« first day (4052 days earlier)      last day (1125 days later) » 

01:41
@nwp You need to install SSL certificate on the server.
I have spend quite a lot of times installing SSL and other security related things on my servers/email servers.
Unfortunately, the internet is like the worst neighbourhood in the real world - always thieves, gangsters and rapist ready to break into your property websites to transpass, maybe steal your valuables and possibly violate you in other ways.
Wish me luck, writing my parser for the 4th time now :`) Wish if I'd have left sone comments while writing the code
02:00
Good luck, so you can get it right before the 11th time.
 
2 hours later…
04:03
Key board warriors tend to be not very physically strong or brave. That's why I never had to worry about my online buddies enemies in real life. My friend called me super fit, maybe she meant that I am super fit for a fattie. Either ways, I enjoy to see 'engineers', 'architechs' or 'directors' moving backwards when I move close. Surely, an engineer who can build house and bridge on top of writing code is not going to be afraid those who can only move mouth and fingers ...
 
10 hours later…
13:53
Holy smokes. There's something I didn't know about Boost Serialization. Reason #4678 to stay away from wchar_t... — sehe 13 secs ago
@Agent_A It's not "writing again" if you have access to the old code/comments :)
Also, my fingers itching. I hear "grammar" and I think "let me see it"
(Bad jokes, reached to far and also misread adding a negation. Oh my. Need coffee)
@nwp Reality has always been at odds with that ideal. It's just a good orientation/guideline and hopefully with good moderation/scoring it will mostly work. Which it clearly does.
nwp
nwp
I'd say I'd totally buy you a coffee after covid, but I wonder if "after covid" is just a euphemism for "never" which makes the whole idea seem more insulting than nice.
After the covid epi/pandemic, then :)
nwp
nwp
I do like that ideal and take issue with SO not caring for it enough.
I think I'll return to my CYOA language. It has an ANTLR grammar you could look at :P
I remember getting royally screwed by ad-hoc lexer tokens.
Now "CYOA language" sounds much more intriguing than "ANTLR grammar" :)
nwp
nwp
14:11
There is a 1 hour GDC talk where they go through dialog techniques. TL;DW: Making dynamic dialogues using if/else chains is bad because you need brain power to maintain its logic. So instead you write a list of (condition, action) and "the system" will look through all options, check the conditions, pick the best one (most conditions) and does the action.
So I set out to implement that in TypeScript and mostly succeeded. It's not that difficult to make, but it's a lot of fun to me at least.
Annoyingly most people don't seem to see the benefit.
It feels like the classical declarative > imperative applied to richer (non-formal) context
nwp
nwp
Maybe. The promised improvement (or what I turned it into in my head) is that a writer will wake up in the middle of the night and think "[character] should say [x] in situation [y]". If you have the list syntax they can simply add a line, resulting in awesome dialog. If they have to sift through if/else chains to find the correct location(s) they will just go back to sleep instead.
I have the same with moderately complex business logic :)
So in legacy code, you will often see me adding "soft-asserts" to check such predicates (often invariants) until my understanding is accurate enough that I can refactor.
It's also not dissimilar to (a set of) state machines. Where you get sparse a matrix of events/actions where you could have to pick the nearest from the grid if the current state is not specified.
(the elephant in the room is how to specify the 'nearness' metric)
nwp
nwp
Thankfully they spoiled that in the talk so I didn't have to come up with it. I didn't get far enough to tell if it actually works as advertised though and there is a chance other complications will arise.
I think in natural language application, any measure of "intelligent enough" nearness can end up wow-ing the reader/user. Because humans are easily tricked into supposing intelligence (see phone bots, Alexa/Siri etc)
Also, see the many video games that are immersive despite not being realistic. And the tendency of people to mistake Hollywoord movies for "real world" (or propaganda for news, etc)
nwp
nwp
14:27
I'll probably just end up spending all my motivation on trying to make TypeScript do cool tricks again.
This touches on the importance of motivation of the receiver to believe. With enough motivation, not a lot is needed. See e.g. this hilarious bot autonomously exposing a phone scammer: youtube.com/watch?v=coNjpBa5m1E
@nwp The bane of our existence. I feel this is my version of "Zen Gardening"
 
4 hours later…
18:45

« first day (4052 days earlier)      last day (1125 days later) »