Looks like Chrome is adding a new image lazy loading browser api. Honestly, bout time.
@Absinthe
Yep! Like I said, my implementation treats the board as functionally infinite as cells grow towards the borders
@raining_night
Can't get around them dying, but I don't think they should suffer for several reasons
I borrowed this one from codewars
Snail Sort
Given an n x n array, return the array elements arranged from outermost elements to the middle element, traveling clockwise.
array = [[1,2,3],
[4,5,6],
[7,8,9]]
snail(array) #=> [1,2,3,6,9,8,7,4,5]
For better understanding, please follow the numbers of the next array consecutively:
array = [[1,2,3],
[8,9,4],
[7,6,5]]
snail(array) #=> [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9]
This image will illustrate things more clearly:
NOTE: The idea is not sort the elements from the lowest value to the highest; the idea is to traverse the 2-d array in a clockwise snailshell pattern.
@freemo
I'm less concerned with en masse slaughter and more maximally reducing harm.
I should clarify that I'm not entirely against private gun ownership; like you said, recent history and modern history speak to how an outright ban ends up working. I'm just hesitant when it comes to adding lethal force to any conflict.
@freemo
Well, gun culture is different in the states, and I can only imagine that if one lone gunman opened fire during a protest, a few more shots might follow from police. There would definitely be a panic and bystanders would be hurt.
I'm not sure it follows that all protestors who want to use lethal force would organize themselves into a separate space.
@freemo
That's valid and I agree. I'm concerned about those who want to protest but don't want to use lethal force. They'd be caught in the crossfire.
@freemo
There are trade offs, imo. otoh, it's valid to think that common people having access to firearms would deter a violent government. oto, the Chinese government is already using lethal force; I can only imagine how much it would escalate if both sides had ready access to firearms.
#toyprogrammingchallenge #GameOfLife
This was a fun one! Written in Ruby, I decided on treating the board size as infinite by expanding it whenever the first or last row or column has an alive cell.
The entry file is game_of_life.rb in the root directory, and for simplicity, it just runs the "small exploder" pattern instead of taking an argument for initial state.
@Absinthe
Related to #toyprogrammingchallenge, I thought this was a good read!
https://jvns.ca/blog/2019/11/20/what-makes-a-programming-exercise-good/
@Samkupar
It's a bit non-intuitive at first. When you search, unless you're searching for a full user name (like mine, @jump_spider@goto.org), you can only search for what your instances *knows* about. So if you're looking for a particular hashtag or someone, and your instance hasn't federated with any toots that have it, then it won't appear. When searching a full username though, which includes the instance domain, the search knows to try to federate directly with that instance.
@mastodon
#ActuallyPsychotic <> programming autodidact and polyglot <> meditation enthusiast
Avatar by Leanna Schwartz,
lrschwartz90@gmail.com
Header image by @cesya@birdshite.monster