Some features that will only work with gVim:
Supports a much wider range of colors (RGB), while the terminal only supports 256 colors (see this and this).
Some other more advanced graphical features, such as "wiggly lines" for spell checking, more flexible cursor shapes, etc. A terminal can onl...
Internet Explorer for Mac (also referred to as Internet Explorer for Macintosh, Internet Explorer Macintosh Edition, Internet Explorer:mac or IE:mac) is an inactive proprietary web browser developed by Microsoft for the Macintosh platform. Initial versions were developed from the same code base as Internet Explorer for Windows. Later versions diverged, particularly with the release of version 5 which included the cutting edge, fault-tolerant and highly standards-compliant Tasman layout engine.
As a result of the five-year agreement between Apple and Microsoft in 1997, it was the default browser...
I just noticeds a message by TimmyD with 11 stars on it in the sidebar. "Members of the "hacking" community known as PPCG have assisted authorities in seizing one of the largest single-day drug hauls in the history of the United States. Asked how they infiltrated the criminal gang's hideout to secure the location of the drugs, one of the PPCG residents said "I dunno, I just clicked on a random camera link." -- CNN" Is it true, or a joke?
It seems like a joke, but I really want it to be true.
Whenever people say things on the internet, I tend to believe them, even if it's ludicrous. The world is more interesting that way, and it doesn't cause problems as long as I don't try to tell other people about it.
I'm just trying to actually imagine this happening. A CNN correspondent... hmm... signs up for ppcg or something, gains enough rep to talk, and then says, "Hi, can I get an interview with the guy responsible for this huge drug bust?"
...then the guy says, "uhm, okay, I'm bored... wussup?" and the CNN person asks how they infiltrated the gang, the guy says, "I dunno, ...", the CNN person writes it down, and files a news report
@Qwerp-Derp I think the challenge is clear and interesting. I'm not sure what heuristics I can use to solve this though, beside generating strings in a bruteforce way
@Qwerp-Derp Not sure what you mean. The goal is to find the shortest string of K, S and () which when applied to the arg outputs the expected result, right?
Make a quine, but include words 'hello' and 'world' in any capitalization in it.
Valid codes:
Inputs:
hello world
foobar hello world
yes World, I will sayHELLOto you
printhelloworld
Outputs:
hello world
foobar hello world
yes World, I will sayHELLOto you
printhelloworld
Invalid codes:
Input...
> ... A variation for lawful and neutral characters is to polymorph humans such as shopkeepers and aligned priests before killing them, to avoid the penalties for murder.
GolfJoke (2 bytes)
×| (D77C in hex)
D77C is 55164 in hex. Since empty is 1 and one-byte are 2 to 257, 258 is added to produce 55422, which is number of problem to be solved.
@Qwerp-Derp I have found no solution for any string of k and s of length 20 or less that solves (2 3 1) (excluding any parentheses, because it's annoying to generate exhaustively)
(unless my program for executing combinatory logic is broken ofc)