does dry running have any meaning on a function that is inherently stochastic?
- 1 post
- 88 comments
- 3 months
the face is switched yeah, that’s what I am referring to
You sure? this would be quite simple to whip up in photoshop
you can but then it’s not “British spelling”
it’s spelled ‘forty’ in british english too
“You’re doing it wrong ya doofus”
- FiskFisk33@startrek.websiteto
Programmer Humor@programming.dev•POV: The highest paid engineer at your company gets fired
8 monthsNone of those things describe a good programmer
I wouldn’t trust a guy letting their battery go that low either
https://www.npmjs.com/package/is-even
don’t look at the weekly downloads if you are faint of heart.
isEven(0) -> true; isEven(Num) -> isOdd(Num-1). isOdd(0) -> false; isOdd(Num) -> isEven(Num-1).
- FiskFisk33@startrek.websiteto
Programmer Humor@programming.dev•I got to avoid memory management for quite some time
10 monthsit is good to learn C, even if you’re never gonna touch it again. It teaches you what other languages abstract away.
fun fact, the RFC introducing NAT calls it a “short-term solution”
wait, does windows jit compile C++ ??
but it removed half the point…?
i know this is a joke, but i find it quite interesting those two words have completely different etymologies.
Grave as in burial site comes from an old proto indo european word for “dig”, while grave as in serious comes from french.
I mean, sure, you won’t stay alive for very long with a stopped heart.
I meant like, when someones heart stops and gets restarted again with cpr or a defibrillator or something. People often call that being dead, and coming back.

One could say he did the wrong thing for the right reasons