Thank you, everyone. One more question, though. I don't really see where the code golf rules are. the FAQ just seems to be the standard SE questions. Are there special requirements to giving answers if I were to try at some point to participate?
@flawr It's the first language I used for non-personal use - it's verbose, inefficient on execution, has ridiculous requirements for valid programs... And also: ಠ_ಠ I said click it first.
Chef, 414 bytes
S.
Ingredients.
g i
2 g t
115 l s
112 l p
111 l o
107 l k
121 l y
109 l m
101 l e
Method.
Take i from refrigerator.Put e into mixing bowl.Put m into mixing bowl.Put i into mixing bowl.Add t.Put y into mixing bowl.Put k into mixing bowl.Put o into mixing bowl.Put o into mixing b...
JavaScript ES5, 328 318 bytes
eval('function s(o){return v=(o?o:" no more")+" bottle"+(1==o?"":"s")}for(o="",i=99;i>=0;)o+=s(i)+"@ on the wall, "+v+"@.\\nTake one down, pass it around, "+s(--i)+"@ on the wall.\\n";alert(o+"No more bottles@ on the wall, no more bottles@.\\nGo to the store and buy...
Desmos
(View them here!)
9-vote
3x\ge 4y^2
Desmos supports inequalities of nonlinear quality! This produces the inequality 3x ≥ 4y2 and graphs it.
8-vote
\theta _2
This shows that Desmos supports the explicit \theta variable, which prints like this: θ. The _2 is a subscript, so the full ...
Vitsy
I've been wanting to put this up for ages. Here we go...
Factoid:
Vitsy is a stack-based 1D programming language with a stack composed of stacks composed of doubles. At any point, the program stack may look like this:
4 8 9 As you can see, each sub-stack may have its own unique len...
Yes, Desmos.com counts as a programming language
Scoring is the "normal" bytecount without special rules
The examples above of Desmos.com's programming language demonstrate that it is a fully-functional programming language capable of solving a wide range of problems (probably all primitive rec...
Hi guys, I have a question. I want to post a challenge based on this article: washingtonpost.com/news/wonk/wp/2015/11/18/… Basically write a program where the user inputs which states they want red and blue, and the output is a map with the right coloring. I don't personally know how to do it myself, but would it be a good challenge?
@geokavel Either way I think it'd be good to have a set image provided - for graphical, it could be a particular image with white states so state positions can be hardcoded; for ascii-art you should post the original ASCII art to be coloured
ಠ_ಠ, 31 bytes
ಠ4ಠ
ಠ4ಠ
ಠ1ಠ
ಠ?ಠ
Explanation
ಠ4ಠ # Push 4 to the stack [4]
ಠ4ಠ # Push 4 to the stack [4,4]
ಠ1ಠ # Push 1 to the stack [4,4,1]
ಠ?ಠ # Essentially: go to line 4
Desmos
(View them here!)
10-vote
r=.5\theta
(There is a trailing space, mandatory as per this meta post) This creates a lovely parametric equation i.e. tight-ish spiral.
9-vote
3x\ge 4y^2
Desmos supports inequalities of nonlinear quality! This produces the inequality 3x ≥ 4y2 and graphs...
Can someone tell me why sometimes people are including class C{public static void main(String[]a){...}} and sometimes that seems to be not necessary?(http://codegolf.stackexchange.com/a/62373/46569)
I want to make a programming language in which functions are defined externally as a wiki. Like, a person makes a page 1 with the contents of the function; when that character is called in said programming language, the code is executed :P
@CᴏɴᴏʀO'Bʀɪᴇɴ You could make the code time dependent: The code uses the definitions of the functions that were active at the time the code was written=)
"Buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo" is a grammatically correct sentence in the English language, used as an example of how homonyms and homophones can be used to create complicated linguistic constructs. It has been discussed in literature, in various forms, since 1967 when it appeared in Dmitri Borgmann's Beyond Language: Adventures in Word and Thought.
The sentence uses three distinct meanings of the word buffalo: the city of Buffalo, New York; the somewhat uncommon verb to buffalo, meaning "to bully or intimidate"; and the animal itself, buffalo. Paraphrased, the...
Help Ben Carson Make Maps Great Again
The cartography team of U.S. Republican presidential hopeful Ben Carson is having some trouble with maps (image via Washington Post):
The problem is they don't have the Right Tool For The Job™. They need the most compact and efficient program possible, so...