Yesterday was Sept. 13, and it wasn't leap year, making it the 256th day of the year, thus Programmer's Day.
I guess all your gifts to me got lost in the mail, just like all the expensive gifts I mailed to everyone else :D
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Yesterday was Sept. 13, and it wasn't leap year, making it the 256th day of the year, thus Programmer's Day.
I guess all your gifts to me got lost in the mail, just like all the expensive gifts I mailed to everyone else :D
Does that mean the 45th, 90th, and 180th days of the year are engineers day? Or is it the 707th day of the year... wait a minute, damn there is no 707th day of the year...
Engineers can celebrate Pi day (March 14, celebrate at 1:59).
And you could have Root 2 Over Two day on July 7 (celebrate at 1:06, or 1:07 if you prefer to round).
I'm still wondering when to celebrate "j day", as there really doesn't seem to be a good "sqrt(-1)" day. Of course, it could happen when I have free time (which is certainly imaginary, as much as I would like it to be real), or it could happen all the time (because every day is complex when you're an engineer).
Pi day is for mathematicians, we can't just steal their day!
Tho j-day or Root two over two day sound both appealing.
>because every day is complex when you're an engineer
=) ::high five!:: And I guess we are only allowed a minute of the day since we're so precise... =) But we can raise the engineer-day-tolerance to get more time! =p