Inside of the loop, you remove an item from the list:
attributes.remove(splitAtt); // Line 75
On the second go around, the call to attributes.get(splitAtt) will then reference an index no longer in the list. Since you haven't removed that last element before you enter the loop, your print stat...
Oh, I actually meant to link to just the question.
But I like how the first two answers were "OMG you didn't start your loop with 0!"
@TheUnhandledException A message asking people to stay on topic is shown. The input box is hidden. Numbers fade in counting down to 0. When 0 is reached discussion resumes -- it'll usually be on the countdown, however, not on the actual room topic.
What I really need is to figure out the IPs of all the mods, so I can return images to them that say things like "I think chat is keen!", and images to everyone else that say "Two days until plan Overthrow Balpha begins!"
Yes, chat shows up in Google search, as all chats are public by default.
Only the transcripts are indexed, though.
For example:
http://www.google.com/search?q=%22seeding+is+nice+and+all,+but+it+feels+too+much+like+rep+whoring%22
@AidenBell, hmm, hadn't thought about adding /me. @TheUnhandledException, @Shog9, and @balpha wrote one for that but the point isn't to make it look nice for the user, it is to make it look nice for everyone. pretty useless unless everyone installs it hehe
it is possible to get close to that, you can check if the text is "adder" and then say, map that to some function adder by doing int (*func)(int) adder = &adder;
er, something close to that, anyway
@AidenBell haha, sure
there's a host of PHP questions about variable variables
and I remember when I was new I used to think variable variables were awesome
I used to think that in C99, even if the side-effects of functions f and g interfered, and although the expression f() + g() does not contain a sequence point, f and g would contain some, so the behavior would be unspecified: either f() would be called before g(), or g() before f().
I am no long...
@AidenBell The problem is that you can't even generally decide whether for one given input and output whether a given function will return that output for that function (I apologize if I'm telling you something you already know).