00:00:07 also you can schedule the next operation right after 00:01:58 because it doesn't need multiple cycles to figure out how everything is renamed 00:02:26 like it can be scheduled in 1 cycle in theory even if you have dozens and dozens of sub operations 00:02:46 and you can transform RISC code into that form automatically 00:02:48 -!- DHeadshot has quit (Ping timeout: 250 seconds). 00:04:28 FireFly : Well, OISC is very serial and can't be issued out of order fast :D 00:14:22 mad: mhellod! long time no see! 00:14:49 Hm, some internet memes are told in an alternative dialect of english displaying an SO word order. Interesting. 00:15:12 hey hey 00:15:25 hppavilion[1] : japanese influence :D 00:15:37 mad: That's not what I was getting at :P 00:15:38 hppavilion[1]: e.g.? 00:15:58 FireFly: It's what you when you the accidentally meme 00:17:33 * boily engrammatifies hppavilion[1] 00:17:58 [http://knowyourmeme.com/memes/i-accidentally] 00:23:05 In all seriousness, are there any actual languages that ever use word order not in {SOV, SVO, OSV, OVS, VSO, VOS}? 00:25:03 flexible word order 00:25:07 V2 00:25:56 "SXOV" (mostly another way of saying V2 really) 00:26:56 some cases of VSO/VOS are kinda ambiguous for rather ergative languages (what's a S?) 00:27:17 same goes for OVS (hixkaryana is very ergative)... and I think OSV 00:29:35 [wiki] [[Special:Log/newusers]] create * Camto * New user account 00:29:40 one case I've read about but can't remember where or how, where 'subject' and 'object' don't really mean anything (though the language has other ways of differentiating stuff) 00:30:01 (like a language that doesn't have case and no fixed word order) 00:31:38 https://www.dropbox.com/s/8ac7zywlgp37v0u/IMG_20161207_191229.jpg?dl=0 ← tastes good 00:33:43 <\oren\> also, there are languages that don't use subject and object 00:34:01 <\oren\> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ergative%E2%80%93absolutive_language 00:36:38 <\oren\> in other words, there are languages where "the boy jumped" and "the girl kissed the boy" use the same grammatical marking on "the boy" 00:46:06 yeah... it's a bit debatable tho 00:47:24 like I think ergative is more like using passive by default 00:48:14 "the girl was-kissed by-the-boy" 00:49:58 -!- oerjan has joined. 00:52:34 [wiki] [[Esolang:Introduce yourself]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=50466&oldid=50458 * Camto * (+219) 00:53:48 [wiki] [[DL]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=50467&oldid=38017 * Camto * (+36) 00:55:21 -!- otherbot has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 00:59:06 -!- Kaynato has quit (Ping timeout: 268 seconds). 00:59:26 `addquote there are very few things more child friendly than breasts 00:59:41 1300) there are very few things more child friendly than breasts 01:01:01 * oerjan isn't quite sure if that's funny without the context 01:02:57 * oerjan twitches from triskaidekaphobia 01:03:08 hellørjan. “The only "intuitive" interface is the nipple. After that it's all learned.” ― Bruce Ediger 01:03:27 * boily lightly mapoles oerjan thirteen times 01:03:29 helloily. would you like to handle the next hundred quotes or so 01:05:11 eh? 01:05:19 like, suddenly a hundred quotes at once? 01:05:26 oh. 01:05:46 it was quote 1300. no worries, I can handle that like the Groan Chicken Man that I am. 01:06:40 -!- iczero has changed nick to physiology. 01:09:26 -!- moony has joined. 01:09:27 is it common in other languages besides English and French to group numbers between 1000 and 1999 by hundreds? like 1988 is said “nineteen eighty eight” («dix-neuf cent quatre-vingt-huit»). 01:09:35 mheloony. 01:09:45 yes 01:09:51 err, well 01:09:56 hellorcah. 01:10:00 it's common to do various random groupings 01:10:03 I dunno about that specifically 01:10:07 bonjouroily 01:10:10 boily: it's common in norwegian hth 01:10:22 well, you have the standard grouping, but then vernacular or dialectal variations? 01:10:27 oerjan: tdh. 01:11:01 I think "nineteen eighty eight" in English is also only for some things, like years. I don't think you say "nineteen eighty eight pounds" if something costs £1988. 01:11:30 fizzie: you'd say "nineteen hundred eighty eight" in north america, but I've heard it's not common in europe 01:12:01 It's not a thing at all in Finnish, incidentally. 01:12:05 i think in norwegian it's more common if the number is round 01:12:43 note that "eleven hundred thousand" would be very unusual though 01:12:49 you'd just say one point one million 01:14:23 indeed, for money you'd use the normal way. 01:14:23 "nineteen hundred" sounds very odd in Finnish, it's always "thousand nine hundred". 01:15:08 actually i think ads with weird prices like 2990 tend to say "to ni nitti", without mentioning hundreds or thousands 01:15:21 (We don't have the "20th century" thing either, that's "1900-century" to us.) 01:15:30 oh that's sensible 01:15:47 1988 most of the time is mille-neuf-cent-quatre-vingt-dix-huit 01:16:03 though it's kinda regional, the 'cent' way is more common in europe I think 01:16:37 "femten hundre kroner" soundly beats "ett tusen fem hundre kroner" at google. 01:17:22 oerjan: That ad thing is true too. 01:17:55 and you have those who say «octante» and «nonante». bletch. 01:18:14 -!- moony has quit (Ping timeout: 244 seconds). 01:19:18 I was about to say that "mille-neuf-cent-quatre-vingt-dix-huit" sounds ridiculous, but I guess "tuhatyhdeksänsataakahdeksankymmentäkahdeksan" looks a bit imposing too. 01:19:33 well 01:19:48 it's written mille neuf cent quatre-vingt-dix-huit 01:19:49 I think 01:21:05 Finnish does put all that together like that when it comes to writing out numbers. Though presumably in the majority of the cases you would have fallen back to using digits by that time. 01:21:16 and pronounced about mil neu cen qua-e-vin-dx-uit 01:22:26 In colloquial speech I guess also just "one nine eight eight" could come out. 01:24:59 /mɪl.nœs.sã.kät.ʁ̥ə.vɛ̃.d͡zɪs.ɥit/ 01:30:31 hizzie 01:30:45 It took me a long time to get used to "nineteen hundred" etc. in English. 01:30:55 Everything else is in thousands. 01:31:14 I think "twenty hundred" sounds odd even in English. 01:33:44 For years like 2250, I think it's just "the year twenty-two fifty", instead of twenty-two hundred fifty. 01:34:13 in the year 2525 01:35:23 I picked 2250 because it's midway through when the Babylon 5 series takes place. 01:35:37 OKAY 01:36:10 Oh no, I'm wrong. 01:36:39 The Babylon 5 years were actually 2258-2262, not 2248-2252. 01:36:52 Never mind then. 01:41:35 If I recall correctly, the Long Now Foundation uses five-digit years in all official documents. 01:42:04 how mediumsighted 01:43:22 They're finally building that clock, I guess. 01:46:40 -!- LKoen has quit (Quit: “It’s only logical. First you learn to talk, then you learn to think. Too bad it’s not the other way round.”). 02:12:06 fungot: nocturnal nostril. 02:12:06 boily: i have just consulted on the subject. it is 02:12:11 'night all! 02:12:23 -!- boily has quit (Quit: SOCIOPATHIC CHICKEN). 02:43:56 -!- Sgeo has quit (Ping timeout: 268 seconds). 02:50:24 -!- Akaibu has quit. 03:04:03 -!- Akaibu has joined. 03:08:17 -!- Phantom_Hoover has quit (Read error: Connection reset by peer). 03:55:39 -!- Perenelle has joined. 04:02:55 -!- MDude has quit (Read error: Connection reset by peer). 04:03:26 -!- Kaynato has joined. 04:11:13 -!- Sgeo has joined. 04:11:20 -!- hppavilion[1] has quit (Ping timeout: 265 seconds). 04:19:23 -!- moodyhoot has changed nick to doodycoot. 04:26:07 -!- Perenelle has quit (Quit: Bye). 04:39:50 <\oren\> `unicode ʁ̥ 04:40:03 U+0281 LATIN LETTER SMALL CAPITAL INVERTED R \ UTF-8: ca 81 UTF-16BE: 0281 Decimal: ʁ \ ʁ \ Category: Ll (Letter, Lowercase) \ Bidi: L (Left-to-Right) \ \ U+0325 COMBINING RING BELOW \ UTF-8: cc a5 UTF-16BE: 0325 Decimal: ̥ \ ̥ \ Category: Mn (Mark, Non-Spacing) \ Bidi: NSM (Non-Spacing Mark) \ Combining: 220 (Below) 05:13:29 [wiki] [[Language list]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=50468&oldid=50464 * Ais523 * (+18) /* A */ +[[A Pear Tree]]; this is mostly a joke, but it ''is'' usable for programming, so… 05:14:12 `unicode PARTRIDGE 05:14:21 No output. 05:14:23 aww 05:21:36 [wiki] [[A Pear Tree]] N https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?oldid=50469 * Ais523 * (+1745) I made this, so I may as well post it… 05:22:45 [wiki] [[A Pear Tree]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=50470&oldid=50469 * Ais523 * (+22) it seems that writing in wikimarkup in one tab, Markdown in a second, and Perldoc in my editor all at once is not advisable… 05:22:55 [wiki] [[A Pear Tree]] M https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=50471&oldid=50470 * Ais523 * (+11) it seems that writing in wikimarkup in one tab, Markdown in a second, and Perldoc in my editor all at once is not advisable… 05:24:44 youtube rewind is awesome 05:29:38 what's that 05:32:00 -!- function has joined. 05:35:24 -!- Sgeo_ has joined. 05:37:42 https://www.youtube.com/user/theyearinreview 05:37:50 -!- Sgeo has quit (Ping timeout: 268 seconds). 05:47:42 -!- Sgeo_ has quit (Read error: Connection reset by peer). 05:52:51 -!- Sgeo has joined. 06:00:39 -!- Kaynato has quit (Ping timeout: 268 seconds). 06:35:13 -!- hppavilion[1] has joined. 06:41:15 -!- doesthiswork1 has quit (Quit: Leaving.). 06:50:09 how about a language named after An Oak Tree 06:51:14 Oakay 06:51:58 . . . 06:52:37 Quantity Calculus is interesting. We should abuse it. 07:07:59 -!- function has quit (Quit: /dev/null is full). 07:08:27 . o O ( any advice using the word "should" is most likely wrong ) 07:09:23 -!- function has joined. 07:09:32 -!- function has quit (Client Quit). 07:10:11 -!- function has joined. 07:10:21 -!- function has quit (Client Quit). 07:11:39 -!- constant has joined. 07:11:57 -!- constant has quit (Client Quit). 07:14:31 so we should stop using the word should? 07:15:15 mad: <3 07:30:06 izalove: yep! oh wait 07:30:37 food -> 07:31:04 "Je déteste le subjonctif, et le subjonctif passé, et l'imparfait, et le plus-que-parfait, et le conditionnel présent" reply: "Ça serait dommage que tu t'arrêtes et que tu aies manqué ces temps... si seulement tu avais su à quel point ils étaient beaux!" 07:51:31 -!- mad has quit (Quit: Pics or it didn't happen). 07:55:04 -!- Jafet has quit (Ping timeout: 245 seconds). 08:08:51 -!- Jafet has joined. 08:12:41 -!- impomatic_ has joined. 08:55:16 Hm, I need a zv and an nr ligature so that I can atbash and rot13 my æs 09:05:56 -!- oerjan has quit (Quit: Avgr). 09:43:23 -!- hppavilion[1] has quit (Ping timeout: 265 seconds). 10:28:20 -!- LKoen has joined. 10:44:33 -!- doesthiswork has joined. 10:50:29 notitdoesnt 11:33:36 -!- boily has joined. 11:46:02 `wisdom 11:46:13 footnote 1//May contain nuts⁸. 11:48:56 (and bo(i?)lts) 11:49:14 `? pun 11:49:16 Puns are fun. Ask shachaf about them. But beware of Muphry adding misspellings. 11:49:32 fungot: why wouldn't I ask shachaf about puns? 11:49:32 int-e: and for some reason i think " reverse" from r5rs normally optimized? i.e. blacks king moves, to construct responses based on random events when the black and gay people? 11:49:51 int-ello. did you just boltly pun my name? 11:49:55 thanks fungot 11:49:56 int-e: global name ' getitem' is not used for real-world applications" people :p)? 11:50:18 but shachaf isn't the Black King, he's the Queen of the Dawn. 11:52:53 It wasn't bold, I just ran afowl of another awfowl pun. (punny chicken) 11:56:58 * boily *thwack* *thwack* *thwack* int-e. 1.0 FP. 12:23:28 ^style 12:23:28 Available: agora alice c64 ct darwin discworld enron europarl ff7 fisher fungot homestuck ic irc* iwcs jargon lovecraft nethack oots pa qwantz sms speeches ss wp youtube 12:24:48 -!- boily has quit (Quit: REGIONAL CHICKEN). 12:32:12 good day, fungot 12:32:13 FireFly: from what i have on my desktop as something like fnord the most popular of the fnord. for some reason 12:37:58 -!- AnotherTest has joined. 12:49:26 that's a nice fungot line 12:49:26 b_jonas: they dump a lot of boxing and unboxing stuff is costly. 12:52:17 too much fnord. 12:53:24 fungot must fancy boxing day 12:53:24 FireFly: if i use stuff from bar.scm, and bar.scm needs stuff from foo.scm and bar.scm with the module system command processor chapters. 14:34:49 -!- Phantom_Hoover has joined. 16:10:31 -!- MDude has joined. 16:14:49 -!- physiology has quit (Max SendQ exceeded). 16:19:51 -!- iczero has joined. 16:26:01 -!- iczero has changed nick to wlp1s1. 16:38:12 -!- Kaynato has joined. 16:38:56 -!- function has joined. 16:39:01 -!- augur has quit (Ping timeout: 248 seconds). 16:40:16 -!- function has quit (Client Quit). 16:53:55 For several interesting mathematical discoveries, there is a legend that Gauss has discovered it, but didn't bother to write it down and publish, because he thought it was too insignificant or trivial . 16:54:34 Is there a mathematical discovery for which there definitely can't be such a legend, eg. because it follows from ZFC that Gauss couldn't have known about it? 16:55:07 -!- augur has joined. 16:59:29 I have not heard any recent rumours about gauss solving the continuum hypothesis 17:00:26 the answer is 'no' because the idea doesn't hold up to scrutiny 17:25:10 -!- Zarutian has joined. 18:00:07 -!- izalove has changed nick to Foozles. 18:04:46 -!- Foozles has changed nick to izabera. 18:06:46 -!- izabera has changed nick to izalove. 18:11:23 [wiki] [[Special:Log/newusers]] create * NoOneIsHere * New user account 18:13:25 [wiki] [[Esolang:Introduce yourself]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=50472&oldid=50466 * NoOneIsHere * (+145) 18:13:41 [wiki] [[Language list]] https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?diff=50473&oldid=50468 * NoOneIsHere * (+15) 18:17:34 -!- Sgeo has quit (Ping timeout: 268 seconds). 18:18:46 [wiki] [[BrainInt]] N https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?oldid=50474 * NoOneIsHere * (+884) Created page with "==Introduction== BrainInt is a language invented by NoOneIsHere from Programming Puzzles & Code Golf. ==Basics== These are the current commands: # +, increment current cell #..." 18:19:24 -!- Sgeo has joined. 18:24:59 -!- hppavilion[1] has joined. 18:27:54 -!- DHeadshot has joined. 18:49:31 <\oren\> OH GOD NO 18:49:42 <\oren\> ANOTHER BF derivative 18:50:02 -!- Kaynato has quit (Ping timeout: 265 seconds). 18:51:50 \oren\: *sigh* where 18:52:01 <\oren\> https://esolangs.org/w/index.php?oldid=50474 18:52:19 BrainBrick 18:52:20 The page is pretty shit too 18:52:37 \oren\: Maybe there should be a central page for BF derivatives and we'll bury them all there... 18:52:45 (for all new ones 18:52:47 ) 18:56:55 <\oren\> https://cdn.meme.am/cache/instances/folder968/500x/73763968.jpg 18:57:26 <\oren\> aside: I've never watched any star trek, I just like the bald guy 19:03:00 -!- Kaynato has joined. 19:07:02 -!- MDude has quit (Quit: Going offline, see ya! (www.adiirc.com)). 19:13:04 \oren\: Everyone likes the bald guy 19:13:15 I've watched a little. My dad really likes it. 19:30:13 -!- hppavilion[1] has quit (Ping timeout: 248 seconds). 19:32:53 -!- Kaynato has quit (Ping timeout: 248 seconds). 19:33:46 -!- Kaynato has joined. 19:47:01 -!- hppavilion[1] has joined. 19:47:03 `unidecode □ 19:47:17 ​[U+25A1 WHITE SQUARE] 19:47:41 <\oren\> `unicode 25A0 19:47:43 ​■ 19:47:56 <\oren\> `unidecode ■ 19:47:58 ​[U+25A0 BLACK SQUARE] 19:48:04 <\oren\> `unicode 25A2 19:48:06 ​▢ 19:48:09 <\oren\> `unicode 25A3 19:48:11 ​▣ 19:48:14 <\oren\> `unicode 25A4 19:48:15 ​▤ 19:49:51 Hm, are □ ▢ ○ distinguishable enough in most fonts to use together distinctly? 19:50:25 They are in neoletters, but \oren\ seems to have worked very hard to make the characters that are usually homoglyphs distinct so people can tell the difference 19:50:31 \oren\: ty tdh 19:53:48 ◇ isn't diamondy enough though 19:55:27 there is no such shape as diamond. At least not in 2d. What you want probalby are rhombuses 19:59:54 -!- DHeadshot has quit (Ping timeout: 258 seconds). 20:01:58 -!- LKoen has quit (Remote host closed the connection). 20:04:21 -!- hppavilion[1] has quit (Ping timeout: 248 seconds). 20:05:34 I think there is such a shape as diamond, because everyone knows what you mean when you say it. 20:06:05 ♢ 20:06:11 That one is definitely a diamond. 20:10:27 most diamonds aren't diamond-shaped, naturally 20:10:36 (nor artificially, for that matter) 20:11:09 Suit yourself. 20:29:32 -!- Kaynato has quit (Ping timeout: 268 seconds). 20:38:21 sweet suit 20:56:00 <\oren\> https://www.facebook.com/livinginchinaironically/videos/1709099522735302/ 20:56:21 Which subtypes in Magic: the Gathering are unique? I think that at least these ones are: Tower, Power-Plant, Mine, Fortification. Until Time Spiral, so was Kithkin, and until Kaladesh (Unhinged doesn't count), so was Hyena. Are there more? 20:56:25 <\oren\> Hayao Miyazaki is very insulted by these AIs 20:56:49 (I am counting only the type line, not characteristic-defining abilities or anything else) 20:56:50 <\oren\> "I strongly feel like this is an insult to life itself." 20:57:48 -!- shovel_boss has joined. 20:58:55 -!- LKoen has joined. 21:07:44 Another subtype that is currently unique is Rabiah. 21:12:57 -!- DHeadshot has joined. 21:36:25 -!- moonheart08 has joined. 21:49:56 Sethbling made an Atari 2600 emulator in Minecraft. o-O 21:51:52 whoa someone is starring a "project" of mine on github that's like 10 lines of code 21:51:56 -!- impomatic_ has quit (Quit: http://corewar.co.uk). 21:52:08 and they opened an issue to add a license 21:52:22 https://github.com/izabera/waiter/issues/1 21:53:05 * izalove feels important 21:55:22 license it under GPL for great license:code ratio. 21:55:54 i'll double license it under gpl2 and gpl3 21:56:13 Post as public domain 21:56:18 yeah 22:02:50 izalove: why bother creating a variable for the siginfo_t? 22:03:04 hmm I might actually complete snakebird this year 22:03:24 ybden: as opposed to &(siginfo_t){ 0 } ? 22:03:41 ye 22:03:41 i don't care 22:03:47 or, (siginfo_t[]){0} 22:03:52 sure whatever 22:29:14 -!- DHeadshot has quit (Ping timeout: 244 seconds). 22:35:05 -!- moony has joined. 22:35:45 -!- moonheart08 has quit (Ping timeout: 265 seconds). 22:53:52 -!- AnotherTest has quit (Quit: ZNC - http://znc.in). 23:32:30 in fact I finished it (snakebird) now... there is a final level in the center (with a space theme), so 53 in total. 23:32:56 and some fireworks in the end... nothing too exciting. 23:37:21 -!- pikhq_ has joined. 23:40:42 -!- pikhq has quit (Ping timeout: 268 seconds). 23:55:01 -!- moony has quit (Ping timeout: 265 seconds).