« first day (630 days earlier)      last day (4687 days later) » 

13:03
@tb: omg, Hlibert cube is compact?!! oh, no...
@Ilya yes. A subspace of a Polish space admits a complete metric if and only if it is a $G_\delta$. This is a theorem of Alexandroff, Kuratowski et al.
See also this question
@JonasTeuwen, can i ask you something related to what we talked about yesterday?
@tb so the metric completeness does depend on the metric: even if $d_1,d_2$ define the same topology, $(X,d_1)$ may be complete and $(X,d_2)$ can be non-complete?
Of course, $\mathbb{R}$ is complete $(-\pi/2, \pi/2)$ is not complete (with the usual metric from the reals) but they are homeomorphic via the $\arctan$
uhu
@tb: but now about Hilbert cube - isn't it homeomorphic to a closed ball in $l_\infty$? (via the obvious shift)
13:06
@Ilya Huh? the standard Hilbert basis seems to be a counterexample to the cube being sequentially compact.
@JonasTeuwen, i'm trying to make work what we discussed yesterday and the implementation wasn't going as i'd thought. so i want to show that $\int G_t(y)(1-\phi)f(x-y)\ dy$ goes to zero with $t$. So what I thought of doing was letting $V$, the support of $\phi$, be the unit ball of radius $R$, and then this gives us the task of estimating $\int_{\mathbb{R}\setminus V} G_t(y)(1-\phi)f(x-y)\ dy$
@HenningMakholm The Hilbert cube is the product space $[0,1]^\mathbb{N}$ which is compact metrizable. It is realized as a subspace of $\ell^2$ e.g. as the set of sequences with $|x_n| \leq \frac{1}{2^n}$, for example.
(not as the unit ball or something)
@tb: so the Hilbert cube is compact as product space, isn't it?
and then i would like to argue that the uniform norm of $f$ outside of $V$ grows small as we let $V$ grow in radius
@tb Ah, sorry. I thought it was the subset of the standard Hilbert space where every coordinate is in [0,1].
13:09
I think the original Hilbert cube was the set of sequences $\{x\,:\,|x_n| \leq 1/n\}$.
@HenningMakholm sorry for the confusion, but Hilbert space has instead a 2-norm, right?
@Ilya no. balls in $\ell^\infty$ are not separable while $\ell^2$ is separable.
@tb, maybe you can help. Let $G_t(x)=(4\pi t)^{-n/2} e^{-|x|^2/4t}$, and $f$ locally integrable on $\mathbb{R}^n$ such that $|f(x)|\le C_\epsilon e^{\epsilon|x|^2}$. I want to show that $\lim_{t\to 0} G_t* f=f(x)$. my idea is above
@tb ok. Let me state it in another way: I mean $\mathcal H = \prod\limits_{k=1}^\infty [0,1]$ with a product topology when I say "the Hilbert cube". My book suggests it, so these are not my words. Is $\mathcal H$ compact?
ultimately i want to show that $u(x,t)=G_t*f$ is a solution to the heat equation i asked you about yesterday
13:13
@Ilya yes. A space is Polish if and only if it is homeomorphic to a $G_\delta$ in that $\mathcal{H}$. That one is compact in the product topology. As I said, I give a detailed argument here
(but the product topology is not the $\ell^\infty$-norm topology, it's rather the weak$^\ast$-topology.)
@tb I see now, thanks
...since it's quiet now: hi t.b.!
Hi, J.M.!
@tb, did you see my question?
@JM Unfortunately, I have to head out. I'll be back later today.
13:18
i don't want to hassle you
@EricGregor Yes, I did see it, but you've got very bad timing today... Sorry.
@JonasTeuwen: HELP
@tb shall I call him?
yes i shouted out to @JonasTeuwen. he was very helpful yesterday
he does not answer, so apparently he is away
Okay, I have to leave. Bye all!
13:20
bye tb
bye
what function does NOT satisfy $f(x)|\le C_\epsilon e^{\epsilon|x|^2}$??
for all $\epsilon>0$ of course
@Eric: $e^{x^4}$ apparently :)
$e^{x^\pi}$.
@Jonas!
but the constant depends on $\epsilon$
13:28
@Jonas: hi.
can't it just get huge
I was at a bar 8-).
@Eric: but you have to fix the contant
@EricGregor No. $\epsilon |x|^2 \leq x^4$ does not hold for large $x$ no matter what $\epsilon$ is.
13:29
of course, sorry
i see now
@JonasTeuwen did you see the messages i wrote before?
it's a uniform bound on all the $x$, i was thinking sloppily
@JonasTeuwen I thought you already had your own "library"... ;D
Yes, but I was at work.
is what i'm doing a correct application of what we discussed?
@EricGregor Hmm but $u(x, t) - f(x)$ must be made small.
So you must have $[f(x - y) - f(x)]$ somewhere.
is my idea of making $V$ the ball of radius $R$, and then sending $R$ to $infty$ the right approach?
in order to bound the integral by the uniform norm of $f$ outside of $V$?
13:35
Oh well, you can just take $V$ a ball, yes.
Doesn't matter does it.
It is open anyway.
Let me try to recall the problem.
isn't it showing that the heat semigroup is strongly continuous on this class of functions?
seems like I'll soon have to show strong continuity of one weird jump-diffusion semigroup :(
Excellent!
@JonasTeuwen do you want me to remind you of the problem?
13:38
uhu :) at least this is very interesting. But it is tough for me - I'll have to devote almost the whole May for this problem
I'm quite sure this is a duplicate.
@EricGregor Nah. I know it.
But I don't have much time, I need to prepare some lectures.
but my essential idea of getting an estimate depending on the radius of the ball is correct?
and then seeing what happens as the ball radius goes off to infinity?
since outside of the ball $f$ is presumably small
and then it would follow that $f$ on $V$ is a good approximation of $f$ on all of $R^n$
for $V$ of an appropriate radius
It was not a long time ago where it was easy for most of us to point where the duplicates were... now, we have so, so many questions.
@HenningMakholm can't find out but remember reading it.
13:42
@EricGregor Okay, so you consider $$\int G_t(x - y) \phi(y) f(y) \, \textrm{d}y$$ right?
Then you pull out the $t^{-d/2}$ factor out of the integral, and you use your exponential bound on $f$.
Now you know $\phi$ is cute with cute support whatever yes.
So then send $t \to \infty$.
Or was it to $0$? Forgot what kernel form you had.
why to infinity?
0
that will make it blow up
No problem!
Fix it with your exponential goody 8-).
$G_t(x)=(4\pi t)^{-n/2} e^{-|x|^2/4t}$
what do you mean the exponential goody, the bound on $f$?
13:45
So you have $e^{-|x|^2/4t - \epsilon |x|^2} = e^{-|x|^2 (\epsilon + 1/4t)}$
ok, sure
And that limit is then $0$.
(LDC for example).
but we also have the factor $(4\pi t)^{-n/2}$
Yes, together with that factor it is $0$.
The exponential decays like five monkeys and the reciprocal is very slow.
leo
leo
hi everyone!
13:47
ohh
leo
leo
@JonasTeuwen, can you help me?
No, I need to prepare a class. Can only help Eric now.
leo
leo
@anon I do not succeed
but really we want the $G_t(x)* f(1-\phi)$ to go to zero
ok, i think i can do this
Yes, I've replaced $1 - \phi$ by $\phi$ for convenience. Just write it down, you'll see.
13:49
Interesting... "monkey" is now a unit of rate of decay... :)
ok, thank you @JonasTeuwen for helping me (again). i really appreciate it
leo
leo
@HenningMakholm and you? are you busy?
You replace $f$ with the bound and then $\phi$ is continuous and compactly supported hence very bounded.
hopefully this time it sticks...
@JM It is a universal unit.
@EricGregor Hence we can find a nice dominating function... Like the exponential times the supremum of your continuous monkey. So you can apply LDC by replacing $t$ by some sequence tending to $0$.
(and then note that this holds for all such sequences and you're done)
13:50
@leo Ahm, whut?
ok
thanks again!
No problem. Good luck. I'll work on something else now. I'll hear it when it works/doesn't work :-).
leo
leo
@HenningMakholm can you help me with an ODE question? something qualitative?
@leo Go ask it on main.
leo
leo
:(
13:58
Hi guys
@JonasTeuwen one thing i'm confused about. when you send $t\to 0$, $\epsilon$ is fixed. so the exponential is not decaying since in the limit you just have $C_\epsilon e^{-|x-y|^2(\epsilon)}$
that $x-y$ factor is because we're doing the convolution
Is this a dupe of this?
Hi @JM : nice to see you after a while
Hi Raj. Yes, it has been a while.
@JM Hmm, not really. The recent one wants to do things with unit circle, but agreed they ask the same thing.
The answers there don't quite meet what OP wants.
14:07
@EricGregor But you have $t^{-d/2} e^{-|x|^2/t}$ right?
What is the limit of that as $t \to 0$?
you are right!
sorry for my obtuseness. it's a birth defect
3
@KannappanSampath well... ;)
@JM That was nice. :-)
@EricGregor Doesn't matter 8-)!
@leo Probably not. Why do you think I in particular would be good for ODEs?
@JM I don't think so. The recent one specifically wants something that involves unit circles.
leo
leo
14:14
@HenningMakholm I'm just looking for help. Thanks any way :)
I'm reluctant to ask it on the main site because the only questions with something like differential equations-inequality do not have answer
@leo Can't hurt to gamble. All you'll lose is time and some energy typing...
leo
leo
@JM Yep I'm on it
@JonasTeuwen, so i've shown that $\int G_t(x-y)(1-\phi)f(y)\ dy$ goes to $0$ with $t$. Now i show that because of this $u(x,t)-f(x)=\int G_t(x-y)(\phi f(y)-f(x))dy=0$, right? and this is when i should be using dominated convergence? i don't know why this problem is frustrating me so much
@leo Careful; you don't want to join Skullpatrol in my ignore list, do you?
4
14:21
@JM : Please see this and a subsequent few comments here, if you have time
You forgot a limit.
Don't mock JM, I'll send a monkey to kill you and feast on your soul!
2
leo
leo
@HenningMakholm why?
yes @jonas, in the limit
@EricGregor Yes. Write down everything step by step. If you're not sure about a step send me the document. I can type it up for you but 1) I don't have much time 2) It will not help you.
Especially 2. So try it :-). I'll check it.
i will write out what i'm thinking in a couple minutes
14:27
@Eric : just a word of advice : take your time and think slowly, nobody is running away here
so we have $\int G_t(x-y)(\phi f(y)-f(x))dy\le(4\pi t)^{-n/2}\int e^{-|x|^2/4t}(\text{(1)})\ dy$, where i want to take (1) to be the uniform norm of $f(x)-f(y)$ over all $y$ in $V$
Hey can anyone help me identify following sequence: 1,1,2,10,80,...?
is that the point, @JonasTeuwen? and then we can bound that expression and show that this too goes to 0 with $t$?
I wonder if it's the SE software that automatically takes the first words of a question if one doesn't type anything in the title box.
14:29
I don't know what you're doing. So write it down step by step please!
there is a site that recognizes sequences, @Milosz
@Milosz Take your pick here
Thanks all!
@HenningMakholm If so, then we now have an excellent way to diagnose laziness...
leo
leo
14:31
@HenningMakholm got it. Don't worry about. I try to do not spam. I never had asked something to you directly. I usually ask here and got answers or discussion or hints. I ask you with this aim. I think that's good. I try to do the work myself. However sometimes I got stuck. The point is: I don't want to be a silly boy. If that's what it feel, let me know please
@JM Apparently not. Experimentally, it's not possible to submit the question without filling in the title field. But it's a great mystery to me how so many askers think things like "Let $V$ be a finite-dimensional vector space" are appropriate question titles.
@leo You did ping me.
leo
leo
@HenningMakholm yes
@HenningMakholm IIRC Arturo had a boilerplate comment for precisely that sort of situation...
Shotgun pinging of random people present in the chatroom is not very appreciated here.
@JonasTeuwen, it seems like we should be done earlier in fact since if we can show that $[(1-\phi)f]*G_t\to 0$ on $V$, then we have shown that $f*G_t\to f$ on $V$. Since this is true for all bounded open sets, we should be able to conclude that $\lim_{t\to 0} G_t*f=f$
14:43
@Henning: Would you happen to know where I might find a full proof that Ackermann is not primitive recursive? I can't make sense of one step in my lecture notes...
@ZhenLin Hmm. I don't actually think I've ever seen that proof written out. I just saw it claimed and sort of convinced myself that I could probably prove that $x\to A(n,x)$ grows faster than any p.r. function with fewer than $n$ levels of recursion if I put my mind to it ...
Ah, OK. I'll look around more then.
15:02
@ZhenLin see pages 13ff here. It seemed to make sense when glancing over it.
@tb: Thanks!
It looks like there are two approaches... one is to show that Ackermann dominates w.r.t. to the max "norm", and one is to show that Ackermann dominates w.r.t. the $\ell^1$ "norm". I can prove half of the claim for each of those approaches, so I only have to show that the two "norms" are equivalent...
15:36
I hate downvoters who don't explain!
Me too.
Hi @robjohn
@robjohn Who doesn't? :) On the other hand, when you think about it, the dot product and the cosine law have a chicken-egg relationship, no?
@JM Sort of. Did you see my comment in reply to Thomas? It reduces things to the formula for the cosine of a difference.
@KannappanSampath How are things with you? It is supposed to rain here today.
@robjohn Not until now. Yes, I agree with your reply. (Also, hi.)
@robjohn Absolutely fine. And, a curious question: Would you take Lilly on a walk on those days it is raining heavily?
15:43
@JM Hi there. Sorry for coming back from an absence with a gripe :-)
@KannappanSampath twice a day, rain or shine.
@robjohn Hmm, a very demanding pet. ;-P
@KannappanSampath No, she really isn't. I feel that it is what is needed to care for her.
@robjohn Oh! OK. But, it might be hard if it rains, I guess?
@KannappanSampath cool!
@KannappanSampath It is more of a hassle (drying her off when we get back), but I would hate to think that she should suffer because I am lazy.
@robjohn I should say you really care for Lilly! So nice of you.
15:54
@Matt? Are you sure that this should be (set-theory) rather than (elementary-set-theory)? The tag descriptions appear to disagree.
16:06
"I think the ordering by elegance and the ordering by simplicity are partial orders, not total orders. I'm sure there are plenty of maximal elements in the corresponding set, but I'm not sure there is a maximum (even if each of the orders is total, the product order is not...)" - oh Arturo... :D
Not to mention the regular exercise you get from it @robjohn ;-)
16:36
@HenningMakholm No. Better? : )
Hi JM.
Hi @Matt!
@JM hey =)
@N3buchadnezzar and you too.
@MattN Yes.
This might seem like a strange question, but a younger friend of mine asked me about the equation $log_10(x^3)+log_10(10/x) = 2$, are the solutions to this one $x=\pm10$ or $x=10$. I would say the latter, but I am quite unsure.
16:47
@N3buchadnezzar What happens if you take $x=-10$?
You obviously get $\log_{10}(-10^3) + \log_{10}(-1) = 2$
Ah, I see. I forgot that multiplication is not valid operation for complex logarithms, because of branchcuts in the complex plane right?
I mean $\log z_1 + \log z_2 \neq \log z_1z_2$
I'm not even considering branch cuts. If you take the principal branch of the logarithm of a negative real, you have a result with nonzero imaginary part, yes?
$\log_10(-x)=\frac{\log\,x+\pi i}{\log\,10}$ is something you agree with, yes?
16:52
You have a result with nonzero imaginary part on the left, and something purely real on the right. Looks weird, no?
Indeed
For a minute i thought the imaginary parts canceled out.
17:17
I'm done for today. See you guys later.
18:06
@JM I would agree with $\log_{10}(-x)=\frac{\log(x)+\pi i}{\log(10)}$
@JM Oops, I didn't read far enough to see that you'd left. See you when you get back.
Hey @robjohn if it is of any consolation: the discussion in the comments to the cosine answer is plain silly IMO.
@tb I agree, but whenever you are doing something basic, people have different ideas of what is most basic.
The fact that $a\cdot a=|a|^2$ is the Pythagorean Theorem, so I am using that in my first answer.
I just don't really understand why André is downvoting. If he expects all the prelims to be included, it won't be elegant or simple.
18:26
Well, his argument is not more convincing. It seems to boil down to: prove Cauchy-Schwarz, and define the angle between two vectors as $\theta = \arccos{\frac{a \cdot b}{|a|\,|b|}}$.
Well, that is even less basic, then. I still won't downvote his answer, though.
My second answer is the way I originally proved the Law of Cosines (before taking trig).
@tb At least he didn't downvote before I got to 23456 :-)
leo
leo
let $f:\mathbb{R}\to\mathbb{R}$ continuous and differentiable. why is easy to see that if $t\in\mathbb{R}$ then there exist an $\alpha\gt 0$ such that $f'$ does not change the sign on $]t,t+\alpha[$?
@robjohn yes :) you could also send him here (just dug up this thread and that link)
(eleventy-one years ago :))
@leo huh? $x^2 \sin{\frac{1}{x}}$ and $t = 0$
(is there a hypothesis missing?)
18:44
@tb definition by $u\cdot v=|u||v|\cos(\theta)$ seems to be the harder road to use.
leo
leo
@tb I see. I'm trying to solve this
don't follow Julian's answer
@robjohn Maybe he's jealous because you got more votes.
(Yay teddy for the second time today : ))
hey, matt!
Never mind : ) You're probably about to go.
@MattN poor guy. He could use a downvote to cheer him up :-)
18:53
@robjohn I briefly considered it.
Quick sanity check before I post an answer. @tb If $S\subseteq R$, the kernel of the map $A\otimes_S B\to A\otimes_RB$ generated by $u\otimes v\mapsto u\otimes v$ is $\cong A\otimes_{R/S}B$, right?
It's the middle of the day and everyone is leaving? :-(
no wait, that can't be right
hey , does anyone know about petri nets ? willing to pay top $$$ for help.
If it's 1M+ I'd do (almost) anything for you :)
18:54
it's generated by $ur \otimes v-u\otimes rv$ quotiented by $us\otimes v-u\otimes sv$ I think..
oh well, it was a parenthetical anyway
bah, no need to quotient, that's already intrinsic. duh.
I'm making this too hard.
@anon don't do that!
make things easy :-)
Yaaradru petri nets bagge help madakke ready idhira ? Yahan koi hai joh petri nets ke baare mein mujhe madat kar sakta hein ?
Is there anyone here who can help me with petri nets ?
@Juggalox I bet that Google Translate won't work on that :-)
@robjoh lol
G translate thinks it's Malay.
18:59
Its 3 languages , kannada , hindi and english.
@Juggalox hmm. Google Translate thinks it is Turkish :-)
I love how people dont care when you say something in english but when you say it in a different languages , they are too curious !
it's mysterious
@Juggalox I know nothing about petri nets. Saying so seemed like it would simply be noise.
@robjohn lol ok no probs about that
19:02
I keep losing my ping sound.
@robjohn test
@robjohn Right after equation (3) you mean $E_n$, right?
@MattN yes. isn't that what it says? ;-) Thanks.
@robjohn 'Tis. : )
Hi. I've had some very good beers.
@robjohn I left you a comment with a question.
What I don't understand is how the question can have 99 views and your answer only 2 upvotes.
(It'll have 3 soon.)
19:11
Hey ho.
Hello Gigili. Long time no see!
'Ello Matt, nice to see you again.
Likewise. : )
Hi guys
Hi Daniil.
19:16
How is it going? Unfortunately, I haven't been paying much attention to this chat.
Good, more or less. Yourself?
Hello.
Bbl.
Neutral :S
@Daniil how could you do that? :-)
19:21
:]
@MattN any more questions?
Any good algorithms for generating pairs of coprime numbers? I tried the algorithm on en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coprime#Generating_all_coprime_pairs but I think the recursion was too much for my program to handle.
There may be nothing I can say that will convince André to remove the downvote. That makes the hypothesis that the downvote is competition or spite more feasible.
@Mike take any two numbers and divide by the GCD?
19:41
I doubt that's going to help. I'm trying to iterate over all coprime pairs with the sum under a certain limit.
@Mike okay. A bit of background is a good thing.
My apologies if I wasn't clear. I think I've seen something similar before, I just don't remember where...
@Mike Have you seen the Farey sequence? It is a similar idea.
Yes. I've used it a time or 2 in Project Euler problems. I think there was one problem I solved where I used that method and someone else gave another method of generating coprime numbers. Trying to see if I can find it. If only I can remember which problem it was...
20:03
Hmm... Somehow managed to find the topic. Looks like it was the same Wikipedia link I gave before. And that gave me a segmentation fault. Looks like I'm going with the Farey sequence.
@robjohn Yes: Why do you use \epsilon instead of \varepsilon? : )
+1, btw. I think you should get more upvotes for that.
@MattN why not? that is the epsilon I have always used.
@robjohn Because I think it's ugly. : D
@MattN I think $\epsilon$ is the one more commonly used in ancient Greek. It is used almost exclusively in astronomy.
@robjohn \renewcommand{\epsilon}{\varepsilon} and you can continue as before!
3
20:12
I never saw $\varepsilon$ until recently
@JonasTeuwen I don't like that one :-p
Hello @JonasTeuwen . Long time! I am back with a set theory question. If you are not busy, perhaps you can help me?
@FortuonPaendrag Excuse me. I think you're mistaking me with Asaf :-).
^ and you're asking Jonas?
Well, I dont know your speciality, so I took you for an all rounder! It was a compliment :P
And by that comment, can I infer that Asaf has not come back since?
@Fortuon: maybe you should just try and ask your question...
No, Asaf hasn't come back since he left.
20:17
@Jonas: any plans for the Queen's Day?
@Ilya No.
@FortuonPaendrag Thanks! 8-).
Get drunk like a monkey, I presume...
@tb Assumptions...
"Assuming that ZF is consistent, adding the Axiom of choice wont make it inconsistent". Can we say the same about any other axioms of ZF. For example, Assuming ZF without regularity axiom is consistent, can we deduce that ZF is consistent?
@tb That is true for almost everyone
20:19
@Jonas: I wanted to escape this fun to Dusseldorf but I won't manage
@Ilya :D.
@Jonas: an lhf for you. I'll delete my answer if you are in the mood of producing something more elaborate than me...
Great... More segmentation faults. Recursion doesn't seem to be my friend right now...
@robjohn I was thinking about that and decided that it is not true. For example, I have come back since I left
@tb Well... Usually I'm not more elaborate than that :-).
20:21
I'll get from 2 to 3 Master students this year. And I'm not allowed to do any measure theory with them, only applications. My supervisor regards me as a bit of a crazy mathematician, but you guys know that it's not true!
@Ilya they won't let you do measure theory?
eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee
@robjohn my supervisor won't
@Ilya well, you're crazy and a mathematician, but your math is not crazy :-)
@tb any help you can offer me? :(
20:23
@robjohn ah, I know that my math is quite weak :( I wish I have more time to learn now that to do applications
@FortuonPaendrag there are quite a few such considerations. I suggest that you look e.g. in Moschowakis's book on set theory which is a very pleasant read. If you have a model for $ZF$ without regularity you can build the von Neumann hierarchy inside that model and you get a model of ZF. This doesn't work for all the axioms but for regularity it does.
@Ilya I wouldn't say that.
I have the Moschowakis's book.
After I've read it I thought: Set theory is for the crazy people.
And I'm not that crazy yet. So I'll postpone for some years.
@JonasTeuwen Is that Yiannis, or another?
Hah, see @JonasTeuwen. You are the allrounder I thought you to be!
20:25
@robjohn Yes.
@FortuonPaendrag Well... 8-).
@JonasTeuwen He was chairman at UCLA when I was teaching there.
@tb , thank you! I will look that up.
Can you rephrase your question using an integral transform?
@robjohn Cool!
You've been between all the cool people.
@robjohn YM must be a cool dude... Good sense of humor at least in his writing.
y so srs?
No problem!
20:26
@tb Yes. He is getting near retirement. He was there when I was an undergrad, too.
I've been listening to WWII Air Raid Alarms all evening.
It gives me a feeling of doom!
@JonasTeuwen is someone invading?
(because of Mr Johnny Walker too)
I hope nobody is invading me.
General (pointset) topology is to set theory like parsley to Greek food: some of it gets in almost every dish, but there are no great “parsley recipes” that the good Greek cook needs to know.
@FortuonPaendrag exactly that one.
20:30
be back in a bit. going afk
later!
20:42
@robjohn I didn't know that. Of course. But it doesn't change my opinion on its ugliness : )
I ate some Pakistani food.
Keeping my fingers crossed on this program. Wikipedia algorithm for generating coprime numbers caused a segmentation fault. Using the Farey sequence like I did in the past caused another segmentation fault. I'm desperately trying the Wikipedia algorithm again, but with a different order by making the branch that should terminate quickest go first. It's been running a while so far. No segmentation faults yet...
@Mike y so srs?
These programs do have a tendency to piss me off now and again. If this method fails, I'll probably have to scrap it and think of something else.
20:51
That would be the time to have a drink.
@JonasTeuwen These are the texts Joker sends to The Batman.
@anon Srsly?
I am schizophrenic! I don't understand my own question...
@tb Hmm... And you did have enough beer this evening?
Usually when I don't understand my own material anymore, that works.
20:55
(check the q)

« first day (630 days earlier)      last day (4687 days later) »