
![]()

🐸
I will not forget ‘\n’ at the end of a printf call.
I will not forget ‘\n’ at the end of a printf call.
I will not forget ‘\n’ at the end of a printf call.
I will not forget ‘\n’ at the end of a printf call.
I will not forget ‘\n’ at the end of a printf call.
I will not forget ‘\n’ at the end of a printf call.
I will not forget ‘\n’ at the end of a printf call.
I will not forget ‘\n’ at the end of a printf call.
I will not forget ‘\n’ at the end of a printf call.
I will not forget ‘\n’ at the end of a printf call.
I will not forget ‘\n’ at the end of a printf call.
I will not forget ‘\n’ at the end of a printf call.
I will not forget ‘\n’ at the end of a printf call.
Tried this at discrete math exam when forgot how to describe an algorithm in a regular math style. Even though code was doing everything correctly and exercise didn’t specified any limitations for solution, sadly I’ve got 0 points for my solution.
That’s was naive and just for lulz but I hoped a little bit because our discrete math professor was from the neural networks department so c++ code wasn’t something alianated for him.
I’m suprised how rarely OpenSource devs abuse their corporate overlords, which though pay them less then to an officialy recruited junior dev(in a best case) or not pay them at all.
There’s so much options to implement backdors and other sketchy shit with a targeting specifically for a big corporate sector, to left normal users unharmed.















