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user1182183
12:00 AM
well i'm going to sleep, school begins at 8.30 am, it's 1.00 am now. bye
 
@EtiennedeMartel YOU HAVE FIVE SECONDS TO COMPLY
2
 
@Cheersandhth.-Alf What is this code for?
 
it actually seems to work! :-)
i'll paste it, wait
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes WELL THIS IS FUCKING GREAT, NO AUTHORITY WHATSOEVER. WHERE DO WE GO FROM HERE ANARCHY???????
 
The thing is, I haven't measured, I just have a gut feeling that stack allocated storage is faster than dynamic string allocation for getting simple numbers formatted.
 
12:04 AM
@Cheersandhth.-Alf VS2012 I assume
 
yes, but should compile with g++
haven't tried yet though
 
holy shit... my new laptop is faster than the desktop that I've been using...
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Oï.
 
the #pragma won't work of course, but why not include enough decimals for a double when defining them?
 
@Cheersandhth.-Alf you need to throw if radix is <0, or >36
@Cheersandhth.-Alf very clever though
 
12:09 AM
@Mysticial My seven year old T60 is faster than my desktop with new crossfire cards. Protip: Use SSD's; your life is better with them.
 
@CaptainGiraffe I'm talking about raw CPU power.
 
@Mysticial of course you would say that
 
My new laptop (Core i7 3630QM @ 2.4 GHz) is beating out the desktop that I've been using for the past 4 years. (Core i7 920 overclocked to 3.5 GHz)
 
@Mysticial Do you have an ftp I can download all your freshly encoded movies from?
 
@CaptainGiraffe I don't have any movies.
 
12:11 AM
@Mysticial did the Core i7 exist 4 years ago?
 
@MooingDuck Yeah, the original Core i7 920 Nehalem.
 
@Mysticial So what do you spend your CPU cycles on?
 
Overclocked from 2.66 to 3.5 GHz, and it looks like it's still slower than this laptop.
The laptop 4-core turbos to 3.2 GHz... that's madness.
I think I better install coretemp...
My desktop needed 107 seconds... :(
Let's see where my sandbox stands (i7 2600K @ 4.4 GHz)...
58.311 seconds.
So no, the laptop does not beat a 4.4 GHz machine.
 
@Mysticial Sure, If I can utilize my Core2 Duo to 741% I can achieve that easily.
 
I have a feeling that this laptop can compile faster than my desktop...
 
12:22 AM
 
Eh... looks like that run pushes the CPU to 90C...
um...
 
@MooingDuck throwing is not quite the right reaction to a logic error. the std::logic_error exception type just illustrates that that hierarchy was designed (or mindlessly chosen) at a time when this was not properly understood. the Right Way(TM) is to assert or to more directly terminate.
 
Ell
you are good at hardware right?
 
@Ell Yes
Arguably better than my C++ in more ways than one.
 
@Cheersandhth.-Alf assert is debug-only, but terminate sounds fair
 
12:25 AM
well it's not necessary to turn off asserts in a release build. ;-)
 
@Cheersandhth.-Alf true, but it's generally expected that one would
 
Ell
could an a8-3870k cope with all modern day games on full settings? CPU wise?
 
And I just found a bug in v0.6.1... great...
 
@Ell guru3d.com/articles_pages/amd_a8_3870k_review,1.html "the A8 (Lynx) processors are entry level to mid-range targeted processors" "Llano offers good enough CPU performance, excellent multi-media options, the Full HD experience and sure, even gaming, albeit very low level will work."
 
looks like I fucked up the memory alignment in one of my earlier builds...
 
12:34 AM
10
Q: Are book recommendation questions acceptable on some sites but not others?

Robert HarveyFor some time now, I have told folks on Stack Exchange that book recommendation questions are off-topic throughout the Stack Exchange network, citing this blog post. Book recommendation questions are aggressively closed on Stack Overflow and Programmers (much to the consternation of some commu...

 
Ell
weirdest thing just happened - I googled a question and got to stack overflow. thought to myself, his English doesn't look so good, then realised it was me. weird o.O
12
 
Jealous of our book list.
 
@Ell So did you edit it?
 
12:52 AM
@MooingDuck fixed a few things pastie.org/5440163
 
@Cheersandhth.-Alf storeStringFromUnsigned doesn't look right... Did you test stringFrom(100, 10)?
no wait, it's right
 
20 min. to fix a couple of memory alignment bugs... Not too bad.
 
I think my only concern is that there might be rounding errors involved in ln(2)/ln(36) if someone passes a negative bigint. Which is a pretty minor concern.
 
@MooingDuck it seems to work OK for decimals. but the buffer size is not computed right for other radices. don't know quite how to do that...
 
@Cheersandhth.-Alf What is CPPX_NUM( 301,029,995,664 )?
 
1:02 AM
it's the integer 301,029,995,664 :-)
 
waaaiiit, WTF is CPPX_NUM
That's clever :D
 
just specified with digits grouped so easier to compare magnitude
 
Hey guys. Anyone familiar with asymmetrical key cryptography?
 
holy shit... the flagship algorithm in v0.6.1 of my pi program puts my laptop to 95C...
not good...
 
what is pain limit for cpu temp?
 
1:05 AM
@Cheersandhth.-Alf I think I would have gone with something based on log2(INT_MAX) / logR2()[radix or 2]. Or say "pffft: size is 66." (on a 64 bit machine)
 
i seem to remember like 76 degrees celcius
 
They auto-shutoff at about 100C. But sustaining anything above 90C on a laptop will hurt it's life.
For desktops, it's less. Laptops are supposedly built to withstand higher temperatures.
 
actually, forget that. bitsPerInt+3 (negative, null, paranoia)
 
@MooingDuck yeah maybe. it's a practical solution anyway. for now i just removed radix argument from the higher level stuff :-)
 
Goes to show that consumer PCs aren't meant for this kind of work-load.
At least not sustained.
 
Can anyone point me to the rules for function template precedence?
 
@soandos precedence? You mean like for operators? That has nothing to do with tempaltes?
or do you mean template overloading lookup?
 
@MooingDuck Two template signatures that match for a particular call
So I'm guessing the second one
 
@soandos template function overloading lookup is very complicated. You'd have to go to the spec. General Rule of Thumb is "the closest match"
 
@MooingDuck where can I find that? (I also though more specific took priority, but that appears not to be the case for me)
 
1:11 AM
@Cheersandhth.-Alf huh, Mobile Celeron is 100C, Intel Core 2 Extreme (Conroe) is 60C
Modern Intel processors seem to be 67.9C to 73C
 
@MooingDuck given a choice between
template <typename U> Sptr(const Sptr<U> &);
and
template <typename U> Sptr(U *); it picks the second one
 
@MooingDuck Though I have yet to see a single modern laptop stay below 75 under Firefox. :)
 
@MooingDuck i guess they're slightly different technologies
 
@soandos when given what parameter? Second would be the best match for.... wait
 
When given a Sptr<someType>
 
1:14 AM
@soandos those don't take even remotely the same types of parameters. First takes a Sptr, the second takes a pointer.
@soandos that cannot match the second one
 
Right. So how does it pick the second one?
 
0
Q: Intel Programming Marathon c++ OpenMP

TeófaloI'm trying to make a parallel version of Intel Programming Marathon problem using opemMP. But the method is in infinite loop and i don't know why. Could someone help me to finish this problem? Serial Problem:(Without compute_path Method) /*! * \file main.cpp * \brief This file contains sourc...

 
@soandos does Sptr have an implicit conversion to U*? Even then it shouldn't do that.
 
@MooingDuck it has overloaded *, and -> operattors
 
@soandos but no conversion operator? operator U*() {return m_ptr;}? In that case, it can't call the second one ever.... unless you typo'd.
@soandos Can you show the line that's calling that function?
 
1:18 AM
hi guys, could someone help me in this problem?
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/13575977/intel-programming-marathon-c-openmp
 
ill show the printscreen of the error trace
 
@soandos just copy it to ideone.com, screenshots of code are usually just silly
 
@MooingDuck will take a bit, one minute
 
@Teófalo sorry, you failed to catch my attention. We don't normally answer questions here. We usually harass and irritate people who want us to answer questions.
 
thnx =/
 
1:20 AM
@MooingDuck include Sptr<T>'s source code (else it will not compile)
 
@Teófalo When posting a question on SO, you have to consider who will actually read it. Do you think anybody is gonna look through all of that? If not, then try to simplify it to something more reasonable. Otherwise, everybody will just go tl;dr and click away.
 
@soandos I just want to see the one line of code :(
 
@MooingDuck sp2 = static_pointer_cast<Base2>(static_pointer_cast<Derived_mi>(sp1));
 
Hey does anyone know bout onion routing?
 
where sp2 and sp1 are of type Base2 and Base1 respectively
@Crowz yes
 
1:23 AM
@soandos I'm having quite a bit of trouble understanding this.
So the steps, as I see them, are:
1. determine a path from host to destination using a directory node
2. use a key (asymmetric key cryptography) with the entry node, and send it data:
>CircuitID (I don't know what this is or its significance)
>a request to establish a circuit
>do a handshake and make a shared secret
2a.
>entry node finishes handshake, now the originator and entry node have a shared secret.
>hash the secret
3. use the hashed shared secret as a session key instead of the asymmetric key cryptography
Past there, completely lost
 
Which part don't you get?
What is past there?
 
Yes
 
@soandos static_pointer_cast is used to convert shared_ptr. Is Sptr related to shared_ptr?
 
@MooingDuck its my own implementation (for class)
 
@soandos what's it's return type?
 
1:25 AM
return type of what?
 
@soandos it's a function right?
 
oh, that. Yes. Return type is Sptr<T>
 
@MooingDuck your suggestion ++. seems to work (at least for decimal and binary). i haven't measured performance yet... pastie.org/5440265
 
@soandos and sp1 is of type Sptr<T>?
 
sp1 is of type Sptr<Base1>
 
1:28 AM
@soandos then that line of code should never ever use the Sptr(U *) overload
 
It does though
Clang tells me that the error taces back to a line that matches a constructor with that signature
Could the copy constructor be messing with it?
 
@soandos that means there's something that's very very relevant that you didn't tell me, probably because you haven't noticed it. In that case, I've run out of shortcut ideas and probably can't help without a sscce.org :( sorry
 
Could the implicit copy constructor be messing with it?
 
@soandos no, Sptr(U *) takes a pointer, and objects will never convert to pointers unless (A) you have a conversion operator, or (B) you explicitly get it's pointer.
 
I'm confused. Are we doing homework or not? stackoverflow.com/questions/13576031/…
 
1:31 AM
@soandos actually, put the word explicit before that constructor, see what happens.
 
@MooingDuck no change
Is there a good way to get the options that it considered?
 
@CaptainGiraffe meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/147100/… yes, as long as it meets the requirements for an SO question.
@soandos no. You'll have to make an sscce
@soandos can you get me that error trace? Even a screenshot?
 
@MooingDuck trace is here: snag.gy/xSARq.jpg
sscce coming up (though it won't compile)
 
@soandos Then it's not an SSCCE. :)
 
@Mysticial my problem is that it won't compile though...
 
1:35 AM
ah
 
@soandos what the heck... YOU LIAR
 
@MooingDuck what do you mean?
 
@soandos the line of code that called that constructor is Sptr<T>(static_cast<T*>(sp.get()));
@soandos you know, the one where you grab the ptr, and construct an Sptr from it?
:D
it even shows it right there in the error message.
 
@MooingDuck wow that was stupid
im sorry
 
@soandos Unrelated: why do you have a protected destructor? That's almost never a good idea.
 
1:38 AM
@MooingDuck thats the test code that I have to pass
 
@soandos alright
 
(I can't think of a good use case)
 
@soandos wait that sounds familiar...
 
Yes, I asked about that specific issue earlier here
 
2
Q: Delete an object with a protected destructor

soandosI have to write a shared pointer for class, and among many other things that it has to do is make sure it can delete the object that it is pointing to. How can I code a solution that will work with an object that has a protected destructor? Additionally, if the object was created using placemen...

 
1:39 AM
Exactly. The solution was to keep the incoming type instead of chucking it favor of the type I was templating on
 
now I want to make a shared ptr that can accept a functionoid deleter object....
oh well, time's up for today
 
shared_ptr can't do that?
 
@soandos shared_ptr can, yours can't.
or rather, the top answer can't
 
luckily, mine does not have to :)
(well actually, it would be trivial to do now)
 
are you certain you have to support ownership of placement-new'd objects? That should never happen.
 
1:44 AM
I don't think so. It was just a concern
 
@Crowz do you know how asymmetric key cryptography works?
 
2:15 AM
@MooingDuck sorta
There's a private decryption and a public key, and the public key is freely available, but only the recipient can have the private decryption key
And although they're mathematically related, it's inefficient to try and crack it
 
 
1 hour later…
3:26 AM
@MooingDuck There are a number of forms that work different ways. RSA is probably the most popular. RSA is almost ridiculously simple, though the simplicity tends to get lost in code for optimized math on big integers. Leave out the big integers so you can see the actual algorithm, and it's like this:
As it stands, that's utterly useless, because it only allows a 32-bit key; for practical use, RSA needs at least hundreds of bits and quite a few people use 1024 or 2048 bit keys. OTOH, install a big math library, and the same code will work with only trivial modifications -- though it'll undoubtedly still be slower than optimized, purpose-built math code.
 
does anyone have experience with Rust here?
 
Only read about it. Never actually coded with it.
Sowwy
 
3:45 AM
Rust looks kinda cool o.o
(just checked it out)
Is it worth using yet? or is it still in early dev.?
 
Hey, can you guys clear this up for me? I was just wondering if the following code is an example of undefined behavior: int x=0;x=x++;
 
@jakebird451 Variations of that question have been asked 1000 times. I'm pretty certain it's UB but whatever it is there's no point in writing code like that.
 
@ITNinja well I just spent 30mins reading two tutorials... only to find out class is replaced with struct + impl where there is currently no way to define a proper constructor.... :-(
 
@Pubby Yea, I have been looking over those 1000 variations. I really wanted to make sure it was in fact undefined behavior since my lab instructor for Real Time Operating Systems wrote it in the lab write up. It has been bothering me ever since I saw it. Thank you.
 
@Borgleader I was going to ask if iface was removed from the language. Turned out they renamed it to trait, which imo is a better name....
 
3:53 AM
iface is a shitty abbreviation of interface
trait is neat
 
@jakebird451 In C or C++98/03, it modifies x twice between sequence points. In C++11, they changed the terminology completely ("sequenced before/after" instead of "sequence point") and some of the rules. I'm not sure if it's still officially UB, but as @pubby said, definitely avoid it regardless.
 
cpx
@jakebird451 As I recall, In C++03, it is UB, In C++11 it's not.
 
@Borgleader yeah for sure, I'm also quite impressed that vim syntastic supports syntax checking for rust :-)
 
The correct way to write it is int temp = x; ++x; x = temp; hehe
 
Xeo
x = *++boost::make_counting_iterator(x);!
 
3:59 AM
Thank you guys, I cannot remember which standard variant our RTOS compiler uses, but I am sure it is not C++11 compliant. This "sequence point" behavioral analysis is rather interesting though and should prompt a rather interesting question when I bring it up.
*interesting debate
 
Unfortunately, sequence points don't lead to interesting debates
 
@Pubby Yea, apparently it only leads to confusion. As I have seen from the various SO questions.
 
@Pubby Quite true, I'm afraid. They almost all come down to people who haven't learned the rules trying to insist that things like precedence and/or associativity affect order of evaluation, and people who have learned the rules saying: "sorry, but no, that's just not true."
 
4:51 AM
Ahahaha... My laptop can read the SMART chip on my dead HD...
2360 bad sectors. 335 weak sectors. 1118 transfer errors
 
@Mysticial That sounds like it was either getting pretty old, or you thrashed it pretty badly. Did you try to push a laptop into computing a few billion digits with only 1 gig of RAM or something?
 
It happened all of a sudden actually. It was fine when I backed it up 10 days ago.
Then after I got home, it started acting up.
It took me another day or so before I realized that I couldn't read half the Anime that I had put on it.
 
@Mysticial Hmm...sounds like it got bumped or vibrated a bit too much.
 
Maybe...
I'm not sure if shock can cause bad sectors.
It would dislocate the platters or head, in which nothing would be readable.
Now it's up to 4112 bad sectors... lol
I'm trying to clean wipe it right now so I can send it in for warranty.
I guess zeroing the disk is revealing how bad it is...
 
@Mysticial More likely just damage a bearing a bit, so there's more vibration than there should be, or something on that order.
 
5:00 AM
The funny part is also the transfer errors.
That hints that the circuitry is somehow fucked up.
 
@Mysticial Maybe, but not necessarily.
 
At the rate that it's going, it's gonna take more than the whole night to wipe the whole drive.
 
In honor of @Mysticial the title of the lounge should be "Where we hoard hard drives" :P
 
What could cause both transfer errors, and bad sectors?
room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: Where we hoard hard drives. [c++] [c++11] [c++-faq]
A bad cable can't cause bad sectors.
Dust or a damaged head can't cause transfer errors.
 
@Mysticial It's been a while, so I don't trust myself on it, but my immediate thought is misalignment between servo track and data tracks, so the head isn't aligning quite correctly with the data tracks any more.
 
5:06 AM
Now it's up to 9592 bad sectors.
 
It doubled the # of bad sectors in a few minutes!? Is your case a microwave or what
 
@Borgleader I'm doing a deep format to wipe the entire drive.
 
Why? It's broken isn't it?
 
So all these bad sectors are popping up as the entire drive is being written to.
I want to wipe the entire drive before I send it in for RMA.
 
5:08 AM
If I can't wipe the entire drive, then I'll just have to eat the cost.
 
Good morning all.
How to loop from 0 to 2Pi with using float value. Idea behind this is to check the comma values?
 
o.o what the hell are comma values....
 
12288 bad sectors. That's a new record for me...
 
I won't be impressed until you get more bad sectors than reputation ;)
 
1.449233292 -> comma value
 
5:11 AM
What's a comma value?
 
That doesn't tell me anything. You've said what value it is. But we don't even know what is the definition of a comma value.
I certainly have never heard of the term "comma value".
 
I think he means "non-integers"
It's the only thing that makes sense considering he's storing it in a float
 
hmm...
 
so comma value -> real number
 
5:14 AM
yes
 
You can't really loop in such a range. It's contiguous.
Are you trying to do some sort of numerical integration?
 
is radian
 
Radians or not, it's still a contiguous range. There are an infinite amount of real numbers between 0 and 2pi
Unless you skip a bunch of course
 
14256 bad sectors... hehe
 
@Borgleader Where "a bunch" = "an infinity"
 
5:16 AM
@JerryCoffin Yes lim a bunch -> inf
 
Even if it was infinity, there's still a limit
 
So... @NerujaJoseph what is it you're trying to do?
 
16048 bad sectors...
Going up faster than Jon Skeet's rep.
> There are 16048 bad sectors on the disk surface. The contents of these sectors were moved to the spare area.
At some point it has to run out of "spare areas".
 
Unless it just starts overwriting good files :P
 
I think the drive just shrinks when it runs out of spare sectors.
But drives usually don't make it that far...
 
5:24 AM
Wait... you're formatting aren't you? Why the hell is it moving files around?
 
It's not moving files around.
I'm not actually sure how it manages to detect bad sectors if it's just writing.
 
"The contents of these sectors were moved to the spare area."
Why is it moving "contents"?
 
Since you don't know the sector is bad until you read it and it fails ECC.
@Borgleader Oh, that's done by the hard drive. No the OS.
 
The hard drive silently reallocates bad sectors.
The OS doesn't know shit.
 
5:26 AM
Hello
 
18976 bad sectors
 
could anyone help me, please? I'm trying to run this code in my pc and it crashes every time I run the exe ideone.com/8eruqZ
 
Can I ask this kind of things there?
 
int mat[1 << 16]; omfg why!?!? T_T oh god... why...
 
5:28 AM
You can, but you're more likely to get an answer on the main site.
 
20080... Oh that's an improvment from the last few increments...
21696... This is almost as amusing as when Seth live-blogged his Clang on Windows installation.
 
What I find most amusing is, I asked @NerujaJoseph what he was working on and 11m later he answers: .
 
user406009
Why oh why does O’Reilly's store have be down on Cyber Monday :(
 
23344
If the ape didn't demote himself, he'd have binned every single one of my messages for the past hour. :P
 
5:41 AM
Nobody re-promoted him? I remember that happening last time
 
@Lalaland The Cyber Monday deals have been sucking this year...
Didn't find any sub-$100 internal 3TB HDs.
@Borgleader We did twice. But he kept removing himself.
 
user406009
99$ one at amazon IIRC (but that was on Thursday)
 
@Mysticial That's the flood's fault, not cyber monday's
 
@Borgleader There was a $90 3TB internal on Black Friday.
 
Didn't I link it to you?
 
5:42 AM
It was limit 2 per customer. I needed 4. But even before I was able to place the first order, they dropped it to 1.
 
But still the flood is partly to blame
 
And I need them in pairs.
 
Does anybody know the difference between ignore(numeric_limits<streamsize>::max(), '\n') and ignore(INT_MAX, '\n') ?
 
I bought 1. It should be arriving in a couple of days.
But I can't really do much without a second.
 
You're putting them in RAIDx ?
 
5:44 AM
So while I search for a second one to pair with it, I'll be using that one to test all my enclosures and docks to see which ones support >2TB drives and which don't.
 
user406009
@Howdy_McGee I think numeric_limits<streamsize>::max() is the max value of size_t. Which might be bigger than int.
 
Most of my USB docks and enclosures only support up to 2TB.
esata docks and enclosures support whatever the esata port supports...
 
gotcha
 
So that's actually dependent on the sata controller.
 
Hullo folks.
 
5:46 AM
And the only way to check if a device supports > 2TB is to fill the drive up to the top and read from it.
 
@Lalaland I was under the understanding that numeric_limits could ignore things other than ints, but it seems like for the more part INT_MAX does practically the same thing.
 
@Moshe Isn't that more of a programmer.se question?
 
Thanks though!
 
user406009
@Howdy_McGee Yeah, according to en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/io/streamsize it is a signed size_t
 
@Mysticial Nope, it's a coding question, IMO.
 
5:47 AM
@Moshe No it's a testing question...
 
"Whiteboard" problems are for programmer.se
 
@Borgleader And so, is that more for programmers?
Oh..
I never hang out on programmers anymore.
 
Just flag a mod to migrate.
 
@Mysticial flagged.
 
It might take a while though. Everyone's usually asleep this time of the day.
Nuke it from orbit. It's the only way to be sure. — Dan Neely 5 hours ago
 
5:55 AM
Why do people need program to "Optimize" their computers?
I mean srsly... all I do is run CCleaner and Defraggler once in a while and PC is top shape
 
a defragger is technically a program that "optimizes" a computer.
I used to reinstall windows a lot.
But I haven't had a need to reinstall any of my machines for a long time. (except for the branch new laptop I just got)
When I do, it's usually because the boot drive failed. Or I needed the boot drive somewhere else.
 
I make a distinction between maintenance tools like a defragger (like Defraggler)/CCleaner/... and Optimizers which tend to not do much in hopes that you'll buy them
 
I have a habit of going overkill with the size of the boot drive. And never filling it up past like 30%.
Never really had to defrag.
Like 1.5TB for boot. And I use maybe 300GB of it.
 
Oh I have less than 10% of space on both the partitions on my laptop T_T
 
All my data goes on secondary and external drives.
 
5:59 AM
guys
the word escapes me
 
Drives usually don't fragment until it fills up.
 
what do you call a game with anime characters in 2D?
virtual novels?
 
If you never fill it up... it won't fragment.
@Rapptz Not quite. Since they're not all novels.
I'm not sure of the term though.
 
virtual novels it is. :(
visual?
yeah visual novel
A is an interactive fiction game, featuring mostly static graphics, most often using anime-style art or occasionally live-action stills (and sometimes video footage). As the name might suggest, they resemble mixed-media novels or tableau vivant stage plays. In Japanese terminology, a distinction is often made between visual novels proper (abbreviated NVL), which consist predominantly of narration and have very few interactive elements, and adventure games (abbreviated AVG or ADV), which may incorporate problem-solving and other types of gameplay. This distinction is normally lost outs...
 
Can we get reopen votes on this:
6
Q: Why is my Strassen's Matrix Multiplication slow?

newprint Possible Duplicate: Why is transposing a matrix of 512x512 much slower than transposing a matrix of 513x513? I wrote two Matrix Multiplications programs in C++: Regular MM (source), and Strassen's MM (source), both of which operate on square matrices of sizes 2^k x 2^k(in other words, ...

@Luchian pulled the trigger a bit too early, and review queue eventually caught up with it.
 
6:07 AM
Why does Luchian like to close questions as a dupe of that?
I've seen it like ~3 times.
 
@Rapptz I used to shamelessly link to my answers. But I don't usually VTC...
 
What is VTC? Vote to Close?
 
yeah
Can't blame him though. He's got +71 on that answer. It's a good way to slowly work it up to 100.
Kinda what I used to do with my flops answer before I finally got bored of it.
 
Java UI is so ugly..
 
6:23 AM
What's the process called when you assign a float to an integer and the decimal is shaved off?
 
Truncation
 
@Rapptz A UI only a mother could love (and then only if she was blind).
 
yes! thanks you
 
user406009
@Rapptz Have you tried switching over to the native look and feel? It actually looks decent then.
 
41696 and counting... long way to go...
 
6:31 AM
I'm not making one, I'm just using a java app right now.
The blue gradient buttons are ugly
 
45016 and it finally goes over the SMART threshold. That's gotta be the highest threshold I've ever seen. Most other HDs I have will trigger at only a few hundred...
 
I have no idea what you've been talking about for the past 2 hours.
 
@Rapptz lol
My failed hard drive.
 
Are you defragmenting?
 
I'm deep formatting it right now to wipe the contents so that I can safely RMA it.
 
6:40 AM
Ah I gotcha.
 
And at the same time, I have Hard Disk Sentinel monitoring the SMART readings.
So we're seeing a hard drive deteriorate in real-time.
 
user406009
@Mysticial How many terabytes of storage?
 
The numbers that I've been showing are the # of bad/reallocated sectors.
@Lalaland 1.5 TB portable HD.
And it looks like the deep format just failed...
If I can't wipe the drive I can't RMA it.
 
6:57 AM
Plan B. I'm gonna fill the drive up with digits.
 
@Mysticial like digits of Pi?
 
yeah
 

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