@hankgreen FYI, some weird visual glitches happen if you click Shuffle several times quickly. Some of the tiles can temporarily disappear. Some of them can become tilted and not lay flat anymore.
@msolurin It was very interesting throughout how he couldn't seem to bring himself to look at you. Even when responding to points you made, he talked to Charlamagne instead of you and talked about you as if you weren't sitting right next to him.
@DanG88_ Everybody else is criticizing, but here's Dan telling you he would trade you all the good candy in exchange for your garbage. We all need friends like Dan. feenBless
@jamestanton Using a dictionary text file from a random gh repo, the only other word that contains AEIOUY exactly once each, in order is 'half-seriously'.
Allowing other orders, you get lots more (e.g., 'commutatively'); more than 1 of each vowel gives even more (e.g., 'aeronautically').
@lightediand @littmath You might also enjoy generalizing. What about subsets of digits (e.g., the prob of an n-dig number containing 1, 3, and 7)? Or digit substrings (e.g., prob of containing exactly '01134' somehwere)?
@sbagley Esther Vergeer's career singles record was 695-25, and she was also dominant in doubles. She ended her career on a 10-YEAR long winning streak. https://t.co/uATXr9R4sS
@elonmusk You-Know-Who also used a Taboo on his name to target his adversaries. Interesting choice of figure to emulate. I guess at least you didn't choose Umbridge, she's the worst.
@TimHenke9 I vaguely remember at one time looking at the fancy-preview package which is apparently not maintained anymore but might be a useful starting point (https://t.co/ZQerpBTzfv).
@d_martin05 "Any math" is probably too permissive. Floor/ceiling together with unlimited root/factorial applications can usually solve these sorts of problems with some trial and error (although not very elegantly): https://t.co/7hWca6NnAN
@kellen_myers@chadtopaz Yeah, I use sticks and stones. But unfortunately students will still see "stars and bars" in basically any book (or the Wikipedia page).
@neilhimself Is "What is the point of you?" from Sandman ep 3 an intentional reference to the Doctor Who ep Amy's Choice (in which the Doctor and friends face the Dream Lord and the circumstances in which the line is said are similar)? Or is it just a wonderful coincidence?
@jamestanton Nice variation on a classic problem! I think you need a stronger stipulation like "no point on a new circle can be within 1 inch of a point on an existing circle" for this to technically end, though.