• @0x30507DE
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    42 months ago

    English, C++; Z80, 6502, and 45GS02 assembly, some SQL, VHDL, a bit of Python and Verilog, BASIC65, bash, CP/M ED, and a few other odds and ends

    • Lvxferre
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      12 months ago

      I get that you’re probably joking, but note that calling C++ etc. “languages” is at most synecdoche. A really common one, but still a figure of speech.

      (Language has multiple functions; referential, directive, expressive, phatic, metalinguistic, poetic, metalinguistic etc. Those instruction sets used when programming are at best directive speech only, as they’re basically issuing commands to something.)

      • @0x30507DE
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        2 months ago

        I am fully aware, I speak nerd and computer.

        The computers speak back. It’s a good time.

        I might be going insane?

        I’m also ripping off being inspired by another comment.

        Poe’s law strikes again?

        • Lvxferre
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          22 months ago

          I got that you were probably joking. However, I’ve seen so many times people equating the human systems of communication with the computer instruction sets that… well, sorry for the knee-jerk reaction.

          (Last time that I saw someone genuinely thinking that C++, Fortran, Python etc. were the same deal as Mandarin, English, Spanish etc., the muppet in question brought up code comments for an “ackshyually lol lmao”. Yup.)

          • @0x30507DE
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            2 months ago

            I… I…

            I have no words.

            How someone could genuinely believe that is beyond me.

            • Lvxferre
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              2 months ago

              This was in r/linguistics, by the way. And the moderators there were doing jack shit to inform the users. Even if one of them works with NLP, so you’d expect the person to be somewhat well versed in both Linguistics and basic programming.

              The worst part? It wasn’t even the only time that I saw this conflation. I think that people get caught in the words, and miss that they’re referring to different concepts.