ufos 1.0.71 → 1.0.72
This diff represents the content of publicly available package versions that have been released to one of the supported registries. The information contained in this diff is provided for informational purposes only and reflects changes between package versions as they appear in their respective public registries.
- checksums.yaml +4 -4
- data/CYCLE_OF_HEALTH +57 -0
- data/PP.rb +2 -0
- data/README.md +73 -147
- data/UCA_cli +0 -0
- data/ULTIMATE_CHAT_APPLICATION.exe +0 -0
- data/ULTIMATE_CHAT_APPLICATION_(LINUX) +0 -0
- data/VERSION_NUMBER +1 -1
- data/bin/UCA_cli +0 -0
- data/bin/ULTIMATE_CHAT_APPLICATION.exe +0 -0
- data/bin/ULTIMATE_CHAT_APPLICATION_(LINUX) +0 -0
- data/documentation/DISCOURSE_GENERATOR.exe +34 -1
- data/documentation/google_speak +0 -20
- data/documentation/page +1 -1
- data/gem_data/VERSION_NUMBER +1 -1
- data/index.html +52 -55
- data/{documentation → other}/make_server +6 -9
- data/other/server_creator/a.out +0 -0
- data/other/server_creator/all_code.cpp +16 -16
- data/other/server_creator/foo.cpp +1 -1
- data/other/server_creator/test.sh +1 -1
- data/other/upload.rb +2 -2
- data/output_data +2 -2
- metadata +5 -7
- data/bin/make_server +0 -784
- data/other/server_creator/all_code.js +0 -27
- data/other/server_creator/foo.js +0 -22
- data/other/server_creator/main_func.js +0 -22
checksums.yaml
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---
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SHA256:
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metadata.gz:
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data.tar.gz:
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metadata.gz: 312871b87e0572383870d6f7ae1082c9317225ad5a75522ace90992c0bb6772c
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data.tar.gz: 2e724bd8dea991ee248510758ec841b1b8ae474c20d17586e351243723de358b
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metadata.gz:
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metadata.gz: '0326058db0b4081e93efabe0c4bb7d462a6481258452198f669f5964446dd46d386028dd93d3b677fac231218b0d81e84b20ff76b1ee02029128ccfa63a3d6bc'
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data.tar.gz: 6e07871829846064ce06d81f636b85aac8d50d0072d1037bcb582933bcf2fc1d5182271070bd9ac2a38c58c90790d0c7e48b3d80ded0abba887b6186e26ad721
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data/CYCLE_OF_HEALTH
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The following shall be regarded as a methodological "Cycle of Health", a cycle of behavior that humans happen to fall into, or can knowingly cause, that is very likely to, result in optimal health.
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Statistics should be found or determined that prove this, this is simple and loop
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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1.1. De facto joining of Potentially-Increasing-Survival-Potential-Group (on whichever aspects(s) of life, you can identify or another, whether or not a specific "group" would qualify as such)
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1.2. Positive interaction with 1 or more others in PISPG
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for each of Cycle 1, after the point is completed:
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2.1. Recognition of having likely improved survival potential (on whichever aspects(s) of life)
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2.2. [(Mental/spiritual/physical/emotional/general/uncategorized) health]/[pleasure]/[happiness], just here, and nowhere else
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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So the full cycle would be:
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1) De facto joining of Potentially-Increasing-Survival-Potential-Group (on whichever aspects(s) of life, you can identify or another, whether or not a specific "group" would qualify as such)
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2) Recognition of having likely improved survival potential (on whichever aspects(s) of life)
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3) [(Mental/spiritual/physical/emotional/general/uncategorized) health]/[pleasure]/[happiness], just here, and nowhere else
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4) Positive interaction with 1 or more others in Potentially-Increasing-Survival-Potential-Group
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5) Recognition of having likely improved survival potential (on whichever aspects(s) of life)
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6) [(Mental/spiritual/physical/emotional/general/uncategorized) health]/[pleasure]/[happiness], just here, and nowhere else
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7) Go to 1.
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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A short form would be
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As a loop
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Join, recognize good, happiness
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Positive interaction, recognize good, happiness
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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(A "group" could be any kind of group, it could only be 2 people, it could be 1 million people.)
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"De facto joining" would be very liberal in classification
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Obviously, people and robots should operate on the basis of this.
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It is currently very not-known, the relative importances of these points. So there is no statement to "do one point more than another".
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Everyone should try to maximize, to the best of their ability, all 7 points.
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Point 2.2 is completely incompatible with psychiatry. The upsides of such an approach could, and should, be tested. Surely, there would
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be a tremendous amount of bias and vested interest in this methodology not seeming to "work in practice", but would this work in practice?
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The answer is <b><span color="blue" size="large">YES, DEFINITELY.</span></b>
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See also
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Ask this software about "ai"
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data/README.md
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methods.
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And Semantic metadata project (very abstract and idealistic, see
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webpage for it in "other/semantic_metadata".)
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There is also Emerald C, which is really useful.
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There is also Emerald C, which is really useful.
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There is also an idealistic make_server program that would make a very
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fast webserver.
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It however is not worth documenting on this page, docs are in the
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"other" folder.
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I was working on a “to buy” program regarding stocks, but it only
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partly works right now and it's not as useful as the other software.
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The find housing tool actually helped me to find housing in real life.
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Those aside, there are these
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Those aside, there are these 81 programs.
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Some ones that convert text are skipped in this documentation because
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their name and usage is obvious (e.g., color tools).
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Democracy Github Ruby Gem Python PIP Package
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Without further ado, here are the
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Without further ado, here are the 81 documented programs. (The obvious usage
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ones are omitted.)
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### 1. Ultimate Chat Application.exe
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mothers or education.
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
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
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This is a very, very large philosophical subject.
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No one person has a monopoly on it.
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To use some metaphors...
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In computer programming, there are commonly known functions called
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“map,” “reduce” and “filter.”
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In regards to human thoughts and human communications, one could think
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that these functions could apply to them.
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One could say that Old Twitter was a “reduce function”-- it tooks
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people's thogughts, and reduced the size of the set or the list, it
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compacted them to 140 characters or less.
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This, of course, is terrible.
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Thankfully modern Twitter can use 4000 characters.
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There are many “filter” functions used in modern social media, if you
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will. There is content censorship.
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WHAT SHOULD EXIST IS A MAP FUNCTION. A CONSTRUCTIVE MAP FUNCTION.
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ONE SHOULD REALIZE THAT THIS COULD POTENTIALLY INFINGE UPON FREE SPEECH
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AND HUMAN RIGHTS. ONE NEEDS TO 100%, COMPLETELY, FULLY EMBRACE THIS
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POSSIBILITY, FOR SOCIETY TO IMPROVE.
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THERE HAS BEEN NO “MAP” FUNCTION.
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THERE HAS BEEN NO FUNCTION TO POSITIVELY TRANSFORM TEXT.
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THAT IS WHAT THIS _IS_ AND THAT IS WHAT THIS IDEA _IS_.
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THIS IS VERY NECESSARY.
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VERY NECESSARY.
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### 3. Emerald Browser
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
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It's kind of like “espeak” or similar tools, but it is much better.
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You need an internet connection for it to work.
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It is probably limited at 100 characters.
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project that gets around that.
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TODO
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Make the alarm clock program in this software project use this voice.
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It is quite reliable.
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It is probably “unlimited”.
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I haven't had Google block me from using it ever.
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Which is a good thing.
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### 6. Make Server
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make_server is powerful.
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make_server takes expressions, either Javascript or C++, and generates
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a resultant program from that.
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The Javascript mode currently doesn't work.
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Not only is a program made, the resultant program is an entire
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webserver, that uses FastCGI to run really fast code.
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The arguments work in an interesting way.
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make_server [function_name] [iterable] [condition, it can be “true” to
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do the following argument always] [code list separated by semicolons,
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the last statement is an expression, and is returned by the function]
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[function_name2] ...
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You have to give 4 arguments every time.
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There was an “otherwise” mode as an “else”, but I don't think that's a
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part of the program anymore.
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It doesn't need to be.
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You have to give 4 arguments for each function.
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So you can do
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make_server 4args 4args 4args 4args
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And pass 16 arguments
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The “iterable” has to be a list.
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What is powerful is that it converts JSON into completely native C++.
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It is very efficient.
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It doesn't need to be a JSON expression though.
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There is a test file.
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You can run the tests and see if it works for you!!
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You can also modify the code because it is open source.
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The program generates a special array object. It is lightweight and
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makes arrays act in C++ like arrays act in scripting languages, but
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much faster.
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The array class also has methods to apply things to every element of an
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array, like surround
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array.surround(“”, “”)
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for example
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would surround all of the elements of array with XML tags and return a
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new list
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This program generates a lightweight Object System, with a BasicObject
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class and an Object Class.
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You can subclass these objects.
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You can have Arrays of the Objects
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The function argument syntax is really powerful.
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Oftentimes people want to iterate through iterables or arrays.
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Oftentimes people want to check conditions.
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Python has list comprehensions.
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This is kind of like that, but simpler.
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You can have arguments as one argument, separated by “,,”
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make_server arg1,,arg2,,arg3,,arg4
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What's the point of using a scripting language when you can use C++?
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This uses FastCGI, so you can have an ____IDEAL____ webserver.
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You can have an IDEAL and very affordable website, that in a sense
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would be faster than Facebook.
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Facebook converts PHP to C++ (slow)
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This produces REAL C++, and it is very fast, almost as fast as
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possible.
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Native STL classes are used, like vector.
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Native STL classes are used, like vector and map
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Do you not need to run and child processes or do slow, costly things.
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You should want IDEAL.
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This is free software, and is BSD licensed.
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The function generation idea allows you to write in 1 line what other
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people might write in 50 lines.
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You do not need to compromise your ideals.
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You should want fast, efficient, and memory light programs that are not
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garbage collected (!!!) and that have reliable performance.
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C++, as everyone knows, delivers that.
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You should also want to not have to write a lot of code to do things.
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compile time, so that bugs don't appear at run time.
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This program delivers.
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It uses NGINX ( a really, really common webserver) to help with the
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FastCGI.
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FastCGI, for the unfamiliar, is like normal CGI, but there aren't child
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processes.
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So the entire server could be written in idealistic C++ .
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Then you just have to think about scaling.
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There are some relevant links regarding scaling in the “scaling” file
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in the democracy project
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1) Speed
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2) Ease of writing code
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3) Memory usage
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4) Monetary costs
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5) Elegance
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6) Practicalness
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Those are 6 things.
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You don't have to sacrifice on those things.
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Contributions on this program would be really appreciated.
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It is called “make_server” for now.
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There was also a mode to generate javascript.
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I have to make that work again.
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The entire program is just one file.
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My email is gregorycohenvideos@gmail.com
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### 7. Selectlines
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### 6. Selectlines
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selectlines shows all nonblank lines from the input
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###
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### 7. Processes
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Processes lists all processes with a certain name
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processes bash
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processes ruby
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processes gsub
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###
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### 8. Emeraldc
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The Ultimate C Preprocessor
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I'm naming this preprocessor “Emerald C.”
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sys 0m0.160s
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Rust takes 0.637 seconds to compile an empty file!
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That is not ideal.
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###
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### 9. Last Nth
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###
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### 10. Speakcat
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Speak cat is a tool like “cat”, which shows the content of files
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(technically, it combines the content of files).
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But speak cat also speaks the text.
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Which could be useful in some circumstances.
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It's kind of like “tee” to your ear.
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###
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### 11. UCA CLI
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CLI for uca app
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###
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### 12. Big Num
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
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###
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### 13. Squeeze
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Squeeze reads all input from stdin, then it prints it back omitting
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argument 1 line from the front, and argument 2 lines from the back
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squeeze 5 3
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This would omit the first 5 lines and the last 3 lines
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squeeze 2 2 [file] also works, it outputs text to file
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###
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### 14. Dictate
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Dictate opens web pages in emerald browser, or in any browser
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(depending on the environment variable set), by you speaking, instead
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of typing.
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speaking.
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###
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### 15. Prepend
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prepend prepends input taken from the standard input to a file
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Usage
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prepend [file]
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This is text to be prepended
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###
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### 16. Chat Rb
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This program is excellent.
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It's essentially a mix of ChatGPT and a shell, such as bash or ZSH.
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It outputs chatgpt data to an output folder in home folder and copies
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it to clipboard
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To run a shell command, prefix things with “c”, such as c gcc.....
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###
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### 17. Undump
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undump is the opposite of dump
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Example
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=> “cat”
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=> cat
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|
-
###
|
392
|
+
### 18. Append
|
466
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|
|
467
394
|
Appends text to file
|
468
395
|
Example
|
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|
append file
|
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|
This is more text to be appended
|
471
|
-
###
|
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|
+
### 19. Gsubip
|
472
399
|
|
473
400
|
Global Substitute (Gsub) In Place
|
474
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|
gsubip is like gsub, which replaces all instances of a regular
|
@@ -485,7 +412,7 @@ ones are omitted.)
|
|
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|
It takes exactly 3 arguments, no more, no fewer.
|
486
413
|
See also
|
487
414
|
gsub
|
488
|
-
###
|
415
|
+
### 20. Rhyme
|
489
416
|
|
490
417
|
A very powerful music generator program that doesn't use AI.
|
491
418
|
See this channel as an example of potential usage of this public
|
@@ -666,7 +593,7 @@ ones are omitted.)
|
|
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|
Disingenuous to the extreme, the society they subvert
|
667
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|
The society is the ones who hurt
|
668
595
|
---
|
669
|
-
###
|
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|
+
### 21. Email
|
670
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|
|
671
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|
This currently doesn't work for gmail since 2022 due to policy changes.
|
672
599
|
A simple and practical tool to email people using Himalaya
|
@@ -681,10 +608,10 @@ ones are omitted.)
|
|
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|
Example
|
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|
email 'Gregory, I love your software!' gregorycohenvideos@gmail.com
|
683
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|
my_friend@outlook.com person@example.com
|
684
|
-
###
|
611
|
+
### 22. Floor
|
685
612
|
|
686
613
|
Gets the floor of numbers e.g. 21.3 -> 21
|
687
|
-
###
|
614
|
+
### 23. Rgsub
|
688
615
|
|
689
616
|
Recursively replaces text.
|
690
617
|
Verbosely tells you everything that happens.
|
@@ -703,11 +630,11 @@ ch]
|
|
703
630
|
-v, verbose mode
|
704
631
|
-- Indicate end of options.
|
705
632
|
|
706
|
-
###
|
633
|
+
### 24. Lines
|
707
634
|
|
708
635
|
Lines gets the number of files in the current folder that you are in.
|
709
636
|
It can also act like “wc -l” if you pipe data into it.
|
710
|
-
###
|
637
|
+
### 25. Clock
|
711
638
|
|
712
639
|
clock is useful
|
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640
|
clock is a command line alarm clock
|
@@ -724,14 +651,14 @@ ch]
|
|
724
651
|
To stop it
|
725
652
|
Run this command
|
726
653
|
clock stop
|
727
|
-
###
|
654
|
+
### 26. Emoji
|
728
655
|
|
729
656
|
Emoji converts words to emojis from the standard input
|
730
657
|
It can also speak the output
|
731
658
|
It can also copy the output to your clipboard
|
732
659
|
It is very useful
|
733
660
|

|
734
|
-
###
|
661
|
+
### 27. Close
|
735
662
|
|
736
663
|
“Close” is a simple program that closes “Emerald Browser,” a new web
|
737
664
|
browser based on the same engine as Chrome. Currently, Emerald Browser
|
@@ -765,12 +692,12 @@ ch]
|
|
765
692
|
some people.
|
766
693
|
Currently, content, like YouTube videos, can't be made fullscreen.
|
767
694
|
If anyone wants to contribute, feel free to!
|
768
|
-
###
|
695
|
+
### 28. Copy
|
769
696
|
|
770
697
|
copy copies the standard input
|
771
698
|
Example
|
772
699
|
ls | copy
|
773
|
-
###
|
700
|
+
### 29. Gsub
|
774
701
|
|
775
702
|
Gsub is very powerful.
|
776
703
|
Usage
|
@@ -779,7 +706,7 @@ ch]
|
|
779
706
|
cat text | gsub man dog
|
780
707
|
cat text | gsub 'man|boy|cat|dog' food
|
781
708
|
ls | gsub Desktop cat
|
782
|
-
###
|
709
|
+
### 30. News
|
783
710
|
|
784
711
|
Gets the news from bbc
|
785
712
|
Usage
|
@@ -787,7 +714,7 @@ ch]
|
|
787
714
|
news speak
|
788
715
|
uses google_speak to SPEAK the news, one story at a time.
|
789
716
|

|
790
|
-
###
|
717
|
+
### 31. Dump
|
791
718
|
|
792
719
|
Dump surrounds its input with quotes
|
793
720
|
ls | dump
|
@@ -795,14 +722,14 @@ ch]
|
|
795
722
|
Use undump to get the reverse
|
796
723
|
See also
|
797
724
|
undump
|
798
|
-
###
|
725
|
+
### 32. Args
|
799
726
|
|
800
727
|
args is like a better xargs
|
801
728
|
args works properly with spaces in the name of commands
|
802
729
|
It takes exactly one argument
|
803
730
|
Example
|
804
731
|
ls | args “mv -t ../f”
|
805
|
-
###
|
732
|
+
### 33. Rnip
|
806
733
|
|
807
734
|
Replace Not In Place
|
808
735
|
This is like gsub, but for strings, not for regular expressions
|
@@ -810,7 +737,7 @@ ch]
|
|
810
737
|
echo .......... | rnip foo bar
|
811
738
|
See also
|
812
739
|
gsub
|
813
|
-
###
|
740
|
+
### 34. Quot
|
814
741
|
|
815
742
|
Turns quotes in text into good text and makes text presentable.
|
816
743
|
Example
|
@@ -821,7 +748,7 @@ ch]
|
|
821
748
|
Example 3
|
822
749
|
(Quote the file and output it)
|
823
750
|
quot text_file
|
824
|
-
###
|
751
|
+
### 35. Open
|
825
752
|
|
826
753
|
“open” is a very efficient program that searches a query from google,
|
827
754
|
and then opens it in Emerald Browser.
|
@@ -842,25 +769,25 @@ ch]
|
|
842
769
|
See also
|
843
770
|
emerald-browser
|
844
771
|
close
|
845
|
-
###
|
772
|
+
### 36. Swap
|
846
773
|
|
847
774
|
Swaps two files
|
848
775
|
Example
|
849
776
|
swap text1 text2
|
850
|
-
###
|
777
|
+
### 37. Exp
|
851
778
|
|
852
779
|
exp is an exponentiation tool
|
853
780
|
(echo 5; echo 3) | exp
|
854
781
|
=> 125
|
855
782
|
(echo 2; echo 10) | exp
|
856
783
|
=> 1024
|
857
|
-
###
|
784
|
+
### 38. Div
|
858
785
|
|
859
786
|
Divides numbers
|
860
787
|
Example
|
861
788
|
(echo 5000; echo 100) | div
|
862
789
|
=> 50
|
863
|
-
###
|
790
|
+
### 39. Mul
|
864
791
|
|
865
792
|
Multiply numbers
|
866
793
|
echo 1 > file
|
@@ -870,10 +797,10 @@ ch]
|
|
870
797
|
echo 5 >> file
|
871
798
|
cat file | mul
|
872
799
|
=> 120
|
873
|
-
###
|
800
|
+
### 40. Nth
|
874
801
|
|
875
802
|
Nth gets the nth line from the input
|
876
|
-
###
|
803
|
+
### 41. Abs
|
877
804
|
|
878
805
|
Abs gets the absolute value of an integer
|
879
806
|
The absolute value of a number is the value of that number without its
|
@@ -886,13 +813,13 @@ ch]
|
|
886
813
|
=> 12
|
887
814
|
The last one would do -2 - -10, the result would be -12, and then the
|
888
815
|
absolute value would be computed, and so the result would be 12.
|
889
|
-
###
|
816
|
+
### 42. Add
|
890
817
|
|
891
818
|
See the sub example
|
892
819
|
add adds integers from the standard input
|
893
820
|
(echo 1; echo 2; echo 3) | add
|
894
821
|
The result would be 6
|
895
|
-
###
|
822
|
+
### 43. Sub
|
896
823
|
|
897
824
|
Sub is a simple command line program that subtracts integers.
|
898
825
|
For some reason, no simple program did this.
|
@@ -909,14 +836,14 @@ ch]
|
|
909
836
|
(echo 5; echo 2) | sub
|
910
837
|
Result =>
|
911
838
|
3
|
912
|
-
###
|
839
|
+
### 44. Rip
|
913
840
|
|
914
841
|
Replace In Place
|
915
842
|
rip tool replaces a string, not a regular expression, with another
|
916
843
|
string
|
917
844
|
Example
|
918
845
|
rip cat dog file
|
919
|
-
###
|
846
|
+
### 45. G+
|
920
847
|
|
921
848
|
A compiler for C += 2. If you want to use C++ with Python syntax, you
|
922
849
|
can use this.
|
@@ -924,7 +851,7 @@ ch]
|
|
924
851
|
Example
|
925
852
|
g+ a.cpp -o out
|
926
853
|
See also README file & emerald-browser and its source
|
927
|
-
###
|
854
|
+
### 46. T
|
928
855
|
|
929
856
|
“t” is incredibly useful.
|
930
857
|
It can be used many, many times every day by computer power users.
|
@@ -967,7 +894,6 @@ Navigation
|
|
967
894
|
Emerald Browser
|
968
895
|
Find Housing
|
969
896
|
Google Speak
|
970
|
-
Make Server
|
971
897
|
Selectlines
|
972
898
|
Processes
|
973
899
|
Emeraldc
|
data/UCA_cli
CHANGED
Binary file
|
Binary file
|
Binary file
|
data/VERSION_NUMBER
CHANGED
@@ -1 +1 @@
|
|
1
|
-
|
1
|
+
72.0
|
data/bin/UCA_cli
CHANGED
Binary file
|
Binary file
|
Binary file
|
@@ -13,4 +13,37 @@ This would enable democracy to work. Imagine if 50% of all websites used this li
|
|
13
13
|
This would help people to be goal or value oriented, and not be coming up with terrible communications that, for example, insult people's mothers or education.
|
14
14
|
|
15
15
|

|
16
|
-
|
16
|
+
|
17
|
+

|
18
|
+
|
19
|
+
This is a very, very large philosophical subject.
|
20
|
+
|
21
|
+
No one person has a monopoly on it.
|
22
|
+
|
23
|
+
To use some metaphors...
|
24
|
+
|
25
|
+
In computer programming, there are commonly known functions called “map,” “reduce” and “filter.”
|
26
|
+
|
27
|
+
In regards to human thoughts and human communications, one could think that these functions could apply to them.
|
28
|
+
|
29
|
+
One could say that Old Twitter was a “reduce function”-- it tooks people's thogughts, and reduced the size of the set or the list, it compacted them to 140 characters or less.
|
30
|
+
|
31
|
+
This, of course, is terrible.
|
32
|
+
|
33
|
+
Thankfully modern Twitter can use 4000 characters.
|
34
|
+
|
35
|
+
There are many “filter” functions used in modern social media, if you will. There is content censorship.
|
36
|
+
|
37
|
+
<b>WHAT SHOULD EXIST IS A MAP FUNCTION. A CONSTRUCTIVE MAP FUNCTION.</b>
|
38
|
+
|
39
|
+
ONE SHOULD REALIZE THAT THIS COULD POTENTIALLY INFINGE UPON FREE SPEECH AND HUMAN RIGHTS. ONE NEEDS TO 100%, COMPLETELY, FULLY EMBRACE THIS POSSIBILITY, FOR SOCIETY TO IMPROVE.
|
40
|
+
|
41
|
+
THERE HAS BEEN NO “MAP” FUNCTION.
|
42
|
+
|
43
|
+
THERE HAS BEEN NO FUNCTION TO POSITIVELY TRANSFORM TEXT.
|
44
|
+
|
45
|
+
<b>THAT IS WHAT THIS _IS_ AND THAT IS WHAT THIS IDEA _IS_.</b>
|
46
|
+
|
47
|
+
THIS IS VERY NECESSARY.
|
48
|
+
|
49
|
+
VERY NECESSARY.
|
data/documentation/google_speak
CHANGED
@@ -5,23 +5,3 @@ It's kind of like “espeak” or similar tools, but it is much better.
|
|
5
5
|
You need an internet connection for it to work.
|
6
6
|
|
7
7
|
It is probably limited at 100 characters.
|
8
|
-
|
9
|
-
|
10
|
-
|
11
|
-
There is a “singing program”, not really a tool, in this software project that gets around that.
|
12
|
-
|
13
|
-
|
14
|
-
TODO
|
15
|
-
|
16
|
-
Make the alarm clock program in this software project use this voice.
|
17
|
-
|
18
|
-
|
19
|
-
|
20
|
-
It is quite reliable.
|
21
|
-
|
22
|
-
It is probably “unlimited”.
|
23
|
-
|
24
|
-
I haven't had Google block me from using it ever.
|
25
|
-
|
26
|
-
|
27
|
-
Which is a good thing.
|
data/documentation/page
CHANGED
@@ -269,7 +269,7 @@ def main
|
|
269
269
|
And <b>Semantic metadata project (very abstract and idealistic, see webpage for it in "other/semantic_metadata".)</b><br>
|
270
270
|
</p>
|
271
271
|
</div>
|
272
|
-
There is also Emerald C, which is really useful
|
272
|
+
There is also Emerald C, which is really useful.<br>There is also an idealistic make_server program that would make a very fast webserver.<br>It however is not worth documenting on this page, docs are in the "other" folder.<br>I was working on a "to buy" program regarding stocks, but it only partly works right now and it's not as useful as the other software.<br>
|
273
273
|
The find housing tool actually helped me to find housing in real life.<br>
|
274
274
|
Those aside, there are these <span style=color:bold>#{num} programs.<br>
|
275
275
|
Some ones that convert text are skipped in this documentation because their name and usage is obvious (e.g., color tools).<br>
|
data/gem_data/VERSION_NUMBER
CHANGED
@@ -1 +1 @@
|
|
1
|
-
|
1
|
+
71.0
|