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Hope you and the missus get well soon and you get good support while stuck in the big Quarantine.
Antibodies to the rescue...
A Fine is a Tax for doing something wrong
A Tax is a Fine for doing something good.
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Sorry to hear this Paul hope you recover quickly
"We can't stop here - this is bat country" - Hunter S Thompson - RIP
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Sorry to read that. I hope you feel better soon.
Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make four. If that is granted, all else follows.
-- 6079 Smith W.
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Keep talking to her. As soon as she can't finish a sentence (or you), call the hospital. Keep warm; the immune-system raises your temperature because it slows intruders down.
Get better soon.
Bastard Programmer from Hell
If you can't read my code, try converting it here[^]
"If you just follow the bacon Eddy, wherever it leads you, then you won't have to think about politics." -- Some Bell.
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Take care of yourself. Keep warm and gargle, preferably with a well aged single malt.
But most of all, get better quick.
"Time flies like an arrow. Fruit flies like a banana."
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why is a lawyer wearing scrubs?
no wonder depressed...
or was it because an other 240k people that also died - and that's just from covid.
pestilence [ pes-tl-uh ns ] noun
1. a deadly or virulent epidemic disease. especially bubonic plague.
2. something that is considered harmful, destructive, or evil.
Synonyms: pest, plague, CCP
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I'm throwing rocks at people in the park later in his honor.
Also because if I can't be happy why should they?
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Sander Rossel wrote: if I can't be happy why should they?
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Who is this name alike?!
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R.I.P. He played the part well!
When you talk, you are only repeating what you already know.
But if you listen, you may learn something new.
--Dalai Lama
JaxCoder.com
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inoperable brain tumor, which was subsequently revealed to be metastatic lung cancer that had spread to his liver, spine, and jaw. (Wikipedia)
Damn. That sucks.
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Thanks, I just made a trip back to my teen-age with A-Ha.
Sam had a hell of a vocal range, quite impressive.
"Five fruits and vegetables a day? What a joke!
Personally, after the third watermelon, I'm full."
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Take back praise for twin (4)
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Yep!
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I'm quarantined and now would be a perfect time for me to submit some articles, but I've been pretty uninspired with coding lately so I've only managed a few tips and tricks.
I think it's because I was burning the candle at both ends during my last coding jag.
Also because I jumped the parsing shark. I really can't improve on GLR parsing. It's already as good parsing as it gets.
I'd like to cover some of the useful but dusty corners of the .NET BCL/"SDK" (core/std) and I have with some IPC and singleton stuff, but I'm just not finding anything fun that is not obsolete - probably somewhat due to the fact that I took a sabbatical from C# coding between .NET 3.5, and like .NET 4.71 so it has been years.
Now that I'm not creating parser generators and regex engines I don't really know what to do with myself.
I'd also like to create some more code generators but it looks like most of the stuff outside of parsing that you'd really want to do codegen for has already been handled by other major tools
Meh.
Real programmers use butterflies
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Perhaps you can answer the question, "What is the fastest way to parse a language/syntax into an execuatable?" I believe I know the answer, but I'm curious what your intellect has for a solution.
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Do you mean compile one?
And what do you mean by fastest? The fastest to compile? Assembly.
Real programmers use butterflies
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Come up with a method that parses and compiles faster than your previous techniques.
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I suppose I could optimize or rewrite the CodeDOM Go! Kit - it's got a parser and something like a compiler in it.
The parser is already hand tuned, but the compilation can take awhile.
Real programmers use butterflies
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I once created what I will call an 'Object Oriented Parser/Compiler' that didn't use tables, and I believe it had the flexibility to handle any grammar you wanted (because the parser/compiler had to be hand generated for each grammar). Because of the object nature of the result, spitting out assembly at the end would not have been too difficult. I never finished it because other projects were more important. I suspect it would be the fastest approach possible to parsing/compiling, but I never developed it far enough, nor do I have near the expertise to be able to say so with certainty.
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As you might be getting a bit rusty take a look at Rust[^]
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