Just because this is already offtopic and because I just want to philosophize with you: they could not understand it. Look at Egyptian hieroglyphes: they could have only be solved by Rosetta's rock. I think it can be (partially) solved without it, but you would at least need tons and tons of text, supported by pictures, videos and the like. If the far future civilization would find a backup of Wikipedia at its last state before the Apocalypse, they could decript it. If they found all seasons of Sesame Street, they could too (because many refugees who do not know any language other than their own learn the language of the new country that way :))
2015-03-13 21:40 GMT+01:00 FRIGN <d...@frign.de>: > On Fri, 13 Mar 2015 21:35:09 +0100 > Vampyrah Broadcasting <vampyrahbroadcast...@gmail.com> wrote: > > Hey Dennis, > >> What does the word "refactor" mean? > > it basically means that I looked at the code and applied knowledge we > came up with in the course of development. > You might not believe it, but sbase's codebase-size is already as high > that you need actual refactor-sessions to keep the tools in a consistent > state. > >> An explanation of the cat command is on the back of the romper, along >> with the file name (cat.c), the software where it belongs to (sbase), >> the developer (suckless), the license (MIT, right?) and the version >> (20150303). I tried to write the explanation as if my teacher were a >> six-year old, so it's a little less mistery for her :D > > In cases like these, I always try to imagine what a civilization in the > far future would make of it if it found this as the only trace of > humanity. > > Cheers > > FRIGN > > -- > FRIGN <d...@frign.de> >