@[email protected] to Programmer [email protected]English • 17 hours agoI have a 64-bit genderlemmy.mlimagemessage-square16fedilinkarrow-up1227arrow-down122cross-posted to: [email protected]
arrow-up1205arrow-down1imageI have a 64-bit genderlemmy.ml@[email protected] to Programmer [email protected]English • 17 hours agomessage-square16fedilinkcross-posted to: [email protected]
minus-square@steventhedevlink37•17 hours agoClearly your gender field is a boolean. Which means it can be either true, false, null, or undefined. Except in javascript where for some reason it can sometimes be NaN, but only when you try to compare two people.
minus-squareNat (she/they)linkfedilink11•15 hours agoMy gender is { toString: ()=>{String.prototype.toString = ()=>">:3"; return ":3";} }
Clearly your gender field is a boolean. Which means it can be either true, false, null, or undefined. Except in javascript where for some reason it can sometimes be NaN, but only when you try to compare two people.
A boolean, so 8 bits of freedom to fill up
My gender is
{ toString: ()=>{String.prototype.toString = ()=>">:3"; return ":3";} }