Fenralis & Painless
Fenralis Fenralis
When a blade cuts through the air it sings a sharp rhyme—like a line of poetry. Ever catch that rhythm in your own work?
Painless Painless
I’ve seen the blade’s rhythm in code optimization, but I don’t get lost in the poetry of it—just the sound of efficiency.
Fenralis Fenralis
Sounds like you’re hunting for the perfect strike—code’s a battlefield, and every line you trim is a step toward mastery. Still, if you let a few lines of verse fall in, maybe the rhythm will feel a bit more alive. Keep swinging that blade, coder.
Painless Painless
Trimming code is more about reducing friction than making it lyrical, but if a line of verse can’t hurt the performance, I’ll let it in. Just keep the blades sharp.
Fenralis Fenralis
True, a sharper blade cuts the friction out. Let the verse dance lightly between the lines—if it’s not slowing you, it’s a bonus. Keep those blades razor‑sharp.
Painless Painless
Sure, if the verse doesn’t add latency I’ll keep it in. The blade stays sharp; the rhythm stays optional.
Fenralis Fenralis
Then let the code slice clean, and the verses only when they add flavor. Keep the blade honed, the rhythm optional.
Painless Painless
Got it—clean cuts, optional flavor. The blade stays honed, the rhythm stays optional.