If I organize a big Merveilles Seattle meetup in November, like the one in 2021, who's interested? :merveilles:
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@neauoire would love to be there to meet you all! :tealheart: but not likely Iβll be able to make it because Iβll be disappearing for a bit to usher in a new addition to our family around then. πΆ @neauoire Nodding along pretty interested but my mind exploded when it got to the **200 lines of ANSI C** part. What a beautiful program and language. Cracked tiller-head, we can't have a new one machined just yet, so.. we found a 5$ option.
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Fizzbuzz in #Modal, but first you have to invent the concept of numbers. @neauoire yéééé y sont sur bandcamp en plus :tealheart: merci de la recommendation! On the docks at 5am to intercept the Greek mafia unloading the ships, to get in on that contraband kalamata.
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@neauoire I would happily mail you A or S Tier Sriracha. Goose is good in my opinion, but not the best. @neauoire He has one of the most unique, and refined aesthetics. I love how well he is able to craft his visual and auditory style in unison.
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@neauoire ive been doing allot of wierd C preprocessor usage lately and reading gur page for modal, its wild to see a system that is so similar yet so much nicer and more flexible (gur way paren matching works / getting around it is a large bit of my cpp efforts rn), really curious how much would need to be done to add hex/binary escapes to modal to allow it to do unmatched parens + potentially allow it to operate on binary data (a dissassembler in modal would be REALLY cool) I think I realized what attracts me so much in Modal. It seems to exist precisely at the intersection between Orca and and something like an OISC. It's both a string system that has no hidden state whatsoever, and a runtime with a single operation, Replace. The #Uxn assembler, but in #Tokipona, by @soxfox42.
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We are completing the remaining items on our list of pre-departure projects, and will soon begin provisioning for our sail to the 60th Parallel North. Over the winter, we've improved the ship in more ways than I can recall, from strengthening critical parts, replacing experienced pieces of the rigging and simplifying the habitat's life systems β With the hope that these will make for a safer journey. I love how Juneau is built right at the base of the mountains, it reminds me of Shimoda, Japan. We have finally received the last parts we had machined, once those are installed we're ready to cast off and head to Alaska! These were our old chainplates covers, they're a bit dammaged but it doesn't really matter much, we had the slot enlarged to fit our new chainplates. Another day of rigging, re-bedding the chainplates cover, on a recored deck. |