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3:00 AM
@EtiennedeMartel I can't vouch for the bus stop (at least this side of the Atlantic we don't call them "pontos"), but yes, the rest are all true.
It also seems to be missing "point".
 
Well, well.
 
Some people also use "ponto" to mean exam (the school kind).
 
Damn, that word really means anything.
 
The French cognate point has just about the same uses as those in the pictures.
 
Also, Brazilian is silly most of time.
 
3:05 AM
@LucDanton Hmm.
 
They use weird grammar and can't pronounce words correctly.
And I mean all of them, not some accent or anything.
If you pronounce words correctly in Brazil, you're clearly Portuguese.
 
Ha, sounds like what the French think about us.
 
5:08am, time to wash the car.
 
@EtiennedeMartel Maybe they're right? I know we Portuguese are right about Brazilians.
I'm not biased, I swear.
 
Hopefully evaporation won't be a problem, it should be still relatively cold.
 
3:09 AM
@R.MartinhoFernandes Considering they sound like they're speaking out of their butt holes, I don't think so.
 
Xeo
@EtiennedeMartel lol
 
Fun fact: in France, "gosse" is slang for "child". In Quebec, it refers to testicles.
 
Testicles.
 
Testicles are like monads. They're useful.
For creating stuff.
 
3:15 AM
Anyway, with that said, I'm going to get some sleep.
Good night, sleep tight, fuck right.
 
Want to help me wash the car?
 
I'd have to cross an ocean for that.
It's not terribly effective.
 
True, got a paddle?
Ahaha, sleep tight.
 
Xeo
@EtiennedeMartel Have him cross the ocean in his car.
 
The Atlantic Ocean is fucking huge.
 
Xeo
3:16 AM
Mission accomplished.
 
@EtiennedeMartel Have fun.
@Xeo Good idea. It would certainly be washed by then.
 
@EtiennedeMartel Not as big as Pacific, IIRC.
 
The Pacific is the largest.
Watcha think? pastebin.com/WLDAehDz
 
3:34 AM
Mmh, isn't that one of the canonical example of what attributes are supposed to help with? How come there's no proposal in the open yet?
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes I think: http://deprecated instead. All current compilers already accept it identically (though none warns about using code deprecated in this way).
 
@LucDanton No idea.
@JerryCoffin lol
Anyway, I'm gathering feedback here and then I'm taking it to the mailing list.
@JerryCoffin Actually, no, that only works inside functions.
And this one is not supposed to. I need to put that in the proposal.
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes You may want to mention that deprecating function parameters might make sense but should be a separate proposal?
 
@LucDanton How would that be different from deprecating the whole function?
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Oh, well, so much for idea.
 
Xeo
3:39 AM
@R.MartinhoFernandes > has intended for attributes, does not change program semantics.
 
@Xeo Yeah, I fixed that in my local copy already :P
 
Xeo
Btw, you may want to take inner namespaces into account for your versioning
or however they were called
 
inline namespaces?
Can you put attributes on namespaces?
 
Xeo
thanks, that's it
dunno
But I meant for versioning your lib
Btw, you may want to allow a literal string for the deprecation
 
3:42 AM
@R.MartinhoFernandes void foo([[deprecated]]int bar = 0); foo(); /* fine */ foo(42); /* warn */
 
@Xeo Ahm yeah.
 
Xeo
[[deprecated("blah")]]
 
@Xeo Oh right, Clang and MSVC allow that. I forgot it.
 
Dunno what semantics to give when no default parameter is present. Could default to deprecating the function, yeah.
 
@LucDanton Ah, yeah, that makes some sense..
Though you could always deprecate the function and add void foo();.
 
3:44 AM
In any case since passing a parameter is nothing like ODR-using an entity it really is a different affair. Point is, you can use that as a disclaimer as to why your proposal doesn't plan to cover parameters.
 
Ah good. Initially I excluded them because I thought it made no sense. I forgot a few other places though :)
Not very familiar with attributes yet. Guess why.
 
They have no use?
 
No, they're not implemented.
 
Xeo
@LucDanton Hey now, Clang plans on using them for concurrency related assumptions and such, for analysis
 
Well, plans.
 
3:46 AM
But yeah, I do agree that only standardized attributes are useful.
The rest is just the same crap as always, with a common syntax.
I think I've mentioned this here before.
Oct 27 '11 at 21:25, by R. Martinho Fernandes
I'll probably be using #define DLL_EXPORT [[ msvc::dllexport, gc::dllexport, clang::dllexport ]]
(Oooh, typo)
 
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes Unknown attributes are just ignored, right?
 
Ah, the one I was actually looking for:
Oct 23 '11 at 22:26, by R. Martinho Fernandes
In the future you can have [[ msvc::super_duper_msvc_attrib, gcc::super_duper_gcc_attrib_that_does_the_same_but_with_a_different_name, clang::and_the_super_duper_clang_version ]] int x;
@Xeo Yes, but you're still stuck with having to write a macro.
Despite what some people believe.
 
To be fair that's what attributes were partly designed for. It's still a better alternative than __attribute__/__declspec and the like.
 
Yes, the standardized syntax is a good thing.
And the fact that you don't have to detect compilers. You can just name drop the things and they're required to ignore those they're not aware of.
Also, which would you prefer for a char32_t literal? 0x02DB_u or U(02DB)? I'm using the former, but today a friend suggested me the latter (it's a macro!).
 
Xeo
macro?
 
3:58 AM
Is that a vote for the latter?
 
Well, what would be the straightforward way anyway? U'\x02DB'?
 
That's valid?
Somehow I got the impression only string literals were.
Oh gawd, I'm soooo silly.
Where the fuck did I get that idea?
It's U'\U000002DB'
 
A somewhat recent question that was paranoid about the meaning of literals.
 
Hmm, I guess I'll stick to my UDL anyway. The need to type all the eight hexits irks me, since only 6 are used.
 
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes Double U?
 
4:03 AM
One to mark the literal, the other to use codepoint escapes.
 
Xeo
ah
 
> The value of a char32_t literal containing a single c-char is equal to its ISO 10646 code point value.
Should I be worried?
Ah, no, seems they're the same since Unicode 2.0.
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes My version is valid though, the \x escape sequence doesn't care how many digits there are.
 
@LucDanton It's greedy then?
 
Yes.
I'd double-check but my system is dying right now.
 
4:06 AM
I checked.
I shall have a round of find and replace soon then.
 
I'm writing a new scripting language
I figured that I would have the syntax of class declaration similar to C/C++ but without the ; after the }
So a class could be declared like a standard C++ class
 
@IDWMaster This seems to be my evening for offering condolences...
 
Computers have infinite memory?
 
Xeo
@IDWMaster What is a "scripting language"? Please define. :)
 
4:09 AM
@Xeo A higher-level language used to plugin to an existing application written in a lower-level language.
 
@IDWMaster Don't mark it if you don't appear to believe that :)
 
Xeo
@IDWMaster C++ is also a higher-level language. ASM is a lower-level language.
 
Yeah, my language will definitely lack goto. I don't want people learning it to be afraid of velociraptor attacks
 
Xeo
@IDWMaster How do you break out of nested loops?
 
Similar to the way JavaScript works
 
4:11 AM
@Xeo You don't. Write functions.
 
Xeo
Don't know JS
 
using break, and checking in each loop if it was requested to be broken out of
 
Use proper iteration constructs.
 
If you must write nested loops
 
I firmly believe the need to break out of nested loops is an XY problem.
 
Xeo
4:11 AM
@IDWMaster That's nothing special to JS
@R.MartinhoFernandes Iterate over a matrix and stop if a certain field is a certain value.
 
@Xeo Grab a matrix iterator? Single loop.
 
Xeo
shush, you.
 
@Xeo There's a lot that's special (as in "Special Olympics") about JS.
 
Xeo
Assume matrix has no iterators. :P
 
The need to break out of nested loops only reveals the lack of proper iterator constructs in the language/library.
@Xeo That's the X problem.
 
Xeo
4:13 AM
Okay, assume you need to know row/column. Should that be offer through iterator constructs?
(yes, I'm just making stuff up now)
 
Why not?
I can very easily write such a thing in C#.
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes You seem to have answered your own question.
 
Xeo
Then, is it bad that C++ iterators don't offer positions, i.e. vector<T>::iterator?
 
@Xeo No, it's just bad that writing iterators in C++ is painful as heck.
 
Xeo
True that.
 
4:15 AM
Anyways; I came here about a simple syntax issue. I was thinking about trying to make my language easier for people to read (more of an English-grammar syntax). So for the following code:
class Vector3D {
float X;
float Y;
float Z;
}
Vector3D md;
Vector3D mc;
set mc to md;
 
There's nothing that makes it impossible to have such an iterator in C++ (in fact, Boost provides that functionality for ranges).
 
Should that be the last line?
Or should I have it be
set mc = md;
For syntax.
Or should I stick with
 
@JerryCoffin I'm filing that as sarcasm.
 
mc = md
 
@IDWMaster Oh gawd, COBOL.
Run for the hills!
@IDWMaster Personally, I'd make it mc := md, because I don't like = for assignment.
(I got the puppy in on that! :P)
 
4:17 AM
@R.MartinhoFernandes No, that would be Assign mc to md. set md = mc is a cross between BASIC and MS-DOS batch.
 
Perhaps I should use mc :) md :(
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes After having written Pascal for too long, I'll take = for assignment any day.
 
@JerryCoffin But set mc to md (not the "to") while not exactly correct, is quite similar to COBOL.
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes What? Me sarcastic? Never!
 
"The compiler crashes when you look at it funny"
 
4:19 AM
@Xeo For the record, I also believe that C# has totally nailed this problem. And Python too. And I think Ruby has this as well, even if it uses one of their four weird different and incompatible anonymous functions constructs.
 
And the VM
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Perhaps we should introduce him to something more intuitive, like a JCL DD statement.
 
Oh gawd, not JCL.
That thing has column-based thingies, right?
Like early Fortrans.
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes That's an insult to Fortran -- a truly nasty one, truth be told. JCL has more ugliness than the worst parts of PHP, Java, and Javascript, all mashed together into one truly gawdawful mishmash of nastiness.
 
Also writing a nice little VM
 
4:24 AM
@R.MartinhoFernandes You've just upset our favorite senior Fortran user. :D
 
@JerryCoffin Oh, but they both have/had meaningful column positions, right?
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yes, I believe JCL attaches significance to column positions, if that's what you're asking.
 
(I hope I'm not dredging up any traumatic memories.)
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Not at all. In fact, I never used JCL at all. It was an IBM thing. Those of us who programmed real (Control Data) machines, pitied anybody who had to put up with such things (after all, NOS was, objectively, at least 100 parts per million better than an IBM OS).
 
Xeo
4:34 AM
Does global scope count as namespace scope?
Also, anybody can test a snippet with Clang for me?
 
I know what I want. I can.
 
Xeo
namespace N
{
    auto L = [](){};
}

struct S
{
    decltype(N::L) m;
};
with empty main
 
No warnings.
 
Xeo
ah, wait. Produce some kind of error with the lamba in the output
I wanna see were it resides
GCC and MSVC put it in anonymous namespaces
 
No, no errors, no warnings.
 
Xeo
4:39 AM
produce one :P
 
Ah, sorry.
> aka 'N::<lambda at foo.c++:2:10>'
-3
Q: What is beneficial about this program?? When using Pointer to Setter and Getters

user1533578class Animal { public: void setName(string *Animal_Name); void setAge(int *Animal_Age); string getName(); int getAge(); private: string Name; int Age; };

The uglies.
 
Xeo
Thanks
And with global lambda?
 
@Xeo Somebody (who shall remain nameless) already put up an answer quoting the standard about where the type should be declared. Oh wait: make that two, who shall both remain nameless... :-)
 
> aka '<lambda at foo.c++:1:10>'
@Xeo Btw, if you have a public key, I don't mind giving you SSH access to the machine I'm using for this.
 
Xeo
@JerryCoffin Ooops. :P
@R.MartinhoFernandes I'm normally fine and just start up my VM for this, but I'm currently at a friends notebook. Thanks anyways
@JerryCoffin Edit into it that GCC and MSVC get it wrong and Clang gets it right, and I'll delete mine again
or maybe I'll just do that
 
4:47 AM
@Xeo Feel free to edit the extra info into your answer and leave it there.
 
Xeo
robot, how did you test for the lambda type?
@JerryCoffin I already have it in there, hence why I even posted the answer ;)
 
My usual technique: struct{}_ = ...
 
Xeo
and then just assigned the lambda or what?
 
@Xeo I meant the extra info about clang (at least I don't think you mentioned it yet,did you)?
 
4:48 AM
Compiler comes back shouting about invalid conversion from X to anonymous struct.
 
Xeo
@JerryCoffin Did
> error: conversion from '<lambda()>' to non-scalar type '<anonymous struct>' requested
screw you GCC
 
@Xeo Ah, so you did. One of these days I'm going to have to learn to read (and type).
 
@Xeo What about it?
 
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes nvm
 
does std::locale work on windows at all?
 
4:54 AM
Probably not.
 
@keith.layne Yeah, I use it quite a bit. The names of most locales are different from under POSIX systems though.
 
default locale: C. Expected. put_money inserts 0 into stream. sweet.
@JerryCoffin I could be fine with a macro for that. What locale will format a long long double of currency American-style like I expect on windows? BTW, I'm using g++, and does that change anything?
By the way, since I have only talked about C++ here lately (my bad)...
 
My wife won a soda maker from some TV show doctor, which is pretty expensive, and now I can make myself fake diet doctor pepper at will. Exciting!
 
Morning
 
4:58 AM
Well, fine. I can't expect everyone to understand my passion.
:)
 
@keith.layne I don't know what a Dr Pepper tastes like, so I have no idea how important that is.
 
The key is that it's diet, yet it tastes sorta kinda almost like the real thing, which is great for fatties like me.
I'm going to make some now...mmmmmmmmm
 
@ManofOneWay morning :)
 
dude, when did "newbie hints" become "code of conduct"? That sounds somehow legally enforceable and grumpy. Totally jives with the atmosphere here.
 
@keith.layne What's in it instead? aspartame?
 
5:03 AM
Was there a military coup in here while I was away?
 
@keith.layne I think it is more appealing than "newbie hints". Some people don't like to think of themselves as newbies.
 
@ManofOneWay splenda, I think, at least in the knock-off version I make. Don't know about the real thing. Ignorance is bliss. I'm pretty sure if you injected a gallon of it into a lab rat, it would die of cancer instantly. Or it's head would explode. Take your pick.
 
Probably the latter, because a lab rat can't fit a gallon of liquid inside it.
 
How about, "Look here, bitches...if people are typing to you in all caps, you might wanna read this"
 
Also, I think I have UB again. Dammit.
 
5:06 AM
@R.MartinhoFernandes american lab rats are all on steroids, they can take it like a champ
Ukelele Badminton?
hate it when that happens.
 
Oh crap, boost::equal requires the two ranges to have the same type. I'm starting to hate Boost.Range.
Yet this somehow compiles, which is scary since it shouldn't.
 
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes Huh?
template<
    class SinglePassRange1,
    class SinglePassRange2
>
bool equal(const SinglePassRange1& rng1,
           const SinglePassRange2& rng2);
 
False alarm, it's just a case of reading failure.
 
Xeo
For me that shows error: conversion from '<lambda()>' to non-scalar type '<anonymous struct>' requested - again, the lambda is not in an anonymous namespace! — HighCommander4 8 mins ago
Now I'm confused
 
@Xeo It's true. It's not on an anonymous namespace.
 
5:10 AM
Oh BTW @R.MartinhoFernandes, I took your advice and asked a question the other day, and instantly suffered ridicule over a point that was mostly irrelevant. I hate SO.
 
It's just the warning that is completely and utter bogus.
 
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes But he said 4.8 puts it there, from the warning it gives
hm
oh well
 
@Xeo It doesn't. Stop trusting the warning.
 
Xeo
Atleast MSVC is definitly wrong :>
 
GCC puts it in the right place (I tested with ADL).
@keith.layne Oh well :(
I hope you hate me now.
 
Xeo
5:11 AM
@keith.layne Well, asked the wrong question it seems. :P
 
Because hate leads to the dark side.
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes, I am your father.
 
I was able to copy music and videos to the Nexus by simply dragging and dropping. I MEAN ITS NO F**KING ITUNES OR ANYTHING.
 
@Xeo yeah, maybe so, I felt dumb because I could have figured out the answer myself.
 
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes Err
Maybe I'm missing the point but... iTunes has drag'n'drop too?!
 
5:13 AM
Does it?
Also, I suspect he is referring to doing it by dragging files to folders, without an intervening application.
 
Xeo
ah, yeah
But that's the iOS' filesystem fault, really. Not iTunes'
 
I've heard iTunes is crap, so it's fair to blame it for anything.
Oh right. I have nullptrs in that data set. Of course that leads to AVs.
 
iOS filesystem allows dragging and dropping of files. I often use my iPhone as a sort of USB stick, circumventing iTunes.
 
Can you do that for music?
 
You music is stored as simple files, but in a flat folder structure and the names are coded like ae2.mp3, ae3.mp3, etc...
 
5:24 AM
@R.MartinhoFernandes You could propose yield return for C++1y :)
 
@FredOverflow Imma try something smaller at first :)
@StackedCrooked Yeah, I've seen that.
 
@Xeo ASM can get pretty high-level if you add macros :)
 
Hmm, I'd need a string with all the codepoints. That means 4MB which almost doubles my already gigantic array. Nope, not gonna happen.
 
Xeo
@StackedCrooked Well, atleast it doesn't make it easily accessible
 
Indeed. Apple wants to be in control.
 
5:26 AM
@Xeo Java has labeled breaks:
outer: for (...)
{
    for (...)
    {
        if (...) break outer;
    }
}
 
@FredOverflow This is what I'll try: pastebin.com/WLDAehDz
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Ah, like Java's @deprecated tag or whatever it was.
 
Yeah.
I keep telling people to make proposals. I guess I should follow my own advice as well.
 
I wonder if it needs to be so formal.
 
It doesn't even have standardese!
 
5:33 AM
We could deprecate the entire standard library and write a better one from scratch ;)
 
Oh, I didn't think of that! I should mention it could be used in the std lib too.
 
Why not create std2 namespace?
 
What deprecated library features do we have?
 
Xeo
auto_ptr
Appendix D btw
 
Function binders.
 
Xeo
5:35 AM
> D.1 Increment operator with bool operand
> D.2 register keyword
> D.3 Implicit declaration of copy functions
> D.4 Dynamic exception specifications
though those are all language features, hmmm
 
I'll also mention it benefits users when upgrading code, because the compiler can point out all places that need upgrading.
 
Xeo
> The class templates unary_function and binary_function are deprecated. A program shall not declare specializations of these templates.
the adaptors
 
How about marking language features deprecated as well? Will your deprecated proposal be expressive enough so it can deprecate itself in case something better comes along in the future?
 
Xeo
lol
main [[deprecated]].cpp
 
@FredOverflow Nah, the intention was to make it useful for library writers, not committee members.
 
5:39 AM
We could also have a @fired tag for code that is so bad, the author got fired for writing it.
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes section IV: "has intended for attributes"...typo?
 
@keith.layne Sorry, had to leave for a bit. Not really sure about g++, but in limited testing it does seem badly broken in this respect. Using VC++, I get about what I'd expect. E.g., ideone.com/eQ1lx, produces: "$123,456.78" with VC++.
 
Holy plums, the longest decomposition is 18 codepoints long? WTF, arabians just ruined my plan. fileformat.info/info/unicode/char/fdfa/index.htm
No wonder they allow those Zalgo monstrosities, if real languages need crap like this.
Basically, there's a codepoint for "May Allah honour him and grant him peace."
 
@JerryCoffin thank you!
 
5:45 AM
@R.MartinhoFernandes Rather interesting that we spend this much time and effort on tailoring computers for people who are convinced they're evil, and should all be destroyed (Yes, I know I'm over-generalizing -- badly).
 
now I have to see if I can make it work everywhere without too much pain...it's a simple thing I'm working on.
nobody should need more than 7 bits to communicate. Ever.
 
Yeah, right.
 
later guys
 
Have fun.
@JerryCoffin Well, at least it's not as stupid as PILE OF POO.
 
@keith.layne Later.
 
5:50 AM
If we have PILE OF POO we might as well have "incredibly long islamic blessing".
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes IMO, PILE OF POO is more sensible -- but it doesn't involve religion, which makes it an unfair comparison.
 
Now, is returning a 72-byte array by value reasonable?
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yes, entirely. Let [N]RVO deal with keeping it efficient.
 
@JerryCoffin Well, it's just that most of the time (like for all the other 1000000+ codepoints), it will never use more than 16.
It annoys me.
But I'll live with it :S
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Okay, so return an std::string or std::vector<char> (and if it makes you happier, use shrink_to_fit).
 
5:58 AM
Yeah, a vector it is. It's a collection of codepoints, not actual text (even if for U+FDFA it is a whole sentence).
 
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes POO, PILE OF it is
 
@Xeo Nah, it's actually PILE OF POO.
 
Xeo
Still, Unicode sounds like insanity.
 
5 hours ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
Btw, after spending lots of time actually studying the thing, I think Unicode is quite good, considering that it is basically an attempt at sanity on a domain that is quite close to being the definition of insanity.
 
@Xeo Given the insanity of languages and alphabets, how could it be anything else?
 
Xeo
6:00 AM
Fuck languages, let's all just transmit our thoughts as images
If you understand me, send me an image of you raising your hand
 
Images of written words!
 
Xeo
An image tells more than a thousand words... and what about an image of words?
 
@Xeo While we're at it, let's handle the transmission telepathically. If you understand me, raise my hand.
 
Xeo
hrhr
I wanted to bring that one first, went the other route though
 
@Xeo Considering the size of a good digital photo, it had better equal at least a thousand words.
 
6:04 AM
Maybe in the future we'll have one codepoint for a thousand words.
 
Xeo
Truly an image (glyph) that's worth a thousand words.
 
I think several thousand words have been devoted to this one already: ♥
 
Xeo
I can't make that one anymore now that I switched to japanese locale. :(
Same with other low-number alt-codes, it seems
everything below 32
 
I have a .reg file that makes Alt-codes work with Unicode codepoints.
 
Xeo
anyways, gonna take a powernap now, see ya later.
 
6:07 AM
Instead of whatever crazy thing it uses by default.
 
@Xeo That's U+2665.
 
Xeo
@JerryCoffin Alt-3
 
@Xeo That works too.
 
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes I still haven't quite figured out what it uses
 
Anyway, I need to go get some rest too. G'night all.
 
6:09 AM
@Xeo It's on wikipedia if you really want to know... whistles
@JerryCoffin Have fun.
 
Xeo
o/
@R.MartinhoFernandes I'll pass
btw, I just noticed...
alt-0134 and alt-020102 both produce †
anyways, napping
 
6:46 AM
-2
Q: C++: which code style is preferred?

texasbruceI have these codes for counting an element in a vector: Which is a better way in terms of performance(space & time) and coding style? (not complete code) For loop for(i = 0; i < v.size(); i++){ if(v[i] == value) n++; } While(1) loop p = v.begin(); while(1){ p = find(p, v.end(...

Wow, gotta love these self-entitled OPs that want you to guess their intentions from their misleading questions, and then insult you if you try to help.
 
flagged, not constructive ¬_¬
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes lol, didn't realize that the OP started insulting everyone... haha
 
7:45 AM
@R.MartinhoFernandes "I gave you those options so that you could tell me what I was expecting, not what works best!"
 
Hi there! I'm now designing a system that as one of its core features is serializing and transporting queries between its components.
 
@KarimA. good for you!
 
by query - I mean: write a C# LINQ query, serialize it, send it to a buffer, read that buffer from a native application and act on it.
Is there any recommended reading about what are the essential components of a query? so that I can model a generalized and extensible representation of my query that is language-agnostic?
thecoshman - its cool, isn't it? ;)
 
@KarimA. honestly? sounds boring
 
why you think so?
Do you have an idea what this project is? :)
 
7:55 AM
AFAIK C# LINQ is in a string format anyway, what are you doing to it? just send the damn string
 
well.. I think you're confused about what C# linq is.
 
probably I am, it's been a year or two since I messed with C# and I only looked and linq in theory
some sort of generic query language, no?
let me look it up a sec
 
yeah - its a tree-based representation of a query
that could be interpretted by custom IQueriable implementations without giving out any details about its underlying mechanism to its users.
 
¬_¬ looks an awful lot like a string to me...
 
well.. :)
 
7:59 AM
of course, converting it to and from a string is probably a bit more complex then I am making it out to be
 

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