@TonyTheLion Your mom has a vibrating "joy stick" too, but doesn't need it any more since...wait, even as "yo momma" jokes go, that's just too cheesy to finish.
@Nooble I could. You might be able to. Robot would manage to sever at least two limbs and get lost in Cambodia on the way from his house to the train-station.
1. Don't cut yourself 2. Don't stab yourself 3. Don't breathe glue 4. Don't walk into traffic signs 5. Don't walk into glass doors 6. Don't get lost in Cambodia
> What a time to be alive where I can have my 12 inch dragon dildos delivered by drones to my doorstep before my erected penis could subside. comment on Amazon Prime Air drone video
@JohanLarsson Semantically, yes. But some conditions are more awkward to read than others - a != 5 && b != 7 looks less awkward to me than !(a == 5 || b == 7)
@ScarletAmaranth Hmm...now that's an interesting idea. Allow a UDL to take an std::initializer_list as a parameter, so you can create a set like {1, 2, 3}s (especially crucial since we obviously don't have s defined for enough different UDLs yet).
@JerryCoffin I did a similar thing in Java recently - if(tapes.stream().limit(2).anyMatch(x -> x.top() != null)) whatever; to avoid writing if(tapes.get(0).top() != null || tapes.get(1).top() != null) whatever;