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01:10
@lyxal What was this?
res
The tio version doesn't work, but github.com/Lyxal/res is a clone of how it was pretty shortly before deletion
It hasn't had any commits for 3 years, so it wasn't modified before the answer was posted
 
3 hours later…
04:40
oh cool i have been in tnb for 1 year and 2 days :p
Cool :P
officially completed one year of tnbing :p
maybe add a testcase with leading/trailing non-word characters
i don't necessarily expect that to trip anyone up but coverage is coverage :P
in Wellscripted, 4 mins ago, by PyGamer0
alright @des54321 @emanresuA how does this grammar look?
^ feebcake on that grammar?
05:48
@PyGamer0 shouldn't it be (expr";")*?
06:10
@JoKing oh yeah thanks
06:37
0
Q: Is it a heapable sequence?

cjquinesWe say a sequence of integers is heapable if there exists a binary max heap, whose nodes are the sequence's elements, such that if \$p\$ is the parent of \$n\$, then the sequence has \$p\$ before \$n\$. Alternatively, a sequence is heapable if we can initialize a binary max heap whose root is its...

 
1 hour later…
07:47
0
Q: Truncate words in a sentence

emanresu AInspired by wezl. Your challenge is to take words (sequences of [a-zA-Z]) and truncate them to length 3. For example, never gonna give you up would become nev gon giv you up. Words will not necessarly be delimited by spaces - for example, youtube.com/watch?v=dQw4w9WgXcQ will become you.com/wat?v=...

08:00
For my desmos challenge in the sandbox, fireflame put an easier process to construct bernard in the comments, should I replace my explanation with that easier explanation, or should I keep my initial explanation? Which would y’all think is better overall for the challenge? On one hand, it might be interesting to see how ppl puzzle out golfier strategies of constructing bernard, but on the other hand, that might just be annoying and be a detriment to the challenge.
Sup guys how ya doin
@DialFrost good hbu?
08:19
@AidenChow trying to bring back CP to ELL lmao
 
4 hours later…
12:27
@emanresuA The plot thickens: Today, my comment flag limit was 54. Today, I've raised 60 comment flags. If I've kept count correctly, 12 of those required manual review before being approved; the other 48 were validated automatically.
12:37
@pxeger I think 13 of your flags were manually reviewed.
Hmm, ok
 
3 hours later…
15:32
@AidenChow your last bernard is only 15 tall, also yes you should include the easier recursive definition probably, as long as its actually accurate to the shape
 
1 hour later…
16:35
and they temporarily starred flax :p
because they might have thought that flax is some language designed for hacking into systems or something lol
Are there languages specifically made for hacking?
i dunno
probably
@user I'm not sure if it was intentional design, but php is great for hacking. Careless developers will easily create vulnerabilities.
@user I know of pwntools, which is a library/framework for "hacking" in Python
@WheatWizard thats less "made for hacking" and more "made for being hacked" though
17:36
0
A: Sandbox for Proposed Challenges

YousernameGoroawase Numeric Substitution code-golf number Goroawase numeric substitution is a common form of Japanese wordplay where homophonous words are associated with a given series of numbers to associate a new meaning with that series. Your task is to take an input of a Japanese pronunciation and out...

 
2 hours later…
19:10
@WheatWizard Why did you add a note about scoring in characters to codegolf.stackexchange.com/posts/8696/revisions? Was our default not to score in bytes?
@pxeger I don't know precisely. The challenge itself was posted in 2012 at which time the default would have been characters, but I think bytes were default well before 2018.
Based on the tag, might it have been migrated from SO?
No, it was posted here
Migrations are shown in the revisions
Hmm
Why did we have that tag then?
But, back in 2012, things were still done similar to the SO way. You could find a decent number of language specific challenges then
19:16
fear not, I am still alive
there used to be a pages that listed recent reviews of a particular type, by anyone
but I can't find it nowadays
has it been removed, and if not, what is the URL?
There's a /history page for each review queue, e.g. codegolf.stackexchange.com/review/close/history
But, I think you can only see the full history if you have 10k+ rep
that exists for me (on a site where I have enough rep to review), but it only shows my own reviews
ah, there's a rep limit, that would make sense
19:20
I'm happy to find a specific one if you need it
Do you have this toggle?
I don't
so, rep-limited then
@pxeger This is behind a rep barrier
yeah that must be it
I wasn't really looking for a particular review, just curious about what was being reviewed nowadays
and was wondering if there was a less time/bandwidth-consuming way than guessing at review URLs
19:21
Yep, 10k rep:
> You now have access to [...]
The full history of reviews by all users in any review queue
in that case I probably need to report a bug about this on meta SE, that 10k information is available to anyone with enough time on their hands
@ais523 Review IDs are consecutive, and we're currently at around 65900, so you can somewhat manually check them out
that's what I was doing
unfortunately, you do have to specify the queue it's in, so six URLs to check (although checking low-quality posts first probably cuts the time down a bit)
@ais523 tbh, most rep-limited information is available if you put in enough effort
Site analytics can be tracked via SEDE for example
I imagine that much of it is available via SEDE
19:27
Yeah, generally, they don't really care that much about hiding information, more about giving people increased capabilities/responsibilities
OLIMAR is back online
speaking of which, did I tell yall I finally found a good process-monitoring tool?
it's called Supervisor: supervisord.org
https://gist.github.com/2a970fa8f7d6e116ed3c7306a73d3bad
https://gist.github.com/1519111e0bbc152c30a3388f8a5f4d5e
https://gist.github.com/9db4486e2405c5e2d72933a75a8a6f10
https://gist.github.com/100244e7699d8fab3c323d6ad9ec44cc
https://gist.github.com/857ae9ce8cc6060db35dc65c8cdcdeed
https://gist.github.com/30622280fb8e02293d843db3f56f854e
https://gist.github.com/419b500532e38da2f601073039730879
thanks
@Ginger you mean like a service manager? You could try looking at things like tini
init doesn't really monitor processes
19:34
I like Supervisor because 1. it has a web interface and 2. it's written in Python
if your system already has systemd, I'd say use that
it only really has two essential jobs: a) to act as a "default" parent when no parent process is available (and do the jobs of a parent process, like waiting on its child processes); b) to start the events that start the system in motion
systemd contains an init, but is much more than an init in practice
but why should I when this is working fine and is easy for me to use and extend?
it may be controversial but it has plenty of features, and is pretty reliable
@pxeger I saw 7 links, and thought you'd included the last history of /first-posts, before remembering that we have 7 queues now :P
19:35
if it ain't broke don't fix it
"Solve an NP-Complete problem with polynomial average time" – I'm glad I started looking at this now
(reopened and deleted, which is actually pretty much what I'd expect)
19:48
I've also added help to OLIMAR
20:41
@pxeger Rounding errors, or you had some flags left from the day before modulo 10
21:18
question that might sound off topic but im thinking about challenge ideas lolol: are there any relationships two like.. integer arrays might have with eachother? like in the same way that two shapes might be duals of eachother
i keep going to call it a "property" of the thing but that doesnt make sense
like you might say like, [1,2,3,4] and [4,3,2,1] are reverses of eachother, or [1,2,3] and [-1,-2,-3] are negatives of eachother
@thejonymyster Yes, lots lol :P
where can i read up on this :)
oear (online encyclopedia of array relationships)
But, you might be interested in Binary relations, but where the domain/codomains are \$\mathbb Z^n\$ (i.e. integer lists)
ooooooh yes yesyesyes
thank you :-)
ooh just from this ive already got one thats caught my attention lol
[1,2,4,6,7] and [3,5,8,9,10] may be considered "complementary" to eachother :P
For what its worth, as I don't think that article explicitly says it, IIRC a relation ~ satisfies reflexivity (x ~ x is always true), symmetry (x ~ y = y ~ x) and transitivity (if x ~ y and y ~ z, then x ~ z)
21:24
ooh ok that doesnt strictly fit the thing i just did :P
Tho I may be misremembering my proofs course
still interesting, and i remember hearing about that in a video about equivalence operations
or what ever it is called
@cairdcoinheringaahing Sorry, yeah, if a relation satisfies these axioms, it's an equivalence relation
I can math, but not after 10pm :P
goto sleep;
It's half 10, no :P
21:28
I tried
And I doubt I'll ever succeed
S(emanresu)
CMC: Given a binary function \$f : X \times X \to \{\text{True}, \text{False}\}\$ for some finite set \$X\$, output a true/false value to indicate if \$f\$ is an equivalence relation; that is, does it satisfy the axioms of reflexivity (\$f(x, x) = \text{True}\$), symmetry (\$f(x, y) = f(y, x)\$) and transitivity (if \$f(x, y) = \text{True}\$ and \$f(y, z) = \text{True}\$, then \$f(x, z) = \text{True}\$)
is it just me that all of that mathJax isnt rendering for, or do you have a userscript that makes it work in chat?
att
att
it doesn't render for me either
21:50
There's a userscript for it (ChatJax)
@des54321 I have a userscript
Plus, after a year of writing almost exclusively in latex, I can read raw latex at this point :P
Hmm, perhaps I should consume more latex too to gain this power
@user aaaaand this doesnt work with firefox/greasemonkey apparently, installed and im still seeing raw mathjax
Did you reload and everything?
reloaded, force reloaded, nothing
21:53
@user My diet consists of entirely condoms and balloons. You cannot approach the power I have :P
6
Ah, but I eat gloves
I shall take 5 biology lab classes if that's what it takes to defeat you
Only dentists have even a fraction of the power I have, and that's only those that dispose of their gloves by eating them
@cairdcoinheringaahing working beautifully, there we go
21:55
Or by injecting them between their toes, but we don't talk about them
wait no its not
im blind
You've just given me an idea - get bad teeth and eat the dentist's gloves when they put them in my mouth
Maybe this question will lend some answers?
Oh wait, this isn't Off-Topic TNB
@user it might, but I dont feel like digging around with javascript and trying to debug it right now
22:36
@user This conversation is scaring me
23:17
@cairdcoinheringaahing ill die before i use chrome :P
or was it the other way around..
When you die, you either start using Chrome or Firefox. Depends on if you committed any sins against web development. People who have done especially horrific things get sent to Internet Explorer.
when i die, fuck it, i wanna go to dell
@RadvylfPrograms People who have done moderately horrific things get sent to safari on ios.
@RadvylfPrograms Which one do you go to if you commit sins against web development? Because both are about equally good/bad
And what's the threshold for being sent to IE? Asking for a friend
@user Depends on personal preference
And old people who retired from committing sins against web development are sent to Netscape Navigator
23:27
Why are you punishing old people? Oh, specifically old people who used to commit sins
@user Well, anyone who overrides how scrolling works, for one
I've done that on Macs before (if you mean simply changing the direction)
You monster
It's in the opposite direction from what I'm used to
Oh well I mean on a publically accessible website, changing how scrolling works
23:29
Oh, for other people
Well, I didn't do it on a website, but I did do it on a shared computer
Also made the accent color yellow, turned off the touchpad, and some other stuff
If a friend aliased nano and vim to ed and cd to rm -rf but it was in a VM, will that friend be sent to IE?
Has nothing to do with web development so no
But you may be resurrected as someone who uses Gentoo
@thejonymyster Thinking of a funny response to this but all I could come with was "when it go to fuck dell, i, i wanna die," so I wasn't going to post anything, but then I thought "what the hell, my reputation as a sensible member of TNB is shot anyway" so I'm posting this message
@RadvylfPrograms I mean, I've always wanted to be that cool
I have no problem with being shunned by the rest of society because that'll happen anyway :P
The only thing I have a problem with is being resurrected. Life can lead to many undesirable things, including cancer, pain, embarassment, and death
one might argue that all computation is sin
23:36
How so?
2+2=4 ? bah! who are you to say what should happen come two and two join together... tis soothsaying, blasphemy!
idk lol
I mean, that's just how, 2, +, =, and 4 are defined
You can define them in such a way that 2+2=5 if you wish
lang where 2+2=5
Hi guis
it's 1:40 and I don't want to sleep
I can't figure out why my fetch isn't working
Might be CORS
23:46
what's that?
btw I'm trying to fetch localhost, would that work?
Only from localhost
Unless you add an Access-Control-Allow-Origin header to the resource being served from localhost
ah thanks
you know what the oeis needs? sequence rating
and a "hottest sequences" tab
23:48
Only if Neil won't decide to remove dislikes
"5 stars, cool sequence, would enumerate again"
"1 star, just a ton of ones and twos"
"3 stars, some of the integers are missing"
whats with m&
like, as in why m
i like the - and / string overloads
also : is interesting, when do you think that might be useful?
@RadvylfPrograms For stuff like say, canvas, you have to choose one way or the other
For stuff like that it's fine yeah
I'm talking about ordinary websites with like, paragraphs of text, but someone decided this would be a great time to show off that they know how addEventListener, preventDefault, and scrollBy work for no other reason than...actually idk
23:57
Oh.
Yeah, they deserve Internet Explorer
Btw, have you figured out what the (human-readable) syntax for catstruct is gonna look like?

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