If you've ever been to Aberdeen, the one in Scotland, then you'll know that they have a very distinctive accent. They also have a wide ranging, and pretty much universally used dialect called Doric.
Doric has some fabulous words. Quine, which is in common use, is not really one of them, I'd say, but here's a decent list, and remember this is how the taxi driver will talk to you when you get of the plane/train:
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[ 3.8 ms ] story [ 31.3 ms ] threadIf you've ever been to Aberdeen, the one in Scotland, then you'll know that they have a very distinctive accent. They also have a wide ranging, and pretty much universally used dialect called Doric.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mid_Northern_Scots
Doric has some fabulous words. Quine, which is in common use, is not really one of them, I'd say, but here's a decent list, and remember this is how the taxi driver will talk to you when you get of the plane/train:
http://www.aboutaberdeen.com/doric.php
He'll probably say: Far y'ga'ahn?
For the record, a boy is a loon, and a bloke is a teuchter, a great word you hear all the time.
But what the heck a rotating quine is, I have no idea.
In computing, a quine is a computer program which produces a copy of its own source code as its only output.
He shows, among other things, ASCII-art quines with background music, and a hello world program in Ruby with only underscores.