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1:16 AM
@DLosc it's funnier because tge message three messages above is an actual question, so it's like Simd is implying its a trivial challenge fit for a cmq
Just had to leave the break room at work because a coworker sat down behind me and started eating (which is totally fine but oh my god it is so annoying)
CMP: Law making it mandatory to play loud music in places where people eat?
 
 
2 hours later…
3:04 AM
@user NO
 
0
A: Sandbox for Proposed Challenges

l4m2Input: a byte array of length 1 to 31, inclusive. Take an example, oxDE, 0xAD Objective: Write each byte into 8-bit binary, big-endian 1101111010101101 Average split into 8 parts 11 01 11 10 10 10 11 01 Convert each part from binary to number [3,1,3,2,2,2,3,1] code-golf Which endian, or allow b...

 
 
2 hours later…
4:50 AM
@user That's... what the break room is for, right?
 
5:03 AM
If I know x^2 + y^2 and x + y , how can I find positive integers x and y and fit both?
 
What you've got there is a system of two equations in two unknowns. I'd recommend solving by substitution.
(And then checking that the solutions are positive and are integers.)
 
@DLosc Uhhh, yeahhh
But most of the time, no one's actually eating in there
It's also the only place to sit and take a break before you start your shift
 
5:35 AM
@DLosc ah yes. You end up with a single quadratic equation. Thank you
 
Do any applications use hotkey that don't exist in 101 keyboard(between LShift and Z, or between space and Alt)?
 
Do you mean Meta?
It's usually replaced with ctrl
 
I mean another `\` or muhenkan(無變換)
 
 
1 hour later…
7:15 AM
Happy international day of trans visibility!
 
I wasn't aware of this, maybe we need a international day of international day of trans visibility visibility
 
Happy trans visibility day to trans parents
 
7:32 AM
Hmm, The Alpha Channel would make a great name for a chat room for trans dads
'cause alpha = transparent
 
8:15 AM
Visible transparent‽
 
8:38 AM
@Adám style="visibility: trans;"
CMC: Given integer n>1, compute lcm(1 ... n) / lcm(1 ... n - 1)
 
@Neil APL (Dyalog APL), 11 bytes: ⊢÷⍥(∧/⍳)-∘1
@Neil btw, f(1)=1
 
there may well be a shorter answer, but I don't know how to find a list of builtins
 
for apl?
 
8:54 AM
I know it's 4 bytes in Jelly
(note that an input of 1 is invalid for my Jelly solution)
 
9:11 AM
just made a rookie error
 
0
A: Sandbox for Proposed Challenges

DanielOnMSECompliment of a set of ranges Consider a shop that exists for a given range of time. At certain times during the shop's existence items can go on sale. These items will be on sale for at least one unit of time. Challenge Given such a shop, and the times it has items for sale, find the mutually-ex...

 
I read a webcomic that updates at 10:11 UTC
problem is, DST started last night
 
@DLosc wow, this looks very cool! i think bitcycle is more similar to what i mean than Zlim, though
i'm making a small lang that's grid-with-values-travelling-across-it-based and would like to find a proper term for it
 
 
5 hours later…
2:00 PM
> If you cannot see the above arrows, or they are not the same size, then you have a problem.
I've got 99 problems but tofu ain't one
 
 
5 hours later…
6:45 PM
For some reason one 2 year old answer got 2 separate votes in the last week. The post hasn't been bumped as far as I can tell
 
7:44 PM
Happy day-where-nothing-on-the-internet-gets-taken-seriously!
 
 
3 hours later…
10:20 PM
@Neil That's oddly specific. (Which webcomic?)
 
@DLosc Irregular Webcomic!
 
Ah! So contrary to the name, it updates quite regularly?
 
@DLosc indeed!
 
@RydwolfPrograms There's an easter egg joke to be made here
 
(currently there are reruns at the weekends, but there are extra rerun comments that weren't there first time around)
 
10:30 PM
I've read a bit of Irregular Webcomic. I got there through Darths and Droids, and I got there through this code golf question.
 
11:06 PM
@Neil I think it is equal to "if n is p^k where p is prime, p; otherwise 1"
 
indeed. my jelly solution was Æfg/
 
11:32 PM
0
A: Sandbox for Proposed Challenges

greybeard8-bit AVR integer division Introduction Some programs use results of integer division: quotient, remainder, or both. Not all processors provide direct support for division in the instruction set, among them 8-bit AVRs (Microchip, erstwhile Atmel). Finding short&fast routines would benefit prog...

 
nice
 

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