1 line with over nine thousand characters in it. Valid Perl one-liner, of course.
(Oh, wow, I've accidentally clicked on "Reply" when just typed "1" and seems that it triggered some FORCED SPAM PROTECTION and got me b& in an instant.)
Name:
Anonymous2008-01-11 7:36
>>5
yeah, if your message is just an `N' yuo get banned.
Name:
Anonymous2008-01-11 7:40
Oh really? I've got to try that out! See you in a month.
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Anonymous2008-01-11 8:16
>>7
It's not only a month - I just got my ISP's proxy server permanently banned from all boards.
>>28
No, Emacs is coded in LISP and run through Emacs.
Name:
Anonymous2008-01-11 17:08
How many LOC have you written in 2008?
Over 1000
Name:
Anonymous2008-01-11 17:24
>>4
I'd wager you are a horrible programmer. You shouldn't be proud of the lines of code you wrote, but rather of the lines of code you avoided writing. Every line of code not written is a correct one. More lines of code is a bad thing, not a good thing.
Good programmers write small amounts of code. Of course, the requirements must still be met, though the solution with less code is a better solution than the one with more.
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Anonymous2008-01-11 17:34
>>31
He didn't say what he wrote or how many programs he wrote.
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Anonymous2008-01-11 17:37
>>31
Okay, then. This thread is now about how many LOC you didn't write.
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Anonymous2008-01-11 17:38
>>32
I know, but given the fixed amount of time in 2007, 50K lines is a lot, regardless. If he wrote 5K 100 line programs, then I'd argue they must have been sloppy programs for him to write that many in the given time. I don't think that changes anything.
Name:
Anonymous2008-01-11 17:40
I didn't write 300 lines. At the [b][u]E N T E R P R I S E[/b][/u] we use [b][u]E X T R E M E P R O G R A M M I N G[/b][/u], the other guy was programming.