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Programmers are strange people. We build things out of thin air, a part of our sanity and with weird codes that would make any grown sane man cry.

But sometimes, a programmer builds a program that is too weird even by their insane standards.

What program have you created that is weird and strange?

(One program per answer please)

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82 Answers

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I wrote a program that deleted the binary it was run from, having first overwritten it with 0x55's and 0xAA's to make sure it couldn't be "undeleted".

And I wrote a Brainfuck compiler in 99 bytes. That is, the binary was a 99-byte MS-DOS executable. Well I guess that's not as weird after all.

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On behalf of for , I wrote a VBA program; for users to enter text for teletype (yes, clackety-clack-buzz-buzz-teletype) format, and then stored those messages in an Oracle database (which was a backend for a different app, that was being used for the actual sending of the teletype messages to the printout machines). The VBA app also made a copy of the teletype message to an MS Word document, (formatted to a rigorous military spec), and could also parse these documents to read them back; part of the structure of the document went to Oracle, to feed the management app (ran on PPC AIX). The Word document also went to a document management system, managed by a client dll on the Windows side.

Anyway, the teletype format was pretty ancient, and was limited to so many columns and rows, and certain characters were control characters, so you can imagine how awful it was, using just the standard Microsoft VBA rich-text-box control, where the user can enter just about anything, and you can't do a damn thing to stop them or validate-out their control characters (the operators were used to entering them literally, on the physical teletype system - old habits die hard), or enforce any kind of characters-per-row limit (depending on what scaled-font they're using).

So I finally solved all those issues, and halfway through the dd-250 process, the agency decides they want to upgrade to the "new" teletype data standard (which is actually like 30 years old, at that point, as opposed to the 50 year old spec they originally had me coding to).

Oh yeah, and they wanted to be able to email these teletype messages too. Oh yeah - none of these systems were allowed to be connected to any kind of external network for email connectivity anyway. (the ONLY external connection was the outbound serial link to the teletype).

Can you say; "contract management?"

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Wrote few TSR programmes in C for DOS. One of them drops character while using DOS apps.

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To relieve boredom at work: wrote an instance message chat-server (many-to-many): the main feature being that it used Microsoft Speech SDK to speak the messages out loud.

It was dead fun; because you leave yourself logged in and listen to music on headphones as normal: then randomly throughout the day, you can trade swear words and insults with colleagues - all spoken faithly in individually parameterized voices...

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(defun bp-folgers-crystalize ()
  "secretly replaces the meta-sytactic variable foo with folgers_crystals"
  (interactive)
  (let (
    (i (point)))
    (beginning-of-buffer)
    (while (search-forward "foo" nil t)
      (replace-match "folgers_crystals" nil t))
    (goto-char i)))

elisp

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Quick 'n dirty audio delay / feedback effect on a Sun workstation, mildly amusing practical joke as it takes a while for colleagues to work out where the echo is coming from...

cat < /dev/audio > /dev/audio
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I once played a LPmud called Genesis, and in this mud I was a fearsome priest of Takhisis (a really evil queen from the Dragonlance books).

All those priests used to mail really fancy ASCII art letters to each others by mail, and it really was a lot of work to create the same letters. But hey, thats what roleplaying is all about..

Being the lazy person I am, I said to myself.. I can code my own ASCII art editor.. Saves me a whole lot of trouble, and I can reply really fast as a priest in game, with a really fancy mail!

So I coded a crappy Java app with the letter design the priests used:

     ____________________________________________________________
    /'\                                                          \
   |   |                      Letter example                      |
   | \/__________________________________________________________/
   |                                                          |
    \                                                          \ 
     \                                                          \
     |                  Greetings Stackoverflow                 |
     |                                                          |
     |                                                          |
     |   Here is an example letter from my ASCII letter         |
     |   creator of old...                                      |
     |                                                          |
     |                                                          |
     |   Greetings,                                             |
     |                                                          |
     |         Arcturus, the Stackoverflow undergraduate        |
     |                                                          |
      \                                                          \
     _ \                                                          \
    / \ |                                                          |
    \__/__________________________________________________________/

Then it got a bit carried away actually.. I ended up adding 29 other ASCII designs, all which could be used with different headers, bodies, signatures.. you name it..

Here are some of my favorites:

  __
 (`/\
 `=\/\ __...--~~~~~-._   _.-~~~~~--...__
  `=\/\               \ /               \\
   `=\/                V                 \\
   //_\___--~~~~~~-._  |  _.-~~~~~~--...__\\
  //  ) (..----~~~~._\ | /_.~~~~----.....__\\
 ===( INK )==========\\|//====================
 ____\___/___________`---`_____________________________________________
||                                                                     ||
||                           Letter example                            ||
||                  --------------------------------                   ||
||                                                                     ||
||                       Greetings Stackoverflow                       ||
||                                                                     ||
||                                                                     ||
||  Here is an example letter from my ASCII letter creator of old...   ||
||                                                                     ||
||                                                                     ||
||  Greetings,                                                         ||
||                                                                     ||
||              Arcturus, the Stackoverflow undergraduate              ||
||_____________________________________________________________________||


                                                               .---.
                                                              /  .  \
                                                             |\_/|   |
                                                             |   |  /|
  .----------------------------------------------------------------' |
 /  .-.                                                              |
|  /   \                                                             |
| |\_.  |                                           Letter example   |
|\|  | /|                                                            |
| `---' |                                                            |
|       |                   Greetings Stackoverflow                  |
|       |                                                            |
|       |                                                            |
|       |   Here is an example letter from my ASCII letter           |
|       |   creator of old...                                        |
|       |                                                            |
|       |                                                            |
|       |   Greetings,                                               |
|       |                                                            |
|       |          Arcturus, the Stackoverflow undergraduate         |
|       |                                                            |
|       |                                                           /
|       |----------------------------------------------------------'
\       |
 \     /
  `---'



            ^^                   @@@@@@@@@
       ^^       ^^            @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@
                            @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@              ^^
                           @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@
 ~~~~ ~~ ~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~ ~~ &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&& ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~
|~         ~~   ~  ~       ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~       ~~     ~~ ~     |
|  ~      ~~      ~~ ~~ ~~  ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~  ~     ~~~    ~ ~~~  ~ ~~|
|  ~  ~~     ~         ~      ~~~~~~  ~~ ~~~       ~~ ~ ~~  ~~ ~        |
|~  ~       ~ ~      ~           ~~ ~~~~~~  ~      ~~  ~             ~~ |
|      ~             ~        ~      ~      ~~   ~             ~        |
|                             Letter example                            |
|                                                                       |
|                         Greetings Stackoverflow                       |
|                                                                       |
|                                                                       |
|   Here is an example letter from my ASCII letter creator of old...    |
|                                                                       |
|                                                                       |
|   Greetings,                                                          |
|                                                                       |
|                Arcturus, the Stackoverflow undergraduate              |
|                                                                       |
|             |    |    |                                               |
|            )_)  )_)  )_)                                              |
|           )___))___))___)\                                            |
|          )____)____)_____)\\                                          |
|        _____|____|____|____\\\__                                      |
|    ~   \                   /  ~    ~  ~                 ~    ~        |
|        ~      ~      ~        ~   ~     ~      ~   ~       ~      ~   |
|~     ~     ~      ~     ~      ~      ~      ~    ~      ~       ~    |
~~~~ ~~ ~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~ ~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~


              (O)
              <M
   o          <M
  /| ......  /:M\------------------------------------------------,,,,,,
(O)[]XXXXXX[]I:K+}==========================================------------>
 -\| ^^^^^^  \:W/------------------------------------------------''''''
|  o          <W                                                 | 
|             <W                                Letter example   |
|             (O)                                                |
|                                                                |
|   Greetings Stackoverflow                                      |
|                                                                |
|                                                                |
|   Here is an example letter from my ASCII letter creator of    |
|   old...                                                       |
|                                                                |
|                                                                |
|   Greetings,                                                   |
|                                                                |
|            Arcturus, the StackOverflow undergraduate           |
|                                                                |
|________________________________________________________________|


                             /   \
 _                   )      ((   ))     (                    _
(@)                 /|\      ))_((     /|\                  (@)
|-|'\              / | \    ( \|/ )   / | \               /'|-|
| | --------------/--|-voV---\`|`/--Vov-|--\----------------| |
| |                    '^`   (o o)  '^`                     | |
| |                           \Y/                           | |
| |                                                         | |
| |                     Letter example                      | |
| |                      -------------                      | |
| |                 Greetings Stackoverflow                 | |
| |                                                         | |
| |                                                         | |
| |   Here is an example letter from my ASCII letter        | |
| |   creator of old...                                     | |
| |                                                         | |
| |                                                         | |
| |   Greetings,                                            | |
| |                                                         | |
| |        Arcturus, the Stackoverflow undergraduate        | |
| |                                                         | |
| |_________________________________________________________| |
|-|'/       l   /\ /          ( (       \ /\   l          `\|-|
(@)         l /   V            \ \       V   \ l            (@)
            l/                 _) )_          \I"



                   _,----,_                      _,----,
             ___,-'     /'  ____________________  `\     `-,___
             |,'       {,-~~-,               ,-~~-,}       `,|
             /       _/',-~~-(\,)         (,/)-~~-,`\_       \
           ,'   ,-,/'{ (     {vv}         {vv}     ) }`\,-,   `,
          , ,-,/      \ \     }{           }{     / /      \,-, ,
          ;/ |         ) }   (^^)         (^^)   { (         | \;
,,,,,,_,-~~-,_,-~~-,_,/ /                         \ \,_,-~~-,_,-~~-,_,,,,,,
''''~-,,-~~-,_,-~~-,_,-'                           `-,_,-~~-,_,-~~-,,-~````
             |                                               |
             |                                               |
             |                Letter example                 |
             |                                               |
             |            Greetings Stackoverflow            |
             |                                               |
             |                                               |
             |   Here is an example letter from my ASCII     |
             |   letter creator of old...                    |
             |                                               |
             |                                               |
             |   Greetings,                                  |
             |                                               |
             |   Arcturus, the Stackoverflow undergraduate   |
             |                                               |
             |_______________________________________________|

Some even had some random elements, so not every letter would look the same:

 ,----------------------------------------------------------,==.
/                                                          /__  \
\                                                          |(_\ /
/                                                          \-`-'
|                      Letter example                      |
{                  Greetings Stackoverflow                 }
\                                                          }
{                                                          /
\   Here is an example letter from my ASCII letter         |
/   creator of old...                                      {
/                                                          /
|                                                          }
\   Greetings,                                             /
{                                                          \
|         Arcturus, the StackOverflow undergraduate        {
|                                                          {____
}                                                          |__( \
\                                                          \    /
 `----------------------------------------------------------`=='

Some people were on to me eventually, so I shared my little application with fellow guild members.. I think they are still using today.. :)

COMMERCIAL WARNING: Genesis was really nice.. you should check it out ;)

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In one of my fits of "what project shall I do next?", I once decided to clone the major applications in Microsoft Windows... wait for it.... 3.1. Yes, that included a fully working calc, calendar, clock, rolodex, notepad, etc clone army.

I have to admit: most did look pretty similar/identical to their predecessors.

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vote up 1 vote down

Bloons Pop 3 game analyzer. It's not unbeatable, but I can generally get the month's highest "legitimate" score (no protocol or memory hacking) on the first try. It was a serious challenge in interpreting partial data since its only input is a screenshot of the web browser (just like a user has).

I thought about releasing the source except for the move decision logic as a challenge to see if anyone can beat it. :o

Edit: It took about 3 weeks, with 2.5 being tuning the decision algorithm.

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vote up 1 vote down

Two, actually, in the same vein.

The Data General Nova minicomputer (in 1969) had lights showing the 16 bit address and data on the bus during each clock cycle. This was great for debugging with a single step switch. Normally these lights were on in rather random patterns for each step. When the machine ran full speed, you got a smear in the lights from the analog integration of the digital bits as the incandescent lights tried to switch on and off at 1 Mhz, the machine clock speed.

There were also switches on the front panel, so one could toggle in a boot strap loader program in binary. To get the machine to work, you typically had to toggle in about 10-12 16 bit words, which was enough to read in a bigger program from the paper tape reader, etc. To use the machine, you had to be pretty good at toggling in these boot programs. When truly bored, we toggled in small programs to make the machine do odd things (can you believe I got paid to do this? Boy, was 1970 fun). The contest that kept our wasted attention was toggling in programs whose sole purpose was to zero out memory completely, including the boot program toggled in. If you succeeded, the 0 words everywhere was interpreted as JMP 0, and all the lights went out, which made the machine look like it had died. Nobody won the contest, but I succeeded in zeroing out all but one bit, leaving just one bit in the data register display smeared on. There just had to be a way to get that last bit off, I thought.

My real job was building a 16 user timesharing system for the machine. That's a whole story in itself that might qualify for this contest because we only had 8k words of memory and a 200Kb hard disk to swap to, but I'll let this pass. The timesharing system I built, when running, would produce a smear in the address and data lights on the front panel. You could tell what the OS was doing by the nature of the smear: this smear, idling in scheduler, that smear, loading a program, changing smear, doing work. Of course, as you got further away from the machine it was harder to tell what the smear was.

The zero-all-of-memory bootstrap contests suggested it might be possible to turn out all the lights, and in a 2 am burst of madness, I implemented this idea for when the scheduler was idle. (The way this worked, was when idle, the scheduler parked a 0 word in location 0 and jumped to location zero. A 0 word conventiently turned out be a "JMP TO 0" instruction. Consequently, the address and data lights all contained zero, so all the front panel lights went out. Interrupts with work got it out of this state). Having gotten it to work at 5 am I went home. Didn't tell anybody what I had done (yawn!)

I recieved a panicked phone call from the computing facility operator at 10 am the next day (the reward of the devils' work, so much for sleeping). He was frantic, because the machine lights were all ought, but the system appeared to be working. He thought he was going crazy.

I explained the trick, and he was greatly relieved.

I modified the code to toggle the carry bit every one second, so people could see some life.

I did get another call from the operator, who understood the basic trick, but I never did tell him how I got the carry bit to blink. He could never figure out how that JMP 0 instruction could do that. It didn't; I used the clock interrupt. Cheaters prosper.

But it was thereafter easy to tell when the machine was idle. The front panel blanked, with a blinking carry bit.

Too bad we have spend most of our work time doing more constructive things. That was a fun job for a geek.

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When I was in college, one of the other CS students claimed to have found a vulnerability in the way Novell authenticates passwords on the network, and backed it up by telling me (correctly) my network password, which I promptly changed.

But a while later, I noticed that, on some of the computers in some of the computer labs, my first login attempt would always fail, no matter how carefully I typed my password.

I did some poking around. This was back in the DOS-and-Windows-3.11 days, and the Novell login app was a text-mode DOS app. I found that what he had really done was to write his own DOS app that looked like Novell's login screen, and added it to Autoexec.bat on some of the computers. After you typed in your username and password, his app would say "bad password", then exit back to Autoexec.bat, which would continue on to the real Novell login app. But not before his app had saved your login and password to a hidden, semi-ROT13-encrypted file.

So I wrote an app of my own, saved it in my home directory on the network, and set it to run every time I logged in from any computer in the network. My app would look for his password file on the local hard drive, hunt through it looking for my login name, and replace my ROT13-ed password with characters that, when decrypted, would be a long sequence of BEL characters.

Never did hear if he found my app, but I like the mental image of him frantically hitting Ctrl+Break so that everyone else in the lab, looking to see why his computer is making all that racket, doesn't catch him with his list of hacked passwords onscreen...

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In high school I had to write a Foxpro manual. The assignment was to make us enhance our touch typing skills... I didn't wanted to write that much, so I opened word and wrote a neat VBA script to open a help file, open the index, copy the content of every section and paste it on the current document. After that, remove all the soft carriage returns and apply some formatting.

All I had to do after that was put the header and footer. And wait one week until the due date :-D

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This is not me, but I think this kid will go places: The Upside-Down Ternet

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A few years ago I wrote an Applescript that made QuarkXpress construct a Photo Mosaic (an image made of tiny images).

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Back in the mid-80's I was doing a school project for an algorithms class, and found myself wanting three different sorting algorithms to emphericaly test and plot the runtimes of. Given my penchant for doing things the hard way, I wanted each to have a different time behavior.

O(n^2) and O(nlgn) are easy (bubble sort and pick your nlgn sort), but I was totally stuck for a third. I didn't want to just write the program to do busy work, I wanted an actual productive sorting algorithm that was worse than O(n^2).

The idea I finally hit on was writing an algorithm that systematicaly goes through every permutation of the ordering of the input ( O(n!) IIRC), then checks it to see if it is sorted. I believe I called it "Permutesort" in the paper. I figured it is probably the worst possible algorithm for sorting (that doesn't do non-sorting work), but as an undergrad I had no interest in doing the math to prove that.

I turns out these days someone has done the math with a related concept (random sorting) and proven it. They now call that algorithm bogosort. Bogosort isn't systematic though, so I still think my horrible sorting algorithm is far superior. :-)

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I guess for me it would be a little "game" I made called "Be The Wumpus." It's pushing things to call this a game, it's really just a goofy liitle project I did for fun. The game has no text or graphics, only audio. You're a blind, cave dwelling wumpus. By means of sound alone, (and, ok, a little xbox 360 gamepad rumble effect as well) you seek out and devour the unlucky wumpus hunters who fall into your lair. bethewumpus.sourceforge.net

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A program that did HTTP GET in Dell Outlet page and sought cheap notebooks!

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A web-controlled lava lamp, with live webcam. This was 1998, so this wasn't exactly revolutionary, but it was fun.

I emailed the link out, and was near-instantly greeted by a violent flurry of clicks from under my desk; the switch that drove the lamp contained a mechanical relay.

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vote up 51 vote down

I'm not sure if this qualifies but....

In college, I had a professor who was trying to make a joke (I'm quite sure nobody laughed). But, as we were handing in our latest programming assignments (a .Net GUI app that drew some things on the screen - nothing fancy) he said, 'For extra credit - you can write a program that will grade all of these!' (referring to the 30-something assignments sitting on his desk).

Naturally, being somewhat a class clown; I took him at his word. This was a Tuesday and our next class met on Thursday.

My program would run through all of the .exe's in a particular folder, 'test' and 'grade' them. The directions for the assignment were obnoxiously direct; to the point of telling you exactly what to name each control on the form. I was able to use Win32 API calls to determine if those buttons really did exist. Then it would perform a mouse click and verify that the shapes that were supposed to be drawn on the screen were actually being drawn by using 'GetPixel' along with some logic to determine what shape it was.

It was certainly hack-ish; and rushed - but I was quite proud of myself.

I cleaned up the code and printed the source and put it in one of them 'I spent $1.00 on plastic, therefore whatever paper is in here must be important' things from the student center.

I showed up to class on Thursday after pulling an all-nighter to get it finished. If I'd only spent that much time working on actual assignments. Class began...after about five minutes I interrupted and asked if he would be collecting the Extra Credit assignment today? He looked confused and asked, 'What extra credit'. It was pretty classic. I said, 'The assignment grading program!'.

He took the assignment and continued on with class. That evening I received an e-mail from him asking me to stop by his office on Friday. I did, and he offered me a graduate assistanceship (IE - no tuition to go to graduate school + monthly stipend to assist a professor).

In terms of 'dollar per hour' it was the most productive programming I ever did.

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vote up 2 vote down

Another strange program I have written is a 3D modeling thingy that run on Palm PDA. I had a blast writing it so I kept going even implemented a plugin interface to build exporting capabilities for various file formats. I called it tinyGL, almost forgotten about it...

alt text

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vote up 5 vote down

My teacher told us to write a useful program using recursion. I wrote a zombie apocalypse simulation program that would figure out how many humans would be converted into zombies and how many zombies would be killed each day.

By my calculations, my town would survive a zombie attack, but only 6 people would survive.

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I used XSLT to interpret a stylesheet language.

I'll break that one up a bit.

  • I defined with a document model inspired from docbook, then started implementing XSLT stylesheets to render it to HTML and LaTeX.
  • Then I found I wanted a template language too, so I could have separate web page templates in which to inject my XSLT-generated HTML.
  • So I designed a simple template language with injection points for predefined values.
  • Then I found that I wanted to have factorized and reusable widgets to attach to the injection points. Such as fancy table of contents, indices, outliner-style site maps, etc.
  • So I designed a widget language that was interpreted in XSLT to generate content to inject into the templates.

I learned a few things from this venture, but one most of all: young enthusiastic students in software engineering have almost unlimited hacking energy. What they need most of all, and too often lack, is an experienced mentor to help them make good use of it.

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Back in the mid-80s I wrote a very basic C++ interpreter on the Commodore 64 in Commodore Basic. If I recall, it would take as input some very limited C++ code and then step through the code. Not sure why I did it and it wasn't very useful, but interesting none-the-less.

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vote up 2 vote down

I worked with a guy who wrote a command line app to order burritos from La Costeña, a Mexican grocery store/taqueira in Mountain View, CA. I could never remember the command line syntax and I didn't order from a pattern to the .burritorc file was useless to me. I wrote a MOTIF-based app that gave the look and feel of La Costeña's FAX order form which then forked the command line app as a subprocess to send off the order.

I got moved into a Macintosh heavy group so to get my chops up, I ported it to the Mac, but instead of an order form, the main window featured a virtual tortilla upon which you dragged the things you wanted. It couldn't run the command line app, so I had to reimplement the ordering code, but that wasn't too hard.

Immortalized here.

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vote up 1 vote down

Recursive descent parser of boolean expressions involving 0,1,and,or,not, and parentheses - in one line of SNOBOL.

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I once wrote a Mandelbrot fractal generator using Excel. I resized the cells so all 256 columns fit on screen and shrunk the rows down so the cells were square. The in VBA code I calculated the bailout value and color for each cell and changed the cell background color. Basically it turned each cell in the spreadsheet into a pixel for a 256x256 Mandelbrot fractal image. I still have it laying around on my computer somewhere.

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vote up 3 vote down

One of the first things I do to learn a new programming language is to write a program that analyzes a source text and then uses a Markov-chain analysis to generate random gibberish that's somehow written in the style of the source text. I think I've done this in six or seven languages now.

Why I love Python: It took me about two hours to get it working. And that two hours included building a little IDE in C# that executes the program using IronPython, because I didn't realize I could just use IDLE or grab Eclipse.

It's actually not a bad program, for one written by someone who doesn't know Python (it's importing clr so that it can use the CLR's Random class; making this work in vanilla Python is an exercise for the reader):

import sys
import clr
from System import Random

r = Random()

def buildmap(text, size):
   map = { }
   for i in range(0, len(text)):
      if i + size < len(text):
         word = text[i:i + size]
         next = text[i + size]
      else:
         overlap = (i + size + 1) - len(text)
         word = text[i:] + text[:overlap - 1]
         next = text[overlap - 1]
      if not map.has_key(word):
         map[word] = [ ]
      map[word].append(next)
   return map

def producetext(map, length):
   word = map.keys()[0]
   output = [ ]
   for ch in word:
      output.append(ch)
   count = 0
   while True:
      count = count + 1
      if count > length:
         break
      char = map[word][r.Next(len(map[word]))]
      output.append(char)
      word = word[1:len(word)] + char
   return "".join(output)

text = sys.stdin.read()

map = buildmap(text, 6)

print producetext(map, 1500)

Not bad, though not as Pythonic as it could be. Here's some sample output. Determining what the input was is another exercise for the reader:

Open your hat get your hat get your hair
Your face like a Cuban plane
My love is like ribbons
And the swamplands
From the hillside struggling to the casements
Rip the Florida coast to the searchlights up
Turn the helicopter passes
We're pretty sure they're here will walk again
Put on the wind stopping
Feel the way down with a broadsword
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vote up 0 vote down

I wrote a y-combinator in python... it was because of a lack of a scheme implementation while I was doing my homework. It looks like this:

makerec = lambda p: \
          (lambda mkfact: mkfact(mkfact)) \
          (lambda f: \
           p\
           (lambda arg: (f(f))(arg)))

fact = makerec(lambda f: lambda n: (n==0) and 1 or (n * f(n - 1)))

(Of course you can use it for things besides fact).

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vote up 1 vote down

I've come to this thread a bit late, but in a Computing class in high school, I wrote a BASIC program which ran an indefinite loop where it used the lprint command to continually print long lines of asterisks to the dot-matrix tractor-feed printer.

I put the compiled program into the autoexec.bat file of every computer. The computers were switched off at the end of the day, meaning that when the classes started the next day and everybody turned their computer on, the printers started randomly spewing out wads of paper.

Ahhh, the hilarity.

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