What’s blocking the way now is a simple function that can detect lies. It would need to have a memory map that’s updateable. New statements bounce around the map until they find a new place or disagree or match. The map updates via a simple tree hard coded in.
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Fell asleep before laying down sufficient code. Am carrying on this morning. It's not yet 7am and still dark outside. Had a liquid breakfast. Countering the negative telepathy is taking hours out of my work time. Quite like the feel of my used ThinkPad's soft touch keys.
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Couldn't code much due to interruptions, bruising my brain every 5 minutes. Thankfully it passed but I'm too sleepy to program Tell. On the positive side, I rehabilitated my / Dad's old iPhone 7. I gave it to him as he needed an easy to use phone but now has a powerful Samsung 5G.
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The SIM went undetected again overnight. Switched back to my stodgy Nokia. No nerve to code past all the British minds thinking they'll be sent to hell and want to beat up a helpless Asian guy.
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Finally, I have the urge to work. This will really be my final project, writing or coding. I will then be making bio-pastic accessories for Apple Pencil.
Made good progress. The program is feasible and non-kludgy to write. I should be done soon.
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There is amazing complexity in Tell with just 4 operators and an equality, plus just 8 variables so I decided to write it a bit different. Almost midnight, been taking care of mental miscreants. We've figured out something called a 'chain bomb' that's tied to their spinal cord and causes incontinence, among other things.
So the applet will output to the screen after making a pass thru the data set against the truth checking array. The variables will cycle a,b,(c) in 3 internal for loops while rotating the color dots array. Now the question is how to render the thing to screen so it's logical. I thought of a 2x2 square at first. Also how does it move about?
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Took a while to figure this thing out. That there are truth blocks and lie blocklets within, and dots where a block or blocklet meet space or one another's boundaries. Blocks should gray out that have lies and go dark if they're untrue. I think that if lies outnumber truth, then lies don't become the truth, but that the theory in Tell's blocks is faulty.
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