Return Styles: Pseud0ch, Terminal, Valhalla, NES, Geocities, Blue Moon.

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slipping source code into real life

Name: Anonymous 2011-07-24 9:58

I try to get away with slipping in valid pseudo code into everyday conversation e.g.

"while true, the babboon did have a long face"

How many can you do without being rumbled ?

Name: Anonymous 2011-07-24 10:05

FORTH backwards I speak like.
Difficult it is not.

Name: Anonymous 2011-07-24 14:54

You mean you try and get away with autism? You're not fooling anyone OP

Name: Anonymous 2011-07-24 15:04

ITT: OP realizes he is not real but is really a self-modifying computer program.

Name: Anonymous 2011-07-24 15:14

>>4
ITT
Go back to the imageboards, ``please''!!

Name: Anonymous 2011-07-24 17:16

>>5
/prog/ is an imageboard.

Name: Anonymous 2013-09-01 13:24


The next wave of excitement in set theory came around 1900, when it was discovered that Cantorian set theory gave rise to several contradictions, called antinomies or paradoxes. Bertrand Russell and Ernst Zermelo independently found the simplest and best known paradox, now called Russell's paradox: consider "the set of all sets that are not members of themselves", which leads to a contradiction since it must be a member of itself, and not a member of itself. In 1899 Cantor had himself posed the question "What is the cardinal number of the set of all sets?", and obtained a related paradox. Russell used his paradox as a theme in his 1903 review of continental mathematics in his The Principles of Mathematics.

Name: Anonymous 2013-09-01 15:41


A derived binary relation between two sets is the subset relation, also called set inclusion. If all the members of set A are also members of set B, then A is a subset of B, denoted A ⊆ B. For example, {1,2} is a subset of {1,2,3} , but {1,4} is not.

Don't change these.
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