@DrGreenEggsandIronMan I don't think so, because each language has their own logic and their own way of thinking. For example, in French, the adjective usually comes after the noun, which would make you think of the noun before the adjective, in some sense.
@TùxCräftîñg here you go: http://pastebin.com/CLJVz8k2 I made some assuptions: - I changed `p` and `P` for inc/dec pointer to `t` and `T` to avoid the conflict. - Popping from empty stack produces error to `STDERR` and terminates program. - Doubling forumla: `(cell * 2) mod FFFFFF`. - Input (`O`) overwrites the value at the pointer with that char code. The ASCII value is also taken `mod FFFFFF`. - While loops use the function on top of the stack without popping it.
@DrGreenEggsandIronMan Same. That's why it's interesting to me; how different the "structure" of the thoughts are
Like, a lot of languages have idioms to them that are learnable but I think it would be interesting to see how deeply rooted some of those idioms are in thoughts of native speakers
One abstract thought could be "thought" in very different ways depending on a language's idioms
Ugh, gotta make unit tests for this new Cinnamon Gum feature. :/
@DrGreenEggsandIronMan I definitely don't think everyone thinks verbally/audiotorially; indeed I wouldn't be surprised if visual thinkers were more common. Hmm... maybe there's some statistics on that
Yeah, I think the way people use the question "What kind of learner are you" is flawed because I don't think prechewing knowledge like that really helps make the thought process easier
That's the difference between "visual learner == I learn by looking at things" and "visual learner == when I learn something I think about it visually"
@quartata It is about the position, but when you read it, you feel the letter, pretty much the same as you read a printed letter, where you don't think about the shape.
@quartata Sure, for learning this is the way to go, but as soon as you're actually reading stuff a little bit quicker you just feel the letters or even the words.
Mini-challenge: Write a program that prints your username where every non-colon/semicolon/whitespace character has a colon/semicolon to its left or right so it looks like a bunch of faces