is this irc, the usual? is this the content versus form equation? patchouly1: what's your native language btw? English of sorts. of sorts? you're from belgium, right? sry, gotta go see y., no my ip location is in Belgium. Uh. No. Although, we *did* see a turkey here a few days ago. heh, I know (that it's not the same "Turkey". I was unaware of your turkey sighting.) (basically, was just making a joke) back from the beach, slightly more red than before ;) I just had a flock of turkey wander through my back yard for anyone who uses freebsd.... http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-tech&m=139709030711793&w=2 openbsd-tech: "Re: OpenSSH hole, April 9" from Theo de Raadt @ 2014-04-10 0:37:56 Well that was helpful. uhh, ok Theo making less sense that usual... @tdr Theo de Raadt says: I'm not just doing this for crowd response. I need to be right. i'm glad he shed some light on...that back from my turkish dinner turkish dinner, eh? I bet with Turkish coffee i like turkish coffee (In small doses) no turkish coffee. I don't drink coffee. I'm not going to lie...Indian Tea is the best hot drink out there I examine foreign vessels entering US waters, and I love getting the Indian crews because of their tea TWSS Okay! twss! 'I examine foreign vessels entering US waters, and I love getting the Indian crews because of their tea' lol phlux, do they share willingly? (I'm not a "coffee drinker" but if I'm somewhere that serves good turkish coffee, espresso, or mocha, I'll partake [socially]) what is TWSS? "that's what she said" @google "that's what she said" 2,120,000 total results returned for '"that's what she said"', here's 3 Said the actress to the bishop - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Said_the_actress_to_the_bishop) The equivalent phrase in North America is "that's what she said". Both phrases are examples of Wellerisms, a literal "turn" of a phrase, changing its meaning. Urban Dictionary: that's what she said (http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=that's%20what%20she%20said) that's what she said. The most versatile joke on Earth. "I think we can fit that in with the rest of them." "That's what she said." "Make sure it's long enough." "That's  ... That's What She Said (2012) - IMDb (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1764636/) Directed by Carrie Preston. With Anne Heche, Marcia DeBonis, Alia Shawkat, Miriam Shor. Bebe and DeeDee, best friends with different relationship problems,  ... oh ... the Urban Dictionary result is most relevant never seen that abbreviated that way before Aint nobody got time to write it out. This is the Internet! We've got important Internetting to do! brycec: they always offer when we board :) phlux: damn, good manners :) brycec: The Captains and officers on these boats are super nice to us Until we catch them in a lie and call them out on it Maybe the British occupation wasn't so bad... Heh, no doubt. (I deal with outsourced support and developers daily... I want to kill them all, every last one.) "Oh we never log our oil-water separator because we don't generate oil!" yaright do they also mix with quinine? RandalSchwartz: not sure what that is Anti-malaria drug @google quinine 339,000 total results returned for 'quinine', here's 3 Quinine - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quinine) Quinine (US /ˈkwaɪnaɪn/, UK /ˈkwɪniːn/ or /kwɪˈniːn/ KWIN-een) is a natural white crystalline alkaloid having antipyretic (fever-reducing), antimalarial,  ... Quinine - Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (http://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quinine) Quinine is an alkaloid which can reduce fever, work against malaria, pain and swelling. The bark of the Cinchona family of trees contains quinine. Quinine can ... Tonic water - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tonic_water) Tonic water (or Indian tonic water) is a carbonated soft drink, in which quinine is dissolved. Originally used as a prophylactic against malaria, tonic water usually ... oh damn yeah I'm reading up on it now good ol' wikipedia AKA... tonic wauter There's also @wiki, FYI as in a "vodka tonic" but it's "Q" on a typical bar gun from the original definition hahaha i'm a big coffee and tea drinker, i loves it all "Quinine is available with a prescription in the United States and over-the-counter, in minute quantities, in tonic water. " TIL "minute" :) ""The Peruvians would mix the ground bark of cinchona trees with sweetened water to offset the bark's bitter taste, thus producing tonic water. "give me a double vodka tonic" "sir, you'll need a prescription for that..." "According to tradition, the bitter taste of antimalarial quinine tonic led British colonials in India to mix it with gin, thus creating the gin and tonic cocktail" "Gin And Tonic" was mentioned in H2G2 heh someting about the drink from the "leader" of ship # 2 been a while, but I remember something there. lurker! @google A= 3,670,000,000 total results returned for 'A=', here's 3 Technology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Technology) Technology is the making, modification, usage, and knowledge of tools, machines, techniques, crafts, systems, and methods of organization, in order to solve a ... PHP: A simple tutorial - Manual (http://www.php.net/manual/en/tutorial.php) Here we would like to show the very basics of PHP in a short, simple tutorial. This text only deals with dynamic web page creation with PHP, though PHP is not ... Ruby Programming Language (https://www.ruby-lang.org/) A dynamic, interpreted, open source programming language with a focus on simplicity and productivity. Site includes news, downloads, documentation, libraries, ... @google ARP Networks 1,110,000 total results returned for 'ARP Networks', here's 3 ARP Networks Homepage (https://www.arpnetworks.com/) ARP Networks is a leading provider of high performance VPS, IP transit, and colocation solutions. Address Resolution Protocol - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Address_Resolution_Protocol) Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) is a telecommunication protocol used for resolution of network layer addresses into link layer addresses, a critical function in ... ARP Networks VPS Services (http://www.arpnetworks.com/vps) ARP Networks is a leading provider of high performance VPS, IP transit, and colocation ... We run our own network, which is fully redundant, with over 50 peers. dangel: welcome let's fighting love looks like brycebot is inserting a broken character just before the "..." showing up as hex "A0" makes little purple blobs on my screen. I wonder if that's intentional. RandalSchwartz: No idea where that's coming from... BryceBot isn't sending it. maybe it's sending some control character into IRC that some clients ignore my emacs lisp client is pretty bare-boned function in ... that's what I'm getting although again, if your IRC client strips A0, you won't see that either. ahh... the space between in and ... seems to have high bit set maybe it's a flaw in the "..."-ing routine RandalSchwartz: BryceBot's log messages translate non-printing characters into escapes. If it was sending that character to IRC, I would see it :p RandalSchwartz: Perhaps the ... is utf8 and your client is just handling it weird? Well, if it was an actual "..." char, I'd likely see that as one (possibly double-wide) char. Perhaps … no - that's how that looks to me yeah, looks fine to me too yeah - I just msg'ed myself that, and it looks good so brycebot is sending A0 2E 2E 2E maybe it's an error in the IRC library as in, the string is in utf8, but the library is mishandling it for the record, no IRC library, all socket-level stuff what language? it took me a while to convince Emacs to give me a full utf8 path for IRC. PHP ok... out of my league. :) is the "shortening" thing your code or a library? which, the "..."? That comes straight from Google. oh... weird. maybe getting it from google is breaking utf8 or something I stand corrected, fixed my escaping and "d for resolution of network layer addresses into link layer addresses, a critical function in\302\240...\r\n" so it was broken? Well the escaping didn't cover >0x7F, so I didn't see it on the console But I dug it, and it's coming from Google, in their JSON response *dug in ahh, so that's probably UTF-8 then. (So, yay, all my UTF8 is handled properly - passes through a-okay) must be Alt-B \302 C2 U+00C2 Â Â capital A, circumflex accent But no idea what \240 is wait... \302\240 should be a single characterr are you using latin-1 \302 thinking? as in the whole string should be mapped to a utf-8 string using whatever php does to map external utf8 to a utf8 flagged internal string yeah - so you're seeing the raw utf8 what are you doing in your code to map that properly oops... gotta go lol To answer your questions as best I can, PHP fails miserably in many fields... Including inconsistent handling of UTF8 strings Most/much is nice and neat and utf8 friendly But some functions are not. So... All my string handling is kosher. addcshlashes() is obviously not multibyte happy, hence a slightly distorted output And 0xA0 is still a mystery oh nevermind non-breaking space totally valid And it's RandalSchwartz's client C2A0(And side note, \240 is 0xA0)