qwertyasdef 10mo ago • 100%
Hermitcraft? Seems hard seeing as the subreddit is about as official as it can get short of being literally, officially run by the Hermits. I can't imagine a Lemmy community would see any significant amount of participation except for some number of people double-posting in both. I'd be happy to be wrong though.
qwertyasdef 11mo ago • 100%
I don't think Turing-completeness implies omniperiodicity. I'm imagining a cellular automaton which follows Game of Life rules on even-numbered generations and does nothing on odd-numbered generations, which is trivially Turing-complete because it's just Conway's Game of Life if you ignore every other generation, but also trivially has no odd-period oscillators.
qwertyasdef 11mo ago • 100%
Going by the example in the Github, it looks like a right-to-left Lisp with Arabic keywords. Does that fully describe the language or is there more to it than that?
I'd be interested in hearing about the parts that are more influenced by Arabic than Scheme. Are there any beyond the keyword language and writing direction? Like a new keyword that does something useful but has no equivalent in Scheme because the concept isn't easily expressed by an English keyword?
qwertyasdef 11mo ago • 100%
As someone who knows very little about Scheme or Arabic, what are some aspects of this language that might be novel or interesting to someone with a background in mainstream languages?
qwertyasdef 11mo ago • 100%
Hey, I like checked exceptions too! I honestly think it's one of Javas's best features but it's hindered by the fact that try-catch is so verbose, libraries aren't always sensible about what exceptions they throw, and methods aren't exception-polymorphic for stuff like the Stream API. Which is to say, checked exceptions are a pain but that's the fault of the rest of the language around them and not the checked exceptions per se.
qwertyasdef 12mo ago • 95%
That texture healing looks super nice. Is that something fonts can just do or does it require special editor support?
qwertyasdef 12mo ago • 100%
I might buy more from Epic if their launcher weren't So. Freaking. Slow. Even claiming the free game is such a chore that I can't be bothered to do it. It takes several minutes to load, responds sluggishly, and lags everything else on my computer the whole time it's running. The only game I play from them anymore is Celeste because I can start it without ever going through the launcher.
qwertyasdef 12mo ago • 100%
I've never gotten past MV lol, looks like no sleep for me
qwertyasdef 1y ago • 100%
Seconding this request, this is the number one thing that has me keep going back to other apps.
qwertyasdef 1y ago • 100%
If you don't need to reuse the collection or access its items out of order, you can also use Iterable
which accepts even more inputs like generators.
qwertyasdef 1y ago • 100%
I love the way Etho parkours through that hole in the crypt lava room, and over the fence and off the ledge in level 2 instead of sticking to the obvious path. Not sure if Tango intended for those to be doable but the extra pathing options seem to help a lot.
qwertyasdef 1y ago • 100%
Out of curiosity, what is that spoilered book?
qwertyasdef 1y ago • 100%
...What are they actually launching though? I mean I love the payment scheme but I can't get excited over this without an actual good product being sold.
qwertyasdef 1y ago • 83%
Do people actually use Epic? I wasn't much of a gamer before and didn't care for Steam, and my first real exposure to PC gaming was when Epic started their weekly giveaway of free games. I made an account, discovered some cool titles, and could have been a happy customer if only their launcher weren't so ridiculously slow. Now I can barely even stand opening the launcher to collect the free game, let alone trying to browse for games to buy.
qwertyasdef 1y ago • 100%
The one case where I prefer video is when I know next to nothing about the topic and the other choice is mediocre to low-quality writing. Most people aren't great technical writers, and it's easy to skip over steps either because the writer assumes too much prior knowledge or simply because it takes effort to put that information in. On the other hand, videos are the opposite where it takes effort to cut stuff out, so you usually get all the steps which is what I need when I don't know anything.
If I have the option of a well-written, step-by-step tutorial though, or if I already know the topic and have a vague idea of what I'm looking for, then text is much better for being able to search/skim/go back and forth at my own pace.
qwertyasdef 1y ago • 100%
I consider YabaIRyS more of an epithet than a nickname. I can't imagine anyone using it to replace her name like "I wonder what YabaIRyS (IRyS) is doing", only as a description replacing yabai like "Bruh, YabaIRyS (yabai)" in response to something she did/said.
Forgetting Faufau is pretty indefensible. It's been a long time, but that puts it in the same boat as Kronini and Sanana which I did remember.
I wasn't sure if Fuwa-chan and Moco-chan count as nicknames or if they're just how you say their names in Japanese. I guess dropping the last syllable is what makes it a nickname as opposed to just their real name + Japanese honorific?
qwertyasdef 1y ago • 100%
I guess it depends on what you mean by using monads, but you can have a monadic result type without introducing a concrete monad abstraction that it implements.
qwertyasdef 1y ago • 100%
At a library level, couldn't you have an opaque sum type where the only thing you can do with it is call a match
method that requires a function pointer for each possible variant of the sum type? It'd be pretty cursed to use but at least it wouldn't require compiler plugins.
qwertyasdef 1y ago • 50%
Really? I would argue that pocket calculators are AI
qwertyasdef 1y ago • 100%
The behavior is defined; the behavior is whatever the processor does when you read memory from address 0.
If that were true, there would be no problem. Unfortunately, what actually happens is that compilers use the undefined behavior as an excuse to mangle your program far beyond what mere variation in processor behavior could cause, in the name of optimization. In the kernel bug, the issue wasn't that the null pointer dereference was undefined per se, the real issue was that the subsequent null check got optimized out because of the previous undefined behavior.
Apparently there's a recut version of the archive with some extra footage. If you watched the original version, you might have missed it. Bae is hosting a [watchalong](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TxZZxzLcG5I) which will be the perfect excuse to rewatch the concert VOD before it goes away.
Council is doing a karaoke relay into a collab in about an hour! All karaokes are unarchived. Original announcement tweet: https://twitter.com/hakosbaelz/status/1679510538966167552 ![Stream timetable](https://programming.dev/pictrs/image/57f1052c-27a3-4f4c-aa27-f53891061d89.jpeg) Streams: [Ceres Fauna Karaoke](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XQmDxCUrRlc) [Ouro Kronii Karaoke](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u0lSWUvCp6A) [Nanashi Mumei Karaoke](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8t0qNLSGpNo) [Hakos Baelz Karaoke](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jTMYQP23g-s) [IRyS Karaoke](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kfo2Fp1aRNY) [Group Collab](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r1KUcTmKofA) I tried to post this before and I don't think it went through, but maybe it did so sorry if this is a duplicate post.