With the first batch of people to receive the Not a Robot badge, I was surprised to see Community receiving one as well. Does this mean I will be able to meet the fabled Community in person?
Is it possible to match an addition in form of (?<a>[01]+)\s*\+\s*(?<b>[01]+)\s*=\s*(?<c>[01]+), where a + b == c (as in binary addition) must hold?
These should match:
0 + 0 = 0
0 + 1 = 1
1 + 10 = 11
10 + 111 = 1001
001 + 010 = 0011
1111 + 1 = 10000
1111 + 10 = 10010
These should not match:
...
@PeeHaa my plan is to make is so that instead of just stripping @mentions, we go and see if we can resolve a twitter handle from the user's profile page on the main site, use that if we can and just remove the @ if not
dat-moment when after a while you realize plotly and plotly.js are actually two separate things, and that if console tells you Plotly.plot is not a function, it's because it's fucking not a function.
\d{9,11} doesn't work because if it has hyphens, it returns an error. The only reason to allow a string length of 11 is in case the person wants to break it up with hyphens
I don't want to codify the regex for 111-11-1111 or 111111111, easier to just check that the string has a number and that it's 9 or 11 characters long, in my opinion
You can use PHP as a C preprocessor. The advantages are:
very similiar syntax, so syntax highlighting works.
<? and ?> are not used in standard C (with non-standard C, the only thing that gets broken is old GCC extension operator that returns min/max)
it's rich in libraries.
it's turing complet...
I was just a bit surprised. Last time I played "let's build a computer", I had to have a 1000W psu. maybe the pieces I were looking at were drastically inefficient...