Is it pathetic that this made sense to me?
void tomsawyer() {
try {
assertequals(you.say(his_company), you.say(society));
}
catch (mist) {}
catch (myth) {}
catch (mystery) {}
catch (drift) {}
finally
{
Runtime.exit(TomSawyer.WARRIOR);
}
}
I’m tempted to compile it.
(Via Geekboy)
I understand barely enough to get it.
lol
That’s how it was recorded, no?
Great!
Yes.
Awesome.
Mean mean pride.
Code-tatsic!
This was at the approach of the Synthesizer-centric Lee/Lifeson/Peart period. Eight years later, it was back to guitars for 1989’s Presto, then a very simplistic effort of three instruments for Roll The Bones.
Spaghetti code!
loser
I don’t get it. Presuming it is a reference to the Rush album, isn’t it Temple of Syrinx, for starters?
And the Tom Sawyer reference??????
Perhaps those who are savvier than myself would be kind enough to explain it to those of us who are not.
我的脑袋疼。
The body of the post goes through “Tom Sawyer”. I did “Temples of Syrynx” for the headline just because. My customary thematic integrity came in second to blind caprice.
Plus, I’m more interested in finding pseudocode representations of other songs, now.
Hmmm:
1——————–
Switch {
Case “Stay”=trouble
Case “Go”=trouble*2
}
Oh, this could be fun.
Flux capacitor.
Well it would of course abend, as Tom Saywer is not on 2112.
But this does elevate (or demote) geekery to a new level.
Declarations
candy.room.wall := pictures(heroes)
If {
gotoRoom == “yes” then walk.darkness(candy.hall)
}
If
candy.room
then
Abort
end if
· · · — — — · · ·
“disconnected modem” really dates it.
Johnny, I did not realize you are an ABBA fan!