Note: this is similar to Interpret PlusOrMinus, but they aren't the same
PlusIntMinus is an esoteric programming language invented by Esolang user PythonshellDebugwindow.
Language specification
There is a wrapping byte accumulator (incrementing 255 results in 0 and decrementing 0 results in 255) ...
@lyxal I'm gonna have so much fun once the Air Force makes me wear a uniform to class every Thursday, pretending like people can't see me 'cause I'm in camo
...This does remind me, it's been kinda getting to me all of a sudden that I'm going to have a very short window for actually having occasions to wear casual clothes that I'd enjoy
@user The thing that shocked me most was that level of control over a dorm even being possible, but then I remembered, housing is not going to throw a fit over someone who's going to be throwing them hundreds of thousands of dollars in endowment funds a couple decades down the line
Like it talks about "some students" "DIYing it" as if it's this bizarre archaic concept then go on to describe what literally everyone who isn't the helicoptered infant of some old money pervert does
Over here, at least, we have normal dorms with communal bathrooms and often no A/C where this would absolutely be neither allowed nor feasible (barely enough space to move around in), but there's also swankier suites and stuff meant for rich kids where they probably do stuff like this
"I want to call out that you don't need thousands of dollars to throw away to make a dorm feel yours, but I also can't be caught actually ridiculing the main subject of the article"
> “He wanted to have living walls, water features, everything,” Ms. Huston said. “After a lot of meetings, sharing ideas and setting expectations, we agreed on a gorgeous plan: We added some plants, a breathtaking mural and a funky hanging chair.”
Like I understand spending money to make the place you live somewhere you can feel happy and safe and proud of. I spent (shudders) $450 on curtains once. But as someone who's only barely still sane after figuring out how to not get thrown out of college for having no money, this stuff makes me irrationally angry
@user It seems like this is mostly at Ole Miss, which from what I've heard from someone who got stuck going there, is sort of a "party school" and all-around disaster
@rydwolf Yeah, but it's not these kids you should be angry at, they're just idiots. It's the government's fault for not taxing the rich more and increasing the minimum wage and rich people's fault for making sure to get favorable laws passed that help them
@UnrelatedString I love that college was supposed to be a place where you get educated but for a lot of people it's just a way to make sure they don't end up making the minimum wage and then for these guys it's just a fun place to be at
And it feels like the growing necessity of degrees for solid jobs has also degraded the ability of colleges to even function as educational institutions, because it turns into a game of student versus administration to minimize effort versus make sure graduates don't actively embarrass them
So it becomes necessary for students to buy into gaming it because the university has to compensate for that
Like I love it, I'm only here for a piece of paper but I'm not learning anything
Okay the salary guide for my university won't load for some reason but I looked at it a year ago and the highest paid people were the president and football coaches, who were paid like 7 figures or something
And I guess it hasn't been until recently that college athletes could even profit off of themselves, just their universities, so that really shows you how much universities care about helping out their students
Like in the first place it probably makes a lot of difference if said student has to pay everyone's tuition or else nobody gets to enroll, or if they can selectively pay individuals' tuition
Probably because there's no real "sequence" after leaving k-12 when you take into account things like trade schools or the multiple routes through grad school
And also probably because it's HISTORICALLY been seen as optional
@rydwolf I genuinely can't think of anything in my future adult life that would give me an excuse to go more casual than business-casual more often than like twice a month, after I graduate and start having a job instead of just going to lectures a couple days a week
Feel like there's almost no way I'd manage to land a job at a tech company, so I'm sorta aiming to end up in some weird niche role doing in house software for a company that by and large does other stuff, but if the internal department for that still "is a tech workplace" then there is hope yet :P
Probably 3 or 4 bytes obfuscates the letters more. If you do two bytes and the source contains two of the same char in a row one will appear in the output
@hyper-neutrino though i eventually want to find a way to sustainably be self-employed cuz working in a structured corporation hasn't really been enjoyable or fulfilling and i don't think my brain is equipped for it :p
online applications for jobs and scholarships and stuff are such a nightmare
"enter your gpa" (am a week into college) "enter your extracurricular activites" (bizarre list you have to choose from) "what EXACT day did you start/end high school/college/your job"
So they force you to go through centralized platforms to apply...?
You'd think they'd like to, like... not do that
Since it literally makes it easier for you to apply to other jobs that you might end up taking despite being a candidate they'd like to have available
But I guess they also just save their own effort by not building infrastructure for it internally, and not getting tailored resumes is also a plus for them I guess
(in their defense, I submitted my application like the day before it was due, so they didn't have enough time to run my background check, and it would have taken extra long for me due to being Indian and having relatives there)
There's no way know everything (or at least, it'd be easier for you to fill it in than for them to pull that information for all their applicants from various sources)
""if magnetism was sharply directional (i.e. a little searchlight of attraction coming out from the tip of the magnet) then this device would work."" This is nonsense! Ever heard of first law of thermodynamics? -1 — GeorgFeb 1, 2011 at 16:32
@user Pithy ironic rebuttal aside, I just CANNOT keep up with the other people who are after jobs in tech
Even if I might be better at the actual job than most of them would be, there's no way to tell before hiring me
Every conceivable proxy for that is something they outperform me in by miles
So I'm banking on finding something relatively obscure that pays relatively poorly
And just being the most qualified candidate by default
Maybe if I do well enough at that then having actual job history under my belt would get me further in the mainstream, but I'd prefer for it not to have to come to that, because it also sounds like that kind of job would be pretty comfy :P
The "third type of Euler Transform" takes an integer sequence that gives the number of objects of a given weight and outputs a sequences that gives the number of multisets of objects that sum to that weight.
In this code-golf challenge, you will be performing an analogous transform on lists.
Exam...
@UnrelatedString I think it depends a lot on luck, but there's certainly some times where it can pay off to just do really good work and not necessarily make that visible. If things go right and you stumble into someone who can actually recognize the skills instead of the heuristics, that is
That does have the same issue of actually having to get your foot in the door though, which probably explains why the main category of people I've heard that happen to started either in the military or as laborer-type jobs lol
I say just go start building buildings, everywhere you can fit one. Eventually someone will ask you to stop, and while you have their attention, whip out a laptop and write the best code they've ever seen
Maybe you could try to gun for something like Putnam top 500 or Advent of Code top 10, the sort of thing where you get job offers from people who literally just read your name in a list? If that's something your good at
I've done the same thing in almost the same way lol, got an interview for something at the same time I was busy so I missed the window when it would've been best to do it then I just gradually got more confident it'd be too late to act on it, which was a self-fulfilling prophecy
I forgot to reply for like a day or two (after I replied and he replied back), and then when I remembered I realized I was waaaaay too anxious to actually follow through if it was a good idea, mostly because I was already beyond burned out from communicating with my dad about anything at all
So I agonized over it for a year or so before just forgetting and moving on
Kinda exactly the same thing that happened with multiple professors asking if I was interested in research 💀
I did get back to one of them three years later, and he is interested if he can actually think of anything for me to do now lol
Funny how he basically made me stake everything on some fantasy scenario of naturally standing out and being recognized... and then it actually happened... and then he beat me down too hard over trying to keep my grades literally perfect for anything to come of it
(and also the one time I did tell him about a professor reaching out with really appealing details he discouraged me from letting him make me "do free work")
I mean I guess I can tell what they were trying to say (that 0 on my list of 0 colleges would admit me) but the way they just tell you "0 colleges will likely admit you" is so fucking funny
Fun fact: I almost did end up getting admitted to zero colleges
I way underestimated how selective top colleges are so my plan was just to throw in an app for MIT and one for CMU, luckily I applied EA to MIT which made me actually think enough to apply to some safeties too lol