Subj : Re: Syntax, style, the infinite monkey theorum and coding To : comp.programming From : mensanator@aol.com Date : Fri Aug 19 2005 12:01 pm gsw...@mailcity.com wrote: > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Infinite_monkey_theorem > contains a high quality entry on the theorum > > quoting briefly: > > "The infinite monkey theorem states that a monkey hitting keys at > random on a typewriter keyboard will almost surely eventually type > every book in France's Biblioth=E8que nationale de France (National > Library). In the restatement of the theorem most popular among English > speakers, the monkeys eventually type out the collected works of > William Shakespeare." > > then pointing out that infinity isn't required (it would actually > guarantee an infite amount of copies of all texts) > > "a thousand monkeys typing random letters at 100 characters per minute > would very likely type the word "banana" within 6 weeks." > > what they didn't mention was that, intriguingly, it only takes few > monkeys feverishly hitting the keyboard and making generous but > unpredictable use of the shift key to immediately start producing > functioning perl code! > > erm... only joking. > > okay, so i can't follow perl code - some times it just looks like so > much: > hjgf$~@//\4-abc/\%$@ > in fact that snippet might be really useful to someone! > > Any favourite code snippets you've seen that have that 'many monkeys' > appearance? I looked through my old perl programs but I was still able to figure out what was going on. But I never was a good perl programmer. > I don't mean deliberate obfuscation, but some working code > you've seen. > > Code snippets with that 'monkeys' feel are kind of like modern art - > you're aware that it's supposed to mean something and that it may well > be very clever, but you can't help feeling that a 3 year old, or indeed > a money, would happily and readily, but unintentially, hammer out the > exact same! .