« first day (514 days earlier)      last day (1980 days later) » 

2:59 AM
Everything's ready to go. Migration will start tomorrow morning (UTC - 3).
 
:D
 
 
6 hours later…
8:55 AM
@Dennis I must have forgotten that, it is now in the repo.
Btw, how are you going to run Imperative Tampio code? I recommend running python3 tampio.py file.itp >file.js && echo "aloitetaan_();" >>file.js && node file.js or whatever javascript interpreter you use.
Can you add both imperative and functional Tampio (which is in functional branch). The old hello world works with later. For imperative Tampio, the hello world program would be Kun aloitetaan, teksti "Hello, world!" kirjataan lokiin.
Sorry, python3 tampio.py -i file.itp >file.js && echo "aloitetaan_();" >>file.js && node file.js is the correct command.
 
 
3 hours later…
Okx
12:05 PM
@Dennis you can delete it if you want
 
12:36 PM
@Dennis could you update Retina, please? I've added a new 1.0.1 release tag.
 
 
1 hour later…
1:49 PM
@MartinEnder Done.
 
thank you :)
 
@Okx I didn't really want to, but with source code and documentation gone, I felt like I had no choice...
@fergusq I'll look into imperative Tampio as soon as I finish the migration.
 
2:02 PM
I just changed the DNS records, so whenever your caches clear, you should get sent to the new servers.
The new servers are three dual-core "flexible" DigitalOcean droplets with 2 GiB of RAM and 60 GiB of SSD space. They're running Fedora 27, so a bunch of stuff should have gotten updated.
As usual, please report any issues.
If you want to know which servers you are using, you can run tio.run/##S0oszvj/PzmxREG/oCg/…. The old servers will show one processor core and Fedora 26, the new ones, two processors cores and Fedora 27.
 
@Dennis for that minimal stack-based language we talked about the other day, should we just ask the author in a github issue whether he could provide an stdin->stdout interpreter?
 
I guess that would be best.
TIO is being migrated back to Digital Ocean, to take advantage of their new droplet plans. https://m.do.co/c/1d18c043cf56 There should be no downtime. All new servers have two CPU cores, have 2 GiB or RAM, and are running Fedora 27. https://tio.run
6
 
2:24 PM
do you wanna do that, or should I?
 
If you have the time, go for it. When migration is over, I'll need a break. ;)
 
yeah I can do it. just thought the person might be a bit more motivated if you can tell them you want to add the language to TIO.
 
OK, I'll do it. :)
 
2:39 PM
no rush though. take care of your migration and that break first ;)
 
Will do. :) Migration alone would have been easy, but I decided to seize the opportunity and upgrade to Fedora 27. That was quite a bit of work.
 
probably a good decision though :)
 
Definitely. Fedora's short release cycle is both a blessing and a curse. TIO should always have fairly recent versions of everything, but Fedora 28 is due in May...
 
3:27 PM
@Dennis could you pull Attache again?
 
3:41 PM
@ConorO'Brien Done (and done).
 
thank you!
 
 
4 hours later…
7:32 PM
@Dennis Can you add APL (NARS2000)?
 
If they make a Linux version, sure.
 
@Dennis They claim to support Linux, but under Wine.
ಠ_ಠ
 
And it doesn't work with Mono.
 
@Dennis can you pull Pyt?
 
@mudkip201 The Hello World program prints this now:
([], u'8', u'0')
([8], u'9', u'1')
([8, 9], u'*', u'2')
([72], u'9', u'3')
([72, 9], u'\u207a', u'4')
([72, 10], u'\xb2', u'5')
([72, 100], u'\u207a', u'6')
([72, 101], u'\u0110', u'7')
([72, 101, 101], u'7', u'8')
([72, 101, 101, 7], u'+', u'9')
([72, 101, 108], u'\u0110', u'10')
([72, 101, 108, 108], u'\u0110', u'11')
([72, 101, 108, 108, 108], u'3', u'12')
([72, 101, 108, 108, 108, 3], u'+', u'13')
([72, 101, 108, 108, 111], u'7', u'14')
([72, 101, 108, 108, 111, 7], u'\xb2', u'15')
([72, 101, 108, 108, 111, 49], u'5', u'16')
 
7:39 PM
oh
okay. one sec
forgot to comment out the debugging statement
lol
Pushed
s'not the first time I've done that lol
 
@mudkip201 Pulled.
 
Thanks
 
@Dennis Can you add Oil/OSH?
 
8:01 PM
I'll add it to the list.
 

« first day (514 days earlier)      last day (1980 days later) »