@prologic@twtxt.net High five, I’m “generation Java” as well! 😂 There were some leftovers of C++, we used that in the computer graphics courses in Uni a lot. But pretty much anything else that involved programming was Java.
(There was nothing even remotely resembling CS in our “high school”. That school neither had the required teachers nor the equipment / PCs.)
I keep muting accounts here (twtxt.net), and they keep popping back on after some time. It is nuts. :-(
@quark@ferengi.one pascal was high school for me 10th grade. I remember making an over the top Yahtzee game with text windows and everything. My instructor got mad at me because it was a ton of pages printed out to review.
@xuu@txt.sour.is wow, I can tell I am older than you (I already knew this, but still). It was nothing but Pascal for me.
@movq@www.uninformativ.de before this century. Back when colleges taught C++ instead of Java for CS degrees.
@lyse@lyse.isobeef.org Yeah the func in func threw me off.. The generic type iter.Seq[V] does make things a bit more clear though.
@xuu@txt.sour.is These are indeed iterators. Very weird syntax, though.
I would love to see a world where ones twtxt feed is defined by webfinger. So @xuu@txt.sour.is => https://text.sour.is/user/xuu/twtxt.txt
Then my identity can exist independent of the feed location. And I can host multiple protocol types for my feed. Ie. http/gopher/Gemini/irc DCC/etc
@movq@www.uninformativ.de NASM is great. I remember playing with it back in my HS days. It has lots of little helps to make assembly more approachable.
anthony.buc.ci account. I am assuming these kind of bugs were never addressed by @prologic. :-(
@quark@ferengi.one @mckinley@twtxt.net
i think you have to be following the person so it does it correctly.
@mckinley@twtxt.net weird you mentioned my with the anthony.buc.ci account. I am assuming these kind of bugs were never addressed by @prologic@twtxt.net. :-(
@movq@www.uninformativ.de its always fun to look back on old projects. I talked to an old coworker about a codebase i made back in 2010 that still has lots of the same architecture i built into it back then and is still in heavy use.
@eapl.me@eapl.me the 24th of June 2002 was a pivotal year in my life.
@movq@www.uninformativ.de the location is real. A few in the ‘hood mentioned seeing this person directly. They live somewhere on the hillside in the background of the video.
@prologic@twtxt.net pretty nothing berger. The “blowout” was pretty tame coming from Linus kill yourself now. The world will be a better place” Torvold.
The issue was a dev making a “fix” that didn’t have a documented problem. They reused some specific low level functions they did not understand the reason they were made.
@prologic@twtxt.net ahhh! Its the dark reader plugin breaking the page.
@prologic@twtxt.net why am I getting this on your git? 
Twtxt spec enhancement proposal thread 🧵
Adding attributes to individual twts similar to adding feed attributes in the heading comments.
https://git.mills.io/yarnsocial/go-lextwt/pulls/17
The basic use case would be for multilingual feeds where there is a default language and some twts will be written a different language.
As seen in the wild: https://eapl.mx/twtxt.txt
The attributes are formatted as [key=value]
They can show up in the twt anywhere it is not enclosed by another element such as codeblock or part of a markdown link.
@eapl.me@eapl.me: [boost]
Ha, this is cool. Has its flaws, although is easy to remember.
An RNG that runs in your brain
Ha, this is cool. Has its flaws, although is easy to remember.
An RNG that runs in your brain
Trying out a boost format. seems better with text after….
@eapl.me@eapl.me trying out a boost format.
Ha, this is cool. Has its flaws, although is easy to remember.
An RNG that runs in your brain
> ?
@sorenpeter@darch.dk this makes sense as a quote twt that references a direct URL. If we go back to how it developed on twitter originally it was RT @nick: original text because it contained the original text the twitter algorithm would boost that text into trending.
i like the format (#hash) @<nick url> > "Quoted text"\nThen a comment
as it preserves the human read able. and has the hash for linking to the yarn. The comment part could be optional for just boosting the twt.
The only issue i think i would have would be that that yarn could then become a mess of repeated quotes. Unless the client knows to interpret them as multiple users have reposted/boosted the thread.
The format is also how iphone does reactions to SMS messages with +number liked: original SMS
> ?
@eapl.me@eapl.me this is interesting. Is the square bracket something used in the wild for multilingual twts?
@prologic@twtxt.net what are your thoughts? Should we extend the parser to handle [lang] and [boost] ? Or a generic attribute spec. Single word is a boolean attribute. And one with an = is a string key/value.
What about using the blockquote format with > ?
Snippet from someone else’s post
by: @eapl.me@eapl.me
Would it not also make sense to have the repost be a reply to the original post using the (#twthash), and maybe using a tag like #repost so it eaier to filter them out?
@eapl.me@eapl.me kinda like the format for markdown images?  ?
@New_scientist@feeds.twtxt.net Silicon Valley’s top AI models are terrible at almost everything. They only seem otherwise because people are easily fooled into believing they have capabilities they don’t have.
A cold beer and hanging out on twtxt, it doesn’t get much better
@prologic@twtxt.net nope.
@prologic@twtxt.net what?
@lyse@lyse.isobeef.org I have read the white papers for MLS before. I have put a lot of thought on how to do it with salty/ratchet. Its a very good tech for ensuring multiple devices can be joined to an encrypted chat. But it is bloody complicated to implement.
@lyse@lyse.isobeef.org i first learned about it from this vid https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6JxvKfSV9Ns&pp=ygUOZmlib25hY2NpIGhlYXA%3D
and this site: https://www.programiz.com/dsa/fibonacci-heap
@prologic@twtxt.net What I did as a work around for mattermost was hijack the gitlab oauth login with my own auth server.
I’ve added myself to the registries at registry.twtxt.org and twtxt.tilde.institute. I wonder if there’s a list of registries. #meta
Huh. At some point, my twtxt-via-ssh shortcut from my phone stopped working. It does again now! I’ve changed nothing. Yay black boxes! 🤷🏻
@xuu@txt.sour.is That was one of the horror puzzles where I had to look for help. 🥴 I modelled my solution after this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2pDSooPLLkI
(I can’t explain it better than the video anyway.) It takes a second on my machine and that’s with my own hashmap implementation which is probably not the fastest one.
@lyse@lyse.isobeef.org I think there is a problem related to the fitting around a corner that is unsolved. I watched a video about it a little while back.
@lyse@lyse.isobeef.org They sure are silly at times. :-) You really have to combine this event with something else, like learning a new language. Otherwise it gets boring real quick.
What I absolutely love about AoC is that it’s – indeed – a bit like school. 😅 The problems are well-defined, the inputs are well-defined, and there is a definite answer. It’s either right or wrong – period. Compared to real life and work, I welcome this very much. 🤣
@xuu@txt.sour.is Despite that these AoC math text problems are rather silly in my opinion (reminds me of an exercise in our math book where somebody wanted to carry a railroad rail around an L-shaped corner in the house and the question was how long that rail could be so that it still fits — sure, we’ve all carried several meter long railroad rails in our houses by ourselves numerous times…), these algorithms are really neat!
Happy Twixmas everyone (new word I just learned 2 min ago)
I have finally gotten around to implementing a gallery feature to timeline.

http://darch.dk/timeline/gallery?profile=https://yarn.stigatle.no/user/stigatle/twtxt.txt
There is still some hiccups, like the limited caching is making it difficult to make links back to older posts not working. Maybe @eapl.me@eapl.me you can help me with that?
@movq@www.uninformativ.de So.. i eventually made it to the end on this one.. was able to reuse code from days 8 and 9!
SSBzdGlsbCBkbyBub3QgdW5kZXJzdGFuZCB3aHkgdXNpbmcgdGhlIHJhdGUgb2YgY2hhbmdlIGlu
IHRoZSBwdXNoZXMgZ2l2ZXMgbWUgdGhlIGFuc3dlci4uIGJ1dCB5ZWFoLi4K
@movq@www.uninformativ.de so the pathfinding puzzle has arrived?
@johanbove@johanbove.info hope all goes well. my Buddy did the same but alcohol was involved so that falls on him.
@movq@www.uninformativ.de you are probably right.. there seems to be a final 10 trend found over on Reddit.

@movq@www.uninformativ.de tossing around inline ASM for the AoC..
@bmallred@staystrong.run this was a really fun run
In the holiday spirit i have donned my Santa hat. (shamelessly stolen from @movq@www.uninformativ.de)
@New_scientist@feeds.twtxt.net I hate to break it to you but that’s not really “A” I?
@movq@www.uninformativ.de I wish they just muted them out instead of making it an awfully loud meep sound.