This is yet another project that I would call personal to me. The first time I came across Jonathan Basile's Library of Babel was about 6 months ago. Back then I had just starting learning about what variables meant in programming and needless to say, I was super intrigued by the idea of a library containing every book that was ever written, is being written and will ever be written by mankind. Just the idea seemed too profound and bringing the story to reality part? oh boy...
Me & my friend were chatting about this idea and we both agreed if someone could solve this complex algorithm (that somehow literally captured the entirety of the time dimension in its palm) they would become a master of programming. Well, here I am today, still a novice but, I'm proud to say that I have solved the Library of Babel. After tons of reddit questions and David Coleman's phone recorded "tutorial", here we are!
Q. Why Visual Studio?
A. Well it was hard for me too... I initially started building this program in p5js but quickly hit a huge wall. JS doesn't seem to handle really big integers all that well. So, I had to switch to C#.
Q. Is your library flawless?
A. Nope, not at the moment. Good news is I haven't encountered any problems during my testing.
Q. Does it really contain what you claim of?
A. I'd suggest reading Jonathan Basile's libraryofbabel.info/About.html or Jorge Luis' book itself to get a better understanding of the complexity we're dealing with. In a nutshell, yes, my library does contain anything that can be expressed in a written format within 3200 characters.
CC Attributions:
freemusicarchive.org/music/ki...
freemusicarchive.org/music/ki...
freemusicarchive.org/music/ki...
David Coleman's video: • The Library of Babel. ...
#csharp #libraryofbabel #coding
Негізгі бет How I Made My Very Own Library of Babel (C#)
Пікірлер: 12