 From the server? 19:04:25 seems so. 19:04:31 and #% is invite only. 19:04:33 Wow 19:04:34 nice 19:07:17 Roujo: say, try to join #¨. 19:08:06 Illegal channel name =P 19:08:13 eeeeeeh... 19:08:32 someone else who has a client that Accepts the Greatness of the Diæ̈resis? 19:08:45 Nah, it's the server who doesn't want to 19:08:50 [kornbluth.freenode.net][479] Roujo #¨ :Illegal channel name 19:10:22 oh. and if you just «/join ¨»? 19:14:29 -!- Bike has joined. 19:15:29 boily: That aliases to "join #¨" 19:15:41 If I "/quote join ¨"... 19:15:51 [kornbluth.freenode.net][479] Roujo ¨ :Illegal channel name 19:19:50 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ms-IFYNrjhU 19:20:30 -!- AnotherTest has quit (Ping timeout: 264 seconds). 19:24:19 roujo: wat 19:24:36 ion: Ask boily =P 19:27:42 ion: listen to the thing. discuss with oerjan. 19:29:08 Can someone give me a sensible terminal size to stream Dwarf Fortress with? 19:30:41 is dwarf fortress an ascii motion picture? 19:30:55 Koen_, it's an ANSI universe simulator 19:30:59 Taneb: 80 × 25 is not good? 19:31:09 boily, it probably is 19:31:38 Koen_: it's a unicodified CP437 universe simulator, down to sweat drops and eyeball nerves. 19:32:34 I'm streaming Dwarf Fortress, telnet termcast.org 19:34:38 oh, shiny! 19:47:50 -!- oerjan has quit (Quit: leaving). 19:49:00 have we got a stack-based language where there is one data stack, and the program is a list of instructions, with the first instruction dropped before it's executed? and some instructions allow to push a "next instruction" before the rest of the program in function of what's on top of the data stack? 19:49:19 Koen_: underload? 19:49:20 underload but slightly suckier 19:49:38 oh 19:49:58 and for so long I have resisted going into how underload works 19:50:29 it's pretty easy 19:50:54 so you say 19:51:03 "it even forms a monoid" 19:51:44 since when underload is monoidal? 19:51:56 since i said so just now keep up motherfucker 19:51:57 Isn't everything? 19:52:10 That's what I got from monads. They're like single gonads, really. 19:52:14 -!- epicmonkey has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 19:53:42 * boily replaces Bike with a small semigroup 19:58:34 -!- conehead has joined. 19:59:58 -!- conehead has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 20:00:12 -!- conehead has joined. 20:29:50 -!- Bike has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 20:33:47 Taneb: someone wants to see your dining room 20:33:59 elliott, why 20:34:04 damn good question 20:40:49 -!- MindlessDrone has quit (Quit: MindlessDrone). 20:54:57 -!- Koen_ has quit (Quit: Koen_). 20:58:56 what 20:59:46 yes 21:08:26 -!- mnoqy_ has joined. 21:09:10 -!- mnoqy has quit (Disconnected by services). 21:09:12 -!- mnoqy_ has changed nick to mnoqy. 21:10:34 mnoqy: will you remonqy eventually, or are you mnoqy for the foreseeable future? 21:11:14 it's terminal i'm afraid 21:18:51 -!- douglass has quit (Ping timeout: 256 seconds). 21:38:44 -!- Taneb has quit (Quit: Leaving). 21:52:04 -!- Bike has joined. 22:03:33 MEANWHILE IN /R/BITCOIN: http://www.reddit.com/r/Bitcoin/comments/1mbo1y/my_parents_dont_believe_in_btc_how_can_i_convince/cc7o88v 22:05:01 ah yes cyprus 22:07:13 WORK DOOOOONE! YEEEEES! 22:07:24 I'm fungotly hungry. 22:07:24 boily: to scroll the following: 22:07:35 -!- boily has quit (Quit: foodening). 22:07:40 -!- metasepia has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 22:07:44 that's a lot of scrolling 22:08:20 so, does anyone know about that thing where you use commodity GPUs to do subsupercomputing? fiora? 22:09:51 subsupercomputing? 22:10:10 supercomputing on the cheap, basically. 22:10:19 aka computing 22:10:19 I know a few small things 22:10:24 i guess it's just opencl stuff. but i don't know any of that. 22:10:33 GPGPU is a general term used here 22:10:36 thanks phantom, that was the joke 22:10:45 it's probably not very "super" if it's also "cheap" 22:10:47 "general-purpose graphical processing unit"? 22:10:56 Bike: ? 22:11:21 i think you (fiora) linked a paper once about breaking crypto using commodity GPUs or something 22:11:25 i don't know. kinda high right now 22:11:35 good for you 22:11:40 high as a bike 22:11:41 um. I know a little but like what about it 22:11:49 just anything 22:11:57 @_@ that's kind of vague 22:11:57 that's kind of vague 22:11:59 i don't know >_> 22:12:07 i am the eternal noob. 22:12:30 like um what do you want to know >_< 22:12:32 fungot: did anyone say anything interesting since this morning? 22:12:33 olsner: 120 print nam tab(25) " total" 120 for t=0 to 1 depends on the tape at a time. the book. if corresponding bits of color ram. the 22:13:56 fungot: I'll just take that as a "maybe"... write funnier things? 22:13:56 olsner: if the number at the next available location in the middle of variable storage area. therefore, this register. the 22:14:07 ... the 22:17:36 -!- SingingBoyo has joined. 22:25:46 maybe i should just jack a gpu and write fibonacci in opencl or whatever shit 22:25:46 what's "hello world" for that 22:29:42 `unicode SNOWMAN 22:29:43 ​☃ 22:30:50 mm 22:31:05 i'm noticing progressively more advertising getting through adblock+... 22:33:03 `unicode POO 22:33:04 Traceback (most recent call last): \ File "/hackenv/bin/unicode", line 5, in \ print u"".join(map(unicodedata.lookup, sys.argv[1:])).encode("utf-8") \ KeyError: "undefined character name 'POO'" 22:33:15 `unicode PILE OF POO 22:33:17 `unicode PILE 22:33:17 Traceback (most recent call last): \ File "/hackenv/bin/unicode", line 5, in \ print u"".join(map(unicodedata.lookup, sys.argv[1:])).encode("utf-8") \ KeyError: "undefined character name 'PILE OF POO'" 22:33:18 Traceback (most recent call last): \ File "/hackenv/bin/unicode", line 5, in \ print u"".join(map(unicodedata.lookup, sys.argv[1:])).encode("utf-8") \ KeyError: "undefined character name 'PILE'" 22:33:31 hm, i thought that was it for sure 22:33:36 It is 22:33:39 oh, it is... is it not in the db? 22:33:49 `unicode U+1F4A9 22:33:51 Traceback (most recent call last): \ File "/hackenv/bin/unicode", line 5, in \ print u"".join(map(unicodedata.lookup, sys.argv[1:])).encode("utf-8") \ KeyError: "undefined character name 'U+1F4A9'" 22:33:56 `unicode 1F4A9 22:33:58 Traceback (most recent call last): \ File "/hackenv/bin/unicode", line 5, in \ print u"".join(map(unicodedata.lookup, sys.argv[1:])).encode("utf-8") \ KeyError: "undefined character name '1F4A9'" 22:33:58 `unicode just takes a char name 22:34:01 not a codepoint 22:34:01 Traceback (most recent call last): \ File "/hackenv/bin/unicode", line 5, in \ print u"".join(map(unicodedata.lookup, sys.argv[1:])).encode("utf-8") \ KeyError: "undefined character name 'just takes a char name'" 22:34:06 look shut up HackEgo 22:34:27 I wonder if it's exploitable 22:34:37 Probably not 22:34:47 how would it be exploitable 22:35:19 Python bug? 22:36:08 hey did you all see http://blog.sucuri.net/2013/09/ask-sucuri-non-alphanumeric-backdoors.html non-alphanumeric php backdoor shell 22:36:23 this is esoprogramming for sure 22:36:32 I keep saying that exploits are weaponized esoprogramming... 22:36:53 Bike: Since you wanted it so much... )) 💨💩 22:39:21 kmc: it involves PHP... do I really want to see? 22:39:29 -!- epicmonkey has joined. 22:39:49 @$_[]=@!+_; $__=@${_}>>$_;$_[]=$__;$_[]=@_;$_[((++$__)+($__++ ))].=$_; $_[]=++$__; $_[]=$_[--$__][$__>>$__];$_[$__].=(($__+$__)+ $_[$__-$__]).($__+$__+$__)+$_[$__-$__]; $_[$__+$__] =($_[$__][$__>>$__]).($_[$__][$__]^$_[$__][($__<<$__)-$__] ); $_[$__+$__] .=($_[$__][($__<<$__)-($__/$__)])^($_[$__][$__] ); 22:39:49 Unknown command, try @list 22:39:56 there now you have seen it whether you want to or not 22:40:14 ah, luckily Haskell is not susceptible to the same backdoors 22:40:18 it's code to run a shell (takes arbitrary calls to do from GET) 22:40:21 http://i.imgur.com/IZrScxv.jpg 22:40:34 kmc are you hacking our aim?? 22:40:38 *hecking 22:40:38 little bitty bit 22:40:40 terrible typo 22:40:45 *heckling? 22:40:50 hecking 22:40:51 no it's definitely hecking 22:41:00 why would you heckle an aim 22:41:06 aim heckles itself 22:41:10 huh. I always thought it was heckling 22:41:57 kmc: Someone probably reared that train 22:42:26 -!- epicmonkey has quit (Read error: Operation timed out). 22:42:39 FreeFull: lolololol 22:45:00 I guess a suitably limited version of PHP could make a nice esolang 22:45:52 * kmc nests iframes 50 deep 22:45:59 hmm, and where except make is @ a prefix to suspend output? 22:46:08 *except make and PHP 22:46:15 in PHP it suspends errors, I think... 22:46:39 kmc: I think most (non-IE) browsers limit iframes to about 9 deep 22:46:55 aww 22:47:06 olsner: DOS batch files I think 22:47:21 I've tried infintely nested iframes and everyone was fine except oerjan whose browser crashed 22:47:47 -!- augur has quit (Read error: Connection reset by peer). 22:48:01 -!- augur has joined. 22:48:27 kmc: hmm, maybe... 22:48:31 so what's the origin of @ as a silencing/error-suppressing prefix? 22:49:02 the shape represents your errors spiraling into a black hole 22:49:41 '@', pronounced slurp 22:56:38 -!- SingingBoyo has quit (Ping timeout: 240 seconds). 23:01:18 -!- nooodl has quit (Ping timeout: 264 seconds). 23:04:25 @ doesn't look like slurping 23:08:03 -!- zzo38 has joined. 23:12:40 we'll have to agree to disagree 23:12:43 hey zzo38, how's it going 23:13:09 OK 23:13:13 you use @ to suppress errors because @ is perfect and never has errors! 23:13:35 :☺) 23:14:15 don't give me that look... that... smell 23:14:37 :@) 23:15:30 Just wait a few minute please 23:15:33 I will answer in a bit later 23:15:40 ?messages-loud 23:15:40 boily said 4d 1h 46m 36s ago: ♪moof♪ you have quotes! 23:15:59 boily: What quotes is that? 23:16:00 -!- Bike has quit (Ping timeout: 260 seconds). 23:16:15 boily added your quotes to the pdf in the topic 23:22:18 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:NancyReaganMrTChristmas1983.jpg 23:22:19 http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/4/41/Elvis-nixon.jpg 23:25:02 NancyReagenMrTChristmas1983.jpg is definitely up there in terms of good filenames 23:25:12 *ae. 23:25:38 good files too 23:31:30 -!- Bike has joined. 23:33:12 -!- yorick has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 23:41:05 -!- augur has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 23:43:57 I have made some levels of "Attribute Zone" game in QBASIC (I don't have it here right now though); later I intend to put in Famicom, since the game mechanics are based on the limitations of the Famicom PPU. 23:45:27 good premise for a game 23:46:46 I don't know if there are other games like that. 23:47:19 the platonic spirit of platformer characters must get through the platonic platformer game 23:47:42 whilst fighting planktonic spirits 23:47:56 terrifying imo 23:48:29 Bike: I do not understand you. 23:49:10 me neither,man. me neither. 23:49:56 I don't know what a platonic platformer game is either. 23:50:12 y'know, world of forms 23:51:11 -!- copumpkin has joined. 23:52:26 "Attribute Zone" is not platformer game though. 23:58:36 -!- Bike has quit (Ping timeout: 256 seconds).