Scratch is very cool, I'd spend all my time "voting" in the random projects where there where 2 lists and you would fork a project and add you name to the column you voted for
Oh and when I used scratch I used a netbook with sound so bad every single sound effect sounded like a screaching bat and I didn't understand why people used that sound in their games
oh frick I just saw that I once made one of those crash site (gambling thing where a multiplier goes up and stops at a random number and you have to cash out before it stops) on scratch
0 →var # Put the value into var
←var ḃE‹ċ¬ [ # if not (2 ** boolify(var) - 1) != 1:
`True`
| # else
←var ḃ¬0=›1≤ [ # if not (boolify(var) == 0 + 1 <= 1):
`False`
]
]
Now I'm wondering if the 0**x trick could actually be useful in golfing, since it has higher precidence than 1-x and also works with values other than 1.0
or I guess it's probably been used before lots and I'm just late to the party
@DialFrost in the sense that something SE does is particularly contributing it? or in the sense that SE is a site which hosts questions, and every question hosting medium will be subject to it...
if you've been posting a ton of star identification questions, maybe try one or two about how to identify a star in general. Teach a man to fish and all that.
@RadvylfPrograms I don't see any post of how to "identify a star in general" so should I ask one? There's a few that look like dupes, but there photos are black and white and programmed outputted, not real photos
I recently stumbled across this image on wikimedia commons. It's a little bit of an information overload at first, but after examining it a bit it shows an interesting number system for writing nibbles.
Image created by user Watchduck.
First off a "nibble" is a 4 bit number which is really a nu...
@PyGamer0 Spaces, but only with a text editor that treats space-indents like tabs (tab key indents by one level, backspace dedents by one level, new line defaults to same indentation as previous line).