It's Thanksgiving in the United States tomorrow.
Please describe your favorite method of cooking turkey in the form of runnable code using your favorite language. For example in Java with java.utils.concurrency.
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It's Thanksgiving in the United States tomorrow. Please describe your favorite method of cooking turkey in the form of runnable code using your favorite language. For example in Java with java.utils.concurrency. |
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In C:
Place turkey on your favorite multi-core CPU array, execute above code. As a bonus, you can use the leftover forks later to eat the turkey. |
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In the perversely overengineered Turkey framework, released for Thanksgiving 2008:
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I don't really get involved in the cooking process (my wife would balk at that). So, I would handle it afterwards like this: Assembly language:
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I fear for the programming industry if these unoptimized solutions are anything to go by. Here's a (fairly) language-agnostic approach, just rewrite for your particular language:
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I tried to cook a turkey in Lisp, but I only ever got back a brand new turkey, fully cooked. The original was still in the oven. Then, since nobody was looking, the garbageman came and took it away. |
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Of course, in Python you wouldn't actually cook anything, just do:
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If you have Boost, you should use boost::turkey. |
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Real programmers stuff a turkey via SQL injection |
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Here's an algorithm developed by a few grad students a while back:
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Naturally, in PHP you wouldn't actually try to solve the "cook the turkey" problem. You would instead try to hide that it, in fact, is raw and eat it anyways. Actually, whether your mouth is filled with turkey or something entirely else doesn't really matter, as you will chew on it and swallow happily nevertheless. If your stomach would fail at some point, you would try to remember what you did earlier by doing what you did before, but at some points in the process, would stop, and look at what you have at hands. Once you have taken the peek, try to figure out how the salmon ended up in your fork, and start the process all over again. Don't get me wrong; PHP is my current language of choice. |
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In delphi:
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I wouldn't waste time writing custom code, I'd buy an off the shelf turkey system. |
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I'd give an answer, but my internationalization skills aren't up to par |
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Well, it depends if Jon Skeet is the programmer or not. He only needs to look at the turkey and it cooks. The rest of us, not so much. |
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Simple one in C#
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REAL programmers would use good old C-x M-c M-xmasdinner |
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First, I ask the client how they like their turkey done. |
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cat plate | grep turkey | eat & |
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Chef's like Perl because nobody else can read their recipes. :P |
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Complainings about me in dinning table,
PHP
OMG, i'm not good at this.. |
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Hmmm, you guys better check localization very carefully :) |
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stty cooked >/dev/tturkey |
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I don't have one for Turkey, but I do have one for Canadian Goose:
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en-GB answer (2008 only):
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