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12:12 AM
Apparently there's also a modal when a new user posts a challenge, that advises them to accept the answer that works the best :/
 
0
Q: Find the HTTP status code

Gold Farmer SprowGiven the name of an HTTP status code, such as OK or Continue, output or return the corresponding number. Your code is limited to 200 bytes, and the winner is the answer that correctly finds the number for the most status codes. For this challenge, the status codes your program should handle are:...

 
@user apparently no-one uses english
 
@NewMainPosts Why do I get the feeling that Japt is going to win this by a mile? :/
 
wonder if there's a mathematica builtin for it
 
@JoKing If you make any more, I'm sure @Lyxal will do their best to get it deleted and get your score back to 69.
 
12:20 AM
@user If only JoKing had some kinda special site ability or power that allowed them to delete and undelete posts at will...
 
@rak1507 There probably is, and it will probably get 12 upvotes, while the clever answer that doesn't use string compression will probably get 2
 
lmao
 
@ChartZBelatedly Don't know what you're talking about :P
 
All I know is that out of me and @JoKing, only one of our avatars is wearing a SE hat. Just saying, one of us seems more dedicated to SE than the other... :P
 
@rak1507 My most upvoted answer is a one word Mathematica builtin. It's my only answer in Mathematica, and I don't even know Mathematica.
 
12:21 AM
none of mathematicas http stuff seems to do this :(
hahaha
'omg builtin!!! so epic!!! deploy the upvotes!!!!!'
 
@rak1507 It literally took me 5 seconds to google ⍨
 
yea well my most upvoted is a jelly one that took me about 5 seconds
ctrl f 'integer partitions' = upvotes galore
 
I wish there was some way to share the amount of work that went into an answer.
 
Upvotes != quality
 
@user well it's obvious but people don't care about that
 
12:23 AM
Someone needs to make a .anguish extension for files that lets others feel your pain
 
So you mean XML?
 
0
Q: Adding readability as a constraint

Erel Segal-HaleviBACKGROUND: I am a CS lecturer (teaching C++) and I keep thinking how to incorporate coding challenges in teaching. Many questions in this site are great; I have just used Do you want to code a snowman? as a warm-up homework assignment. The challenge of writing short programs fits my goal of enco...

 
@RedwolfPrograms Hey, don't hate on XML, hate on Ant and HTML
 
Ah true good point
 
Making the file would probably add to your anguish, so you would have to make the file bigger, so you'd just keep on adding to the file with no end, making your anguish infinite.
 
12:27 AM
@ChartZBelatedly i haven't changed my avatar yet, i'm not changing it to put on a hat
 
I'm rerunning Lynn's Jelly corpus analyser, and the second most common trigraph in Jelly answers is ...
 
besides, my usual avatar is literally a hat, so that would be confusing
 
No, it would be awesome
A hat on a hat
 
Run an image of a hat though Identicon and use that :P
 
@NewMainPosts oh this doesn't even have the code golf tag
 
12:28 AM
@rak1507 with a limited length
 
oh
200 is .... way more than required
 
@RedwolfPrograms A HAT on a HAT? How would that look?
 
does this person know about compression
 
The hat in the hat is one of my favorite Dr. Seuss books
 
Didn't know Dr. Seuss taught computer science :P
@RedwolfPrograms Oh, I see, it makes a lot more sense if there's a HAT containing a pointer to another HAT.
 
12:30 AM
@ChartZBelatedly Additionally: *`¡, `¡*, ¡*` all appear 24 times. I wonder why...
 
@ChartZBelatedly what does ... do
I only just realised that was the code, and thought you were pausing dramatically
 
@rak1507 It's used in explanations :P
 
oh
well that's no fun
is there a way to tell what the actual most used and least used things are
imagine a golfing language that reshuffled builtins based on use
 
@ChartZBelatedly especially for compressed and/or really long strings
 
Or rather, ... outputs 0.50.5
@rak1507 Yeah, it's generally pretty accurate
 
12:32 AM
nice
damn it, matlab isn't on TIO
 
@rak1507 Matlab costs money
 
oh
of course the only language with a 'get status code name' builtin is not on tio
 
Huh, 12 is the most common digit only digraph in Jelly answers
 
@rak1507 octave is
 
I doubt octave has the same obscure builtins but maybe
 
12:36 AM
MATL is also on TIO
 
Which is weird, cause isn't MATL built in Matlab?
 
wait, MATL is implemented in matlab
wonder if you can call matlab from matl
 
I think it might be built in Octave but based more on Matlab
 
Makes sense, Octave is free
 
MATL's built in Octave on TIO, can't speak for the offline interpreter
 
12:37 AM
Ah, it works in either
> The compiler works in MATLAB R2015b or newer. [...] It is also compatible with Octave 4.0.0. The compiler tries to ensure consistent behaviour in both platforms.
 
ah
 
Huh, is it a polyglot?
 
Matlab and Octave are very similar
 
12:52 AM
@Lyxal if you thought that was bad, there's a fashion footwear chain in this country called Shoe Zone. Its previous finance director Peter Foot, well, hot-footed it, or at least, stepped down, or maybe, walked away from the job, so they've appointed Terry Boot, who was probably a shoe-in, to, well, step into his position, i.e., fill his boots.
5
 
@Neil oh ffs
 
And it's real
I googled it
 
(on a side note, Peter Foot's previous position was with a company that my then employer dealt with around the turn of the millennium as they had some old software which needed to be updated for Y2K)
 
I have no words for any of this
 
I'm sure the new guy's going to have to walk a thin line to avoid being booted, though. At least it's a step forward for the company.
 
12:57 AM
God forbid he put a toe out of line
 
It's not his sole responsibility, though
They can't have another accounting sandal
 
@Neil, please don't put your foot in your mouth with these awful puns.
 
1:37 AM
31
Q: 2019 April Fool's Day Retro Theme

a stone arachnid Screenshot / Code Snippet (click to make bigger) About Keeps the 2019 April Fool's Day theme, all the time! Inspired by this post on Meta.SE Download Get it from GitHub, or below: // ==UserScript== // @name Stack Exchange 90's theme // @namespace http://tampermonkey.net/ // @versi...

^ This userscript is amazing. It makes everything look like this:
 
It was annoying when you had to disable it per-site, though :p
 
I wish I was there then
I joined just a few months after that, I think
 
@user I remember that lol
 
1:59 AM
@Lyxal Ok boomer
 
That makes me a boomer too :(
 
@RedwolfPrograms Turns out that Stack Exchange revoked my access to the API cause I queried them too much, so no I have to make a stack apps post to get an API key :/
 
The quota's like 300/day, isn't it?
 
Plus my internet is, and I can’t say this enough, shite, so all my bug testing leads to either “No API” or “No internet”
@RedwolfPrograms While loops do more than 300 cycles before I can stop them :/
 
Oh, rip :/
 
2:02 AM
May I ask why your bot queries it so much?
 
It seems that the shit internet's the bigger issue rn
@user It shouldn't, it should only query it a number of times equal to the number of Sandbox posts from a week ago, but I misplaced a function call without realising it when testing a week or so ago
 
Once you know the bot's working, I've got fairly reliable internet and a server with a backup power source, so you could set it up on there if you want
 
@RedwolfPrograms Sounds good, thanks 👍
Getting API access isn’t hard, it just means I have to actually do something :/
I much prefer not doing things
 
relatable
 
@ChartZBelatedly Don't we all?
 
2:09 AM
I would star that too but I have raw shrimp juice on my fingers
 
Hmm, I'm starting to think I didn't lose API access, the bot's working again :/
 
@RedwolfPrograms You're willing to get it on your keyboard but not your mouse?
 
I did repeatedly get an error message saying "API usage quota exceeded", so that's annoying :/
 
On a side note, does anyone know if it's legal to use Google Translate's internal servers for free translations?
 
nothings illegal if you don't get caught
 
2:11 AM
@rak1507 Pretty sure it doesn't work like that, but okay :P
 
@user They're not wrong
 
@user There's an API right?
 
Laws are just threats by the dominant socio-economic class and police are essentially an occupying army
 
@RedwolfPrograms Google's own API isn't free
@ChartZBelatedly Right, but even if you don't get caught, it can be illegal according to the current authority.
 
if a tree falls in the woods but no one's there to hear it, does it make a sound?
 
2:15 AM
@user The fact that people are able to do "illegal" things and suffer no consequences suggests that for an act to be "illegal", you must also be found guilty of committing that act
 
@ChartZBelatedly That they suffer no consequences is irrelevant, though, isn't it? It is against the law, no matter if you care about that law or if you get caught.
According to google, illegal means "contrary to or forbidden by law, especially criminal law." That doesn't include getting caught.
 
2 mins ago, by rak1507
if a tree falls in the woods but no one's there to hear it, does it make a sound?
 
@ChartZBelatedly If a burglar robs a house and no one's around to report it, was there a crime?
 
All I'm saying is that you could very likely use Google's internal servers with no real consequences
 
@ChartZBelatedly this is already happening with colab
 
2:29 AM
Hey guys can anyone help me with python. I'm having problem with storing SIFT features and extracting them from stored file.
 
@DevendraWalkoli Hi, welcome to The Nineteenth Byte. If this is a general programming problem, you might want to ask it on Stack Overflow, where more people will see it and be able to help.
@ChartZBelatedly Hmm, I guess I'll just go ahead, then
 
0
A: Sandbox for Proposed Challenges

Cloudy7Calculate the 'geothmetic meandian' of a set of numbers Randall Munroe's March 10 xkcd comic "Geothmetic Meandian" defines the 'geothmetic meandian' of a set of positive real numbers as follows. Define a function F, such that F accepts a set of n positive real numbers and returns the set (a, b, ...

 
Ok sure
 
2:51 AM
2
Q: Largest power of 2 that divides \$n\$

MakonedeRelated, related Introduction The ruler sequence is the sequence of the largest possible numbers \$a_n\$ such that \$2^{a_n}\mid n\$. It is so-called because its pin plot looks similar to a ruler's markings: However, with a slight modification, we can also get a similar sequence. This sequence i...

 
3:04 AM
I have 121*69* rep
nice
you know what's not nice
SE markdown
stupid thing it is
 
@NewMainPosts this is frustrating, <\⍢⌽⍢⊤ should work in dyalog extended but it doesn't
 
3:17 AM
@NewMainPosts Aaand, bitwise nonsense ruined it :(
 
@ChartZBelatedly You can always do it without the bitwise nonsense :P
 
@user I have, but as soon as someone discovers some short and easy bitwise relation, every answer just ports it
Later, when I get to a device that can actually edit in some not awful way, Imma edit my 5 byte Jelly answer back in
 
3:36 AM
this is why challenges like this are bad
my apl answer would've been the coolest but ⊤ doesn't define an inverse for some stupid reason
 
@rak1507 Nah, they aren't bad. Unless the OP had discovered the relation before posting, there's no way of knowing it could be that simply. The problem lies with 's absolute devotion to short code, and be damned if your code is longer but more interesting
But I'd rather that than allowing any and all scoring criteria
 
even if the relation didn't exist, the other answers are trivial too
 
Yes and no. Me and Lyxal put in some serious effort in Jelly and 05AB1E to get to 5 bytes
 
@rak1507 Have you tried dzaima/APL? It has more fully implemented Under.
 
does it have monadic ⊤?
 
3:46 AM
I think so, but maybe not.
 
@ChartZBelatedly I don't think the jelly 5 byter took a lot of effort
 
@rak1507 It took me remembering a recent challenge I competed in to realise that builtin would be helpful
 
well, the same thing without the ` 2*` was the answer to a linked challenge
 
@rak1507 yes.
 
oh
epic
 
Whenever a challenge seems Under-able, I always try dzaima/APL first. (For example, it is the only one that handles ⍢⎕UCS)
 
It's a fairly trivial challenge, so it won't yield genius insight for most languages, but I'm happy if the non-obvious (to me at least) version is shorter than the obvious
 
wowo whut
 
how can I do a ⎕SRC⎕THIS type thingy for dzaima/APL?
 
@rak1507 I know, the accepted answer is mine
 
3:49 AM
f←\
 
f←( <newline> code <newline> )
 
thanks
 
What languages have significant whitespace? Python and Whitespace are obvious, what else? (By significant I mean that spaces/tabs/newlines have specific meaning beyond "separating tokens")
 
@ChartZBelatedly japt
 
@ChartZBelatedly You already mentioned Python but...
Nov 30 '20 at 15:46, by Redwolf Programs
I made a markov chain of the Wikipedia descriptions of most of the common programming languages, and the first thing I got was "Python is a cornerstone technology of significant whitespace"
 
3:52 AM
Japt's space translates to a closing paren.
 
I suppose Pyth does, newlines are a command which prints its argument
 
So it's fairly important
 
argh, \ in dzaima/APL is left to right so <\ doesn't work
 
Closing parentheses? Important? Nah :P
 
Well, closing parens participate in the parenthesis autocompletion
 
3:54 AM
@rak1507 what about ⍀
 
@ChartZBelatedly Scala 3
 
just replicate
tried it :/
 
and Japt has lots of reasons to parenthesize things from the right
 
ugh lol
 
Wait, let me think about it
 
3:55 AM
lmao, extended has working \, dzaima has working ⍢, but nothing has both!
 
@ChartZBelatedly Also Nim
 
hm I wonder if something can replace <\⍢⌽ though
 
@rak1507 time to make your own apl
 
would be the only way to get one that worked...
 
How about this: Decrement the number, base 2, keep all the trailing ones, frombase 2, increment back
You need three unders for this though :P
 
3:57 AM
@rak1507 just pull request the extended repo
 
how does dyadic funderg work
 
Idk, ask dzaima :P
 
x f⍢g y = g⍣¯1 ⊢ (g x) f (g y)?
that'd make sense I think
 
That's how J does
To make decrement-increment into an under, you'll need to make it monadic like ⍢(¯1+)
 
yep
annoying
I have a 7 as a full program anyway
2*⊥⍨~⊤⎕
 
4:02 AM
Looks good
 
so basically what bubbler means is
switch to J
 
:P
But yeah, J is fun on its own right
 
idk if I can be bothered submitting it, I don't like full program submissions anyway
 
I don't like it either, but what can we do
I choose J when I'm pretty sure one of J's (usually mathematical) built-ins can do the most of the job, or its auto-mixing is useful
 
Make a dfn maybe
 
4:05 AM
@user what does this mean
 
@Razetime Sorry
 
ah
 
dfn would be longer
 
"full programs" are convenient
 
@rak1507 Does it matter?
 
4:07 AM
for code golf, yes
 
Any feedback on: 1, 2, 3, 4?
 
@rak1507 The core of the answer is still the same, though
 
good numbers in general, particularly like 3
@user I guess
 
I don’t like 3, and I hate 1. I don’t like 4 either, but I can handle it.
 
@ChartZBelatedly wondering if whispers is possible for 1
 
4:08 AM
2 is good, though
 
@Razetime It's math-y enough that Whispers could do well
 
CMP: Which numbers do you like/dialike?
 
2
It shouldn't be prime, but it insists on being so
 
@user 1 because unary is boring
 
@ChartZBelatedly At first glance, 1 looks good
 
4:11 AM
@ChartZBelatedly oh no the 4th one is a carcassonne challenge
 
@Razetime Unary doesn’t have 1, does it?
I dislike -1 the most because it’s evil and is always scheming against the positive numbers (especially 2). It would even betray 1, because it has no morals
 
@Razetime There have been an equal number of questions as answers for Carcassonne related challenges on the site, I intend to change that one way or another :P
 
carcassonne difficult
 
2 is one of the best numbers, because it’s always trying to help others out, although it cam be uppity at times
 
Four is nice.
 
4:16 AM
@Razetime Real life, or answers involving it?
 
everything
 
Also we need to bury this conversation before Lyxal gets a chance to answer it
2
 
69
there I already claimed it
 
@RedwolfPrograms Really? 4 seems like an opportunist to me - it goes along with others unless it can help itself
 
CMQ: Consider the story of Baucis and Philemon as a whole. What are the lessons about hospitality that Roman readers have learned from this myth? (4 marks)
 
4:19 AM
@rak1507 vtc as this is a homework question :P
 
lol
 
What is this story? Does it involve alcohol?
 
In Ovid's moralizing fable which stands on the periphery of Greek mythology and Roman mythology, Baucis and Philemon were an old married couple in the region of Tyana, which Ovid places in Phrygia, and the only ones in their town to welcome disguised gods Zeus and Hermes (in Roman mythology, Jupiter and Mercury respectively), thus embodying the pious exercise of hospitality, the ritualized guest-friendship termed Xenia, or theoxenia when a god was involved. == Story == Zeus and Hermes came disguised as ordinary peasants, and began asking the people of the town for a place to sleep that night. They...
 
@Razetime 420
Does this mean that caird + Razetime = Lyxal?
2
@rak1507 Baucis = god of indulgence IIRC, so from a story about him, we learn that orgies, drugs and alcohol are good?
 
Razetine = Lyxal - caird
 
4:23 AM
I don't know if I should be offended or not :P
 
@ChartZBelatedly It’s a good story, then (different Baicis though)
@ChartZBelatedly you may be offended now, but you will cone to accept that you are merely a 0, as we all are
Actually i think i lije 0 more than 2 - it’s like K : calm, mature, and open minded
 
4:39 AM
@user Is that like a synesthesia thing? Grapheme-personality sort of?
 
@user 69 and 420
@RedwolfPrograms too late
 
@user my favourite number is sqrt(pi)/2 (0.5!) because it connects so many aspects of maths together and produces a totally unexpected result
 
What's that?
Oh wait they're equal
I thought you meant multiplying them lol
 
oh lol
 
@RedwolfPrograms Probably
@rak1507 That’s actually pretty interesting
 
4:57 AM
Any feedback for KotH: Hunter-Gatherer Society? One thing I'm wondering is how complex/"realistic" the terrain generation should be. For example, should rivers just be thin rectangles, or natural-ish looking rivers?
 
5:34 AM
Github suggests the best repository names
turbo-octo-meme
That's what it gave me
very useful
 
I love it when I try to hit Ctrl + Shift + Tab to go to a previous tab and accidentally hit W and close all of them :/
 
use Alt + F4
it gets the job done nicer
 
I usually use a screwdriver to pry the contacts off the laptop battery, that ensures nothing gets saved to the disk or anything
 
@RedwolfPrograms Just read the terrain part, and it looks like some simplified Minecraft :) I think Minecraft's algorithm is described somewhere
 
I've got most of the biome selection and tree/bush/stone placement figured out, I guess I'll look at how Minecraft handles rivers and coastlines.
 
 
6 hours later…
12:07 PM
CMC: Given a Boolean list, determine if the last element is the only True. [false,false,true]true, [false,true,true]false, [false,true,false]false, [false,false,false]false.
 
@Adám 14 bytes, Raku, {.one&&.[*-1]}
 
12:23 PM
actually, 12 bytes, &one&{.tail}
wait no, i don't mean the language "Actually", it's still Raku
 
@JoKing Seriously?
3
 
@Adám Jelly, 3 bytes: Try it online!
 
@ChartZBelatedly Nice idea!
 
Another 3 byte version, different approach: Try it online!
 
12:39 PM
And if I told you APL can do it in 2 (ASCII!) bytes, would you be intrigued?
 
@Adám |/ ?
 
@JoKing I guess that works. I was thinking </
 
1:16 PM
right reduce by comparison, I guess?
 
Yes, or reverse division remainder
 
in Charcoal I would probably write All(Reverse(Input()), Equals(i, Not(k)))which is 7 bytes in succint
 
Jelly needs a reduce-right quick :/
 
1:54 PM
I'm sure no one cares, but Scala has reduceRight, reduceLeft, reduce (which seems to just reduceLeft for most classes), /: (foldLeft, :\` (foldRight), and just fold.
 
@user Try doubling your backticks.
 
@Adám Ah, it's too late, it still looks weird.
@Adám Scala, 19 bytes: _.reduceRight(!_&_)
 
2:12 PM
Oddly enough, the math tag badge has only been awarded 118 times.
 
Bronze, silver or gold?
 
Bronze
Is there a way to see how many times the gold badge was awarded?
 
@Adám Thanks!
 
Whenever I look at tag badges, I'm always reminded that the vast majority of my rep comes from challenges, not answers :/
 
2:19 PM
@ChartZBelatedly That just means your challenges are good/interesting
 
> we even created a new hat on the fly to recognize users that found and shared ways to cheat at Hat Dash
You mean I spent days helping report when cheated leaderboard scores appeared and they were getting rewarded?
 
@RedwolfPrograms Consider it a hat of shame, not a hat of pride
 
@ChartZBelatedly Look at Socratic instead :P
 
@Bubbler 77/100 :P
 
For like a week I had the highest play time out of anyone for that game and I don't get a hat for that, but if you hack in 100 million points you get one :/
 
2:25 PM
Although, I'm closer to Curious: 77/5 :D
> 871/1000 score
 
92/100 for me
 
Only need to get 129 more upvotes on code-golf answers :P
@Bubbler CnR challenges hurt Socratic, as it only counts days :/ I have 87 "well-received" challenges, but 6 of them are CnR
 
That's true
 
9/100 :\
 
The trick is to post the cops challenge at 23:59 and the Robbers at 00:01 :P
 
2:27 PM
and I lost a few in my early days by simply posting multiple challenges on the same day
 
I quite often will post multiple good challenges in a day, which is annoying for Socratic
 
Jan 27 at 10:40, by caird coinheringaahing
@Lyxal When I first joined, I didn't know about the Sandbox. Cue like 7 shitty questions, which got downvoted, closed and then I deleted them
 
Hmm, not much. I have 94 questions in total anyway
 
Why I don't have Curious :/
My "question record" is 0.48 and it needs to be 0.5 to get Curious/Inquisitive/Socratic
 
Inquisitive is the wrong name for a CGCC badge
 
2:29 PM
TBH all of those 3 are wrong names
 
What is the question record?
 
Yeah
 
@Bubbler A metric measuring how good you are at asking
Lemme just find the mother meta post detailing it
From here:
> In order to qualify for any of these badges, you must have a "positive question record", which means you don't have too many Closed, Negative, or Deleted questions overall. The formula is (TotalQuestions - Negative - Closed - Deleted) / TotalQuestions ≥ 0.5. Questions that qualify as Negative and Closed and Deleted count three times in this calculation. If you don't, you won't earn any of these badges.
 
1
Q: Welcome to Code Golf and Coding Challenge StackExchange!

ChartZ BelatedlyWhat is this site? This is a place to host recreational coding challenges, such as code golf. We are unlike most sites in the Stack Exchange network. We are not a question-answer site, nor are we a forum, instead we use the Stack Exchange network as a host for our coding challenges and solutions....

 
Missed an s in the title
 
2:31 PM
@ChartZBelatedly Cool, so it is exactly 1 for me
 
@RedwolfPrograms How did I miss that? :/
Oh yeah, for ^^^, feel free to edit any mistakes/typos/poor wording/whatever, there's no need to ping me. It should be more of a community post than "my" post anyway
 
Now for a userscript that makes comments that link here :P
 
Just use my quick comments userscript
You can change what the different numbers paste in :p
 
@RedwolfPrograms Do you have a link?
 
Yeah, I've already modified the quick comments script to include links to it :P
 
Actually, I think the pro forma thing should work too, I already have that
@RedwolfPrograms Thanks
 
This takes you right to the install page
 
Does anyone know how to find questions in SEDE where most (or all) of the answers are by the question asker?
 
It'll take an inner join, so no :p
 
That sounds complicated :(
 
2:45 PM
Welcome to SQL :/
I am convinced nobody knows how SQL works and they all just pretend
 
@RedwolfPrograms Like when you're watching a movie but you forgot what the prequel was about :P
 
At some point I want to make a system that automatically downloads all the important information from SEDE weekly and lets you query it with a custom JS-like language I'll make
JS-like as in it uses JSON's data types and structures, not as in awful
 
JS wouldn't be that bad
 
@RedwolfPrograms Why would someone deliberately make an awful language?
 
We have a ton of languages that can handle JSON, we don't need more of them
2
 
2:50 PM
You should try out Scala.js, it compiles to JS but has all the advantages of Scala
 
@Bubbler I agree with the first part
But the more JSON in the world the better
 
I prefer YAML, actually
No need for those double quotes or commas or braces
 
I hear people started to hate JSON
 
Well, I like JSON's data types. JSON's formatting isn't the most practical.
 
Meh, a stack is the only data type you need :P
 
2:52 PM
Who needs stacks when you can have bits? :P
 
Bits are cool, bytes are just trying to steal the fame
 
@ChartZBelatedly Bits can't hold other bits
 
@user Wait tell you learn about pointers! :p
 
@RedwolfPrograms Qubits are even worse.
 
Nah, Qubits are cool.
 
2:53 PM
@RedwolfPrograms That takes multiple bits - a data structure
@RedwolfPrograms Quantum computing may be cool, but a lot of it seems to be hype.
 
Yeah, it's not very useful for things other than making crypto nerds worried
 
I'm just not sure about quantum computing, seems like a lot of uncertainty
3
 
Qubits are not cool. They are Qool.
 
@RedwolfPrograms It can actually help security
 
qubits are good because they are a valid word in scrabble and you get lots of points
 
2:55 PM
Although I doubt people will ever understand quantum computers very well, I've spent way too long trying to convince people that a qubit isn't just a bit that can hold three values :/
 
There are algorithms that can help tell you if someone's eavesdropping
@RedwolfPrograms Of course not, it's a bit that can hold 4 values :P
 
if lives_in_pretty_much_any_country_in_the_world(): return True
 
@rak1507 This should be how all things are judged :P
 
agreed
 
Why don't we call them "quabbits"? (Pronounced like "rabbits")
 
2:57 PM
Lack of wit when they were first named
 
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