"Happy Chocolate Christmas". You know you're in for a treat when your latest video is starting by irreverently downgrading two religious times of year :) I like the NCoT transitions as well. :)
I believe the Olivetti M20 had an Easter egg that could invoke an animated bug walking across the screen. I don't know how it was activated though. Some strange key combination.
There is a great Easter Egg in MS Excel, version 2000 I think, you enter a formula into a certain cell and the a racing game pops up with the name of the programmes written on the road.
I pronounce GIF with a hard G also, but I prefer to pronounce GNU as Guh-New. If the one thing they changed about Python was to add a keyword such as `end` to terminate a given block instead of having significant whitespace, I would actually use it. I mostly use Bash for simple things, and beyond a certain level of complexity I use either C or C++, depending on how I feel that day.
I think you made half the point about the recursion Easter egg in the C book... Weren't you supposed to follow one of the pages which sends you back to the original, thus making a recursion joke?
The joke is that the page of the book within the index where it points you to where in the book the term is referenced lists that page of the index as a referenced page.
"Happy Chocolate Christmas". You know you're in for a treat when your latest video is starting by irreverently downgrading two religious times of year :) I like the NCoT transitions as well. :)
7:10 Yeah that's rather disturbing.
Didn't know about most of them, thanks for collating them together.
"Explicit is better than implicit" coming from a language with dynamic typing is kinda ironic, ngl
I believe the Olivetti M20 had an Easter egg that could invoke an animated bug walking across the screen. I don't know how it was activated though. Some strange key combination.
There is a great Easter Egg in MS Excel, version 2000 I think, you enter a formula into a certain cell and the a racing game pops up with the name of the programmes written on the road.
I'm sure you didn't mean to say Brian Kernigan wrote the language and not just the book
I may want to have a look into the C64 easter egg, do you mind if I download your video and show that scene in a video examining this?
Sure, no problem.
I pronounce GIF with a hard G also, but I prefer to pronounce GNU as Guh-New. If the one thing they changed about Python was to add a keyword such as `end` to terminate a given block instead of having significant whitespace, I would actually use it. I mostly use Bash for simple things, and beyond a certain level of complexity I use either C or C++, depending on how I feel that day.
I think you made half the point about the recursion Easter egg in the C book... Weren't you supposed to follow one of the pages which sends you back to the original, thus making a recursion joke?
The joke is that the page of the book within the index where it points you to where in the book the term is referenced lists that page of the index as a referenced page.
Try RANDOMIZE USR 1234 on a 48k Spectrum...
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This video __ pretty cool?