> There have been a few studies that found that the group of people consuming child abuse media and the group that actually molests and rapes children doesn't have too much overlap, contrary to what one might expect.
Do you have some links for this? I've anecdotally heard it both ways.
> "Lists, which are a generalization of graphs, are extraordinarily well supported by Lisp."
I always thought of linked lists as a special kind of graph, where each node except the head and tail had exactly one incoming edge and one outgoing edge. What's a better way to think of this in terms of LISP?
I picked up on the reference to Stockfighter, but does anyone know if the walking machine learning game mentioned at the end of the article exists? Sounds like a fun game.
I don't know how many books there are on those topics. A lot of the data structures in higher level competitive programming problems have pretty niche uses. It might be best to look at papers instead. Here's one on the Fenwick/Binary Indexed Tree:
Do you have some links for this? I've anecdotally heard it both ways.
https://olemiss.edu/depts/ncjrl/pdf/I%20C%20A%20C/2013%20-%2... seems to imply the opposite.