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Until a few years ago I would have answered "Um copo de cólera", by Raduan Nassar... but then I read "Crônica da casa assassinada", by Lúcio Cardoso.

My favorite music album is "Fun House", by The Stooges. "Um copo de cólera" has the same chaotic fury of "Fun House", but transposed to literature - and "Um copo de cólera" is the same, but it was written 20 years earlier, is even stronger, and it touches lots of tabboo topics.

I don't know if there are decent translations of them from Portuguese to other languages.

My favorite book _that is available in English_ is "The Lives of Animals", by J.M. Coetzee: <https://tannerlectures.utah.edu/_resources/documents/a-to-z/...>.


"Cronopios and Famas", by Julio Cortázar - I read it for the first time when I was about 13 and for many years I reread at least once per year;

"Zen & The Art of Motorcycle Maintenance" (Robert M. Pirsig)

"The Sailor Who Fell from Grace with the Sea" (Yukio Mishima)

"The Yage Letters" (William Burroughs)

"The Old Ways" (Gary Snyder)

"Life and Death (Elementary Go Series #4)", by James Davies. Really - I studied that one very seriously.

Note: I answered just the "What book had a big impact on you as a child or teenager?" part, and I ignored that you are building a library for your children and asking for recommendations...


The translation by Augusto de Campos? That one is amazing!!!


"Zen & The Art of Motorcycle Maintenance" is in my list!

I only read "In Search of the Miraculous" when I was 22 or 23, though...


In eev I use M-e as a shorthand for C-e C-x C-e, but highlighting is optional and only happens when I type M-0 M-e... take a look:

http://anggtwu.net/eev-intros/find-eev-quick-intro.html#2

http://anggtwu.net/eev-intros/find-eev-quick-intro.html#3


Hey: MANY, MANY, MANY THANKS!!!

I use REPLs in ways that are similar to yours, but 1) you have several tricks that are new to me, and 2) you've been able to put into words many ideas that I haven't!

My way is here,

http://anggtwu.net/eepitch.html

and I'm certainly going to cite you in my presentation in the next EmacsConf! =)


While we're at this: https://github.com/darius/halp -- I came up with it 16 years ago and still use it.

Example of use: the ## comments and #. outputs in https://github.com/darius/sturm/blob/master/tictactoe.py#L20...

(It'll need a Python 3 update if you're more up with the times than me.)


My main problem with SymPy is that I don't know where its community is! Maxima has a mailing list that is a really lovely place and an IRC channel that is (halfway between dead and) alive... what are the good places to ask questions about Sympy? Stackoverflow? Matrix? I just discovered that it has a group in Google Groups - that, ta-da! even has a recent message about the Gitter channel:

https://groups.google.com/g/sympy/c/jisKFe_xsd0

"From what I've seen, for a while, it's mostly just been people asking questions, but no one has been on there who is actually able to answer them."


The thing below - one of the links at the bottom goes to its "Show HN" page, where people can check that only received 4 points. Many people discuss REPL tricks here, so I didn't expect it to flop so miserably...

Show HN: Eev and TikZ, or: how to learn TikZ using a REPL (twu.net)

Hi all, I made a video that at first sight is about a way to use REPLs to explore TikZ - and TikZ is a huge (La)TeX package for drawing graphics...

At second sight that video is about a series of tricks for using REPLs in Emacs, and TikZ is just an excuse to present them. As far as I know those tricks are very unusual; they implement a kind of "meta-REPL" that controls other REPLs, and they do that in a way that is much simpler, and much easier to hack, than Org's code blocks and than the cells in Jupyter notebooks.

The page has lots of screenshots and links, and it has instructions for downloading the video and its subtitles, and for reading the subtitles in plain text. I tried to make everything as accessible as possible for the people who just want to watch the the first two parts of the video - "Introduction" and "Trying it" - in super-high speed.

I'm especially interested in pointers to related work. Cheers, have fun, etc! =)

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=33568184 (Show HN page)

http://angg.twu.net/SUBTITLES/2022-eev-tikz.lua.html (Subtitles of the video)

http://angg.twu.net/eev-tikz.html (page)


Hi! I'm an exception!

I find Org very hard to learn, mostly because I'm a "non-user" in the sense explained in the page below. Note that that page is about a video, and that it is possible to read the subtitles of the video without watching it by following the second link...

http://angg.twu.net/2021-org-for-non-users.html

http://angg.twu.net/SUBTITLES/2021-org-for-non-users.lua.htm...


The best page about my main project is this one: http://angg.twu.net/eepitch.html

But I've been working a lot on its "videos for people who hate videos", here: http://angg.twu.net/eev-videos.html


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