Ideally, find some high paying job that I don't fully hate, likely biting my lip and doing software shit, or boring myself to death by going into finance
@cairdcoinheringaahing One thing I canāt remember if Iāve said here is that I havenāt met much of anyone else who identifies with the multigender label so thatās definitely the part of my identity that I feel the most alone in
I can't clearly remember you saying anything about it but it also rings a bell, but it might also just ring a bell because I a priori would expect it to be rare
My friend was going by genderfluid for a while and wore little bracelets colored blue pink and there was another color for androgynous. But they always wore the blue one and then switched to just transmasc
@noodleperson either a) phone connection or b) you can connect the watch directly to the earbuds/headphones (depending on company and ecosystem support)
Anyway @everyone, as I have leaked, I have a fancy new chat library written in Kotlin called kasey. You should totally check it out. It's not feature complete yet, notably missing RO tools and user info, but it has most of everything else.
@noodleperson there's something to be said about inconveniencing users with boxes and the inability to have a normal array of strings with different lengths
Uiua feels like a language where it's fun to think in terms of arrays for principle, but in practice, you can get things done using plain old ragged lists
okay I have googled and I have learned that it's like an in-joke which I don't really feel like spending my time unless it's hilarious in which case I'd like a heads-up
A spigot algorithm for the digits of \$\pi\$
code-golf math sequence rational-numbers pi
The spigot algorithm for the digits of \$\pi\$ is an interesting algorithm found by Stanley Rabinowitz and Stan Wagon in 1995. It can generate the decimal digits of \$\pi\$ one by one without storing the pre...
A six-bit character code is a character encoding designed for use on computers with word lengths a multiple of 6. Six bits can only encode 64 distinct characters, so these codes generally include only the upper-case letters, the numerals, some punctuation characters, and sometimes control characters. The 7-track magnetic tape format was developed to store data in such codes, along with an additional parity bit.
An early six-bit binary code was used for Braille, the reading system for the blind that was developed in the 1820s.
The earliest computers dealt with numeric data only, and made no provision...
What if Braille write lowercase as shiftdown, with some changes to avoid collision? E.g. CwSO4 ā ā “ā ā ā ¹ (u and a collide so w is used instead)
Dot 6 indicates a number. w is moved from ā ŗ to ā ¾
@Ginger Just because your software has a workaround to shield you from the effects of a terrible design decision, doesn't make it not a terrible design decision :P
@RydwolfPrograms It's me. I'm Cishet Man, straighter than a beam of light. I feed on the straightness of those around me, growing ever more straight while everyone else grows ever more queer. Mwahaha.
Come to think of it I'm having a really hard time remembering when/why I stopped having that thought, but I think it was like... remembering that there are some people who enjoy being men And then I just also immediately made the leap to thinking "therefore I should strive to be one of them"
I hate that humans have to sleep...I love the aesthetic of working late into the night, but also getting up really early feels great and makes me super productive
Hey @lyxal, you'll enjoy this fact: one of the major people involved in US Steel was named Henry Frick, so landmarks all around Pittsburgh are named after him. There's a Frick Park, a Frick Auditorium, etc.
> Frick married Adelaide Howard Childs of Pittsburgh on December 15, 1881. They had four children: Childs Frick (born March 12, 1883), Martha Howard Frick (born August 9, 1885), Helen Clay Frick (born September 3, 1888) and Henry Clay Frick, Jr. (born July 8, 1892).
My rabbi's parents named him such that his full initials (with family name) would form the reversed acronym of the personal names (without family name) of a famous rabbi.
Erase the loops
A nice simple one!
You are given a finite sequence. Find the earliest pair of equal elements, if any (where "earliest" refers to the position of the second element of the pair), and collapse them and the interval of elements between them into a single copy of the repeated element...
@RydwolfPrograms I've definitely heard of doing that with a middle name (e.g. my cousin's kids both have their mother's maiden name as their middle name), but not with a first name.