« first day (1789 days earlier)      last day (3229 days later) » 
00:00 - 13:0013:00 - 00:00

12:02 AM
Lol, the week lasts as of 2 mind and already really many users who got their up votes :)
 
12:22 AM
ParseErr
 
Methinks @bjb568 should go socialize.
 
12:33 AM
This is socializing.
 
user259867
@hichris123 Pet peeve #114
 
lol
 
:)
 
@bjb568 Really. Go talk. There are people out there. Nice people.
 
Wifi is so bad in the cabin, that I need to use LTE.
 
12:46 AM
Everyone should ignore bjb for a week. Then he has to socialize.
 
I have 2 books to read.
I know, it's awful.
 
@bjb568 Can I have them?
I finished my last book and have no more to read on this vacation :(
 
user259867
@Doorknob gutenberg.org
 
oooh
 
12:58 AM
@Doorknob read DD's code, familiarize yourself
BTW, can sowmbody figure out how to detect the difference between a regex literal and 2 division operators?
(In JS)
 
In case of a division, there is a digit before the first slash; not the case for regex.
 
Or a variable.
 
yeah
 
a / b / c looks like foo(a, /b/ , c)
 
user259867
I guess that a regex literal would be either assigned to something or be an element of array, or be a property of an object. So you would have [=,:] before the opening slash, without any alphanumerics in between.
 
1:08 AM
@bjb568 use a parser?
 
I'm making one.
@1999 'string' + /regex/
is legal
 
user259867
But it shouldn't be.
 
user259867
More practical, regex could be a function/method parameter. So add ( to that list.
 
It needs to be able to handle at least the majority of edge cases
 
user259867
@bjb568 The original was better.
 
1:17 AM
[ SmokeDetector ] Offensive answer detected: How to access bricked phone /system folder? Fix corrupted file by buy a new one on android.stackexchange.com
 
user259867
@SmokeDetector naa
 
[ SmokeDetector ] Offensive answer detected: Restart game on iPad ios8 by Big Penis on apple.stackexchange.com
 
user259867
@SmokeDetector tpu-
 
@bjb568 Yes.
A regex is a TERM, whereas division is an OPERATOR. The parser is in a different production stage at that point and so there can be no ambiguity.
@bjb568 yacc it up kiddo
 
What section of the ECMAScript spec applies here?
 
1:30 AM
I just know that this is how parsers that understand these things work.
 
Also, why do people send 302s when they mean 303?
 
Pretty sure I heard that asked two days ago.
 
user259867
What's so bad about trailing whitespace anyway? (re: failed PR)
 
@bjb568 If you think about it, it's how it has to work. Think of the slashes as a funny kind of quote that has some side effect as a secret function call. When you think of it in that way, you can see that /regex/ has to be a TERM.
 
@tchrist On here?
 
1:32 AM
@bjb568 One came before the other, that's why
 
humph
 
@1999 Overly anal people need their butts cleaned out?
@bjb568 No, at a hackathon I was at a coupla days back.
 
@tchrist Ok, so I should be looking for the end slash?
 
user259867
It's circleCI complaining, not a person. I now remember Jason C hit the same thing.
 
@bjb568 The lexer should. The parser is already not caring.
 
1:33 AM
@tchrist oh, sounds fun
@tchrist It's all one to me.
 
@1999 Git complains because Linus’s butt is stuffed.
Thence also Perl Critic. But it's a bunch of reverse python phobia or something.
@bjb568 Incest is often unavoidable, but they should still be two things.
If you just saw an operator, you have to be looking for a term.
And therefore, it cannot be division, for that would be two ops in a row.
If you have not seen an operator, then you are going to be looking for a term.
There really isn't ambiguity here.
 
@1999 heh. Still around?
 
user259867
Yes, reading up on the github interface
 
user259867
inb4 "It's Saturday night!"
 
@1999 Just remove a space from the end of the line here: github.com/Charcoal-SE/SmokeDetector/pull/57/…
Or I can do it.
 
user259867
1:39 AM
Let me do this...
 
k
I missed your presence @tchrist.
 
I have been conferring.
 
With whom?
 
ences
 
@tchrist a / b / c is valid…
 
1:40 AM
@bjb568 Of course it is.
It is also not a regex.
 
Then what's with the "no 2 operations"?
 
a / b / c is TERM OP TERM OP TERM
There is no OP OP.
 
Sure
and no TERM TERM too, right?
 
So if you just saw a TERM, then the / has to be an OP. If you just saw an OP, it has to be a TERM.
Well, that depends.
TERM TERM makes people squeak.
print "hello";
But that can be part of a different place in the grammar.
If you stack up too many TERMs your parser needs to look too far ahead and your shift-reduce conflicts collapse into reduce-reduce muddles.
 
But that's only valid for continue, return, etc. predefined, right?
 
1:44 AM
Which is why it isn't exactly a TERM.
Because your lexer told the parser it was a KEY_RETURN or whatnot.
 
Right, so term, operator, keyword, and reset-things to care about.
 
Yes.
 
Ok, I can probably debork my parser now!
 
Good luck!
 
:)
 
1:46 AM
I only know this because of long aeons spent in perl.y
Since ($x + /regex/ * 5) is a legal expression, but so too is ($x / regex() * 5).
 
That qualifies you as a monk, right? :D
 
The lexer is hand-rolled in Perl for speed, but also so it can continuously cheat and feed back info to the parser in back-handed ways. The parser though is a yacc or bison parser.
That was the incest part.
 
:p
 
The lexer needs to decide whether /regex/ is a pattern or a division and a term and a division, but that is something only the parser can know, so the parser also kibitzes with the lexer.
This is not how they will teach you to do things when you take a compiler class.
However, it gets the job done.
Simpler languages are less incestuous, but note that even C and C++ change their parser based on typedefs.
 
There's… a compiler class?
 
1:50 AM
Both undergrad and grad, normally.
But yes, of course there is.
 
Merged & pulled @1999.
 
user259867
\o/
 
kewl
that'll keep me off the streets
 
I already knew lex and yacc though, so I was unusual.
I also cheated and wrote programs to write magically generated lexers because it was too much work to do what they wanted and write it all by hand.
REMEMBER: Programs that write programs are the happiest programs in the world.
4
 
:D
 
1:53 AM
That's the course in which you finally well and truly understand that regexes are the user-friendly interface to finite state automata.
Because coding up those tables yourself is a PITA.
In 536 you write simple lexers and parsing stuff. In 701 you write a real compiler.
By parsing stuff, I mean things you haven't dreamt of.
All table-driven.
You probably won't get courses like that in a vocational "college".
 
Jun 25 at 1:19, by hichris123
Better call in @tchrist.... who isn't pingable.
We missed you.
 
2:09 AM
Thanks.
> CS 536 is an introduction to the design and translation of programming languages. Subjects to be covered include symbol tables, scanning and regular expressions, Lex and Flex, context-free grammars and parsing, Yacc and Bison, abstract syntax trees, code-generation, and syntax-directed compilation. A variety of tools, including JLex, JavaCUP and Jasmin will be used. Concepts of name scoping, modularization, and type rules will be considered in a number of languages.

Class projects will be components of a simple compiler for the language CSX, a blend of C, C++ and Java. Projects will be i
All silly Java now. Good luck with that. It was C when I took it.
701. Register allocation. Yawn.
Kirk McKusick did his PhD in register allocation and has never looked at it again.
> CS 701 studies advanced aspects of compilation, particularly program analysis, optimization and code generation. It assumes a familiarity with the general design and implementation of simple compilers (as presented, e.g., in CS 536).

Topics to be studied include:

Register allocation and graph coloring.
Code scheduling.
Automatic instruction selection and retargetable compilers, especially LLVM.
Program transformations that improve instruction and data cache performance.
Local and global optimizations, including redundancy analysis, live/dead analysis, constant and copy propagation, code
I much preferred the graduate operating systems courses to the compiler ones. I really think the undergrad compiler class is enough.
 
user259867
@SmokeDetector should be a novel
 
What IS that??
 
That's a poorly disguised rant.
It's an answer for a question about Windows that features the word "Linux" 18 times.
 
2:24 AM
Space it.
 
user259867
Let's do everything in browser and be done with the OS split...
 
There's a lot of world between the kernel and some paltry web client.
 
Jun 20 at 21:32, by Tiny Giant
I wonder what will happen to android once webkit-for-wayland is finished http://blogs.igalia.com/zdobersek/2014/12/09/announcing-webkit-for-wayland/
 
Must herd kitties.
 
KITTEN!
 
user259867
2:32 AM
Six years ago today on Meta: Encouraging people to explain downvotes by ChrisF... to be followed by hundreds of duplicates over the years. The sidebar says 241, but many of them are deleted.
 
user259867
I'm afraid that a large percentage of my 24489 downvotes on Math were not explained.
 
there was a meme image for that, something like: I don't always explain my downvotes, but when I downvote you, you deserved it
 
Is this spyware or spam or what => english.stackexchange.com/a/255473/2085
The pixelly thing.
 
have anyone ever heard about 'eggs without yolk'?
 
@Braiam Is this a seed for a corny yoke? :)
 
2:40 AM
I think he somehow copied some HTML
 
user259867
@tchrist I suggested an edit fixing the link and embedding
 
k
 
@tchrist nope, serious
 
user259867
It was broken because "The" got attached to the URL.
 
someone asked me if such things are possible/done (somewho I'm who you have to ask for trivia stuff)
 
2:43 AM
@1999 Approved.
@Braiam Apparently.
@1999 However, I’m not sure that the person really wanted that answer. There are lots of less-than variants.
 
user259867
I didn't really evaluate the content; it may be NAA for all I know.
 
Heh.
I like ≟, ⩻, and ⩼ myself.
Alas that we have no combining question mark.
Where by “lots”, I of course mean 2**6.
< « ‹ ≤ ≦ ≨ ≪ ≮ ≰ ≲ ≴ ≶ ≷ ≸ ≹ ⋖ ⋘ ⋚ ⋛ ⋜ ⋦ 〈 ⍃ ⥶ ⥷ ⦓ ⦖ ⧀ ⩹ ⩻ ⩽ ⩿ ⪁ ⪃ ⪅ ⪇ ⪉ ⪋ ⪌ ⪍ ⪏ ⪐ ⪑ ⪒ ⪓ ⪔ ⪕ ⪗ ⪙ ⪛ ⪝ ⪟ ⪡ ⪣ ⪤ ⪥ ⪦ ⪨ ⫷ ⫹ 〈 ﹤ <
I bet those aren’t too cool on foonz.
fauxnz?
 
@tchrist Only 5 boxes. yay
 
Which code points?
 
I'll give you the symbols:
⥶ ⥷ ⦓ ⦖ ⧀
 
2:54 AM
mac(tchrist)% echo ⥶ ⥷ ⦓ ⦖ ⧀ | uniquote -v
\N{LESS-THAN ABOVE LEFTWARDS ARROW} \N{LEFTWARDS ARROW THROUGH LESS-THAN} \N{LEFT ARC LESS-THAN BRACKET} \N{DOUBLE RIGHT ARC LESS-THAN BRACKET} \N{CIRCLED LESS-THAN}
 
user259867
In my Chrome/Win combo the first two of five render. But I have far more boxes.
 
user259867
 
@1999 You're on 43, right?
 
user259867
Yes, 43.0.2357.130 m here
 
Okay. I think my patch was 44 -- that made some math symbols render properly.
 
2:57 AM
μsoſt: Yesterday’s technology for tomorrow’s world.
 
What's ſt?
(it doesn't render)
 
A joke.
Sigh.
That’s dumb.
ſt was in Unicode 1.
What the hell is wrong with them?
 
Oh, it's those fancy letters?
 
tchrist and his Unicode have returned!
 
No.
 
2:59 AM
!tchrist
 
It’s LATIN SMALL LIGATURE LONG S T.
 
@tchrist Well, that's fancy. :P
 
Age=1.1 is NOT fancy. It’s ancient.
mac(tchrist)% uniprops -a ſt
U+FB05 ‹ſt› \N{LATIN SMALL LIGATURE LONG S T}
    \w \pL \p{LC} \p{L_} \p{L&} \p{Ll}
    All Any Alnum Alpha Alphabetic Alphabetic_Presentation_Forms Assigned
       InAlphabeticPresentationForms Cased Cased_Letter LC Changes_When_Casefolded
       CWCF Changes_When_Casemapped CWCM Changes_When_NFKC_Casefolded CWKCF
       Changes_When_Titlecased CWT Changes_When_Uppercased CWU Ll L Gr_Base
       Grapheme_Base Graph GrBase ID_Continue IDC ID_Start IDS Letter L_ Latin Latn
 
Blame Chrome.
 
3:00 AM
It is one of those wicked code points that when uppercased becomes two.
uc("ſt") is "ST".
 
My eyes haven't viewed such lavishness, sadly.
 
I used it as a joke because at tiny point sizes people mistake it for an ft.
Maybe if in fixed-width?
uc("ſt") eq "ST"
 
nope.
 
There are 104 code points which have casemaps of more than a single code point.
It’s kinda nasty.
 
Is there any sort of unicode support test, @tchrist?
(except for this room, of course)
 
3:05 AM
mac(tchrist)% unichars /./
That should do it. :)
 
I meant for the web.
 
:r! unichars /./
From pentadactyl. :)
 
what... does that do?
 
That one is very simplistic, of course.
I have one here somewhere. Hm.
Found it.
 
I'm on the edge of my seat.
 
3:09 AM
Oh, this is the short version.
文字化け 𝀬 𝀳 𝀵 𝀷 𝀺 𝁁 𝁩 𝁭 𝁲 𝄁 𝄃 𝄈 𝄍 𝄏 𝄒 𝄔 𝄗 𝄙 𝄬 𝄯 𝄱 𝄵 𝄹 𝄻 𝅀 𝅘𝅥𝅲 𝅫 𝆄 𝆒 𝆕 𝆗 𝆚 𝆶 𝆹𝅥 𝆺𝅥𝅯
🌀 🌁 🌂 🌃 🌄 🌅 🌆 🌇 🌈 🌉 🌊 🌋 🌌 🌍 🌎 🌏 🌐 🌑 🌒 🌓 🌔 🌕 🌖 🌗 🌘 🌙 🌚 🌛 🌜 🌝 🌞 🌟 🌠 🌰 🌱 🌲 🌳 🌴 🌵 🌷 🌸 🌹 🌺 🌻 🌼 🌽 🌾 🌿 🍀 🍁 🍂 🍃 🍄 🍅 🍆 🍇 🍈 🍉 🍊 🍋 🍌 🍍 🍎 🍏 🍐 🍑 🍒 🍓 🍔 🍕 🍖 🍗 🍘 🍙 🍚 🍛 🍜 🍝 🍞 🍟 🍠 🍡 🍢 🍣 🍤 🍥 🍦 🍧 🍨 🍩 🍪 🍫 🍬 🍭 🍮 🍯 🍰 🍱 🍲 🍳 🍴 🍵 🍶 🍷 🍸 🍹 🍺 🍻 🍼 🎀 🎁 🎂 🎃 🎄 🎅 🎆 🎇 🎈 🎉 🎊 🎋 🎌 🎍 🎎 🎏 🎐 🎑 🎒 🎓 🎠 🎡 🎢 🎣 🎤 🎥 🎦 🎧 🎨 🎩 🎪 🎫 🎬 🎭 🎮 🎯 🎰 🎱 🎲 🎳 🎴 🎵 🎶 🎷 🎸 🎹 🎺 �
Of course, they unibroke it.
Dumb bugs.
Oh, this is better.
 
63 / 63
PPW 2014 • Sunday, 9 November 2014
Perl Unicode Essentials
YANETUT
文字化け 𝀬 𝀳 𝀵 𝀷 𝀺 𝁁 𝁩 𝁭 𝁲 𝄁 𝄃 𝄈 𝄍 𝄏 𝄒 𝄔 𝄗 𝄙 𝄬 𝄯 𝄱 𝄵 𝄹 𝄻 𝅀 𝅘𝅥𝅲 𝅫 𝆄 𝆒 𝆕 𝆗 𝆚 𝆶 𝆹𝅥 𝆺𝅥𝅯 🀀 🀄 🀈 🀋 🀍 🀐 🀒 🀕 🀚 🀞 🀠 🀣 🀦 🀨 🀫 🂩 🂬 🂮 🂱 🂵 🂺 🂼 🃁 🃃 🃆 🃈 🃍 🃓 🃕 🃘 🃚 🃝 🃟 🌀 🌁 🌂 🌃 🌄 🌅 🌆 🌇 🌈 🌉 🌊 🌋 🌌 🌍 🌎 🌏 🌐 🌑 🌒 🌓 🌔 🌕 🌖 🌗 🌘 🌙 🌚 🌛 🌜 🌝 🌞 🌟 🌠 🌰 🌱 🌲 🌳 🌴 🌵 🌷 🌸 🌹 🌺 🌻 🌼 🌽 🌾 🌿 🍀 🍁 🍂 🍃 🍄 🍅 🍆 🍇 🍈 🍉 🍊 🍋 🍌 🍍 🍎 🍏 🍐 🍑 🍒 🍓 🍔 🍕 🍖 🍗 🍘 🍙 🍚 🍛 🍜 🍝 🍞 🍟 🍠 🍡 🍢 🍣 🍤 🍥 🍦 🍧 🍨 🍩 🍪 🍫 🍬 🍭 🍮 🍯 🍰 🍱 🍲 🍳 🍴
I guess I didn’t do hieros that time.
60 / 63
PPW 2014 • Sunday, 9 November 2014
Perl Unicode Essentials
Appendix 1: Font suggestions
I recommend two free fonts from George Douros at users.teilar.gr/~g1951d/ known to work with this presentation: his Alfios font for regular text, and his Symbola font for fancy emoji. If any of these don’t look right to you, you probably need to supplement your system fonts:
Ligatures: fi ffi ff ffl fl β ẞ ſt st
Math letters: 𝒜 𝒟 𝔅 𝔎 𝔼 𝔽
Gothic & Deseret: 𐌸𐌼𐌽𐍂, 𐐔𐐯𐑅𐐨𐑉𐐯𐐻
Symbols: ✔ ✅ 🐪 📖 🛂 🐍
 
Does Emotica = Emoticons?
They don't show up at all.
 
A poor joke.
But yes.
Oh and the starboard is unibugged too. Will they ever fix these?
 
3:16 AM
So sad.
> Ligatures: \N{LATIN SMALL LIGATURE FI} \N{LATIN SMALL LIGATURE FFI} \N{LATIN SMALL LIGATURE FF} \N{LATIN SMALL LIGATURE FFL} \N{LATIN SMALL LIGATURE FL} \N{GREEK SMALL LETTER BETA} \N{LATIN CAPITAL LETTER SHARP S} \N{LATIN SMALL LIGATURE LONG S T} \N{LATIN SMALL LIGATURE ST}
Math letters: \N{MATHEMATICAL SCRIPT CAPITAL A} \N{MATHEMATICAL SCRIPT CAPITAL D} \N{MATHEMATICAL FRAKTUR CAPITAL B} \N{MATHEMATICAL FRAKTUR CAPITAL K} \N{MATHEMATICAL DOUBLE-STRUCK CAPITAL E} \N{MATHEMATICAL DOUBLE-STRUCK CAPITAL F}
 
Can't be sad without a sad emoticon.
At least we support sad emojis. I think.
 
WTF?
That should have been a LATIN SMALL LETTER SHARP S.
Not a GREEK SMALL LETTER BETA.
 
😞 or... not.
 
‭ ß  00DF       LATIN SMALL LETTER SHARP S
        = Eszett
        * German
        * uppercase is "SS"
        * in origin a ligature of 017F and 0073
        x (greek small letter beta - 03B2)
        x (latin capital letter sharp s - 1E9E)
‭ β  03B2       GREEK SMALL LETTER BETA
        x (latin small letter sharp s - 00DF)
        x (latin small letter b with stroke - 0180)
‭ ẞ  1E9E       LATIN CAPITAL LETTER SHARP S
        * lowercase is 00DF
        x (latin small letter sharp s - 00DF)
 
there isn't a... you know, unicode library that abstract everything and just returns the correct character using the installed fonts?
 
3:18 AM
Programs know code points.
Fonts are for eyes. :)
 
maybe blishful thinking
 
@tchrist yeah, exactly.
 
I’m a backend guy, remember. We only play by the numbers. :)
 
@tchrist well, they do bad one of the only two tasks
 
A unicode-aware program knows the codepoint... it just doesn't know how to render it.
 
3:19 AM
That isn’t its job.
 
that's what I'm getting at, they should delegate that responsability to some utility that does the job
 
firefox on windows is failing
 
What, on the pictures?
 
no, these ones: 𝀬 𝀳 𝀵 𝀷 𝀺 𝁁 𝁩 𝁭 𝁲 𝄁 𝄃 𝄈 𝄍 𝄏 𝄒 𝄔 𝄗 𝄙 𝄬 𝄯 𝄱 𝄵 𝄹 𝄻 𝅀 𝅘𝅥𝅲 𝅫 𝆄 𝆒 𝆕 𝆗 𝆚 𝆶 𝆹𝅥 𝆺𝅥𝅯 🀀 🀄 🀈 🀋 🀍 🀐 🀒 🀕 🀚 🀞 🀠 🀣 🀦 🀨 🀫 🂩 🂬 🂮 🂱 🂵 🂺 🂼 🃁 🃃 🃆 🃈 🃍 🃓 🃕 🃘 🃚 🃝 🃟
 
well, actually I can see 🀄, but I'm not sure if that's is what I think it is
 
Red Dragon.
 
huh....
 
\N{MAHJONG TILE RED DRAGON}
 
unicode really have a character for everything... except eggs without yolk!
 
3:25 AM
Coming soon to an emoji expansion near you!
 
YAY!
 
I wish there were a real italic font out there in common use.
I get tired of slanty romans masquerading as italics.
You have to use an actual design program to get at the alternate sorts.
There may be some open type web mumbles for it. I forget.
I can’t tell whether these are letters or emoji :)
The Egyptians seem to have more flying kitties:
Well, or somethun.
Flying bulls
I think those would all make great emoji!
Kitty with an asp on its head:
Notice the Egyptians had their own Hello Kitty millennia before the Nipponese.
And one for the SCOTUS flappadoodle on MSO:
That man+monkey marriage one though is definitely ahead of its time.
 
3:46 AM
I don't know what's the difference between Linux and Windows Firefox build...
 
4:34 AM
I'm confused about this question... stackoverflow.com/q/31096121/4639281 is it really a good question? I'm sure its not, but how is it getting so many upvotes?
 
user259867
It's a lightweight puzzle, accessible to anyone with some JS knowledge. So, naturally, there are people who like it.
 
5:22 AM
[ SmokeDetector ] Email in answer: Paypal Wire to Bank (not MY bank, A bank) - Possible? by Aigbehi Bravo on money.stackexchange.com
 
user259867
@SmokeDetector tpu-
 
user259867
5:35 AM
Successful maneuver: dropped a 100 rep bounty on Juan M's answer, which got him over 200 rep on Community Building, which enabled a flair, which I added to the CM list.
 
ha!
 
user259867
... and since he had 144 accounts already, this 100 rep bounty resulted in total +14500 in his reputation notification.
 
that must be amusing
 
6:10 AM
I'll never understand why questions like these gets upvoted
 
6:26 AM
exams are over \o/
 
Yay!
 
6:57 AM
@1999 Who's Juan M?
 
7:15 AM
Is StackExchange opensource?
 
no
 
@Unihedron can you provide link for this?
 
@Pandya For what?
 
which states SE isn't opensource
any documentation, etc.
 
7:17 AM
It isn't. There are plenty of open source alternatives though
 
I've found; probably this:
440
Q: Which tools and technologies are used to build the Stack Exchange Network?

aleembWhat tools and technologies are used to build the Stack Exchange Network? See also: Which tools and technologies are used to build Data Explorer? Return to FAQ index

 
There were some discussions on open sourcing SO/SE a the very start, but that never went anywhere. They do however open source certain tools they develop in the process.
 
> Operating System Microsoft Windows Server 2012 x64
WTF
 
@Unihedron why?
 
7:36 AM
[ SmokeDetector ] Bad keyword in title: Nutriutious diet plan as a food replacement by Pennf0lio on cooking.stackexchange.com
 
8:02 AM
[ SmokeDetector ] Nested quote blocks in answer: Compiler configuration for Qt Creator by Mahmoud Abd El Samea on stackoverflow.com
 
[ SmokeDetector ] Repeating characters in answer: Can't figure out EIA-232 (RJ45) to DB9 cable... (seems simple!) by Joel on electronics.stackexchange.com
 
^thanks answer?
 
@JanDvorak thought about, not sure if it's an extension, no domain knowledge :/
 
8:23 AM
Am I correct that all hot questions on math.se are either 1) incredibly stupid with non-descriptive titles that somehow got upvoted twice, or 2) really hard questions that I would have to think about to even understand?
how do questions like stackoverflow.com/questions/31087537/… get 11 upvotes?
> Prove to me the compiler will do this completely sensible thing, please? I can't find the right paragraph by myself.
 
@JanDvorak strange things happen :/
 
8:39 AM
lo and behold, an upvoted meta post by Jeff Atwood. Locked, of course: meta.stackexchange.com/questions/61142/…
2
 
[ SmokeDetector ] Nested quote blocks in body: ADHD and Ameilus B'Torah by Mefaresh on judaism.stackexchange.com
 
gone
 
9:19 AM
@JanDvorak : I starred that f***ing message!
 
@Dronehinge edit please
 
@JanDvorak Yeah, I've f**cking seen that f**cking post already.
 
@nicael flocking?
 
> f**k this s**t (i.e., "fork this sort")
 
i remember that, but different than your message since you added extra *, u = 1 asterisk, u != 2 asterisk
 
9:28 AM
Yeah, that was too late when I got it :D
 
[ SmokeDetector ] Email in answer: Finding duplicate words in Lyx by Bataleon on tex.stackexchange.com
 
> ... and those who see swearwords even when it's clear none have been written can go fork themselves.
 
[ SmokeDetector ] Email in answer: sch-i905 shuts off by alexis on android.stackexchange.com
 
 
2 hours later…
11:36 AM
[ SmokeDetector ] Blacklisted website in body: Why is a good BRAIN GYM? by Bonnie Knox on drupal.stackexchange.com
[ SmokeDetector ] Email in answer: Emergency Fund vs. Student Loan Payment by Cletus Morgan on money.stackexchange.com
 
Wow, 2h. Tavern has died since I left.
 
No. The tavern has died when you came and flooded us with all those resource-hogging images
 
[ SmokeDetector ] Email in answer: Reading S2P Files - What Does Each Column Represent by sasa on electronics.stackexchange.com
 
naa
 
11:51 AM
[ SmokeDetector ] Nested quote blocks in answer: generate random string so no two threads collide by ehh on stackoverflow.com
 
Yay, grumpy @JanDvorak is back!!!
 
?
Well, I'm only back until the next catsplosion ;-)
 
6 mins ago, by Jan Dvorak
No. The tavern has died when you came and flooded us with all those resource-hogging images
:D
 
[ SmokeDetector ] Blacklisted website in body: My experience with Niagen by tomfazul on meta.stackexchange.com
 
ooh, a new keyword
 
12:13 PM
A mod's there, what does it mean? @Jnat hey hi :)
 
Hey ;)
 
would I be allowed to set up an automatic butchery for cats? That is, auto-trash any image oneboxes by a certain user?
 
:o
 
12:32 PM
[ SmokeDetector ] Email in answer: Why did the Lubavitcher Rebbe give out dollars? by Israel on judaism.stackexchange.com
 
NAA?
 
AKA too minor 2.0
 
[ SmokeDetector ] Bad keyword in body: However many doctors simply do not by mucha3355 mucha on superuser.com
 
00:00 - 13:0013:00 - 00:00

« first day (1789 days earlier)      last day (3229 days later) »