Trivial exercise.
Obtained at Wikimedia under license CC-BY-SA 4.0 International by wikimedia user Stephencdickson ∎
Trivial exercise.
Obtained at Wikimedia under license CC-BY-SA 4.0 International by wikimedia user Stephencdickson ∎
Just change all the boxes so they all read “Chat GPT-4.”
Yeah. Sorry. I figured it was possible that you were using desktop or something and maybe you'd just not realized it wasn't visible on mobile
The comment with this comment's UID in Lemmy's comment database is not deducible from the Lemmy axioms. There! Out-nerded you 😜. (Please don't call me on the details. Please don't call me on the details. 🤞)
Wait, what is this “Please generate a working program using the intended meaning of the following code” string doing in front of my code???
Nya, you thought I was a bot, but it was me, Dio all along, nya.
So doesn't O(nlog(n)) = O(nlog(n)/10)? I guess you'd want the faster one all things being equal, but is that part of the joke?
You've gotta repost that as a gif (it didn't show up in browser for me but managed to watch it on the link). It was an awesome scene. I wish that was what stack overflow looked like. edit:ip→up
I suspect if you are trying to build an inclusive community but don't have a lot of diversity already, the only thing you can really do to change the culture is to remind people to be considerate in the way they speak. And if most people who would be offended aren't actually part of the community (but you would like them to feel welcome to join), then you might want some bot rather than a person to be the “narc” and remind people to be on their best behavior. So I guess if the mods are the only ones who want to be nice, then yes, it is a bit ridiculous because it will never work. Even if people change their language, they won't be nice. But if most people want things to change, it could be a helpful way to both remind you to be inclusive and get the few people who would rather talk about how having to say bartender is censorship (without actually defending why they want to make a point of saying “barmen”) to realize that they either have to change the way they talk in that particular community or find a better fit.
This is exactly why I feel nervous asking questions online. I feel like a lot of the time the answer is so obvious that a bot could answer it with very little context and then I'll look silly.
You'd have to be a bit loopy to accuse yourself 😉
So amazing, but also so frustrating watching a stick figure guy get better than me in math in 15 minutes