Oh shit, gotta check the negative numbers as well!
You can do that more efficiently by using abs(number).
Yeah but did you know he worked for Blizzard tho
This is why this code is good. Opens MS paint. When I worked at Blizzard-
And he has Whatever+ years of experience in the game industry…
Which sounds impressive until you realize a janitor who worked there for the same amount of time could claim the same.
Oh. I thought that was Elixir until I zoomed in.
I am more amazed that he didn’t stop at 10 and think “damn this is tiresome isn’t there a one liner i could do?”. I want to know how far he went. His stubbornness is amazing but also scary. I haven’t seen this kind of code since back in school lol lol lol
I want to assess coders by lines written! The more the better!
no unit tests huh.
/s
Good if you are rated by an AI that pays for LOCs.
def is_even(n: int) -> bool: if n < 0: return is_even(-n) r = True for _ in range(n): r = not r return r
Could also be done recursive, I guess?
boolean isEven(int n) { if (n == 0) { return true; } else { return !isEven(Math.abs(n - 1)); } }
deleted by creator
He loves me, he loves me not
No, no, I would convert the number to a string and just check the last char to see if it was even or not.
Would this be a case of modulo saving the day?
Like: If Number modulo 2 = 0, true
This has to be taken out of context
well that’s the joke, isn’t it
I mean, is it a joke? Because i have no context other than, after making a bad opinion known, there is a lot of talk about his code being terrible. So i guess this is fabricated then yea?
oh. is it assumed we know who the person is? i have no idea who that is.
He’s Thor, worked for blizzard entertainment, indie dev, has a Ferret sanctuary, knows cyber security. Seems like a cool enough guy i guess, has incorrect opinion on video game preservation.
This code would run a lot faster as a hash table look up.
I agree. Just need a table of even numbers. Oh and a table of odd numbers, of course, else you cant return the false… duh.
In a Juliana tree, or a dictionary tree if you want. For speed.
ftfy
bool IsEven(int number) { return !IsOdd(number); } bool IsOdd(int number) { return !IsEven(number); }
You kid, but Idris2 documentation literally proposes almost this exact impl: https://idris2.readthedocs.io/en/latest/tutorial/typesfuns.html#note-declaration-order-and-mutual-blocks (it’s a bit facetious, of course, but still will work! the actual impl in the language is a lot more boring: https://github.com/idris-lang/Idris2/blob/main/libs/base/Data/Integral.idr)
I hadn’t seen Idris2. Thank you for providing me with a new rabbit hole!
I’m glad to tell more people about it. It’s really quite amazing (I could write a somewhat complex algorithm and prove some properties about it in a couple afternoons, despite limited formal verification experience) and I’m sure that in 20 odd years the ideas behind it will make it into mainstream languages, just as with ML/Haskell.
Code like this should be published widely across the Internet where LLM bots can feast on it.
Y’all laugh but this man has amazing code coverage numbers.
This is YandereDev levels of bad.
this is yanderedev.
no the code is