Complement Cat
answer-chaining
Objective Write an answer that outputs the previous answer. Simple enough, right? Well, here's the catch: You may not use any characters that were present in the previous answer. That's right, none of them.
Thus, you are trying to be the last answer for a total ...
In essence, this proposal is to move from a copyleft license (CC-BY-SA 3.0) to a permissive license for code. (By default, it's basically the most permissive license possible, nearly equivalent to public domain with a liability disclaimer.)
Having thought about it for a couple of hours, I've sh...
Complement Cat
answer-chaining
Objective Write an answer that outputs the previous answer. Simple enough, right? Well, here's the catch: You may not use any characters that were present in the previous answer. That's right, none of them.
Thus, you are trying to be the last answer for a total ...
Montreal is very French. I was trolling. I have absolutely no idea what percentage of the population of Montreal, a city I've never been to in a country I don't live in, is German.
Complement Cat
answer-chaining
Objective Write a program that outputs an arbitrary string of text, no more than 64 characters long. Simple enough, right? Well, here's the catch: You may not use any characters that were present in the previous answer's output. That's right, none of them.
Thus, ...
The fastest random generator you could implement is this:
XD, jokes apart, besides everything said here, I'd like to contribute citing
that testing random sequences "is a hard task" [ 1 ], and there are several test
that check certain properties of pseudo-random numbers, you can find a lot o...
Because with my approach, you can implement `%` as an operator with 1-arity. The other approach implements `%` as an operator that increases its parent string's arity.
Maple is a commercial computer algebra system developed and sold commercially by Maplesoft, a software company based in Waterloo, Ontario, Canada. The current major version is version 2015, which was released in March 2015.
It was first developed in 1980 by the Symbolic Computation Group at the University of Waterloo. In 1988, Maplesoft (then known as Waterloo Maple Inc.) was founded to commercialize the technology.
== Overview ==
=== Core functionality ===
Users can enter mathematics in traditional mathematical notation. Custom user interfaces can also be created. There is support for ...
@Timwi Oh, I guess I mean menu-based. For example, I could select from dropdowns formulas with boxes where I could put in numbers and it would evaluate.
@CᴏɴᴏʀO'Bʀɪᴇɴ I don’t remember exactly what it was, but at some point this year I searched around for open-source algebra systems, and I found them all lacking compared to Maple
Speaking of open-source. Is there a central website to benchmark new compression algorithms with a mixed set of data against other algo's? (Like the Hutter prize, but way less specific).