« first day (601 days earlier)      last day (4574 days later) » 

15:00
@Cicada You're not using your real name, are you?
@RMartinhoFernandes I'm not but there's enough data on me to easily determine my real ID
@Cicada We are legion. You are Cicada
@Cicada Tunnel it through wikileaks!
@Cicada Shut up and just do it.
Now I really want to see such shopped picture.
Ok, let me find a nice pic of a vanilla cone
15:00
@Cicada Do it anonymously?
@Cicada Lol
What did you expect?
@Cicada Do you mean vanilla cone as in flavor? Or vanilla cone as in normal/boring/lacking style?
^ smart robot is smart
15:06
11
Q: How can one implement hot-swappable C++ modules?

Evil EngelFast iteration times are key to developing games, much more so than fancy graphics and engines with truckloads of features in my opinion. No wonder many small developers choose scripting languages. The Unity 3D way of being able to pause a game and modify assets AND code, then continue and ha...

"use a scripting language"
@RMartinhoFernandes Wow there are a lot of sexual meanings to ice cream cone.
user784668
Use Python.
@Neil It's urbandictionary.com, what did you expect? Religious meanings?
GARGLEFLARGLE!! Why does my co-worker insist on double five = 5.0f;
15:08
@RMartinhoFernandes Chat should totally onebox (trollolol this is a terrible idea) urbandictionary links.
user784668
@Drise Because he's an idiot.
@SamDeHaan Xeo once proposed that for TVTropes.
@RMartinhoFernandes I support that. Give me a link to +1
@Cicada Do it.
15:10
@RMartinhoFernandes You really need to assert NSFW when you post shit like that...
@SamDeHaan I think it was deleted.
@Drise He wants to be sure that the day in which 1 + 1 turns out to add up to 3, that he can handle variables whose actual numeric value can change, rather than hard-coding it in.
@Drise I thought urbandictionary.com was NSFW by default (to me, it is).
Sorry about that, then.
No no, I knew not to click on it assuming what it would probably lead to, but still.
@RMartinhoFernandes Had my boss behind me when I did that, man. There was some half-nude chick in an advertisement when I did it.
15:12
And blaming me is easier :)
Now he's all pissed at me. Thanks a lot.
Still, I have a bad habit on clicking links arbitrarily when they are posted.
Hey, @Sam, don't be pissed at @Neil.
@RMartinhoFernandes No way am I going to let him off the hook for this one. Not after last week.
@RMartinhoFernandes I thought I was his boss. :(
15:13
@RMartinhoFernandes Vote to reopen imo.
@Neil He doesn't like half-nude chicks?
@SamDeHaan I don't have enough meta-rep.
@Neil The company we work for has so many confusing layers of indirection that we're both each other's boss.
@RMartinhoFernandes I've got 300. Soooooo...
@RMartinhoFernandes Naw, just yanking your chain. If you use the internet and don't know when not to click on links still, you must be +50 years old and use the keyboard by bird peck method.
I <3 checking in on Fri, 5pm. Since going home for the weekend is too boring for the others, I leave them interesting bug s to play with!
Here we call that a "commit and run".
@SamDeHaan I didn't get the memo. When we adopt the confusing layers of indirection strategy? I thought that was supposed to happen next month, not this month.
Take a guess at how they're storing passwords.
@Fanael I know and like Python.
but still
@RMartinhoFernandes I'm pretty sure they don't use prepared statements.
they have their reasons for preferring native code
15:19
@RMartinhoFernandes I like how they explicitly write "It may not contain SELECT or *". Gives it an air of sophistication.
3
or their own script
@Neil I wonder if that means you can use INSERT, UPDATE or DELETE .
@Neil No, it was last year. Next month we're reverting it and each becoming our own boss.
@EtiennedeMartel Only one way to find out.
Obviously, only SELECT is nasty.
15:21
Only criminals use SELECT.
@SamDeHaan Oh. Wait, am I your boss then?
user784668
@RMartinhoFernandes The real WTF is that the screenshot is in GIF.
@Neil Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and the second half of Friday.
@SamDeHaan Yes! 2nd half of Friday is the best half.
@Fanael GIF is the hipster's file format.
15:22
@RMartinhoFernandes The least they could do is pretend it's not subject to sql injection
It feels like they're saying "Our SQL injection support isn't complete yet. SELECT and * are still being worked on."
2
SQL is the worst invention since nothing. Text? Really?
@RMartinhoFernandes Please be patient while we fix our SQL injection problem. In the meantime, your passwords will be checked to see if they contain SELECT because we can't handle it if it is.
@RadekSlupik SQL is cool.
@RadekSlupik What? You'd rather write binary?
15:25
But I like how CouchDB uses JSON.
@RadekSlupik SQL was outdated when it was invented, but it's hard to imagine any other language to do the same thing
Many compilers will not turn division by power of two into a bitshift. That would be an incorrect optimization for signed integers. You should try to look at assembly output from your compiler and see for yourself. — exDM69 6 hours ago
@RMartinhoFernandes I'd rather have an API that produces the binary for me. Say, SelectStatement stmt("someTable", /* fields: */ {"field1", "field2"}, /* where: */{"field1", "eq", "foobar"}); or something similar. You get the point.
I'm really tempted to do ORLY.
Not one long string, but an object.
15:27
And that comment has +3, what the fuck.
@RadekSlupik The driver can compile it client-side. There's no reason to send raw SQL over the wire.
Is reading comprehension that uncommon? :.
@CatPlusPlus Can't they just optimize for numbers > 0?
@RadekSlupik SQL is just the lowest common denominator.
Of course they can.
15:27
It's good at that.
@CatPlusPlus Well, that comment is true, but when taken in the context of the answer, it's quite wtf-y.
And they do. And GCC can do it for negatives, too.
user784668
lol
user784668
I see idivl: gcc.godbolt.org/…
@RMartinhoFernandes In that case, you can just use an object instead of SQL in the first place. No need to waste time on parsing and compilation, and no injection.
15:28
@CatPlusPlus I guess they could, couldn't they?
@Fanael That thing must be cool, there's a "Fork me on Github!" ribbon!
Prepared statements prevent injection, until you want to do very complex things.
@RadekSlupik Until what?
I really don't get that comment.
@RadekSlupik The problem with that is that you can't make it uniform across all the variety of languages.
15:29
@RadekSlupik Use stored procedures or views if you want to do complex things.
@RadekSlupik The contract for prepared statements is that any value replaced by the parameters are escaped, or at least that's how it should work.
I DON'T GET IT.
@RMartinhoFernandes Say you want to select specific fields. Which fields you want to select depends on a variable.
Prepared statements are safe.
15:29
@RadekSlupik Look at the XML DOM for an example of what trainwreck can come out of attempting something like that cross-language.
:4047667 Then it's no longer uniform.
And what about network?
You can't transmit C API through a network.
That's not the point.
You won't send SQL over the wire either.
Yeah, I don't know what the point is, really.
15:31
@Neil I'd assume parameters are sent along with the query instead of being copy-and-pasted in it, so there's no injection possible.
@RadekSlupik But you could.
I don't know what the point of SQL is.
@RadekSlupik No, of course not. It magically appears on the other end.
@CatPlusPlus the %2 operator in this case was not optimized automatically. I think if you do GPU computing you still need to avoid integer division manually.
You send a compiled statement.
It's a language for interfacing with relational databases.
15:31
Exactly.
@RadekSlupik Yeah, but you need a human readable thing.
Regardless of vendor, platform, host language.
@RadekSlupik Not really.
It's like saying "I don't know what the point of C++ is. You run machine code on your machine."
As I said, you can have an API that produces those compiled statements for you.
15:32
@EtiennedeMartel Yes, but more importantly, the database handles the injection, so it knows how to escape it properly. There's no risk that you try to escape it, and it ends up not being proper escaping for a certain database type.
Client libraries don't parse SQL.
Databases suck.
@RadekSlupik Yes. You can have it with SQL too. So what?
@RadekSlupik That's what Hibernate does.
@EtiennedeMartel SQL is human readable?
15:33
@RadekSlupik Now you're just trolling.
Ok, I see the point now. You don't grok SQL.
@RadekSlupik Is brainfuck human readable?
I HATE SQL.
@Nils Not really relevant.
15:33
@RadekSlupik We got that.
You should have said so earlier, jackass.
@Neil No, why?
Then we could have ignored you.
@RadekSlupik There you have it.
15:34
SQL is better than alternatives.
@Neil Here's the thing: there's no escaping required. The parameters are not part of the query.
I.e. nothing.
Or custom languages used only by one database.
And at least if you really dislike SQL you can let your ORM generate it for you.
@EtiennedeMartel Depends on how you define it "part of the query"
user784668
@RadekSlupik SQL HATES YOU.
15:35
@Fanael :D
Somebody has to handle insertion of those parameters. Maybe you, the programmer doesn't worry about it, but somebody has to do that
SQL is fine.
@Neil i.e. If you do SELECT * FROM table WHERE x = @name, name is not just brutally inserted in the query where @name is.
@EtiennedeMartel It's also optimized, I know
No, it goes "out-of-band".
15:36
Yes, but that's not the point I'm trying to make.
When you do prepared statements, parameters are most likely inserted after the query is parsed, so there's really no need for escaping anything.
SELECT * FROM table WHERE x = @name; @name = 'foo'
The statement is compiled first with placeholders. Then you bind name to @name. It's not textual replacement.
Query is unchanged.
Essentially, parameters are like "metadata" that you send with the query. They don't have to be escaped because they're not parsed by the query parser.
15:37
Woah I suddenly got +20 on that division answer. Was the question linked somewhere?
I don't know the innerworkings of SQL parsing, thank god. You guys seem to know about this a lot more than I'd ever hope to, so if you tell me there's no textual replacement, I have to take your word for it.
@CatPlusPlus Woah.
+20 as in 20 rep, or 200 rep?
200. Wow.
@Neil You don't have to. You can just check it :). Use a string like Bla"di'Bl;a
In the past 5 hours.
@sehe I know what it does, and how it optimizes. I guess I figured the parameters were escaped or something
15:39
Textual replacement is silly if you can, you know, not do it.
0
Q: What architecture to use to imply 2 behaviours in one class?

user1058588I am trying to make a class that will represent two different behaivours at the same time. Like the following: class IMouse { public: virtual void Walk() const = 0; }; class TSimpleMouse : public IMouse { public: void Walk() const; }; class IBat { public: virtual void Fly() const =...

@CatPlusPlus That was really difficult to read due to the excessive commas.
Heheh. "What's the best way to violate SRP?"
There are no excessive commas in that sentence.
Also it makes the whole thing safer, since you don't have to worry about properly applying complicated escape rules.
They're not extraneous. The grammar is completely borked if you remove them.
15:42
I forgot how it's called in English. I thought it might be "interjection", but it's something else.
Also found this:
In grammar, an ejaculation is an utterance that expresses a feeling outside of the normal language structure. Often, but not always, it is an exclamation, most often consisting of a single word, either an interjection or a profanity or both. Examples: * In English: ** The shout Hey!. ** The huh in "War! Huh! Good God, y'all!" ** "Glory to God!", "Glory be!", or "Praise the Lord!" In this context, this is known as a religious ejaculation, not to be confused with a religious profanity. Ejaculatory prayers -- one-liners that can be spoken at any time -- are quite common in the Roman Catho...
Parenthetical phrase.
Or maybe a vocative.
@RMartinhoFernandes I think we call it interjection or exclamation. Ejaculation? Srsly
@Grigor read the linked article, that usually helps — sehe 1 min ago
@sehe Wow. Our dumb translation of "interjection" ("interjeição") means something completely different. In fact, it means exactly the same as "ejaculation" as the cat linked above.
^^ oh man, why do people insist on getting answers spelled out and spoonfed. That's never gonna teach them stuff for real
user784668
The vocative case (abbreviated ) is the case used for a noun identifying the person (animal, object, etc.) being addressed and/or occasionally the determiners of that noun. A vocative expression is an expression of direct address, wherein the identity of the party being spoken to is set forth expressly within a sentence. For example, in the sentence, "I don't know, John," John is a vocative expression indicating the party who is being addressed, as opposed to the sentence "I don't know John," where John is the direct object of the verb "know." Historically, the vocative case was an eleme...
15:46
@Neil That would totally preclude the optimizations. Think about it. If it escaped the stuff, it would have to go back to square 1: parsing
You can't access members of bases in templates without this->, right?
lol the robot asks a question which doesn't have todo with some TMP SFINAE black magic
user784668
@RMartinhoFernandes You can, but you probably shouldn't.
I'm just sanity-checking.
Haven't slept at all today.
@Neil @CatPlusPlus Of course, he probably refers to if you can not do it being (in itself) unclear, and even more after the intteruption with , you know,. No problem for me, but I get the point
user784668
15:48
@RMartinhoFernandes You can if you access it through Base::.
@sehe What's unclear about it. :.
@Fanael Nah, you can't. Only on MSVC's broken two-phase lookup, maybe.
Ooh, PyPy 1.9.
user784668
2 mins ago, by Fanael
@RMartinhoFernandes You can if you access it through Base::.
@Fanael Yeah, or that.
user784668
15:52
@RMartinhoFernandes But other than that, no wai.
@CatPlusPlus "if you can not do it" is ambiguous. Can LISPify to one of: "(if you can) (not do it)"; or "(if you can not) (do it)".
Damn, I have a total brainfart. I don’t find the closed formula for finding how many numbers within a range [a, b] are divisible by k
all I find is a convoluted algorithm in O(k)
user784668
@RMartinhoFernandes When in doubt, use Lisp.
Divisible by = multiple of, right?
@RMartinhoFernandes The second one doesn't make sense in the context.
15:53
@RMartinhoFernandes Yes
@CatPlusPlus Stop it already
In other elated SQL news:
user784668
@RMartinhoFernandes Maybe.
That's what started the whole SQL discussion.
Slowbear.
:4048026 Repost! It's even atop the starboard, man!
My screen!
@KonradRudolph (b-a)/k, and then a check to see if you have to add one :/ Should be simple
15:54
1 message moved to bin
Is there a way to fmap tuples where each tuple element is the same type?
user784668
@Pubby Write a Functor instance for (a, a)?
@CatPlusPlus Thanks for being more to the point than others :)
Usually when I call "repost!", I'm usually just fooling around, but this time I was serious.
@Fanael Yeah, but I was hoping there was something that already exists
15:55
@RMartinhoFernandes Who reads starboards. My neck won't turn that way today
Also, sometimes I do work.
@sehe You were not working. You were reading TDWTF :P
@MooingDuck Yes, how do I check that? That’s the O(k) part in my algorithm
@RMartinhoFernandes I'm going to go easy on you, since 'you didn't sleep all day', but that misses the mark by a mile or some more.
I did sleep all day.
15:57
@RMartinhoFernandes I was working when you guys discussed a nice screenshot
@sehe Oh, ok. Sorry if I was rude.
@RMartinhoFernandes Huh?
Ok, I guess I wasn't rude, then.
@MooingDuck You forgot to star it
@RMartinhoFernandes Nope
@sehe I can't scroll it on the "show all stars" page, too lazy to figure out a way to do so
15:59
@KonradRudolph First saturate a to the next multiple of k, and b to the previous one.
@MooingDuck Click link (gets to transcript), drop down arrow, 'star as interesting' - done
@RMartinhoFernandes Is there really no easier way?
@sehe can't do that from the transcript
I'd have to go back 8 hours in this window :/
@KonradRudolph I can't come up with simple logic to properly process the "edges", so I think removing them is easier.
@RMartinhoFernandes Ok, how would you remove them? Just round a up to the next multiple and b down? Hmm, that might actually work.
16:02
(b/k) - ((a+k-1)/k)
Looks simplifiable.
@RMartinhoFernandes Uh, what’s that supposed to be?
@KonradRudolph Ooops, sorry, had an extra /k...
Beware, though, that assumes a half-open range (for a=b, gives 0).
@KonradRudolph It's the formula for my idea.
@RMartinhoFernandes frick that had just dawned on me
Hmm, I need to think about it, I currently don’t see what that’s even supposed to be
k*(b/k) rounds b down, and k*(a+k-1)/k rounds a up.
16:05
@KonradRudolph (num multiple of k less than b) - (num multiple of k less than a)
wouldn't it be b/k-a/k? no wait that's [a,b).
@MooingDuck Uh, of course
That contourdata website from TDWTF really needs to get their security act straight: contourdata.com/download (freaking frontpage extensions exposed?!)
@RMartinhoFernandes do you like soccer?
@bamboon I can only derive enjoyment from it if I'm watching it with friends.
Hi guys
16:07
I'm not sure if that counts as liking.
How do C++ implementations cope with the lambda->std::function conversion?
Back, did I miss any excellent points against my argument while I was gone?
@rubenvb Without doing anything special? It just works.
Just like any_old_function_object->std::function.
Is it compiler magic or is there a certain form of constructor arguments or templates for std::function that could be used to make it work for a custom function class?
@rubenvb Type erasure.
Magic, but not compiler magic.
16:09
Type "forgetting" is cheating.
@RMartinhoFernandes So it's just a std::function::function(T(Args...)) constructor or something.
@sehe ._.
What about stateful lambda's, ones with more than a function pointer?
The same thing as with functors.
@rubenvb A possible implementation is like this: there's a template <typename T> function(T&&) ctor. That creates a inner_fun<T> instance (which can hold a T) and stores it though a pointer to inner_fun_base, which is not a template.
16:10
Erase the type, forget about it.
@MooingDuck I used to think that too:
@rubenvb I never did figure out that magic either. Always bothered me.
@rubenvb inner_fun_base has a virtual operator() with the signature as the parameter of std::function, and that's what function::operator() calls.
Apr 24 at 6:46, by sehe
@sbi Do you mean by repeatedly /load-ing older posts and starring from there?
But as the ape explained, you can.
May 30 at 14:00, by sehe
Well, i don't think it matters, but I just starred a message from many months ago :)
@RMartinhoFernandes well, that is probably true for the majority of people. so, are you going to watch with friends tomorrow?
16:12
@MooingDuck Take a seat! I'm free and willing to explain!
IOW, bored.
You dropped it
Your jaw
@bamboon Tomorrow probably not. I think we'll watch Portugal against Germany on Sunday.
@RMartinhoFernandes I just got it, I figured it out
@RMartinhoFernandes but then inner_fun_base depends on the function signature, but is not a template?
@rubenvb In this hypothetical implementation it's nested in std::function, so it can use its template parameters without being a template itself.
16:15
@RMartinhoFernandes you switched to "hypothetical implementation"... sounds like a bad way to do it then?
@RMartinhoFernandes erm, I don't want to destroy your plans but that's tomorrow - saturday^^
@rubenvb No, I just added that because you could make it a template and keep it outside. But this way it helps in the explanation.
@bamboon Oh.
Damn.
so a template *::function with a nested non-template class to call whatever is stored. What happens to lambda-local variables?
@rubenvb They're in the lambda.
ie, the lambda's state?
user784668
Poland 1 - 0 Greece
so the compiler keeps the lambda around and all that is stored is a function pointer to a lambda?
lambda is basically a function object
im sorry for such a newbie question, I am using plain C, if I need to set a string to "" do I need to allocate 1 for the null pointer?
So at contourdata the developer is named Kevin and uses that as a login name too. The local tmp folder is hardcoded at c:\trak\users\kevin too... (source: contourdata.com/download/add%20files%20to%204997)
user784668
16:18
Lewandowski the scorer.
@PeteHerbertPenito yes
@PeteHerbertPenito yes.
@Fanael I've heard the screams, yes. Can we not do it on channel? :.
thank you guys
@PeteHerbertPenito also we have a C room for C questions
16:18
ah nice, good call @MooingDuck
@sehe You evil hacker.
@RMartinhoFernandes does my IDEone link have the vaguely right sort of idea behind the magic?
Time to open up a second pizza and finally start that Dredmor run I forgot about.
@CatPlusPlus Huh. So, picking up a key that you found on the street makes you a thief?
@sehe </sarcasm>
16:21
@MooingDuck Yeah, that's it.
@CatPlusPlus You're wrongly including sehe's comments in your sarcasm tag, resulting in a InvalidXmlException to be thrown.
@rubenvb No, it stores the whole lambda.
@CatPlusPlus Well, I'm tempted whether I can indeed logon to the RDP server at 63.115.16.67
@RMartinhoFernandes is there additional magic to avoid the allocator when given an actual naked function pointer?
@MooingDuck A std::function<void()> can hold both a function pointer and a function object later in its lifetime. No optimization seems possible here.
16:25
This is just so full of WIN:
To Install Tracker on Your Home Computer


Insert floppy disk
Double click Citrix.sea icon
Click Continue
Choose a place to save the Citrix program
Click Quit

You must now log on to the Internet
Go to where you saved Citrix and double click the Citrix folder
Double click The Citrix ICA Client Editor icon
In the Server field type in (PUT IP ADDRESS HERE)
Type in YOUR UserName
Type in YOUR Passwork
Go to the top ot the screen and click on the NetworkConnection button and select Window
In the Window Size frame deselect Use Default and select Use Full Screen
(see full text)
@ruben Got a compilable example: ideone.com/yU5cW
^ That's apparently the connection instructions for Mac users.
@RMartinhoFernandes sure there is, give it both a naked function pointer, and a (unique?) pointer to a function_impl_interface. It can alternate in it's lifetime
With comments ideone.com/Ly3Q8
@MooingDuck And how is that an optimization? You're still with virtual calls, except you're doing them by hand.
Welp, got 87 turns of -1HP.
16:30
@RMartinhoFernandes line 16, 28 std::move?
@MooingDuck // I'm going by value here for simplicity :)
@sehe What's a "passwork"?
@RMartinhoFernandes NO VIRTUAL DESTRUCTOR ON inner_fun_base
Just pass along :P
@MooingDuck I know :P
And I drank acid potion instead of a healing one.
Welp.
16:31
@RMartinhoFernandes avoids hitting the allocator
@MooingDuck And costs you an extra pointer in size everywhere.
It's a trade-off at best.
@EtiennedeMartel I bet it is kevin's last name
@RMartinhoFernandes I still can't think of a workaround, so you're right that it's not worth it
what happens if we delete myfunctionptr? That's gotta be UB right?
eh, my idea wouldn't have worked anyway. No optimization possible there.
I'm way to paranoid about hitting the allocator
16:34
@MooingDuck This is one reason why it's preferable to take function object arguments with types as template parameters instead of std::function.
I never did some up with a "clean" way to compare my unicode strings without it. Right now string comparison requires you to pass it a comparison_state object as a workaround :/
There's no point in std::functionizing a function object unless you're storing it.
Or binary interfaces.
@RMartinhoFernandes or need to pass a templated functionoid to a function that you want to not be in a header
2 mins ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
Or binary interfaces.
user784668
Is std::function used anywhere in the standard library?
16:39
@RMartinhoFernandes yes
@Fanael Not in interfaces.
All facilities accepting arbitrary function objects are templates.
@CatPlusPlus KoL?
@SamDeHaan Dungeons of Dredmor.
And dead again. I suck at roguelikes.
Ah, fun.
I like roguelikes, usually.
Need a good one for my mobile so that I can slack off better.
Oh please, don't name one.
16:44
@CatPlusPlus Have you managed to put any of the DLC skills to use ?
@CatPlusPlus I find only Werediggles useful.
@CatPlusPlus Oh, wait. I have that one. Just remembered. It's hard.
@SamDeHaan It's a roguelike.
If it's easy, it sucks.
True.
Anyone play Binding of Isaac?
I used to.
I suck at that one, too.
16:52
Just got the DLC, anything interesting in it?
I hate the mood in it.
The mood's definitely strange, to say the least.
I've run through it once and beaten the new final zone, but I'm not sure what else I'm missing
Straaaange, right.
Dungeons of Dredmor is quite the opposite, everything there is farily hilarious.
Looking at the WikiPedia page, this is apparently controversial, but I wouldn't call it a strength reduction. A strength reduction is when, in a loop, you reduce from, for instance, multiplication to addition, by adding to previous values in the loop. This is more of a peephole optimization, which compilers can do pretty reliably. — SomeCallMeTim 16 mins ago
._.
16:55
@Sasha don't post links like that in chat, see newbie hints on the sidebar
@SamDeHaan You beat it on first run?
WikiPedia
hippopotomonstrosesquipedaliophobia ?
@RMartinhoFernandes The DLC, yeah. Got a good combo. Technology 2.0 (super speedy laser) and Three Dollar Bill (random tear effects) => mom's contacts (freeze) on final boss.
Everything up to the final boss is still cake.
user784668
@CatPlusPlus That person should GTFO, this is strength reduction. Whether or not it's applied during peephole optimizations is completely irrelevant.
16:57
@SamDeHaan What is the name of the roguelike for your phone ? (Android I hope ^^ ?)
I'm still trying to figure out why the sudden influx of silly people.
@ScarletAmaranth Don't have one. "Need a good roguelike for my phone..."
@SamDeHaan " @CatPlusPlus Oh, wait. I have that one. Just remembered. It's hard. " ?
user784668
@CatPlusPlus Silly people tend to like commenting on highly upvoted answers to stupid, highly upvoted questions.
@ScarletAmaranth Dungeons of Dredmor
16:59
@SamDeHaan Oh, then why the weird "I have one" construct.

« first day (601 days earlier)      last day (4574 days later) »