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This is a response to #69. An issue title like that sounds like a challenge, you know. A claim that deserves investigation, at least.
I would like to present for your entertainment a number of novel generators which are very short indeed.
Generator the First
To begin, here is a program written in the language HQ9+. It outputs the full lyrics to the rousing counting song "99 Bottles of Beer on the Wall", twenty-three times:
99999999999999999999999
Since this song has 25 words per verse, and 99 verses, and is output 23 times, a simple multiplication tells us that this program outputs 54648 words, which, in NaNoGenMo, is a novel. Here's a preview:
99 bottles of beer on the wall,
99 bottles of
(Alas, I can't bring myself to continue writing that out, much less post the entire thing. I suppose I will simply forego the 'completed' label on this one.)
You'll note that the program is only 23 characters long. Further, in the quite well-established ASCII encoding, the character 9 only occupies one byte, so this program can be expressed in only 23 bytes, as well.
Generator the Second
Though not as old as ASCII, HQ9+ is fairly well established as well -- it's 20 years old this year. However, if we are permitted to, as Lyxal has, make up a new language, I'm sure we can do better than 23 characters.
So, allow me to define the language HQ9N̅+. This is a variation on HQ9+ which enhances it in two small ways. First, it adds another instruction:
N: output 50,000 copies of the word "meow", separated by whitespace
Which means the following HQ9N̅+ program is a novel generator:
N
despite the fact that it's only 1 character long. Here's a preview: meow meow meow but again I will forego posting the entire output.
Generator the Third
But wait! Not done yet! The second enhancement to HQ9+, to which the overbar on the N in "HQ9N̅+" is clumsily alluding, is this rule:
A HQ9N̅+ program must have at least one instruction. If the HQ9N̅+ interpreter cannot find any instructions in the program, it supplies an N instruction as the default, and executes it.
Which gives us the following novel generator
of length zero.
I hope you enjoyed this little demonstration. We now return you to your regular computer-aided Oulipo jam, already in progress.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
This is a response to #69. An issue title like that sounds like a challenge, you know. A claim that deserves investigation, at least.
I would like to present for your entertainment a number of novel generators which are very short indeed.
Generator the First
To begin, here is a program written in the language HQ9+. It outputs the full lyrics to the rousing counting song "99 Bottles of Beer on the Wall", twenty-three times:
Since this song has 25 words per verse, and 99 verses, and is output 23 times, a simple multiplication tells us that this program outputs 54648 words, which, in NaNoGenMo, is a novel. Here's a preview:
(Alas, I can't bring myself to continue writing that out, much less post the entire thing. I suppose I will simply forego the 'completed' label on this one.)
You'll note that the program is only 23 characters long. Further, in the quite well-established ASCII encoding, the character
9
only occupies one byte, so this program can be expressed in only 23 bytes, as well.Generator the Second
Though not as old as ASCII, HQ9+ is fairly well established as well -- it's 20 years old this year. However, if we are permitted to, as Lyxal has, make up a new language, I'm sure we can do better than 23 characters.
So, allow me to define the language HQ9N̅+. This is a variation on HQ9+ which enhances it in two small ways. First, it adds another instruction:
Which means the following HQ9N̅+ program is a novel generator:
despite the fact that it's only 1 character long. Here's a preview:
meow meow meow
but again I will forego posting the entire output.Generator the Third
But wait! Not done yet! The second enhancement to HQ9+, to which the overbar on the N in "HQ9N̅+" is clumsily alluding, is this rule:
Which gives us the following novel generator
of length zero.
I hope you enjoyed this little demonstration. We now return you to your regular computer-aided Oulipo jam, already in progress.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: