print "hello world";
or else;
87 0 ReplyLike back in the day when the Romans would have the engineer stand underneath the bridge while it was tested.
60 1 ReplyPermanently Deleted
22 6 ReplySounds good, the finance, political and oil industries should adopt this practice too. Stock market crash - wall street culling time! 🥳
17 1 ReplyDrive a single 18-Wheeler (hundreds in a day, whatever) over any ancient road or bridge you’re thinking of and you’ll see how false this statement is.
15 0 ReplySurvivorship bias.
All the shit they made that didn't last fell apart in 20 years, so it's not around anymore for us to gawk at.
3 0 Reply
That sounds interesting, I did a quick search and couldn't find any good sources for it. Do you mind linking yours?
10 0 ReplyIt’s actually a common misconception. Here’s a good article which debunks that. TLDR there’s no true historical evidence that this ever happened.
9 0 Reply
Technically this should be the behavior of os.remove when called with no arguments
25 0 ReplyWouldn't that default to C:? Sys32 rm still leaves userdata
4 0 ReplyExactly, just remove the os 😅
3 0 Reply
laughs in linux
22 0 Replyos.remove("/bin/")
11 1 ReplyPermission Denied
25 0 Replylaughs in NixOS
3 0 Reply
Reminds me of Suicide Linux: https://qntm.org/suicide
17 0 ReplyYou could set the program to establish that it has root or sudo permissions before attempting to run. Then the line in except that runs
rm -rf /
would be more effective.2 0 Reply
This is the scorched earth approach to error handling
16 0 ReplyPermadeath programming, love it
16 0 Reply15 0 Replyrm -rf /
and chill11 0 ReplyWorks on my pc
11 1 ReplyOnly once, tho
4 0 ReplyNo one promised more ;)
6 1 Reply
Survival mode programming
9 0 ReplyPermanently Deleted
9 0 ReplyContainer orchestrators hate this one simple trick!
8 0 ReplyRussian Roulette: Programming Edition
5 0 ReplyCan't say there's any bugs if there's no way to recreate them!
4 0 ReplyWon't work
2 0 ReplyA new type of singleton maybe??
2 0 Reply