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12:00 AM
I think the URL is too long... Edge is a pain
@totallyhuman It was a simple text compression that jelly does
 
@Christopher Right yeah, but there's gotta be a shorter way, right?
It's jelly of all languages
 
Oh definitely.
 
@quartata In C, is it not possible to declare a local variable within a function then allocate some memory to its pointer somewhere else? In my code, it looks something like this, assuming that the function names are mnemonic.
 
It's all ruined now ;-;
 
@ConorO'Brien I think you're describing a move?
Not sure
Obviously your code right there isn't going to work since that value is on the stack
 
12:10 AM
sort of. I'm trying to create a VALUE (glorified union) to push to the stack given an int
 
Well allocate it on the heap with malloc
 
Hm, ok, thanks. Kolmogorov complexity doesn't really help imagining a hard problem though .. but TIO works for me.
 
C doesn't have std::move but in C++ you could potentially use that depending on the object
 
@quartata so, malloc the VALUE?
 
12:17 AM
VALUE* value = (VALUE*) malloc(sizeof(VALUE));
Of course then you have to free it
 
isn't memory freed at the end of the program anyhow?
 
No
I mean technically yes
In that the OS will mark whatever pages you were using as free
But it's called a memory leak
Bad for performance to keep memory around that long and bad style
 
I remember reading that it shouldn't matter unless its a 24/7 piece of code
 
@ConorO'Brien not sure who told you that
 
12:24 AM
@totallyhuman Done
 
@Christopher hehe
 
Most leaks are bad. That's why we spent a lot of time making good garbage collectors
 
I had to downvote but I un-downvoted the last one
 
Granted there's no point in freeing an object whose lifetime lasts up until the end of the program
 
@quartata maybe I just misread this wrong
 
12:25 AM
But that's not typical of most objects in actual programs
 
@Christopher honestly I'm totally fine with that
 
@LeakyNun V, 11 bytes: ÙÒ kòf0jr^k
 
anyways welcome to C
 
hm, thanks.
it's quite a pain lol
 
@totallyhuman done
 
12:30 AM
now my reputation is not a nice round number :/ guess I can't have it all
 
@quartata TIL some leaks are good
 
13 mins ago, by quartata
Granted there's no point in freeing an object whose lifetime lasts up until the end of the program
That's what I meant.
I mean, you can free it anyways, but the OS is going to deal with it regardless
Probably should have said "almost all."
 
12:48 AM
Question: when I do #import <stdio.h> I never explicitly link the library, so how does gcc typically handle it?
 
Well it's in libc
 
So is it like automatically statically linked
 
No it's dynamically linked usually
 
D:
 
?
 
12:57 AM
:ᗡ
 
I mean, there's a pretty good reason libc is dynamically linked
$ du -h /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libc-2.19.so
1.8M	/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libc-2.19.so
one of the reasons
 
wait is swearing against SE policy? o_O
 
user165474
I don't think so; I mean, I've seen swear words here before without any 11'ing.
 
a message just got flagged for saying "so I [bleep]ed up my computer then?" and deleted
 
user165474
Hm.
 
1:18 AM
I don't appreciate the amount of times it was used as an actual swear.
 
user165474
Me neither. In my opinion, if you wouldn't use it in front of your teachers/boss, don't use it here.
 
According to the archives, I've only sworn once. Neat.
And yet I use the word "Gosh" like a sailor.
 
user165474
Wow. :P
 
user165474
I've used the f-word (censored) once. About 10 minutes ago.
 
user165474
I've used "gosh" once. :P
 
1:30 AM
Disambiguation Is still my favourite wikipedia page.
8
 
user165474
Wow. :P
 
user165474
...why......
 
user165474
 
-2
Q: How can I make a list with even numbers from 0 to 10 in Python?

user69009I'm struggling to make my code work. It isn't working. Here's what I have so far: def evenNum(): L = list[0,0,0,0,0,0] num = 0 for x in L: x = x + num num = num + 2 The code should basically give me [0,2,4,6,8,10]. 6 even numbers which go from 0 to 10....

 
@DJMcMayhem You're not here to witness the moment :/
 
user165474
Is something happening?
 
I answered a challenge in V
 
user165474
!!\o/!!
 
2:20 AM
@LeakyNun oh cool! Link?
 
1
A: Be the First 1 (leave only the first Truthy)

Leaky NunV, 6 bytes f1òlr0 Try it online! My first V submission! \o/

Second place \o/
 
user165474
woo! \o/ congrats! :D :P
 
user165474
I'm thinking of making a stack-based esolang where it's a stack of numbers, but you can traverse into the top of the stack and turn that into the current stack, so you can nest stacks indefinitely, and do stuff with them.
 
so, each element of a stack is a number, but every number is also a stack of numbers?
 
An nD Stack?
More realisticly, each value is still a stack, but operations are done on the top of those stacks. (And thus, those stacks, and so on)
 
user165474
2:27 AM
So let's say we have a stack [1, 3, 5, 7]. Then, if you traverse into the top, it becomes [[1], 3, 5, 7], and then if you push 2, you get [[2, 1], 3, 5, 7]. Then if you go back one level and push 4, you get [4, [2, 1], 3, 5, 7].
 
But then if you use an add for the top two values, what does it do with the substack?
 
eh, could be useful.
 
@DJMcMayhem are you here?
 
@ATaco concatenation
 
How horrifying.
 
2:28 AM
Hmm, maybe I should learn V.
I have to use Vim sometimes, so it could help with that.
 
So 4 + 2 is 6 but 4 + [2, 1] is [4, 2, 1]?
 
user165474
Well, + adds the top two elements on the stack. So if you're at level one with [1, 2, 3], + would result in [3, 3].
 
@LeakyNun sort of
On a scale from 1 to 10, I'm like a 2.5 in hereness rn
2
 
maybe this should settle your misunderstandings:
available commands:
- go to the next level
- go back one level
- push
 
I agree
@LeakyNun Can't do much with just pushing and moving levels.
 
2:31 AM
@ATaco I mean, all he demonstrated is those three commands
of course you would expect his language to have more commands
 
user165474
Okay. I'll explain once I get something reasonably useful working. :P
 
I feel how addition of these multidimentional stacks is handled is rather important.
 
user165474
So you're wondering what + would do on [[1, 2], 3, 4] at level 1?
 
user165474
BTW I need separate dupe-commands to perform operations on the main stack because otherwise certain things are impossible to do.
 
Alternatively I could just make my own version of this, with a similar idea.
 
user165474
2:36 AM
True.
 
user165474
I'm wondering... Java, or Python?
 
Lua..?
 
Ruby
 
@HyperNeutrino Java
 
for a new scripting language? I'd always choose Python
speaking from somebody who loves both Python and Java
input processing is far easier, as well as function composition. Because you don't need speed, I see no downsides
 
2:43 AM
@ConorO'Brien are you familiar with lambda calculus?
 
For a programming language that's not a tarpit, I would certainly want a reasonable execution speed.
 
its an esolang
I agree with you if its supposed to be mainstream, but choosing python over java for speed for an esolang seems rather silly
 
It's true, I have no idea what the discussion is about.
Oh you said a "new scripting language", that's why I thought it's not an esolang.
 
Pfft, When has anyone here ever tried to write an actual language... @ConorO'Brien ...
 
I am. And Elendia/Quartata are writing Pytek. And Downgoat is also in kahoots with Conor :)
so 5?
 
user165474
3:03 AM
I tried. It didn't work.
 
user165474
@feersum @NathanMerrill I'm probably going with Java because I have more experience with it, and it's not really a tarpit, and i might want speed.
 
@Downgoat yes, why?
 
I get the familiarity argument, but really, you aren't going to need the speed
python is plenty fast for what you are writing
 
I suggest writing a language in a compiled language. I might have done something wrong with stacked but it's quite sluggish
@ATaco it's the next natural step :P
 
I've never had problems with python's speed except for KoTHs and the Rat Race challenge
man, that rat race was really fun to build
 
user165474
3:08 AM
I want classes and python classes are too weird :c even though they're really not hard to understand but still
 
user165474
:P
 
RProgN 2's Compile stage did greatly increase the speed of programs.
 
I thought about compiling stacked, but noooo, I had to go the masochistic route and write it in C
 
@HyperNeutrino right. In my mind it's always "what language is the easiest to write it in" (which is Python for me), but familiarity with a language has a huge effect on that
 
@Downgoat I'm going to sleep. If you need help with lambda calculus, the Wikipedia article is great. That's basically how I learned it
 
user165474
3:13 AM
@NathanMerrill Yes. Usually I use Python for quick programs, but I use Java when making new languages because I don't want to screw up the mechanics with weird things like being able to do True = False.
 
I've never written something like that (even by accident), but I could see how that could happen :P
 
user165474
Ah. Yeah, I wouldn't do anything like that but there are a bunch of weird Python things and I can't understand half my own Python programs after I leave them for like a week. :P
 
I need to give a-ta.co HTTPS support so it can be used in Q/A :I
 
0
A: Sandbox for Proposed Challenges

ais523Swap indexes and values The task Write a program or function whose input is a list/array X of integers, and whose output is a list of sets of integers Y, such that for each element e in each set Y[i], X[e] = i, and such that the total number of elements in the sets in Y equals the number of ele...

 
4:03 AM
I can never consistently remember to write self. before accessing class members.
 
then don't
 
4:39 AM
@feersum I do this all the time as well
 
4:51 AM
@Downgoat for babel: when in doubt, use let instead of var, right?
 
5:05 AM
Why? Wasn't var the original?
CMC: given 3 strings a, b, and c, replace the first occurence of b in a with c.
 
0
Q: Can Halting be considered output?

Wheat WizardI am currently designing a language that cannot halt if it all of its memory is cleared, this means for any practical application it has no output whatsoever. However when the program does halt it does output HALTED. In languages otherwise incapable of traditional output can halting and non-hal...

1
Q: Recent inbox messages counts wrong

AdámAs seen from the blue shading, I only had 2 new messages, but the red indicator showed 6. Such mismatch is very frequent. The blue shading is always right.

 
Ruby snippet: a[b]=c
 
If that actually works that is really cool.
 
It does
 
0
Q: Create a black window with as little memory as possible

EMBLEMToday I installed MonoGame and ran the test application, which creates a basic colored window. I was surprised to see that the process was using 32.2 MiB of memory, and I thought it could be improved. Your challenge is to write a program that creates a 640 by 480 window displaying only black p...

 
5:38 AM
there should be a page on wikipedia called Ø (disambiguation) (disambiguation)
 
5:48 AM
a-ta.co has now moved to https!
You can now use all the mathjax you like in questions and answers~
 
6:17 AM
@NewMainPosts :( i need to install vc++ for vs
 
How do you score a restricted memory answer? Would I just use the byte count?
 
6:32 AM
I think Is incorrect, if I'm understanding, the goal was the make a program that uses as little memory as possible.
 
6:44 AM
Is that not just code golf?
Or else how would you measure that?
 
@BetaDecay Memory = RAM not ROM
 
7:10 AM
0
A: Sandbox for Proposed Challenges

Kevin CruijssenIt landed on its side!! code-golfrandom We're going to simulate a random coin-toss, with the very small probability to land on its side. How small is this chance you ask? Well, to be honest, no idea. But for the sake of this challenge it's 1 in 10,000,000,000 (or 1e-8 %) by default. In additio...

 
@NewSandboxedPosts ... it's actually usually around 1 in 6000
 
I don't know what kind of coins you're flipping.
 
7:42 AM
depends on a lot of factors.
Wind, coin imperfections, the surface it's landing on etc.
 
 
1 hour later…
8:47 AM
@NewMainPosts ok i can get it down to 1.4mb with winapi
 
Anonymous
9:07 AM
@BetaDecay It's been proposed (by me), but we haven't yet come up with a good way to measure memory usage
 
9:36 AM
0
Q: Implement the Fibonacci-quine

SIGSEGVA Quine is a program which outputs its source when run. In this challenge, You should make a Fibonacci-quine, a variant of the quine. What is a Fibonacci-quine? A Fibonacci-quine is a program, which outputs a modification of the source by the following rule: The initial source should be ......

 
8519 bytes, definitely the longest answer I've submitted to a code-golf challenge, possibly the longest answer I ever will submit
 
@Mayube Link?
 
0
A: Generating a soccer team!

MayubeOok!, 8519 bytes Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook! Ook? Ook. Ook? Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook? Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook? Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook. Ook....

 
Ook! is just a brainf**k substitution language, but each byte in brainf**k is 10 bytes in Ook!
 
@Mayube Then that means you'll never write a Lenguage or Seed submission
 
9:50 AM
Correct
 
Huh, green checkboxes appeared on every executable file shortcut on my desktop
 
My ear's been ringing for over 45 minutes
 
10:08 AM
@TuxCopter OneDrive?
@KritixiLithos Sounds like tinnitus, you should 1. see a doctor, 2. wait and hope it goes away, 3. clean your ear in case there's something in it or 4. ignore it (bad idea)
 
maybe
 
Or maybe some kind of antivirus
 
I don't think it's either of those because the checkmarks only appear on shortcuts
 
@ASCII-only @KritixiLithos 5. Snooze your alarm.
 
@ASCII-only I'll do 2 and 3
 
10:10 AM
And I don't even have onedrive
 
Onedrive is beast
 
I don't use cloud storage
 
@TuxCopter come back to KSP
@TuxCopter I only use it to have the same docs on the 2 computers at my house
 
The only thing for that that I have for cloud storage is ASUS WebStorage and it's crapware
 
@Adám Good solution
 
10:15 AM
@Christopher What happened to the two APL solutions you were working on?
 
@Adám Sleep happened. I got the first challenge done but never got around to the truth false truth -> truth false false thingy
 
@Christopher Which one was the first one?
 
10:28 AM
@Adám Generate first N odd numbers
The one that I forgot about using the 2n+1 formula until you reminded me
 
A J answer inspired a solution for challenge 6, and a Jelly answer inspired one for 8
 
@KritixiLithos 6? 8? Are you talking about my student competition challenges?
 
Yes
My 8 solution was very verbose, now I got it golfed by over half
 
@KritixiLithos Oh, well, now someone finally find the solution to problem 8.
:37246371 Impressed? It takes effort to shave, not to let grow.
 
@Adám It takes skill to make it look nice
I have to go now. Real life calls :(
 
10:37 AM
@Christopher Not really, I never cut mine.
@Christopher care ( is "take")
 
11:09 AM
CV please (if you agree)
 
Okx
Also vote to delete?
 
Anonymous
@Okx One step at a time
 
Oh, now it can be done
Hah. That was quick!
 
Okx
11 minutes.
 
@Mego Do three votes suffice for deletion, or do you have some super-power for that?
 
11:13 AM
@LuisMendo three votes suffice
 
Ah, thanks
 
Okx
Nah, Mego has magic powers.
 
Yes, he's a talking writing penguin
 
I imagine he's perfectly capable of talking, too
 
Anonymous
@LuisMendo The number of votes needed for deletion depends upon the post score and whether or not it is closed. A closed question with many downvotes and no upvotes like that one only needs 3.
 
Anonymous
11:14 AM
@Okx This is true, but not in this case.
 
^^ Ah, it makes sense that it's adaptive. Thanks!
 
Anonymous
My only magic powers are sarcasm, dupe-hammering, kicking, and trashing.
 
Anonymous
@LuisMendo Glad to help
 
Nah y'all have super powers
 
Anonymous
When I'm groggy and haven't had my morning coffee, I have stupor powers
 
11:25 AM
@Mego there has been little quines written in Actually...
 
Anonymous
@LeakyNun It's not really well-suited for quining (aside from the trivial builtin)
 
@Mego see my answer (Actually is the shortest answer)
 
Anonymous
I think you can do better
 
Is it technically possible to quine in any turing-complete language?
 
Anonymous
@Mayube Theoretically yes, but there may be some high barriers
 
11:28 AM
e.g. a turing-complete language uses the alphabet A
but all its outputs are in the alphabet B
then there can be no quine possible
 
Anonymous
If you generalize the notion of quining to "output the same sequence of bytes as the source code"
 
A bf quine is here
 
was just about to ask about a bf quine
how the hell does that work though
 
the first part sets up the last part
I think
I have no idea
@Mego how?
btw is format not working?
 
I'm trying to wrap my head around how I'd do a quine in braingolf, and I figure if it's possible in bf it must be possible in bg. I just don't have the faintest clue how
I mean the classic CJam quine of 0 works in braingolf, and for the same reason, but it kinda feels cheaty
 
11:34 AM
It doesn't fit the PPCG definition of a quine either because it's not payload capable
 
26
A: Is it possible to create a quine in every turing-complete language?

DuoSRX Any programming language which is Turing complete, and which is able to output any string (by a computable function of the string as program — this is a technical condition that is satisfied in every programming language in existence) has a quine program (and, in fact, infinitely...

 
Anonymous
11:47 AM
@LeakyNun I'll look at it later
 
Anonymous
12:01 PM
@LeakyNun I was wrong. I thought it could be shortened, but my idea didn't work.
 
12:28 PM
Azure is so god damn unstable. How can the status of a VM be "Unknown" - shouldn't - you know - the cloud provider know what's going on in their data centre...
 
@SIGSEGV it's generally helpful to reply to people when you edit a challenge spec in response to a comment
 
@MartinEnder oh, so it's valid now
 
well it's been valid for 2 hours, but I didn't notice the edit
 
neither did I
 
I was actually waiting for it to post jimmy's solution myself. oh well.
 
12:31 PM
btw my Actually solution would have the same byte-count
and I won't use that method
a=3;b=5;
b+=a; //a=3;b=8
a=b-a; //a=5;b=8
a=(b+=a)-a-a;
b+=a;a=b-a;
 
Why? The less readable the better
That's why Perl, APL, Golfscript and Jelly were invented
 
@JanDvorak what are you referring to?
I'm saying that I won't use the method of multiplying by phi to get the next number
 
@KritixiLithos hi
 
12:47 PM
o/
 
@KritixiLithos see vim room
@Alex is not even pingable now... where did he go?
He's even a moderator
 
ragequit
 
@Mayube really?
 
no
 
1:11 PM
@LeakyNun He's just pretty much never there
 
CMC (credits to Kritixi Lithos): Output this:
a
 b
  c
   d
    e
     f
      g
       h
        i
         j
          k
           l
            m
             n
              o
               p
                q
                 r
                  s
                   t
                    u
                     v
                      w
                       x
                        y
                         z
 
@LeakyNun APL: ↑⎕A↑¨⍨-⍳26 if uppercase is ok.
 
@LeakyNun Charcoal, 2 bytes: ↘β
 
@ASCII-only seriously?
 
@ASCII-only I'm cracking up. Wow. Just wow
 
1:15 PM
@LeakyNun Yes seriously
TBH if Charcoal couldn't do this golfily it would be kinda embarassing
 
CJam, 14 bytes: 26{_S*\97+cN}%
Assuming a trailing newline is ok
 
@JanDvorak not this charcoal lol
 
@JanDvorak Yes Charcoal is definitely a C dialect
2
 
1:34 PM
Jelly, 8 bytes: ØA='ao⁶Y
 
@ASCII-only I guess Charcoal is a DSL.
 
user165474
Python, 41 bytes: for i in range(26):print(' '*i+chr(i+97))
 
Retina, 44 bytes, Try it online!
Retina, 43 bytes, Try it online!
@HyperNeutrino Retina, 40 bytes, Try it online!
 
hmm, trying to figure out how I can do this
 
user165474
:(
 
1:40 PM
oh wait I got it
hmm no it falls apart pretty quickly
 
@HyperNeutrino Retina, 38 bytes, Try it online!
 
user165474
lol
 
Heh I was just writing that one
 
@BusinessCat :p
0
A: Be the First 1 (leave only the first Truthy)

Leaky Nunbrainfuck, 55 bytes +>,[[->+>[->-<]>+[-<+>]<<<]>>[-<-<<[->>+<<]>>>]<.[-]<,] Try it online!

 
hold on I can do this, I believe
 
user165474
1:49 PM
@LeakyNun nice
 
Braingolf, 26 bytes
55*V"a
"v[v!&@ >># <1+<v];
hmm actually I think the semicolon is unnecessary
yeah here we go, Braingolf, 24 bytes
55*V"a
"v[v!&@>># <1+<v]
 
user165474
Alternate Python solution, 48 bytes: print'\n'.join(' '*i+chr(i+97)for i in range(26))
 
Mine assumes trailing newline is ok
 
user165474
2:08 PM
Yes! After a week of having a weird rep, I'm back to a multiple of five! \o/
 
I was at 600 earlier, i just lost 2 rep :(
 
user165474
oh rip :(
 
user165474
I got exactly 5 downvotes on my Guess the Gender question so that's exactly -10, going back to a multiple of 5.
 
it's probably somebody downvoting my Ook! answer
people don't seem to like me doing that
 
@Riker yeah, let is like var but does what you think it does
 
2:18 PM
ah ok
constants, right?
like const in other langs
 
@Downgoat still can't map strings...
 
user165474
Apparently Downgoat has troubles mapping strings.
 
Hmm.. can a language still be TC if it doesn't support nested conditionals, nested loops, complex conditionals or complex loops?
 
I think ^ may be equivalent to showing the brainfuck is tc if you can't nest [] loops.
 
can you nest [] loops in bf?
 
2:31 PM
You can
 
can it be proven tc without doing so?
 
Maybe
 
Anonymous
@Mayube Just simple loops and infinite loops should be enough iirc
 
I'm mostly just trying to figure out if Braingolf is TC when it only has "if last item on stack > 0" and "while first item on stack > 0"
and no nesting
 
user165474
IIRC if you can implement rule 110 it's TC?
 
Anonymous
2:32 PM
If you have an unlimited stack size, you can simulate any nested loop with a series of simple loops
 
but you need conditionals inside those loops
 
Anonymous
@JanDvorak Sure, but braingolf has conditionals (I think)
 
CMC: Output the following without using nested `[]` in BF given input n

1
12
123
1234
12345
...
12345...n
(You can use charcodes instead of numbers and 0 instead of newline)
 
@Phoenix impossible
 
But is it really?
 
2:39 PM
@Mego it does, albeit only primitive conditionals (is last item in stack > 0), but it also has else, and conditionals can be put inside loops
@HyperNeutrino rule 110?
 
user165474
Yeah.
 
user165474
110 -> 01101110 in binary
 
user165474
So then we take an array that can wrap around on either side if you want
 
user165474
It's a cellular automata.
 
user165474
For each cell we look at its immediate neighbors
 
user165474
2:41 PM
The rule is 01101110.
 
user165474
So:
 
user165474
000 -> 0
001 -> 1
010 -> 1
011 -> 0
100 -> 1
101 -> 1
110 -> 1
111 -> 0
 
Feb 27 at 22:23, by Riker
Disambiguation is word-sense disambiguation, the process of identifying which meaning of a word is used in context. Disambiguation may also refer to: Sentence boundary disambiguation, the problem in natural language processing of deciding where sentences begin and end Memory disambiguation, a set of microprocessor execution techniques == Music == Ø (Disambiguation), a 2010 album by Underoath Disambiguation (Pandelis Karayorgis album), a 2002 album by Pandelis Karayorgis and Mat Maneri == See also == Ambiguity, an attribute of any concept, idea, statement or claim whose meaning, intentio...
5
how come you got stars ;p
lol thank you anon
 
HAHAHAHA
Question: If I run sudo -i, will it execute what's in the .bashrc of /root/?
 
Yes
 
2:51 PM
TY
 
@LeakyNun what is problem?
 
I wish sudo -hi was a thing
 
@Downgoat need to .chars before .map
 
Oh, yeah, true
 
not good
 
2:53 PM
I dunno, if I add map, should it map by chars or bytes?
 
good question
I would go with chars
 
Can you map over a string in JS?
 
Just mentioning stars gets you stars these days...
9
 
My theory is that teamspirit.js is causing people to take any excuse to vote for their team.
 
it doesn't help that anybody can star a message for no cost, at any time, anonymously
 
2:56 PM
@Phoenix In a way: [..."string"].map
But that makes it into an array
 
Does that do chars or bytes?
 
I assume chars
 
@Downgoat and variables still require let?
 
Yes, it does chars
 
Proposal: remove the star cap, but also have stars deduct one rep each - and don't tell anyone about the change
 
2:58 PM
@JanDvorak don't tell who?
 
1 rep is pretty negligible to most regulars tbf
 
@LeakyNun As in, make a code change without posting a meta announcement
 
I dunno, I'm pretty paranoid about downvoting in case I end up missing some privelage milestone by 1 rep.
 
evil idea: have comments cost one rep each, too
 

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