"Klaatu barada nikto" is a phrase originating from the 1951 science fiction film The Day the Earth Stood Still. "Klaatu" refers to a name of the humanoid alien protagonist of the film. Klaatu (Michael Rennie) commanded Helen Benson (Patricia Neal) that, were anything to happen to him, she must utter the phrase to the robot Gort (Lockard Martin). In response, Gort relented from destroying the Earth and resurrected Klaatu from death.
Usage in the film
Edmund H. North, who wrote The Day the Earth Stood Still, also created the alien language used in the film, including the phrase "Klaatu b...
@DomagojPandža Hello to you to. Welcome to SO Chat, kittty
@ScarletAmaranth Fire shields are for pussies. Real Nords use Steadfast Wards they learned from Tolfdir at the College of Winterhold, the best school of magic in all of Skyrim.
So I read that Microsoft is really showing commitment to open source these days. One of the highlights being LibUV:
> ibuv is a new platform layer for Node. Its purpose is to abstract IOCP on Windows and libev on Unix systems. We intend to eventually contain all platform differences in this library
@sehe He was out in the garden (still on a leash since we got him recently so it isn't advisable to let him roam yet). Somehow, I startled him by shoving something aside with my foot. He jumped about the height of the laundry mill.
Naturally I felt sorry and risked my life calming him down and removing the strap (from the leash).
(dammit. English is hard once I get 2 inches out of the center of my usual jargon file)
@RMartinhoFernandes That wildly contradicts the goals (zimbu.org/design/goals), e.g. bullet 6: Tools support
Progamming tools are essential. The language should make it easy, or at least possible, to have tools do such things as:
- reformatting
- auto-indenting
- refactoring
- automatic completion
- looking up documentation
All those would be enormously helped with balanced braces/brackets (well, except perhaps looking up docs)
@RadekdaknokSlupik You haven't even seen vimscript yet, the other child of Bram Molenaar. The only reprieve there is that it is pragmatic and fits vim. In a way.
@RadekdaknokSlupik It doesn't look as bad. It has an awful lot of Perl semblance. And it has real trouble dealing with any kind of datatype/ structure beyond ints or strings.
> If one has a very nice language that is too slow, it won't be used. And "too slow" quickly means slower than others. That is why C and C++ are often favored above Python and Java.
@RMartinhoFernandes I can envision that. Hell, I recognize it. Taught myself XLST 2.0 with XSL/FO once. Oh god.
I was fairly glad I had it unlearned, till last friday, my boss asks me to redo a XSL before wednesday (it needs to go into production then ... GOD morons).