- Looks like it creates a few emoji printers in a vector, then prints them all. The output is all emoji, of course. The main function exits with a random return value just to be more quirky. - I’m not sure what the purpose of the 😎 function is. In main that first predicate is always true, so it prints the poop emoji. I don’t know why it’s behind an if. - Also, there’s a copy-paste error on line 31. Wrong emoji is used. - This guy emotes ᕦ(ò_óˇ)ᕤ 
 
- Wow that’s horrible. They’re using c++. - If you really need some nightmare fuel, some of us use c++ every day and even enjoy it. - it’s hard to believe… 
 
 
- It would be great to use some emojis in coding. - Imagine how much more readable it would be if you could break a loop with 💀 or return true with 👍. Or use ❓for ifs, or ↔️ for switch (the emoji didn’t work for that one). Or use an emoji to represent a custom object? - Maybe the ECMA should get on that! - Edit: I guess you can use emojis for custom objects in js. - Edit 2: ➡ for console.log - You’d still be left with the brackets and braces though. It might make more sense in a whitespace-based language pike Python - I see your point. Personally, I like the brackets and braces, they help organize. Or maybe that’s just what I’m used to. 
 
- Programming typefaces with ligatures are a step in this direction. - I would try this in something like Haskell, where some of the more exotic character sequences get tricky to recognise. - Unison might be the best language to test this in. Having identifiers separate from the actual definitions, you can call anything whatever you want. 
- emacs lisp already lets you use the full range of unicode. - Sorry, I meant ECMAScript 
 
 
- deleted by creator 
- 💩 
 🍊
 🍉
 🍉
 🍍
 🍎
- Surprisingly more readable than standard C++ 
- I didn’t bother trying to see what an output would be, but this is a nightmare. - Oh no, now I’m going to notice you in, like, every thread! - Hahaha, I’m inevitable! The nostalgia is too powerful! 
 
 
- This just prints: - 💩 🍊 🍉 🍉 🍍 🍎- Line 38 and 39 just check if a function that always returns false is false and if so, prints “💩\n”. (C++ uses the bit shift operator for file IO for some reason) - Line 41 creates a vector of shared pointers to an abstract class, or in other words, an array of functions. Each function prints the emoji, mostly the same as the name, but not always. ( 🍒 is the exception, it prints “🍉\n”) - 43 and 44 just loop over the array and call every function inside, printing a bunch of emoji. - Line 46 returns the result of std::rand(), but because the programer forgot to call srand, the result is always the same (1804289383 for me). - (There are also a few missing includes, but I doubt this is intentional) 
- Is 👀 even defined? - Yes, line 28 defines 🍴which defines 👀 and all the structs inherit from 🍴 - Brand new sentence. 
 
 
- deleted by creator 
- Now imagine the poor sod who gets this as an interview question - “Please extend the following code in the same code style to sort [😀,😃,😄,😁,😆] using bubble sort” 
- deleted by creator 
 
- Mojo prepared me for this with their filename extension .🔥 
- Assembly but the commands are emojies🤯 











