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00:45
Typing backwards is a bit less pointless.
@Conrado Yeah it's called RTL
Sunset looked like it was shaping up to be nice, but at the end some clouds overpowered it. And not in a good way.
Still, interesting clouds.
Or maybe they underpowered it? I'm not sure how that works.
01:16
@tchrist Did y’all figure out gimahalta?
@Xanne Not sure, the great Peter Shor has provided an answer and some comments.
3
A: What is meant by a weirdwielder in the translation of the Hildebrandslied by Francis A. Wood?

Peter Shor This is speculation here, but it seems to me that weirdwielder is a kenning for God (or maybe personified Fate) that Francis A. Wood came up with. Weird (sometimes spelled wyrd for this meaning) can mean fate, and a weirdwielder would then be somebody manipulating people's fates, in other words, ...

I haven't yet shared with him Túrin Turambar, which I am 111% certain Tolkien took from the Hildebrandslied.
"Doom Doom-master" or some such. Where doom=fate.
I've been very busy with $job today.
But it is so easy, learner, earner, turner, burner...
Not to mention Erna.
@Cerberus None of those rhyme with Moderna.
Pfizer before Moderna will probably turn ya.
"y"?
01:23
Poetic license.
Close enough for rock 'n' roll.
@tchrist Perhaps not if you pronounce tail r's!
Pfizer ere Moderna but only in taverna.
@Cerberus Randall Munroe has no speech impediment. I've heard him speak.
Are you saying rhotic accents are no speech impediments??
Who you callin rrrrhotic?
Hehe.
01:26
Pfizer before Moderna and lose your parapherna.
Nu-rhotic.
Or nouveau-rhotic.
@Cerberus I treble-dog dares ya to try that one on a Scotsman, preferably one in a kilt with steel-toed boots to kicks ya.
What are you saying, I can't hear you.
xkcd
for you and me
cuz every panel's
3 new channels
an' every strip
is such a pip
the end
Pfizer after Moderna will kick your triplex sterna.
01:31
Moderna & Pfizer
Make nobody wiser
But Astra Zeneca's
The one for Seneca
Who's as dead as that vaccine's future.
I have stood before his home.
I'm pfed up with Pfizer.
Mix Pfizer with Moderna and kiss goodbye your pterna.
Randall is right. These are hard droogs to rhyme.
In that case, Alex is right.
I think I'll not even try with labia externa.
What's the opposite of Moderna, Antiqua?
01:36
The opposite of Moderna is Sputnik IV, I think.
@Cerberus ^
If I had a laptop I would consider dark mode for the battery savings, but as I don't I won't.
Dark mode makes syntax highlighting and brace matching too hard to see.
@Robusto Well, I've never used that blue interface nor all those colours.
I used the classic Windows 95/98 interface.
XP was far too modern.
@Robusto Doesn't that only apply if you have an OLED screen?
@Cerberus You are such a conservative.
@Robusto How so? In what editor?
@Robusto Thank you.
@Cerberus Yeah, but why would you have a laptop without an OLED screen?
I only switched to XP when it was already old.
01:48
That just doesn't make sense.
Then...how could dark mode save you energy?
@Cerberus I use ActiveState's Komodo IDE.
And it does something that makes syntax highlighting harder to see?
I'm assuming dark mode just means the OS and other software use dark background with light letters?
2
Q: To “travel” inside a house?

RobertoI am a native speaker of Spanish and, when moving inside a big house, which may also have a large garden, we sometimes use the verb “viajar” = “travel”= “make a trip” if we need to move over thirty or forty metres. When “viajar” is used in this context, the tone is rather informal, and the word c...

@Cerberus It's just harder to see in any environment. For me, anyway. Also, for dark mode to succeed they need a lighter rim on window edges so that you can see where the edges are for resizing when the active window is over other dark-mode windows.
@Cerberus I think we're talking at cross purposes. My point is that the only sensible screen to have on a laptop is an OLED one. So yes, the point is to save energy.
@tchrist I suppose if you lived in a Victorian mansion with an observatory or a widow walk you could plan to take a "trip" up there. "It's kind of a hike, but it's interesting. Come on, I'll show you."
02:04
Yeah, that's nice.
@Robusto Oh, I glossed over the word "without".
But how many laptops have OLED screens?
@tchrist What if you have Narnia in your house.
It doesn't take many for me to choose one that does. If I were buying a laptop, which I'm not.
> All vans and lorries in Dutch cities are forbidden from using combustion engines starting ca. 2025 but at the latest by 2030.
This will make quite a difference, I think.
At the same time, we have less and less asphalt (most renovated street pavements have have been clinker bricks over the past couple of decades. This, too, prevents cancer.
Now the only thing left is a big campaign against conventional car tyres, which are also a major cause of cancer.
But are you going to burn fossil fuels to charge those batteries?
Less and less, but yes.
But any such fuels will not be burned in inner cities.
So they will not give us cancer.
Car batteries are excellent recipients of wind and solar power.
Because they can 'consume' electricity when people are sleeping and not using any energy.
So they can charge on wind energy that would otherwise go to waste.
And on excess solar energy in summer.
(I should have been more praecise: combustion is allowed as long as it's clean, e.g. hydrogen. We used to have hydrogen buses, I think.)
02:20
@Cerberus Yeah, somehow the numbers on hydrogen couldn't be made to work in a combustion scenario. They can work, however, in a fuel cell scenario.
Oh, right.
Probably because it is difficult to burn hydrogen fast enough to generate enough power?
I read about developments in aeronautics, by the way, where many people are already working on electric and hydrogen aeroplanes.
It will start with hybrids.
But it'll be a while.
They have to solve the weight problem to get it to work with aircraft. Batteries are, unfortunately, still too heavy.
Yes, that is a big one.
It was a long article, but it is in Dutch so I cannot post it.
My hybrid Honda weighs substantially more than the same model with just a combustion engine.
02:36
Sure.
But the fuel cell in a hydrogen plane wouldn't need to be that large.
Maybe.
But, yeah, it will be a while before we have non-hybrid electric and/or hydrogen planes.
Driving around the aeroport, taking off, and landing use a ton of energy, so the article said.
Driving and part of the take-off could even be done using a detachable battery.
May options are under research.
@Cerberus I've thought a mag-lev takeoff ramp might help with that.
Yeah, why not!
Landing doesn't take nearly as much fuel as taking off.
02:41
OK.
Taxiing does take a lot.
Not as much as you might think. What takes the fuel is lining up and waiting with the engines on.
Better ATC might alleviate that, but in congested major hubs that's pretty hard to fix.
OK perhaps the article included that in 'taxiing'.
Weight and drag (air resistance) are what burn fuel the most.
What passenger jets have to do is get to a cruising altitude (~10-12,000 m) so that they can burn less fuel at cruising speed because the air is so thin the air resistance is decreased mightily.
02:59
Yes.
03:19
Is it ever useful for an implementation of Regex to return an empty string for a match?
E.g. when you search for ().
I think most Regex engines will tell you there is a match and return an empty string, will they not?
But is that useful? Conversely, how would you feel about an engine that simply told you there was no match in such a case?
Perhaps @tchrist also has an opinion on this ↑.
You need to know whether the finite automaton complete its mission. That mission is for all the rules to be fulfilled. That's all you need to know.
if ($line =~ /^$/) { print "line is empty!" }
You don't need to know anything more. In that case.
I could show you the equivalent in a compiled language, but not worth bothering. The principle remains.
Now, if your pattern is ^ +[a-z]+ +$, then if that is true, it tells you something else.
It says your line is just one or more spaces, then one or more lowercase ASCII letters, tehn one or more space. Nothing fore nor aft.
@tchrist I'm not sure I understand what you are saying here.
Now, perhaps you would like to know what those letters were. That's fine, and there are API calling adjustments that allow for this, but that is above and beyond the mission of solving the regular expression.
Sorry, a regular expression is a state machine, called a "finite automaton".
I think you are saying that the Regex must tell its caller "yes, we had a match"; but it does not need to return the content of the (empty) match?
In particular, it is a user-friendly front-end to make these easier to use.
@Cerberus Why would it need to return what it matched? It told you it has done so.
03:26
By "need" I mean in order to be fully useful.
No, I disagree.
Then I don't understand.
if ($line =~ /A/) { print "Your line has the letter 'A' in it.\n" }
As it is now, I have this implementation that will return an array of three empty strings when you use () on ab.
What do you propose that the match return here that's "useful"?
Do you wish to know WHERE it matched? Or how many times? Do you wish to loop?
03:28
I don't know!
You must choose the right primitives for your programming interface, or else you can't do things you haven't planned for.
I'm wondering what users might wish to know.
You should not do so. You should provide ways for them to do, and know, all these possible things, as primitives.
You never make only a high-level interface that can only be used in some narrow way.
It will still be possible for them.
But not in the 'convenient' way I'm creating.
You start with the nuts and bolts.
03:30
They are already there.
OF what use in my two examples is "returning the string matched"?
Waste a time, space, and memory.
I've seen three examples?
Should everyone pay that price? You make people pay for things they don't use, and they will not appreciate your taxes.
^$ in this case, I understand it can be useful to know that there was a match.
But can it also be useful to have an empty string returned in addition?
But perhaps the two are hard to separate.
($word) = ($line =~ /^ +([a-z]+) +$/);
Et voilà!
Now it returns what's inside the inner parens around the letters.
03:34
I can read the Regex, but I don't know what you're telling me.
I ASKED it to return something.
So it did so.
It should never do what I do not ask it. It is a terrible waste.
while (($word) = $line =~ /([a-z]+)/g) { print "Found a word: $word\n" }
And now I have it looping through finding all the matches one by one.
I am considering what structure the custom match object should be that I am implementing in Autohotkey.
Oh this is a far more complex thing then.
I would look at existing match-object APIs to see what they support. You'll want a bunch of things.
I think currently it returns a standard PCRE object.
Ah, ok.
03:36
Because the object is not iterable in Autohotkey, I think it must be 'external'. And Autohotkey includes PCRE.
I don't know its method calls; it depends on the API.
Probably.
I know how the object is structured.
But I may want to present a differently structured object to users.
Also because Autohotkey does not support a global search, so I'm also creating that.
So I might as well think about how I want the global-search object to be structured.
I see.
Why are you writing your own programming language again? :):):)
03:46
Heh.
Just adding something to Autohotkey.
A global Regex search is sorely lacking.
A secret vice: all creatives continually create their own languages.
So I've heard.
> First ever critical study of Tolkien’s little-known essay, which reveals how language invention shaped the creation of Middle-earth and beyond, to George R R Martin’s Game of Thrones.

J.R.R. Tolkien’s linguistic invention was a fundamental part of his artistic output, to the extent that later on in life he attributed the existence of his mythology to the desire to give his languages a home and peoples to speak them. As Tolkien puts it in ‘A Secret Vice’, ‘the making of language and mythology are related functions’’.
03:49
Yes, he is a prime example.
It pains me when I read fiction in which the made-up words seem tacky or childish.
Their form is important, even when it's only names and no sentences.
> MATCH
. (0) FULL MATCH:
. . Length => [5]
. . Position => [1]
. . Value => [Crazy]
. Count => [0]
. Mark => EMPTY
This is the structure I have now for a non-global search.
What I don't like about it is that you have to do Match.0.Value to get at the characters that were matched.
I'd prefer Match.0.
But then you can't do Match.0.Length any more to access the length of the match (the language does not seem to have the required flexibility).
The default way is to do Match.0 to get the value and Match.Length(0) to get the length.
Perhaps because it is the only way?
04:09
So you have shown me that it is important to tell users there was a match, even when it was an empty string that was matched.
 
1 hour later…
05:24
> “I’m here live, I’m not a cat,” says lawyer after Zoom filter mishap twitter.com/lawrencehurley/status/1359207169091108864
Hope he doesn't get charged with purr-jury.
 
5 hours later…
10:38
-20 C but sunny
11:23
@CowperKettle That would be cat-astrophic.
even a crow of that size couldn't bear the weight of all the bread of America
12:36
90% of people are idiots. We work for the remaining 5%.
 
1 hour later…
13:45
Could we please ban muggles from talking about computer science? We don't have to go to extremes. I'd be perfectly content with merely ripping out their tongues and cutting off all their fingers, but if you think we need to take their toes, too, I'm not going to stand in your way.
> When cyberspace, which is made up of the sum total of all the apps running on the internet, first blossomed in the 1990s, it seemed so benign.
WTF is an app? WTF is an internet? WTF is a cyberspace? No, providing fako deffos doesn't helpo.
They clearly have no fucking clue what software is. And they haven't read Neuromancer, either.
And this is from the New York Fucking Times.
Fine purveyors of snake oil extraördinaire. Smoke and mirrors. Probably opium.
14:05
@tchrist That seems a mite extreme.
Very well. They may keep their toes.
What you describe is all of popular media.
Dumbasses.
@tchrist apps are appetizers, I think. cyberspace is the space on the river cyber, so the internet must be some kind of fishing net, catching appetising fish
They know not whereof they speak.
14:23
Although you may underappreciate the situation precipitating in site adstipulators having absquatulated your interrogation, we are left no alternative but to elucidate how in the ultimate evaluation we remain inadequate at expiating your inadequate preparation by explicating Latinate morphology via facultative confabulation absent prior formulation.
"What does -ulate mean?"
I felt I had to say inadequate twice to drive the point home.
15:06
click on play when you get there: a ripe blackberry murmurs to the wall
More Vapeur Mauve
@Robusto "tabarnak! c'est chouette!"
but thanks for finally posting a link. You kept saying 'vapeur mauve', 'vapeur mauve' and I'm thinking - "What does he -man- by that? Mauve vapor? Mauve steam? that makes -no- sense."
haha
I heard that the other day and was both amused and impressed.
I also wanted to see if anybody linked vapeur mauve with purple haze without seeing the video.
Or hearing it.
Something about lyrics sung in French... it just doesn't go well with R&R
It is interesting, though, hearing Hendrix filtered through French pop sensibilities.
@Robusto as you can see, I definitely did not. I mean, even hearing the song it's like why is he using those weird words, mauve steam, for purple haze.
it's like everything in a foreign language is entirely literal, no contextual or metaphorical meaning.
"What is this haze that is colored purple?"
15:37
I think they chose those words because vapeur mauve scans the same as purple haze
Oh totally
Brumaire pourpre ... bleurgh
15:49
I always thought this was some kind of ska offshoot but turns out it's Australian.
16:35
Word of the day: arc.
> Electrical sense is from 1821.
1882, in the electrical sense, from arc (n.). Meaning "to move in an arc" is attested by 1940. Related: Arced; arcing.
> from Old French arc "bow, arch, vault" (12c.), from Latin arcus "a bow, arch," from Proto-Italic *arkwo- "bow."
Arcing
Or "The rocket arced gracefully into the sky."
@Conrado Interestingly, the Ozark Mountains in Missouri owe their name to the French, who categorized Native American tribes in the area as sans arc (bowless) and aux arc (having bows). Of course, aux arc was transliterated by English-speaking pioneers as Ozark.
Man loses flute on train, gets it back. So they don't say what make and model of flute that is. Seems like you should be able to get gold for $22K. @Reg take note.
Hmm, seems you can't @mention RegDwight in chat anymore.
> “There was no way that was happening," Unwilling? or unable? to give a 2.5% reward.
Who were the bowless, and what did they hunt with?
> One of the many etymologies of the Lakota name tells the following story: The true meaning of Itazipacola is "no markings". This referred to the fact that the Itazipco were so generous they did not mark their arrows (they were usually marked so that braves could claim the bison they killed, etc.), that way everyone could share the meat of the hunt.
16:52
Interesting.
Russians want to hold a "distributed rally" against Putin's political repressions. People will go out into their yards and shine lights into the air at 20:00 on 14 February. A pro-Putin Parliament member has already called on "to do something against this, because this reminds of the Nazi collaborants who shined lights and guided Hitler's bombers onto Soviet cities in WWII"
Not a joke.
It's in the news. It's hard to believe.
They will try to issue some statute or official statement to prohibit people from shining lights into the air.
A famous Russian rapper went out to protest against Navalny's arrest. The rapper was just walking the street and screaming some silly ditty about how the clitoris should be protected and cared for. Totally unrelated to Navalny. The police arrested him for using the "obscene" word clitoris. Seven days in jail, LOL.
I've never listened to this rapper and I don't even know what he looks like. But must be a good guy.
17:09
@CowperKettle Yeah, because Navalny's bombers are already on their way.
18:04
[ SmokeDetector | MS ] Link at beginning of answer (34): Synonym of "to generate interest" ✏️ by swoxo on english.SE
18:30
> A hundred members of Iran’s medical council in a letter last week to President Hassan Rouhani questioned the efficiency and safety of the Russian vaccine, while the head of the parliament’s health committee said he refused to get the Russian jab. The Sputnik V doses are part of a batch of about 500,000 that will arrive in Iran in February, out of a total purchase of two million doses.
20:47
> Only one man, an unreliable Washington cop named John Frederick Parker, was assigned to guard the president at Ford’s Theatre on April 14, 1865.
Half a century earlier, Alexander I, the Emperor of Russia, used to just stroll across Paris. I wonder why some rogue Bonapartist did not kill him.
21:05
@CowperKettle It's kind of funny to look back at this and see the aspirations that ultimately resulted in the Internet, but how dimly and clouded their vision of the future really was.
They had no real concept of a global communication system. But within the next 25 years there would be such a system, and it would change everything.
Even science fiction writers of the period had no idea of things that were right around the corner.
"dimly and clouded" obviously should have been "dim and clouded" ... stupid fingers
21:39
The rest of our life is going to be worse than you can even imagine.
It's all about pandemic, masks and F-vaccines.
And if I sound depressed, it's because I am.
22:00
@Gigili I'm sorry. On behalf of the human race.
Keep you head above the water. Be strong.
> Follow that star above you
Should the world try to break you down
Genius is one percent inspiration and ninety-nine percent transpiration.
your*
@Gigili I sure hope you're wrong, but I fear you could be right.
@CowperKettle Well, many leaders still do this.
The larger the country, the greater the chances of an attack, perhaps. But it is also a matter of culture.
The Chinese and the Americans are known to be a bit hysterical in this regard, using unique cars are aeroplanes and armies of guards, I believe.
But the King of Morocco or the Dutch Prime Minister can be seen in clubs in foreign countries.
In his own country, I think our PM is usually followed unobtrusively by a pair of guards, but he still cycles around the city at will, and to his office every day.
Many Kings will stroll around cities incogniti.
Especially abroad, but also at home, perhaps in a hat and sunglasses.
@CowperKettle We shall have to see the results of the research into the Russian vaccine once it's been officially published.
But we all know Russian scientists are highly capable, so who knows?
22:37
@Cerberus Hysterical is misused here.
@Gigili You're upset now, but wait until they come out with the G-vaccines.
@tchrist Perhaps he is using it as a synonym for "cautious"?
hysterical is the epitome of hyperbole
@Conrado There, peeping among the cloud-wrack above a dark tor high up in the mountains, Sam saw a white star twinkle for a while. The beauty of it smote his heart, as he looked up out of the forsaken land, and hope returned to him. For like a shaft, clear and cold, the thought pierced him that in the end the Shadow was only a small and passing thing: there was light and high beauty for ever beyond its reach.
'smote' always sounds to me like you're hit with a chimney sweep
like in the process of being hit, you get a load of soot in your face.
22:40
And they lived happily ever after
you mean of smut in your face
no, I really did mean soot. a big cloud of black dust.
a load of smut would be pretty gross.
and smoting somehow doesn't evoke smut for me
Smudge is the causative of smut.
what is it for mildew?
Mulch.
22:45
disappointingly funny
you gotta a little bit of schmutz... right there. let me ... licks thumb ... rub that off.
You can't do that with a mushroom
@tchrist John McWhorter on his language podcast mentioned a whole bunch of causatives using this fossilized causative '-k'.
? just lick the mushroom and rub it on the schmutz
seek < see, hark < hear, talk < tell
I bet there are a bunch of others
twerk?
23:00
Balk?
we have to smirk, there's something important I need to smile you

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