Spyke
m-p{3}reply
lemmy.ca

Gotta remain positive and see the glass half full, or January 2nd depending on the cell format.

56

If your mind goes to "spreadsheet" instead of "calendar," that says more about your... proclivities... than it does his!

23
lemm.ee

It's really more of a DataFrame I've mismanaged. Which might be why I'm struggling to handle my relationships.

13
lemm.ee

I don't think I'm ready for that. In fact, I think I'm just going back to individual delimited text files to store every record separately using a custom encoding I made up.

I'll add arbitrary folders to split them up based on inconsistent logic and never make backups.

5

Did you know you can also store your data on random pieces of paper of various sizes and shapes, and pile them on the kitchen table? You also get bonus points, if you write/draw the data using colorful crayons! I call it the CLUTTER format which stands for: Chaotic Loosely Unstructured Tangled Tornado Explosion Records. It’s a new data storage method, and I’m pretty sure it will catch on.

3

First post here that kind of fucked me up for a moment.

82
lemmy.world

Yes, and if we're playing my connect 4 rules, you can also aim for a Monday - Tuesday - Wednesday - Thursday diagonal.

72
lemmy.zip

You can also go 3D. January 8, February 5, March 4, April 8 would be 4 in a stack.

52
Ferrisreply
infosec.pub

thank goodness i can see time in 3d now. this wont end badly.

28
slrpnk.net

Holy shit, what an opener, and then the second paragraph is the perfect punchline. I think the wiki editors knew exactly what they were doing.

4
jh29areply
lemmy.blahaj.zone

huh? please elaborate. The opening paragraph of the time cube article appears normal

2
lemmy.zip

Sure. That would be 4 days in a… well stack is already taken, so what do we call that?

3
lemm.ee

That’s the third dimension of time. You playing 6D chess over here

4
Szylerreply
lemmy.world

That's only moving in the third dimension without moving in any other.

If you have movement in all 3 dimensions, you get January 1, February 6, March 13, April 25.

Thats diagonally and stacked.

2

If you see someone on Friday, Saturday, Sunday and Monday, that counts as only three days in a row, since Monday is on another row. If you see somebody on four consecutive Tuesdays, that would be four days in a column.

38
lemmy.world

What if the Mondays span different months?

Like 8/19, 8/26, 9/2, 9/9?

Now the Mondays are on another page or they're a swipe to the right

14
lemm.ee

Looking at my life calendar every day for a few months really kicked my life into gear.

My advice is just open it up and look at it once per day. You don’t have to do anything else. Make sure it’s one where the current week is marked.

5

You had it on your phone?

Edit: oh excellent

weeksoflife.com

That’s great!

Side note - wonder why it hijacks the share feature and copies adlinkbypass dot com to clipboard - almost like they own both sites and made a mistake.

2
lemmy.world

I see where this question is leading, and I don't think I like the implications

20

I'm going to make the executive choice of saying that yes. Yes it does mean that.

15
yiffit.net

There is no human entity, just human Cubics - as in 4 different people in a 4 corner stage metamorphic rotation.

4 corner quadrants compose Earth sphere, as 4corner room with 4corner dimensions, with 4corner perspectives and the 4seasons. Earth's 4corners rotate 4corners of TIME, creating 4simultaneous day Earth rotation, as if 4 different Worlds with their own day, for 4separate races with 4corner life stages, with outer limits of 4x4 great-grandparents.

(sorry, I couldn't resist!)

5
tektitereply
slrpnk.net

Evil Ass Educators Suppress Time Cube, and dumb ass students condone such evil. Cubeless institutions are spreaders of evil, and students lack mentality to challenge it.


I bestow upon myself the "Doctorate of Cubicism", for educators are ignorant of Nature's Harmonic Time Cube Principle and cannot bestow the prestigious honor of wisdom upon the wisest human ever.

5
sh.itjust.works

I'd say so.

Although I still think it's weird that "consecutive" became a requirement.

Edit: Not implying blame for OP about the requirement. But colloquially it does mean consecutive, and I think that's a little strange. Probably a weird etymology rabbit hole to look at sometime.

4

Good question. Not sure why my brain went there. Generally speaking, growing up when someone used the term “in a row” they usually did mean consecutively. I can’t think of a time someone said 3 days in a row and they were not back to back days. Reading it now it does sound repetitive for me to have phrased it that way. Maybe my brain wanted to be specific for non English speakers? It was late at night.

1
lemmy.world

If I see someone Monday, Tuesday, Friday, and Saturday all in the same week, is it still 4 days in a row?

3

Not necessarily.

It could be five days in a column then there are five Mondays in a month (like this month).

3

Yes. Calendars are made up of rows and columns - weeks are rows, days are columns.

1