SteveHendersonFineArt, to art
@SteveHendersonFineArt@mastodon.social avatar

We share our secrets and our thoughts with those who hold them gently in their hands and securely in their hearts.

These people are few. Even social butterflies who boast of being "people persons" with lots and lots of friends would be wise to watch with whom they share their innermost introspections.

Hand in Hand metal print of the original oil painting -- https://2-steve-henderson.pixels.com/featured/hand-in-hand-steve-henderson.html?product=metal-print

Sophie, to Nashville
@Sophie@glammr.us avatar

Hey friends! The Mapping Trans Joy team will be in town soon! Come share a meal with us and let’s dream big about , , and

@transjoy

bunvoyage17, to chicago
@bunvoyage17@mastodon.social avatar
SavahRellcast, to Plants
@SavahRellcast@pagan.plus avatar

I finally have an app that allows me to identify the plants in my yard and holy goddess do I have a lot of freaking plants in my yard. Not only do I have a lot of diverse beautiful plants but I have learned that I have two cherry trees four apple trees a whole bunch of different blackberry and raspberry bushes tons and tons of wild strawberries. Plus I found some really good witchy stuff like witches purse and Buttercup and yarrow. There's a lot going on on this 2.3 Acres chunk of land.

Writch,
@Writch@pagan.plus avatar

@SavahRellcast
I have a TON of wild geraniums out here, but I'm not sure what else. I'll have to try this out!

SavahRellcast,
@SavahRellcast@pagan.plus avatar

@Writch let me know what you discover.

arkadiusz, to edge
Indigo, to nature
@Indigo@zirk.us avatar
ChaHarper, to random
@ChaHarper@mastodon.scot avatar

In my experience the first week of May here on Skye means an explosion of green. We had 24 hours of rain, the river is high and the leaves seemed to grow in front of our eyes.

What joy there is in this annual renewal.

SteveHendersonFineArt, to dance
@SteveHendersonFineArt@mastodon.social avatar

I send thanks to the buyer from Texas who purchased a canvas print of

Twilight Romance -- https://2-steve-henderson.pixels.com/featured/twilight-romance-steve-henderson.html?product=canvas-print

May the artwork take you to a place of magical romance and deep, calming joy, bringing a smile of gladness to your face and heart every time you see it.

ebelien, (edited ) to photography
@ebelien@mastodon.social avatar

Het kan weer; met volle kracht vooruit. In vrijheid, zelfstandigheid en welzijn. Met dank aan mijn familie, en aan onze vrienden, collega's en kennissen die ons daarin hebben ondersteund ❤️

SteveHendersonFineArt, to nature
@SteveHendersonFineArt@mastodon.social avatar

I send thanks to the buyer in Washington who purchased an art print of

Otter Rock Beach -- https://2-steve-henderson.pixels.com/featured/otter-rock-beach-steve-henderson.html?product=art-print

May the artwork take you on a peaceful yet bracing walk along the beach, where you can walk barefoot through the surf. And may you set aside any worries or cares in exchange for a feeling of freedom and well being.

AlanC, to photography
@AlanC@pixelfed.social avatar

"Because of your smile you make life more beautiful"

vlrny, to science
@vlrny@disabled.social avatar

If yer having a bad day, this might help. Tickling rats ..for science!

Eavesdrop on Ultrasonic Rat Giggles

https://youtube.com/watch?v=78PfGQbL-g0&si=Tn45tSupm2yeB-jG

SteveHendersonFineArt, to dance
@SteveHendersonFineArt@mastodon.social avatar

Such a perfect place, perfect time for a spontaneous, extemporaneous dance on the beach.

The folds of fabric were just calling out to be unfurled in a flowing ripple of light, color and glow.

The last light of the sun cast its golden rays across the glistening surface of the sand, and there was no orchestra but the surf.

There was youth, and joy, and innocence.

Evening Waltz canvas print -- https://2-steve-henderson.pixels.com/featured/evening-waltz-steve-henderson.html?product=canvas-print

abucci, to ProgrammingLanguages
@abucci@buc.ci avatar

A weird thing about being 50 is that there are programming languages that I've used regularly for longer than some of the software developers I work with have been alive. I first wrote BASIC code in the 1980s. The first time I wrote an expression evaluator--a fairly standard programming puzzle or homework--was in 1990. I wrote it in Pascal for an undergraduate homework assignment. I first wrote perl in the early 1990s, when it was still perl 4.036 (5.38.2 now). I first wrote java in 1995-ish, when it was still java 1.0 (1.21 now). I first wrote scala, which I still use for most things today, in 2013-ish, when it was still scala 2.8 (3.4.0 now). At various times I've been "fluent" in 8086 assembly, BASIC, C, Pascal, perl, python, java, scala; and passable in LISP/Scheme, Prolog, old school Mathematica, (early days) Objective C, matlab/octave, and R. I've written a few lines of Fortran and more than a few lines of COBOL that I ran in a production system once. I could probably write a bit of Haskell if pressed but for some reason I really dislike its syntax so I've never been enthusiastic about learning it well. I've experimented with Clean, Flix, Curry, Unison, Factor, and Joy and learned bits and pieces of each of those. I'm trying to decide whether I should try learning Idris, Agda, and/or Lean. I'm pretty sure I'm forgetting a few languages. Bit of 6502 assembly long ago. Bit of Unix/Linux shell scripting languages (old enough to have lived and breathed tcsh before switching to bash; I use fish now mostly).

When I say passable: in graduate school I wrote a Prolog interpreter in java (including parsing source code or REPL input), within which I could run the classic examples like append or (very simple) symbolic differentiation/integration. As an undergraduate I wrote a Mathematica program to solve the word recognition problem for context-free formal languages. But I'd need some study time to be able to write these languages again.

I don't know what the hell prompted me to reminisce about programming languages. I hope it doesn't come off as a humblebrag but rather like old guy spinning yarns. I think I've been through so many because I'm never quite happy with any one of them and because I've had a varied career that started when I was pretty young.

I guess I'm also half hoping to find people on here who have similar interests so I'm going to riddle this post with hashtags:

#C #R

abucci,
@abucci@buc.ci avatar

@BoydStephenSmithJr How do you find using Haskell in a work setting? I always feel like I'm under time pressure and don't have as much as I would like to think through a design. I'm never satisfied with my Scala code for that reason and I feel like it'd feel even worse with Haskell since it's so much more concise.

Am not familiar with GMDTT, will have to check that out! So many things to learn 🤯

BoydStephenSmithJr,
@BoydStephenSmithJr@hachyderm.io avatar

@abucci This is my second Haskell job and I'm sure things will depend on the organization around you, but I just do the first thing that I can think of that "will work", make it as simple / concrete / specialized as possible until I have something that compiles without warnings, and only then do I let myself generalize / abstract things. Try to stick documentation on all new top-level bindings while my motivation is fresh, and allow myself to rewrite later.

YMMV, HTH

Stitch26, to art
@Stitch26@mastodon.social avatar
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