@lyxal I think the easiest/quickest way to get demodded would have to be them sharing PII. Every other reason would require internal investigation, especially after the Monica incident, but sharing PII would be something that would need to be contained first, investigated second
In fact, I'd imagine that'd even be quicker than stepping down, as that takes a few days IIRC
For the nonce I've gone ahead and made it "The Nineteenth Byte". When we're bored of that I suppose we'll use the then highest voted answer not yet used. Or something. I'm not marking this [status-completed] because I think that continued input will help for future name changes. — dmckee --- ex-moderator kittenFeb 22 '14 at 22:24
> when we're bored of that
and then the name proceeded to never be changed for the next 7 years
I work for a small-ish company (~15 employees).
I've managed to automate myself out of 80% of my job, starting in 3-4 months. I would really like to stay with my company, but my best analysis suggests that there simply won't be (enough of) a need for me. If our growth rate continues, that 20% wil...
@PyGamer0 I had a chat listener bot active a few months ago in a bunch of rooms and had to manually delete a bit of PII that someone sent (mods nuked the message). I think the log file was close to a gigabyte before I shut down the bot :P
@hyper-neutrino Okay, I didn't really edit it, I filtered out most of the columns (and some rows where the perpetrator was 0 years old and stuff like that) and just stuck it into Minitab
It was actually at FBI bootcamp, where I was training to be an FBI agent who monitors people's computers
@Lynn I got it to {×/ ({⊃ ,/ ⍳¨⍵} ⍣ ⍵) ⍵} in APL (ungolfed) but there's probably a both shorter and more elegant way to do it that someone who actually knows array languages can find
⍳ makes an N-dimensional hypercuboid range for vector input which doesn't work how we want; ⍳¨ produces an array of arrays and if we ⊃ diclose that, we only get the first cell, which is not what we want, so we have to ,/ join the cells together, but then we still have to ⊃ it to get it back into a depth-1 vector
so overall not nearly as nice as Jelly R just vectorizing on vector input :P but probably more useful for real applications
second of all I wouldn't say I even really know APL
but among the esolangs i'm fairly familiar with I'd say Vyxal (but not really, I suck with stack based languages overall), Jelly, somewhat yuno, and javascript
i can probably write an answer in any stack based golfing lang if there is a command list available but it will be bad
thing is it's hard to define what constitutes "knowing a language" :P like sure i know how BF works?? but i don't know all the bf tricks/patterns that actually good bf golfers/programmers know
yeah i have 11 intercal answers but all of them are trivial either in the sense that the challenge is trivial in most languages that aren't intercal, or somehow intercal's features make a less trivial challenge relatively easy
the thing is BF only has 8 commands and it's pretty trivial to know what all of them do yet skill ranges from not knowing how to multiply two numbers to literally making a compiler to compile ASM into brainfuck lmao
yeah. i saw a video about keyboard layouts and typewriters from i think junferno the other day and he mentioned how CJK languages dealt with typewriters
cuz typewriting a language with 6000 characters is somewhat difficult :p
one idea for a chinese typewriter was a large matrix and a selection window that you slid around and then a lever to push to print the selected character
and a similar idea put that onto a cylinder to make it less clunky and a bit more compact
the korean approach was to simply give up, and use hangul (it didn't look that nice, but at least it worked for typing most things at least)
it looks like it was maybe sort of a mix of korean nationalists who wanted to use a script that was actually korean and foreign missionaries who didn't want to have to figure hanja out to write in korean
if you're learning japanese, you have to deal with the fact that 下 has like 9 ways of saying it
tho tbh I think the main difficult part about learning japanese is the grammar - i think you are mostly right that learning the vocabulary is quite similar no matter which language you learn (although with heiroglyphic languages (or whatever they're called) there's no such thing as sounding out words, so it's an extra layer of memory that you can't guess or mnemonic-ify as easily)
@Razetime you could have multiple dimensions of emotion, which different operators move in different directions, and the overall emotion at each step determines how some operators work
me: spends like an hour fiddling around with jelly's string compressor and reverse-engineering it to make an LTR algorithm so i can store it in a prefix cache for optimization
also me: doesn't store my intermediate values to the cache
Never have I come across someone who could so confidently declare something blatantly incorrect that I have to go check wikipedia to make sure I'm not going crazy
Also, is Jelly cuts characters that aren't in its codepage out of its code. You will need to use <a href='/atoms/chr'><code>Ọ</code> (Chr)</a> on the codepoint to create those characters. supposed to have unparsed HTML in it?
@RedwolfPrograms I've never understood why people like the whole "a string is an array of characters" thing, to me that's just a hacky workaround from back when C was a thing