"why do all popular languages seem to be from over fifteen years ago" because it takes a lot of work and a long time to make a language and to make it usable by other people and to make it useful and accessible to other people. (and we have to ask, who is funding all this work?) next question.
"but it's just like using a compiler, you can't know what's going on" my sibling in silicon, you are talking to that person who wrote an assembler in machine code and used that assembler to implement a programming language. understanding what's going on in a compiler, understanding exactly what the compiler does, that is very much something you can and should do, as a programmer. maybe not to the fanatical degree that some of us have, but definitely don't just wallow in that ignorance.
The Kuratowski monoid represents all possible combinations of complement (c) and closure (k) operations on subsets of a topological space. (Note that the interior operation can be given as the composition ckc.) Only 14 possible operations exist.
- if it lives in the sea, it's a fish - if it lives in the river, it's a beaver - if it lives in a pond, it's a frog. - if it lives in a lake, it's a big frog. - if it lives on land, it's a dog. - except, if it lives on land but mostly indoors, it's a cat. - if it lives in the air, it's a bird. - if it lives in space, it's a planet.
do you ever fall into a depression/anxiety spiral and are no longer able to function, and then other people, instead of being kind or forgiving or empathetic, get angry at you
i don't understand owning something you don't use or participate in, like owning a home where someone else lives, or owning a business where someone else does the work
to clarify, i mean only the whitespace outside of string literals is significant. the whitespace inside of string literals is not significant and should be properly ignored