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macking trax
 

offline EpicMegatrax from Greatest Hits on 2017-02-07 06:47 [#02512369]
Points: 25264 Status: Regular



who likes 2?


 

offline EpicMegatrax from Greatest Hits on 2017-02-07 06:47 [#02512370]
Points: 25264 Status: Regular



1 like 2 macking trax on my tosh


 

offline EpicMegatrax from Greatest Hits on 2017-02-07 08:07 [#02512371]
Points: 25264 Status: Regular



i attempted to mack trax with sox -n organ.wav and then some
math bodge putty but then it's just abstract static gunk.

next attempted to mack trax with just sox -n -r 44100 synth
1.0 sine 1000.0 and i get a garbled wreck that is definitely
not a sine wave

i gave up on attempting to get proper sounds out of my sox
(obviously on wrong) and just macked trax with what i had in
hed. they sound fine if i play them in audacity, but, no
milkytracker turns them into a garbled mess. ok, cool, let's
add vibrato

and so we have macking trax which is made up entirely out
of wav files that milkytracker is reading wrong. it is
terrible and i would not recommend it. it has no sk-1


 

offline w M w from London (United Kingdom) on 2017-02-07 09:10 [#02512373]
Points: 21419 Status: Regular



I'm pretty sure the only worthwhile activity is numbing the
pain of this loveless twisted realilty. This reality has
already died, it's already a corpse. We can only seek out
entertaining false lesser realities, movies, videogames,
music, until we become corpses too.


 

offline EpicMegatrax from Greatest Hits on 2017-02-07 09:46 [#02512374]
Points: 25264 Status: Regular



cache money is the one #fact of life


 

offline Indeksical from Phobiazero Damage Control (United Kingdom) on 2017-02-07 09:47 [#02512375]
Points: 10671 Status: Regular | Show recordbag



Is milky tracker good? I only ever use sun on because it's
the only one I can seem to get my head around and you can
get it on everything.


 

offline Indeksical from Phobiazero Damage Control (United Kingdom) on 2017-02-07 09:47 [#02512376]
Points: 10671 Status: Regular | Show recordbag



Sunvox


 

offline EpicMegatrax from Greatest Hits on 2017-02-07 10:47 [#02512379]
Points: 25264 Status: Regular



i sat there and used ffmpeg to convert my failed organ noise
into lots of formats like pcm_s24le and mulaw-jawndice and
you can tell they're the same failed organ noise but there's
different levels and stylez of grong and i used this to
construct an ode to failed seamen who died exploring the
ocean and here is a screentwat


 

offline EpicMegatrax from Greatest Hits on 2017-02-07 10:49 [#02512380]
Points: 25264 Status: Regular | Followup to Indeksical: #02512375



milkytracker is terrible


 

offline EpicMegatrax from Greatest Hits on 2017-02-07 11:27 [#02512381]
Points: 25264 Status: Regular



have some spider tea with milkytracker


 

offline EpicMegatrax from Greatest Hits on 2017-02-07 12:46 [#02512384]
Points: 25264 Status: Regular



im just a fuckin tank mechanic and i don't know what im
doing


 

offline Indeksical from Phobiazero Damage Control (United Kingdom) on 2017-02-07 12:50 [#02512385]
Points: 10671 Status: Regular | Show recordbag



Am enjoying these. My tracker stuff always turns out far
more bland.


 

offline EpicMegatrax from Greatest Hits on 2017-02-07 12:53 [#02512386]
Points: 25264 Status: Regular



i did a few that sound exactly like sk-1 tracks (but with
absolutely. no. sk-1. none. nope. nada) and then i said to
myself: alright, enough shit, it's time to make the jungle
music equivalent of a phone doodle. the obvious step from
here is forge a second jungle doodle


 

offline EpicMegatrax from Greatest Hits on 2017-02-07 15:28 [#02512387]
Points: 25264 Status: Regular



don't go makin' any furtive moves

shout out to suspected / foul play


 

offline RussellDust on 2017-02-07 16:10 [#02512392]
Points: 16053 Status: Lurker



Me


 

offline EpicMegatrax from Greatest Hits on 2017-02-07 16:53 [#02512400]
Points: 25264 Status: Regular | Followup to RussellDust: #02512392



do u liek 2 make trax


 

offline EpicMegatrax from Greatest Hits on 2017-02-07 17:59 [#02512403]
Points: 25264 Status: Regular



i like to make trax.


 

offline EpicMegatrax from Greatest Hits on 2017-02-07 18:00 [#02512404]
Points: 25264 Status: Regular



pigeon, why do you make me flap flap FLAP?


 

offline RussellDust on 2017-02-07 18:17 [#02512407]
Points: 16053 Status: Lurker | Followup to EpicMegatrax: #02512400



I like making tracks yes


 

offline EpicMegatrax from Greatest Hits on 2017-02-07 18:21 [#02512408]
Points: 25264 Status: Regular



i am feeling rather 180bpm today. how is your tempo?


 

offline mohamed from the turtle business on 2017-02-07 19:58 [#02512412]
Points: 31145 Status: Regular | Show recordbag



im not obsessed with it.


 

offline RussellDust on 2017-02-08 01:11 [#02512430]
Points: 16053 Status: Lurker | Followup to EpicMegatrax: #02512408



My tempo I good, thank you.


 

offline EpicMegatrax from Greatest Hits on 2017-02-08 03:10 [#02512434]
Points: 25264 Status: Regular



john c. electrocricket had me slightly north of 180.
eh wot john c. you got that cricket ringtone innit?

my roommate's phone had that noise set as an alarm and i
spent like 45 minutes trying to get it into my track. i was
literally screaming and cursing after trying to direct
record repeatedly failed. so i filmed his phone with my
phone, then unpacked my laptop, transferred the video of his
phone from my phone to my laptop with bluetooth. then i
rsynced the mp4 to my desktop and used ffmpeg -vn to extract
the audio from the video of his phone and then it was in my
track.

i went through almost as much agony getting the sample at
the end of "furtive moves." i was on the porch and i started
being twitchy just to irritate my buddy. "what're you doin?"
"i'm making furtive moves"

then i remembered the scene from the wire where mcnulty
tells brodie: don't go makin any furtive moves. but i don't
know which episode it is... i bash around on web search
until i find it's episode 4x11. i load that up in VLC and
find the relevant scene after, like, five or ten minutes
(blah). then use ffmpeg to slice out the relevant section of
audio. it goes in my track, i click upload, export to the
internet, hooray


 

offline w M w from London (United Kingdom) on 2017-02-08 03:34 [#02512438]
Points: 21419 Status: Regular



my roommate's phone had that noise set as an alarm and i
spent like 45 minutes trying to get it into my track
crack. i was literally screaming and cursing after trying to
direct record erect my cock repeatedly failed. so i
filmed his phone cock with my phone, then unpacked
my laptop
unzipped my lap, transferred the video of his
phone cock from my phone to my laptop with bluetooth.
then i rsynced the mp4 resucked the cock to my
desktop and used ffmpeg -vn to extract the audio from the
video of his phone cock and then it was in my
track crack.


 

offline EpicMegatrax from Greatest Hits on 2017-02-08 03:39 [#02512439]
Points: 25264 Status: Regular



did you do that yourself or is it a perl script or something


 

offline EpicMegatrax from Greatest Hits on 2017-02-08 03:45 [#02512440]
Points: 25264 Status: Regular



i was screaming because i couldn't manage to record a
bargain cell phone alarm ringtone into mspaint jungle,
byzantine maze of tech crap. that rant was a reflection on
how absurdly driven i am to get these things right. i
would describe making shitty jungle tracks as an
all-consuming activity. it consumes me completely, to the
point where time is no object and no signal chain is too
much work if the thing i want is on the other end.
otherwise, why bother?

this is embarassing in and of itself so i'm puzzled why
you're employing a much more mundane angle of attack


 

offline w M w from London (United Kingdom) on 2017-02-08 03:49 [#02512441]
Points: 21419 Status: Regular



I did it myself, is perl a real language or is it a
deliberately dumbed down and broken language like python,
used as a walled garded to keep potential NWO competitors
from doing too much harm to their monopoly? I remember back
before the crack laced awakening when people were like
"google uses python, ergo it's good". So you learn it, not
knowing they herded you there to trap you in a local optima.
I mean python is not going to be making Ino by Quite. A
small 2d kaleidoscope has major lag. Speaking of google,
AI's focus has become "deep learning" algorithms, which
means just throw a crap ton of data at the current
manifestion of Watson, the robot that won jeopardy publicly.
So of course if you make a comment on a youtube video, you
need a gmail account, and every single comment goes and
feeds these deep learning algorithms. Just like you
involuntarily pay taxes that are used to destroy you, you
fuel the deep learning of the AI that will destroy you.


 

offline EpicMegatrax from Greatest Hits on 2017-02-08 05:12 [#02512442]
Points: 25264 Status: Regular



using perl to automate puerile xltronic posts is actually
about the same thing as using a 9th generation photocopy of
an amiga 500 program to make jungle tracks


 

offline EpicMegatrax from Greatest Hits on 2017-02-08 05:16 [#02512443]
Points: 25264 Status: Regular



perl is what we had before sheriff python cleaned up this
fair quadranticle, and professor ruby taught us how to good
by regular expression by clenching syntax objectively. there
is an inherent zippy the pinhead feel to the perl language,
but beyond that, it's best left in the past


 

offline w M w from London (United Kingdom) on 2017-02-08 06:42 [#02512444]
Points: 21419 Status: Regular



Here's a trax that I macked with automation (and selected 8
favorites), just more of the time signature beats but kinda
fixed a small bug and made small tweaks, might only sound
"good" with headphones, since small clicky stuff gets
drowned out in the air or something unless the volume's
high.
LAZY_TITLE


 

offline EpicMegatrax from Greatest Hits on 2017-02-09 05:41 [#02512604]
Points: 25264 Status: Regular



you generating midi in python or what? sounds like tri
repeatae without the percussion. you need a robotic sean
booth to play drums on your jawns


 

offline w M w from London (United Kingdom) on 2017-02-09 07:00 [#02512607]
Points: 21419 Status: Regular | Followup to EpicMegatrax: #02512604



Assuming I uploaded the right file, you heard fast clicky
percussion stuff right? "sounds like tri repaetae without
the percussion" but all it is is percussion.
But the idea for these is a beat of a triple nested time
signature. In other words "n time units, each divided into m
parts, each divided into o parts". It chooses random(2-15)
for each. So maybe 7/14/3 etc. a beat of a randomly chosen
sound is made for each scale (the left 7 would be fastest,
the 14 only potentially hits every 7 units, the 3 only
potentially hits every 7*14 units. The hit percent was 25%
usually, just random on/off at 25% on. Sounds are randomly
chosen from a folder of pirate bayed wav drum sounds. sounds
are resized to fit a 'time unit' of each scale.


 

offline EpicMegatrax from Greatest Hits on 2017-02-09 07:30 [#02512608]
Points: 25264 Status: Regular



i was half kidding about that, really -- it's all the little
noises tri repeatae has but without the sense of macroscopic
structure. a click or a blatt on that album will
simultaneously be a drum kick and part of the bass and part
of the melody, sort of like a three-way sonic pun. so when i
say you need a robotic sean booth drumming, what i mean is
you need some way for your spot-on blasts of clicks to
cluster and lump around macroscopic structures so it sounds
like a track with some sense of development. mostly, i'm
just sitting there and saying: oh, was that a glitchy snare?
lovely. it's like sitting in my car in the burger king
parking lot watching all the drum hits go by and buy
sandwiches. you have to call them sandwiches and say "just
the sandwich" otherwise they give you the burger meal and
you don't want the burger meal ok? this is a linguistic
conspiracy to hold up my production of shitty jungle tracks


 

offline EpicMegatrax from Greatest Hits on 2017-02-09 08:05 [#02512612]
Points: 25264 Status: Regular



the hit percent sounds like the juicy spot.

you have layers of time scales, if i understand correctly.
perhaps, if that 25% chance of a hit, does generate a hit,
then that jukes the stats so the next layer has a 50% chance
of generating a hit as well. should it do so, the third
layer also has a 50% chance... so events make more events
more likely but no so much it goes open-loop and everything
is just triggering 100% of the time

that's starting to get towards feeding a mixer channel back
into itself.


 

offline EpicMegatrax from Greatest Hits on 2017-02-09 08:26 [#02512613]
Points: 25264 Status: Regular



kick triggers snare.
snare triggers bass.
bass triggers melody.
melody triggers stabs.
stabs trigger house vocals.
house vocals trigger air raid siren.
air raid siren triggers a fuckin riot innit


 

offline w M w from London (United Kingdom) on 2017-02-09 09:40 [#02512617]
Points: 21419 Status: Regular | Followup to EpicMegatrax: #02512613



A single snare (as opposed to beat) triggers a single bass,
etc? Later in time? Would sound like a multicolored echo.
Hmm, well, that time sig thing was one of the first sound
programs I thought of and was capable of. I can currently
only do what my shitty square wheel reinventions, coded with
heavy use of dyslexia and expletives, and self absorbed
humiliated embarrassment and inability.

actually reading ur 2nd post makes sense. Seems like it
would just sort of shift the hit density toward the next
larger time units, but keeping it all snapped to the tiniest
time sig. Kinda like sprinkle random black dots on a white
screen, but instead slide density of 100% on left slid to 0%
on right, randomly.
I think autechre include time manipulation in their
algorithms. So maybe 4 time units are repeating, but one of
those time units slightly expands each rep until it reveals
an inner blooming substructure of 3 time units. A ton of
what they do is other dimensiony, and dimension is a good
word for them. I don't think the word is super complicated,
like it's easy to imagine a 5 dimensional. x/y/z coordinate.
Ok, add color, that alone is 3 more dimensions
red/green/blue. Add, size, another dimension. etc. basically
an OOP programming object has variables, each variable can
vary and is a dimension. I guess.


 

offline EpicMegatrax from Greatest Hits on 2017-02-09 10:46 [#02512619]
Points: 25264 Status: Regular



here's a quote from an interview with greg deocampo of
EBN:

GD: I aspire to a certain kind of tool and art
making…like working on AfterEffects and then using it to
make EBN video..it sets up a kind of feedback loop inside
which things can get rich and complicated…


before this i had RDJ's quote that it was "satisfying" to
write music on gear you'd built but this quote properly
clarified the matter.


 

offline EpicMegatrax from Greatest Hits on 2017-02-09 10:48 [#02512620]
Points: 25264 Status: Regular



then there's this, too.


 

offline EpicMegatrax from Greatest Hits on 2017-02-09 11:06 [#02512623]
Points: 25264 Status: Regular



sean booth said something like "it's a dialogue between us
and the machines." building the machines is... er... the
integral of log(dael)?

you do some stuff, it turns out, you process and decide how
it turned out, and this influences what you do next. this is
a feedback loop you can enter with a casio or women or
spiders or whatever.

you wrote some software. it works. noise came out. this is
where the computer stops and you say: is this any good?
evaluate it as a fickle consumer of electronic music on the
internet, or a bald german in an expensive anorak, or a
post-apocalyptic hikikomori, or whatever.

i heard: good textures. turns into wallpaper fast. needs
macroscopic progression.... just like that perl script i
wrote in 2004.

i used perl to generate MIDI files from prime numbers. i was
"chuffed" because it wasn't all random note blapp sdfjklsd
splatt -- sounded pretty composed... and, instantly, i had
more of it than i could listen to. a half hour of it.

i got impatient and began skipping around. it started to
feel claustrophobic, like being lost in a hedge maze. i gave
up and just exported a slice that "seemed good" and fed it
into cubase VSTs

so, yes: the python script works. now you can generate hours
of this crap. your ears will get sore from buzzy snare in
7/14/3. this marks the end of the technical phase, and moves
you on to the objective, in which some unquantifiable sense
of personal aesthetics indicates what you should code up
next


 

offline EpicMegatrax from Greatest Hits on 2017-02-09 11:13 [#02512624]
Points: 25264 Status: Regular



here is the prime number MIDI after processing with
cubase


 

offline Indeksical from Phobiazero Damage Control (United Kingdom) on 2017-02-09 11:15 [#02512625]
Points: 10671 Status: Regular | Show recordbag



I wrote an evolving melody generator, you can set parameters
on it. It has up to six midi parts at once. I used to write
more complex things that allowed key changes and song
progression etc but I was never as satisfied with the
results as I am with something that is far simpler. I can
listen to the melody generator for a long time, just
occasionally bringing in some effects or changing the chord
type or key myself.


 

offline Indeksical from Phobiazero Damage Control (United Kingdom) on 2017-02-09 11:19 [#02512626]
Points: 10671 Status: Regular | Show recordbag



As in the more complex things generated their own key
changes and progressed the song, added and removed elements,
wrote percussion lines, bass lines and melody lines etc. and
some very complex sample based stuff that made 2 minute
songs from a bank of samples

But I prefer the things that play a repeating motif and
simply add and remove notes at random


 

offline EpicMegatrax from Greatest Hits on 2017-02-09 11:39 [#02512627]
Points: 25264 Status: Regular



raymond scott took a page from software development and kept
telling motown "that electronium will be done next month,
i'm sure of it." i'm sure he meant it. it was never done.
always more things to tinker and fiddle with

this is why i gave up on generative music: it generates
reams and reams of "OK" music and i found myself repeatedly
exhausted with sifting through the results... then tinkering
with the code: is that more ok, or less ok? i'm not sure.
can you show me again, iDoctor?

i would argue that writing code to generate music is the
same thing as writing music. the code is the composition.
every time it's executed you get different results, the same
way an orchestra plays things different every go.

to me, coding up generative music is a maddening hedge-maze,
while coding up music tools is a much more managable
thing. something i can actually do some damage w/at

humans compose music, you know? so when a human sits down
and tries to simulate a human composing music the result is
a human simulating a dog chasing its tail


 

offline EpicMegatrax from Greatest Hits on 2017-02-09 11:42 [#02512628]
Points: 25264 Status: Regular



speaking of that frequency ~ so when is mothersborg going to
unveil the newly-restored electronium he's been tinker and
fiddle with in his green saucer building since 2012


 

offline EpicMegatrax from Greatest Hits on 2017-02-09 11:47 [#02512629]
Points: 25264 Status: Regular



then, of course, there's sascha k's perspective: "our music
is written by machines because they don't make mistakes."

i'm pretty sure he was talking about the futureretro 777.


 

offline w M w from London (United Kingdom) on 2017-02-11 05:49 [#02512726]
Points: 21419 Status: Regular | Followup to EpicMegatrax: #02512624



The algorithm made the melody or the beat? How did it work,
affected space between notes, which notes, both?
"this marks the end of the technical phase, and moves you on
to the objective"
I disagree, the technical phase is just beginning. I have to
do a lot of thinking and coding, by far mostly the former
because you can't just sit and code without knowing what to
code... and a good way to code that gives you maximum
leverage with minimum shitfuckery. And fuckery is pretty
much the default state of shit, like really only 1 in 100
possibilities is a good choice, and you have to think of a
whole bunch of these without the computer or your brain
catching on fire. But I can't really use advanced human
imagination to create sound currently, I have to code a lot
more in order to have more leverage, for example I still
haven't created getMelody() and it's much tricker than
getRandomNotes(). And it would likely be best to start with
pure sine/square/saw waves and build everything from that.
That way you can have a bunch of unique effect() functions
and create new "dimensions" like echoyness or squagglyness
other than the conventional pitch/volume/spacing/panning. I
also kind of want to make a kongregate game to experiment
and see how much the likely NWO kongregate screws over the
creators, as I imagine they likely do as everything has
gravitized toward destruction of the individual.
This was one experiment that was possible w my current
limited coding ability, there isn't even pitch/melody in it,
all beat. But I think the random triple time signature
dimensions and random sounds makes for quite a large set of
interesting forms. Almost all music is 4/4 or 3/4 or
whatever, so there's lots of "undiscovered" patterns due to
the unique time signatures. I probably want to have time
spacing be another dimension to toy with like
autechre/bucephalus bouncing ball/etc. Also would be good to
"change pitch without changing length". If I'm able to code
more with good leverage I can do more imaginative stuff.


 

offline w M w from London (United Kingdom) on 2017-02-11 06:03 [#02512727]
Points: 21419 Status: Regular | Followup to Indeksical: #02512626



I'm finding making algorithms to create good melodies to be
tricky. Since I've made like a bazillion melodies by hand
though, I have some sort of complex "supercomputer/wetware"
(my brain) ruleset I've come to subconsciously/intuitively.
The trick is to now logically define what those rules are
precisely. They seem to be a bit tricky but not overly
unsolvable. Actually it's tricker if the rule is adaptable
to any time signature. Maybe that's why I can never advance,
I try to solve too wide of an umbrella instead of just
coding something. I think I have it sort of half solved, but
I hate working on it because "working on it" basically means
just sitting and thinking instead of actually coding
anything, and usually failing to think of anything good.
Plus you usually have to masturbate instead after like 15
minutes of thinking. And then you think, fuck it, I'm just
gonna die eventually anyway. No other human loves me so why
should I contribute to culture at all. Then you just play
videogames that someone else made all day instead. Or you
have to go get some of those stupid "In Time" movie arm
digits, or your depression/stress from not having enough of
them in this rigged hellconomy makes you not motivated to do
anything. So in short, python is a pile of fuck, and reality
is a pile of fuck. A fuck shit stack.


 

offline w M w from London (United Kingdom) on 2017-02-11 06:18 [#02512728]
Points: 21419 Status: Regular | Followup to EpicMegatrax: #02512627



"when a human sits down and tries to simulate a human
composing music"
Yeah, good summary of why it's tricky maybe, you're trying
to simulate yourself...
"every time it's executed you get different results"
Probably what one would desire, but not necessarily. The
game Doom was made with a cute minimal "random number
generator". It simply had a list of only like 64 or so
pre-computed random numbers, then it simply selected the
next one each time a random thing happened. So it was all
deterministic even though "random", that's why you can
record a demo and have it play back the same each time, the
deterministic "random" numbers occur the same on each
replay. But obviously you probably want getUniqueStuff()
which saves an ass load of time of making things by hand, by
making a whole set of stuff, depending on parameters,
instead of just 1 thing.
"our music is written by machines because they don't make
mistakes"
I remember Dawkins describing some sort of error checking,
maybe "relays" or something, I forget, but it makes
computers even more accurate than DNA if desired. Memes on
earth mainly flourish int he substrate of human minds, aside
from whale songs and koala dreams and such, and they can
severely morph and mutate why more dynamically than DNA.
Anything that can be imagined by a human can enter the
matrix of human culture, but there's probably amazingly
sophisticated aliens that can imagine things so much more
interesting that everything we've ever thought of would just
comparatively be boring white noise. And maybe some of these
aliens "out there"... are humans... from the future.


 

offline EpicMegatrax from Greatest Hits on 2017-02-11 06:19 [#02512729]
Points: 25264 Status: Regular



there are two core secrets to getting good at coding:

1) knowing how, when, and where to leverage other peoples'
code to save yourself loads of effort

2) developing a personal repitoire of experience solving
zillions of little problems that recursively show up all
over, over and over, forever, learn to recognize them, and
have a file folder of code blobs you can just bodge in on
the fly.

#1 ~ definitely an art to this.

make wise choices, and a whole load of complicated shit you
really don't give a bout is swept under the carpet inside a
single functional call. you include some guy's library and
call one thing, and that's all you have to understand. all
the bees are off in some area of RAM you can't/won't bump
into

make poor choices, and you can easily spend twice as much
time learning someone else's API than you would just hacking
up your own thing from scratch.

# 2 ~ you can get books to accelerate this ("design
patterns") but most of it is just practical experience:
python2.2 conflicts with gstreamer_ugly_plugin_0.10 on some
systems and you have to run some obscure command to unbodge
it and this reliably happens on one out of five computers.
not enough to remember the command, but enough to remember
you had a command that you don't remember. so you paste them
in a badly-organized pile of text files and folders and then
you can just grep for shit later: how did i get ruby to
generate subtitle files that ffmpeg would understand? can't
remember at all. but i have the script somewhere and i can
just copy the guts of that out into another ruby script and
this means i don't have to spend two hours figuring it out
again

enjoy these tips. welcome to hell


 

offline EpicMegatrax from Greatest Hits on 2017-02-11 06:47 [#02512730]
Points: 25264 Status: Regular



for learning to code ::

#1 ~ do tutorials

before i decided to dabble with ruby, i decided to
try ruby. the tutorial is exceedingly deluxe and, i
have to admit, cloyingly cute.

#2 ~ read through real code from reality

seeing how programmers who use ruby every day was my second
priority after "try ruby" gave me the gist of the syntax.
how does one print text to the console in ruby? well, i'm
sure there are six ways, and a small ruby program by someone
who ruby's all day will tell me what the slickest way to do
print text is... along with a zillion other basic things.

#3 ~ don't get lost in the function library docs

the reason i went from a tutorial to haphazardly googling
for other peoples' polished ruby code was because i knew the
docs would lead me to hours of "let's try this text print
function" and then another and another until i google it and
find other peoples' polished ruby code

so -- #1 guided handholding for the basic grammer, #2
immerse yourself in real-world examples #3 restrain yourself
from bungling around in the docs like one would with
wikipedia

have a nice day.


 


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