@hexafraction The offset to UTC is always constant. Only locally that changes. E.g. CET is always UTC+1 (but it might be +2 some time during the year in Germany).
In the spirit of Patch the Image, here's a similar challenge but with text.
Challenge
Bit rot has afflicted your precious text! Given a paragraph composed of ASCII characters, with a rectangular hole somewhere in it, your program should try to fill in the hole with appropriate text, so that the...
@LeakyNun I wouldn't even know where to start looking. But I can say that the cob from corncob is pronounced just like the cob in cobbler (a person who repairs shoes) or cobbler (a type of dessert), even though those are pronounced slightly differently (3 syllables for the first, 2 for the second).
If I want to read a file, I have to define an entirely separate callback function for what to do with the result (namely process it and pass it to the outer functions callback, with is just crazy)
@MᴀʀsUʟᴛᴏʀ Once I needed to read and process 3 lines from a file, so I had to define 3 nested callback functions, each of which unregistered itself and registered its inner callback
@TimmyD There's no way to force someone to unaccept an answer, this is part of a a Q&A system, the accept is for the answer that helped you the most. One of the benefits of codegolf's identity in a Q&A network
@LegionMammal978 Synchronous node is much more normal, pretty sure it can become pretty C#-like (well, get/set is slightly different, and you can use lambdas freely, and there are no access modifiers)
Phonotactics (from Ancient Greek phōnḗ "voice, sound" and taktikós "having to do with arranging") is a branch of phonology that deals with restrictions in a language on the permissible combinations of phonemes. Phonotactics defines permissible syllable structure, consonant clusters, and vowel sequences by means of phonotactical constraints.
Phonotactic constraints are highly language specific. For example, in Japanese, consonant clusters like /st/ do not occur. Similarly, the sounds /kn/ and /ɡn/ are not permitted at the beginning of a word in Modern English but are in German and Dutch, and were...
@flawr If it's a golf, would it be better to make it either graphical output or ascii art, rather than both? Or is there interest in finding which is shorter in each language?
@trichoplax I just thought the principle is the same, as you have to define a grid, and for each "pixel" find the sign of the given function, and then apply some discrete filtering for finding where the sign changes, so I don't think there is a big difference.