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DougMerritt

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DougMerritt
·3 か月前·議論
Although its core is low level, PostScript is a pretty good language by some metrics; it's often been claimed to be a (supposedly accidental) dialect of Forth with some powerful features bolted on.

What makes Zmachine.ps so bad? Certain programming issues, or are you going off a general feel?
DougMerritt
·3 か月前·議論
Years ago, somewhere I read that children have a genetically-based urge to avoid bitter flavors, since they may signal natural poisons, whereas adults can judge better, so the urge is lessened.

(And even if that source were true, that wouldn't make the genetic effect an absolute; it would depend on individual genetics and the variable expression of those genes. And probably on the individual's experience, either as a child or as an adult.)
DougMerritt
·3 か月前·議論
> we shouldn't judge coffee based on months-old pre-ground grocery store roasts.

Next you'll be claiming that we shouldn't judge sushi based on months-old grocery store sushi.
DougMerritt
·3 か月前·議論
> I am now just going to go through the (single file) of code and just fix it myself.

That's front page news, in this era.
DougMerritt
·3 か月前·議論
It's a humorous reference to a (in-)famous serious post by Stallman, see https://www.gnu.org/gnu/incorrect-quotation.en.html
DougMerritt
·3 か月前·議論
1. It says it is $8/month, which is not mentioned on the github page, so I had been thinking it was free in addition to being AGPL-3.0; it links to https://snapify.it/ which is where I see the fee.

2. It says "for everyone" but looks like it might be Linux-specific, and it doesn't say anything about which OSes are supported.
DougMerritt
·3 か月前·議論
This appears to be mercifully shorter and less intimidating than the must-have bible, "Curtis Roads. The Computer Music Tutorial. MIT Press, Cambs, MA, 1996".

It says it was originally published by Wiley in 2009, and the rights reverted to the author in 2025, whereupon the author released it on the net for free.
DougMerritt
·3 か月前·議論
I think he should fix that, but meanwhile see: https://almightylisp.com/book/essentials
DougMerritt
·5 か月前·議論
It's not uncommon to have a regression test for compilers that are written in their own language (e.g. some C compilers): compile each new version with itself, then use that to compile itself again, then use the result on unit tests or whatever, which should yield the same results as before.

The point being that determinism of a particular form is expected and required in the instances where they do that.

(I'm not arguing for or against that, I'm simply saying I've seen it in real life projects over the years.)
DougMerritt
·5 か月前·議論
That's an excellent question, but the answer would depend on goals and the evaluation system used.

It seems to me that CEOs have a different opinion than anyone who cares instead about actual people.
DougMerritt
·6 か月前·議論
SO is the website Stack Overflow.
DougMerritt
·7 か月前·議論
Life mimics art.
DougMerritt
·9 か月前·議論
Yep; this has frustrated me for two decades.
DougMerritt
·9 か月前·議論
For the languages that we westerners regard as having very exotic grammars -- not like Chinese, which is comparatively straightforward, but like the aboriginal languages of Australia -- AFAIK there's no experience on such subjects yet.

For the world's most common/famous languages (English, Mandarin, Portuguese, etc) there's every reason to think that it's just a question of how much training data is available for training up an LLM.

In particular note that the Chinese experiments with their Deepseek LLM technology does well with both Mandarin and English, which all by itself is fairly illustrative.

If "exotic" grammars turned out to pose a major problem for LLMs, that would possibly challenge some of the most mainstream theories about linguistics, so I regard that as unlikely.
DougMerritt
·9 か月前·議論
And it's not even a full moon.
DougMerritt
·10 か月前·議論
You're arguing with people talking about how things are currently by talking about how things could be or should be and how people should change how things are.

That can be a great topic on its own, but it's not the same topic others are discussing.

And unless I missed it, you didn't say "let's switch the topic", you just went off in your own direction.
DougMerritt
·2 年前·議論
Lisp CPUs had type bits stored with values, but I can't think of any typed CPUs still in use. What are you thinking of?