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6:44 PM
@Dennis Can you pull Attache and Tidy?
 
4 hours later…
10:47 PM
@ConorO'Brien Improvement suggestion on that feature request: things like kavod, Klein, and Kotlin should come after those, but before things like 2DFuck.
@Οurous oo yeah, prefer languages starting with the search query, then containing. (prefer by earlier occurrence of substring?)
@ConorO'Brien Yeah, it's a constant annoyance that when I type in cl, APL (Dyalog Classic) comes up before Clean
I could live with C (clang) and C++ (clang) but that one's a bit far
(it might be best to regard the parenthetical as separate for the purposes of searching; e.g. a large reticle should probably come before C (clang))
11:16 PM
@ConorO'Brien Does that work in IE 11? I see a lot of features I didn't know about.
@ConorO'Brien Done.
let me check, I'm not sure what IE11 supports. probably not much but it's worth checking
ok yeah apparently nothing. brb
I'd test it myself, but my VirtualBox broke. :/
this should be ES5 compliant
IIRC TIO searches languages by their title attribute? you might have to modify the code slightly
@Dennis thanks!
I may have pushed too late, can you pull Attache again?
11:32 PM
@ConorO'Brien No, that was my fault. Should be updated now.
working perfectly now, thank you!
@ConorO'Brien Thanks. I'll try to work this (or a version of it) in. I think C (clang) should have a higher precedence than ancle, because the cl occurs at a word boundary.
Would it make sense to only counts matches at a word boundary? I'd imagine nobody would ever type cl to find ancle anyway...
not necessarily. maybe I'm odd but if I'm searching for something specific and remember a distinct part (e.g. in code) I'll type starting in the middle of the query. (e.g. when searching for class AtState I'll search for ss at rather than typing the whole thing)
maybe just shove words that match not at a word boundary at the end
I guess that works too.
That could replace the indices though, no? First matches at the start of the name, then matches at the start of a word, then other matches.
that would make sense
do you want to treat parentheses differently/separately?
11:42 PM
Probably not. I think too many sorting rules would just make it confusing.

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