@SuperJedi224 oh you were the one posting the ridiculous E# notation in the my number is bigger thread. IT ALL MAKES SENSE. (except the ridiculous notation)
RGB points, left to right, for me: [10,0,0],[255,255,255],[11,2,3],[10,1,0],[11,0,1],[10,1,0] (there's a slight blur on this one to the right - I assume that that's the photo editor - its values are [11,0,2]),[11,0,3]
Jelly, 9 bytes
This answer is non-competing, since it uses features that postdate this the challenge.
SH;P½¥ð}¡
Try it online!
How it works
SH;P½¥ð}¡ Input: x (vector) -- y (repetitions)
SH Take the sum (S) of x and halve (H) the result.
P½ Take the product (P) of x ...
How is string manipulation in Jelly currently? My idea would be to add a "mirror" operator that would invert brackets and stuff. Useful for ASCII art and challenges like Stewie's recent one.
@quartata Not since I started to rewrite the parser at least. Strings are coming soon. I just wanted to finish the parser first. The previous parser required a rewrite every time I added a feature. :/
We have an internal testing lab. We release to an external test lab. They integrate us into a larger product and then release to the customer. At that point, we provide support, but no further code changes (usually).
We still haven't gotten "unit test coverage" into our definition or "done" but I'm pushing for it
I'm kind of a broken record when it comes to process improvement. I never have any new ideas. Only the ideas that I learned about when we started Scrum a year ago that nobody ever listens to.
@TimmyD What do you do?
Oh, nevermind. "Exchange/PowerShell admin that masquerades as a code monkey."
Do you work for Microsoft, or just a really large company that needs someone to manage their Exchange server? Or am I completely missing what an "Exchange admin" is?
Yeah, that's why 99% of my submissions are in PowerShell, because it's really the only language I'm intimately familiar with ... I'm decent at VB and BATCH, but the last time I really touched C/Python/Java/etc. was back in college
Large company, >4500 users and dozens of locations throughout the US
The fun part for me is the first hour or two on a fresh world. Exploring, surviving the first couple nights, establishing a base. Once you get some iron armor and equipment, the game is just dull.