[03:11:46] What does 'G' stand for? [04:16:18] *** Quits: JuanDaugherty (~juan@98.4.124.117) (Quit: Ex Chat) [08:28:21] I don't know [08:39:17] *** Joins: JuanDaugherty (~juan@98.4.124.117) [08:40:45] *** Quits: JuanDaugherty (~juan@98.4.124.117) (Client Quit) [08:41:12] *** Joins: JuanDaugherty (~juan@98.4.124.117) [11:33:27] *** Quits: freeside (~ubuntu@ec2-52-58-69-57.eu-central-1.compute.amazonaws.com) (Ping timeout: 240 seconds) [11:34:28] *** Joins: freeside (~ubuntu@ec2-52-58-69-57.eu-central-1.compute.amazonaws.com) [11:51:20] hello! [12:36:04] I'm reading the GF for Python programmers document, and it's fun :-D we should pitch it for the GF course starting in next period at GU [12:36:05] "Rearranging known tokens in new ways, no problem: GF can generate an infinite variety of different combinations of words. That's its job. [12:36:05] Coleridge reminds us that ``prose is words in their best order'' -- but GF is quite willing to play with words in any order your grammar can devise. [12:36:06] But they have to be words known to GF at compile-time. GF is not improv: as Shakespeare might have said, if anybody's going to make up new words around here, it'll be the playwright, not the actor. " [12:46:03] there's also this tutorial, which is in estonian, but if you scroll down you see examples in GF and python: https://github.com/kristiank/GF-praktikum/tree/master/gfse#kuidas-see-t%C3%B6%C3%B6tab-pizza [14:24:40] this is great, now I know what is syncategorematic in estonian ^_^ [23:03:33] *** Quits: JuanDaugherty (~juan@98.4.124.117) (Quit: Ex Chat)