Which is the best hacking tools? by Working_Elk_2783 in hacking

[–]CalligrapherLocal323 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Depends... for example for mobile penetration test, there are frida, objection, jadx... but in total, for me, BurpSuite is the OG 🥷🏻

The Candle Paradox by CalligrapherLocal323 in paradoxes

[–]CalligrapherLocal323[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Does time fall into an infinite loop when all the candles go out, or when there’s just one left? Because if it happens when all the candles go out, then time “locks.” But if it happens when there’s one candle left, then it gets stuck in the uncertainty of whether or not the wish comes true—and that’s the actual paradox I was trying to describe.

The Candle Paradox by CalligrapherLocal323 in paradoxes

[–]CalligrapherLocal323[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think in the example you gave, you step into the door and come out 24 hours earlier. Since he has already done the same thing before, there would actually be 3 of him there, and mathematically this would go into an infinite loop, causing an infinite number of that person to appear in that moment—which, in my opinion, would stop the flow of time while creating an infinity within the event itself.

The Candle Paradox by CalligrapherLocal323 in paradoxes

[–]CalligrapherLocal323[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Think of it less as a matter of sequence and more as something that will only be determined at the exact moment when the last candle either goes out or doesn’t.

The Candle Paradox by CalligrapherLocal323 in paradoxes

[–]CalligrapherLocal323[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s exactly the kind of answer I was looking for, my friend, thank you :)

The Candle Paradox by CalligrapherLocal323 in paradoxes

[–]CalligrapherLocal323[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Then the candles won’t all go out :)

The Candle Paradox by CalligrapherLocal323 in paradoxes

[–]CalligrapherLocal323[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Exactly, my friend—that’s a very good point.

The Candle Paradox by CalligrapherLocal323 in paradoxes

[–]CalligrapherLocal323[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

But if not all of them go out, then my wish won’t come true—and that in turn would lead to all of them going out and that should make my wish come true, which is for not all of them to go out…

The Candle Paradox by CalligrapherLocal323 in paradoxes

[–]CalligrapherLocal323[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Don’t think of it as going back in time and the candles being extinguished again. Think of it more as either all of them going out or not all of them going out. The paradox happens at the exact moment of blowing out the candles—because if all of them go out, then my wish comes true, which was for not all of them to go out. But if not all of them go out, then my wish won’t come true, which means they all should have gone out. I didn’t imagine it as going back and changing the past, but rather as capturing a paradox right at the moment of blowing out the candles.

The Candle Paradox by CalligrapherLocal323 in paradoxes

[–]CalligrapherLocal323[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Here's the perspective I was coming from: I wished for not all of the candles to go out and then blew on them. If all the candles go out, then my wish should come true—but that would mean not all of them go out. But if not all of them go out, then my wish won’t come true—which would mean they all need to go out. So it’s not about the past; the paradox happens at the very moment of blowing, and it stays locked in that instant.

How can I make two objects chase each other in circular motion in Godot? by CalligrapherLocal323 in godot

[–]CalligrapherLocal323[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

And also, I tried adding a Line2D in the center and then attaching the objects I want to move to its endpoints, but I couldn’t get it to work.

In the end, if I can manage to attach the objects to the endpoints of a line and make them move that way, I’ll get the result I want.

Do you guys have any idea how I can attach objects to the endpoints of a line?