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I'm interested in where this goes, if it goes anywhere. Seems like a cool concept, but only if the functions interact, and build upon one and other, not just print "Hi this is quaz3l! I defined a variable!".
I originally wanted to write an `incr(x)` function which increments a variable. However, it seemed to me that we needed to "print" something, so I think I added to the confusion by making a graffiti of sorts.
Taken to its logical conclusion, it will produce Emacs.
I hope no one adds the 'M-x skynet' mode, or we're all screwed.
Unless someone manages to figure out what the save the world button is.
It will just expand until it can read mail.
And evolve into a web framework, which will eventually be ported as a Node module.
propbably taken down after someone posts copyrighted code
And lisp will be there
I hope so. Once I'm done my exam I plan to add a super small lisp interpreter.
anyone want to help with the merges? hit me up - sri [dot] umd [at] gmail
Is it possible to give everyone push access?
I just pinged github/twitterverse to see if they have any ideas.
Create a new GitHub account, give it write access to the repo, generate a fresh RSA keypair, post the private key.
Disappointed that people with numeric usernames cannot participate because numbers are not function names.
Nothing stops you from prefixing your function with an underscore.

  File "./socode.py", line 297
    print ', '.join(contributors_list) 
    ^
IndentationError: unexpected indent
yeah, choosing to do this in python might not have been the best idea.
I fixed this :)
a lot of open pull requests...
could use some help, want to pitch in and help? I'll make you an admin.
Someone should make a function that mines a trivial amount of bitcoin
Unfortunately that's not really feasible without being part of a Mining pool: it simply takes too long until you make a block.

[1](bitcoin mining is granular and not continuous https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/Mining_Pool)

What, no tests!? Just kidding. We don't need no stinkin tests.
I've never used Python but looking through the code I think I'm starting to pick it up a little bit.
Think this maybe the first repo I've seen with more forks (224) than stars (132)
I can say I was initially not convinced this would take off. 175 pull requests later I've changed my tune. Now that we know there is a large talent pool interested in such a task, I wonder how much structure could be added before interest starts to subside. Surely something fantastic could come of this, but we just proved it needs a bit more direction.
The first time i have my pull request approved on Github. LOL