Note that this cheat method isn't actually cheating - it's what chess anarchists like myself call the Siberian swipe. Note that it can only be performed if the h file pawn hasn't been moved and if the h file rook hasn't been moved as well. — lyxal59 secs ago
Disappointing that there's no knooks, double check, il vaticano, knight boosting, long passant and knight roost in the challenge
Why are there so many of them? Like, I'm all for new memes but these aren't particularly original, it's just new arbitrary rules that you then need to memorize to be able to understand subsequent memes
so I can claim that the move "Dynamic Quantum Holistic Multidimensional Telecheck" allows me to move a piece through the imaginary dimensions across the complex plane to instantly cause a checkmate?
@Ginger you can also manipulate the board shape, add all sorts of other things like portals, tanks and sprites from other games, and you can even use the pieces from the promotion menu on chess.c*m for checkmates
PSA: The call for best of 2022 nominations needs more nominations. Currently, only 1 category is contested, with every other category having 0 or 1 nomination(s). Find what you enjoyed in 2022 and go nominate it, otherwise there'll be a lot of free rep wasted.
Jesse is the unknown, a mysterious figure whose true identity and motives are yet to be uncovered. He operates in the shadows, leaving little trace of his actions and always one step ahead of those trying to uncover his secrets.
2fuck is a simple 2d variation on brainfuck. Like brainfuck, there is a tape that extends 30000 bytes to the right, consisting of values between 0 and 255.
Arithmetic should wrap around, adding 1 to 255 sets the cell to 0, and moving right from cell 29999 should move the pointer back to 0. The co...
@Ginger My cat's favorite food is goldfish. Not real fish, goldfish crackers. The little orange ones. She will smell hear you pouring them from across the house. I once left a little bowl of them sitting out, and she just started eating them. Half the bowl gone by the time I finished swapping out a hard drive.
I thought it was just like, some things like accessing uninitialized memory might give you different results on different compilers, and typically compilers would do whatever's quickest. Not...that
Well, I didn't intentionally give the paste to my cat
But I made way too much
The experiments were rather successful but extremely time consuming with the equipment I had
I got a very small amount of dilute juice, decided to leave it extracting while I went to work and when I came back most of it had been spilled and the rest had turned brown, so I kinda lost motivation to continue
I still never got to taste it, not gonna try again for a while tho because my family wasn't too happy with me using up their counter space for six hours
I'm currently the high bidder for both RAM kits, with 24h left. Spicy :p I think everyone interested in buying them has already gotten one, since there've been dozens of these auctioned off, so my odds are pretty good I get at least one
There's this build tool called sbt that has its own shell and makes you enter commands there instead of having a daemon and letting you do sbt compile/test/whatever every time you want to run it
It really depends on the library where it looks for stdin, some look for sys.stdin, some look for sys.stdin.pid, some just always look for pid 0. In the first 2 cases it's overridable, in the third case it gets more tricky
PHPFuck Golf - Hello World
Like this
PHPFuck is an esoteric language in which any PHP statement can
be accurately reproduced into another valid PHP program that
uses only the 5 characters (^.9).
The PHPFuck converter, when given an input of echo "Hello World!",
produces a block of code that is 7...
Given an even number of points (x, y), return a line mx+b that groups half of them on one side and half on the other. You can assume such a line exists.
@Adám Am I the only one who finds the term "skin" for this sort of stuff uncomfortable? You can change your clothes, but changing your skin just conjures up gross images
@RydwolfPrograms the hell kinda tests are you writing then? When I've written tests for things, it's always been a matter of just place it in a test case file and have the framework handle it from there
E.g., if I want to write unit tests for a function that adds numbers, I'd rather jump off a cliff than explain "well this test makes sure 1+2 equals 3 :3" for every one
@RydwolfPrograms well you see the thing is that you wouldn't be writing trivial cases like 1+2, you'd more want to be creating tests for edge cases like NaN + -inf
For example, you could get away with breaking some of the rules of the language for simplicity. Like, identity([0, [1, 2]]) -> [0, [1, 2]] could work even if your language doesn't support deep == on lists
(do modern languages do that? can't remember if Rust does)