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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)KH
keepcarrot [she/her] @ keepcarrot @hexbear.net
Posts
0
Comments
453
Joined
4 yr. ago

  • Is linear algebra older than 0? Hang on (no, it is not, formalised in 17th century)

    In my CS course, at least, it was treated as "engineering", so we did both linear algebra and C programming. For everyone counting from 1 was more natural and the C method had to be taught a few times throughout the course (starting with java loops, which wasn't used for malloc, OOP was probably the first unit anyone did for CS). As a habit it tended to stick even where we didn't really use it (or in languages that don't, e.g. lua), given how grueling C programming was and the other languages that were downstream of it.

    I guess you could analogise things like saying "17th century" is 1600-1699 (first century is 0001 to 0099, I guess), in CS you are counting the very start of a thing (e.g. how many apple-widths to get to the first apple), vs the more common how many apples to have gotten the first apple. Or something, idk,

    I'm drunk and avoiding housework, sorry

  • I'm not entirely sure what it means enough to give a summary.

    The first usage that pops into my mind is when someone has said a silly joke regarding your situation and you want to acknowledge the joke but also move on quickly.

    Second usage is someone has suggested something, you want to say you understand but you have a different opinion.

    thonk

  • I assume you allow everyone into your home, no questions asked? Maybe you do, but frankly most people at least vet their guests through a combination of social connections and history, and rarely is a place "entirely open" or "entirely closed". Being excluded from a place because the gatekeepers of that place prefer the company of someone else who doesn't like you is perfectly normal and ultimately they have to make a choice between you being at an event or their closer friend.

    This isn't to say I agree with every banning or exclusion, but it's perfectly normal behaviour.

  • You are just a 5e hater.

    Yes (though mostly a 3.5 hater, though hate is probably way too strong a word, more like a "I wish 80% of RPG players played something else") (I haven't played 5e, played a bunch of 4e)