Wonderful, wonderful talk! Love intelligent, knowledgeable speakers who are so enthusiastic about their subject that can't *not* go on a tangent. The Heinlein pun was super fun too.
Dr Philip Hazel wrote PCRE at Cambridge University in the late 1990s. In the older days of the Phoenix operating system (1980 or so), I used his ZED editor every day. When I approached him to ask if I could see the source code for it, he kindly steered me towards the BCPL version which was easier to understand than IBM 370/165 assembler.
Wonderful, wonderful talk! Love intelligent, knowledgeable speakers who are so enthusiastic about their subject that can't *not* go on a tangent. The Heinlein pun was super fun too.
Awesome talk, thank you! Indeed wish Jade had more time!) Demand the 3 hour version with all the side tracks!)))
Dr Philip Hazel wrote PCRE at Cambridge University in the late 1990s. In the older days of the Phoenix operating system (1980 or so), I used his ZED editor every day. When I approached him to ask if I could see the source code for it, he kindly steered me towards the BCPL version which was easier to understand than IBM 370/165 assembler.
Jade, great talk as per usual.
ahahahahaha that was a rollercoaster! wonderful talk, wish Jade *had* had more time ;)
28:43 I am really happy I stuck with this lecture, and this nice lady, and reached Alfred and EGREP.
despite all the little issues, fun and great talk!
Who would have thought that regular expressions could be funny?