« first day (309 days earlier)      last day (1058 days later) » 

08:01
@pxeger ngn/apl doesn't work
Assuming ATO doesn't support prompt(), you should always call apl.js with -l too.
@Adám Thanks for letting me know, I'll add -l but it seems to give another error message anyway
Yeah.
I think the "usage" message is because it wants input on stdin, not as command line args
but when I do that it gives TypeError: x.a.join is not a function
Maybe it expects stdin to be an array of strings, so you can join them?
I wonder if this is a sign that Iverson's unique programming style was perhaps not the most practical, and ngn perhaps shouldn't have copied it...
08:09
What?
Well that error message contains pretty much no useful information, because x and a are completely nondescript
Oh, don't blame Iverson for that. It is just ngn's style (possibly adopted from Arthur Whitney).
Whitney. That's who I meant.
thinking of the (in)famous 10-line buddy memory management system implementation
Sounds like ngn.
so I'm gonna say there's not much I can do about it
08:18
So be it. Waiting anxiously to add Dyalog APL…
I'll add dzaima/APL in the mean time then, so you can have at least some kind of APL
:-)
I'm pretty sure that's abandoned too.
well, at least there's BQN
We'll get there. Just working on various bug fixes for 18.2
08:33
That is being maintained, so ask in
 
4 hours later…
12:55
> any activity that places deliberate excessive strain on computational resources (such as CPU share, memory usage, network bandwidth, disk space, etc.)
@pxeger So are ATO links to tight-loop code that doesn't terminate (within a reasonable time) disallowed?
well, they are forcibly terminated after 60 seconds
I don't think code in a tight loop for 60 seconds is really excessive, as long as you aren't trying to circumvent the timeout, or running it repeatedly
I guess experimenting with/golfing some non-terminating solution could be seen as "running it repeatedly"…
if you're doing it in good faith, it's permissible
^ this is not legally binding

« first day (309 days earlier)      last day (1058 days later) »