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user1804599
11:02 AM
Man.
 
user1804599
tmux is nice.
 
yay, I'm going to TIFF. Augh, how do I choose which films to see?
there are too many good ones
 
TIFF?
 
ohhh I see
 
11:08 AM
not the file format
 
yea I figured
 
11:21 AM
0
Q: How to prevent implicit conversion from char array to bool

Happy#include <string> using std::string; struct Foo { void setBar(bool bar_) { bar = bar_; } bool bar; }; int main() { Foo f; f.setBar("true"); } The above code compiles successfully due to type conversion, even though a char array is passed where a bool is expected. Is it possible to ca...

meh, you can't not allow implicit conversions
 
Xeo
Fuck implicit conversions :/
 
how retarded is that?
FUCK C++ IN ALL ITS GLORY!!!
 
Xeo
You can, in a very roundabout way
 
Make an intermediate carrier type that has explicit ctor.
 
Xeo
void foo(bool){}
template<class T>
void foo(T&&) = delete;
 
11:25 AM
Eh, but args would convert anyway, nevermind.
:cplusplus:
 
Xeo
Thinking about postfix ? again, the proposal would likely make more sense if implicit boolean conversions were removed.
 
"What do you want to do workarounds for today?"
Many things would make more sense if implicit conversions were removed. :v
 
Xeo
Too bad that won't ever happen for C++
Maybe I should boundle postfix-? with "ban implicit bool conversions".
Would likely break a shitton of code though
Even if the migration path is easy - append ?.
 
DENIED
 
user1804599
@TonyTheLion What glory?
 
11:32 AM
lol
 
user1804599
glory hole
 
STL's MinGW distro page says "My MinGW distribution ("distro") is x64-native". Does that mean it only targets 64-bit systems?
 
o_0 phd gone... who up set him?
huh... didn't look like he was upset...
 
11:57 AM
in Discussion between sehe and Skeen, 14 mins ago, by Skeen
I'm trying to translate a compiler, that I wrote in OCaml to C++ :)
@thecoshman Why does he need to be upset?
 
Xeo
Welp, here goes nothing. /cc @R.MartinhoFernandes
 
Hello, I have a problem with my Javascript program. Can you help me ? It says "Please insert floppy disk #3" but I only have a CD-ROM player.
 
Xeo
You're getting too obvious
 
@sehe erm... either something got lost in translation, or you are being an idiot on purpose. I clearly did not claim that he was upset. I simply stated that he did not look to be upset, which would be a likely reason for someone to quit.
 
Well, I didn't aim for discreteness
 
12:09 PM
@ereOn pop it in the oven for an hour at 90c to soften it up.
 
I'm a what? Why do you keep saying things like that. I could be wrong, but I'm never out to offend and try to handle things politely even if tensions rise in this room. Come on.
That was uncalled for.
 
ew ew ew ew! My chrome updated, and now the omni box drops down with a full width box for suggestions, but keeps the text that same width as the omnibox, with needles white space.
 
@thecoshman There are other possible reasons.
 
@sehe indeed... but upset is a likely reason, one that I do not think it was based on his last few messages.
 
Meh. I agree :)
 
12:12 PM
@sehe either it's you or me, but somehow you manage to come across, most of the time, as an antagonistic twat.
 
"most of the time". Lol. Perhaps you can find someone to corroborate that? Meanwhile, I think it's only you who insists on this particular conviction about my lounge persona.
 
> either it's you or me
> you manage to come across
> somehow
but it's just the regular realisation we have of "we do not understand each other, despite both claiming not meaning to be awkward"
 
Dear pirate. Will you please let it rest if you think it's not that important? Look, this is what I see: my question --> your response. I just wanted to say your use of language surprised me a whole lot and I don't care how much time you spend downplaying ("it could be me"/"somehow" - ... you're just clouding the issue). It just wasn't nice. Done.
 
It's me I'm the antagonistic twat
 
You're drunk :)
 
12:27 PM
Not yet.
 
@sehe your question comes across as a snarky implication that I am saying he must be upset. Your response almost always come across to me as some sly attempt at trying to put me down. I do not get this from anybody else, so I can only conclude either you are attempting to be aggravating, or, as I suspect, something is being lost in translation, some subtle usage of language combined with my interpretation results in a grumpy pirate and confused polar bear.
 
user1804599
I wonder how difficult it is to stream from a camera to a website.
 
Just noticed:
Newbs want to know how to get a value from a terminal. Aspiring pros want to know how to get a value from a non-terminal
 
/me sits back with a bowl of popcorn. Carry on
 
@not-rightfold Hmm. Depends on the camera and the website :/ With a wemcam, it should be pretty easy. Doesn't HTML5 have stuff built in for that?
 
12:32 PM
@not-rightfold not very
 
user1804599
@sehe HTML5 has <video>.
 
@ArneMertz Sorry. I haven't read it yet. Should I?
@not-rightfold That's download, I presume?
 
WebRTC
 
user1804599
I have a camera connected to the web server and I want to stream the image to the client.
 
@sehe you have written part of it. I was just reading your little dispute with thecoshman
 
12:34 PM
@thecoshman What can I say? You were the one using "being an idiot", directed at me. All I want to say is: that doesn't seem nice. At least I don't think I'm "reading into things" or looking for sly attempts; It was overt.
Apology would be accepted though not necessary. Let's move on
@ArneMertz (Yeah as you can see, by now I've read the last message too, myself.)
@not-rightfold Should be dead simple. Perhaps Stack Overflow or even Super User (how many people want to use their webcam as a baby monitor/burglar alarm thing?)
 
@sehe I do recall leading that with the posabilty that something was just being lost in translation
ergh... fuck it
chrome has decided you must all suffer my raw spelling attempts
 
Simplest solution is to use streaming service. They have embeddable clients.
 
TIL. I could just lead in every qualification of behaviour by others with a disclaimer. I'd never step on anyones feelings anymore. World peace achieved.
 
"I don't want to offend you BUT"
"I'm not a racist BUT"
Buttes.
 
Xeo
I just remembered, Going Native 2013 is pretty soon
 
12:41 PM
A tale of surviving in the Amazonian jungle
 
Would it be a bad idea to have a wrapper class which moves the held object on copy? (In order to move it into a lambda without much hassle.)
 
@Xeo next week. In 8 days. And I cant go
 
Xeo
@StackedCrooked Is auto_ptr bad?
 
@Xeo I'd like to use it but it generates a warning which is treated as error.
 
Xeo
It also has "move-on-copy" and is considered very bad, which is all I was going for with that question.
 
12:43 PM
@StackedCrooked yes it would. You are essentially raising auto_ptr functionality from its grave. Why should the corpse of the original wrapper keep laying around if the wrapped object has been moved elswhere?
 
@Borgleader Woah, what, what?
 
@ArneMertz That's not my goal.
 
Anaway, are any of the Swedish-y people around?
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes what's wrong with the turnip-y people?
 
I want to send a message to a friend in Swedish, but I don't want to Google Translate it.
I think @CaptainGiraffe and that dude with the bald avatar (sorry I forgot your name!) are Swedish.
 
12:54 PM
@R.MartinhoFernandes it'll be more fun if you send it to hit in something like latin... latin is quite like latin
 
And IIRC @Ell was studying some.
You know, maybe in Danish would be funnier. @jalf?
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes @Ell is no longer available. He was last heard of in an airport, about a week, ago, on the way to Spain. His corpse is probably still there, sat in some remote corner, forever staring at a display screen for news of his delayed flight.
Loungers are dropping like flies, @Ell eaten by the European airline system and ThePhD becoming even-more-phantom derpstorm. I may be next: TIL that Thwaites' Lancaster Bomber is much stronger than I thought it was last night. My head is sorta continually exploding.
 
What is that?
 
WAIT! Hold the pigging phone!
Lanacaster Bomber... the drink?!
Instructions right now!
 
("My head is sorta continually exploding." sounds like something my Borderlands 2 character would say. Except it would be more like "MY HEAD IS SORTA CONTINUALLY EXPLOIDING")
 
1:07 PM
fucking shit stringly typed shit
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Torgue.
 
@Chemistpp EXPLOSIONS?
@Chemistpp (Actually, no. It's Krieg the Psycho)
 
@Xeo I thought you had read that already?
 
@MartinJames 4.4% doesn't sound that strong :D
 
find it funny imagining the robot in your avatar exploding and propelling the the naked chick forward into a pile of mud
 
1:17 PM
 
i HATE that crappy debugger that silently hangs itself after half an hour of doing nothing FFS
 
Xeo
@LucDanton I must've forgotten
 
@Xeo No matter. Say, beyond the implementation in C++, do you now get how the Haskell implementation works?
 
Xeo
ya
 
1:24 PM
@KonradRudolph Spoiler alert: nope, still missing the point.
Now let's read it.
 
@ArneMertz My head tells me a different message :( I'm used to 4.0%. That last 0.4% seems to make a huge difference, for some reason.
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Does it? It’s a full-blown monad and does very much exactly what @DeadMG proposed yesterday.
 
Xeo
let x = f x in x expands to f x -> f $ f x -> f $ f $ f x -> ..., but the x part is only evaluated when needed, so as soon as the end condition is reached inside f, the passed x is no longer needed.
 
@KonradRudolph Yes, and no special syntax support, which everyone seems to miss and is what makes monads cool.
 
@MartinJames uh. Well.... you should visit Germany some time eg :D
 
1:25 PM
They are painful without that.
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Well you simply cannot get that in C++ … not even macros help there
 
They are even more painful without that if you have verbose lambdas like C++.
@KonradRudolph I know, which is why I said it missed the point before I read it.
 
and actually the problem of C++ is that it doesn’t have currying and syntactic sugar for partial function application, the rest is all there
 
@ArneMertz I have, and yes, I do get exploding-head syndrome from German beer.
 
@Xeo Yup. 'Layers' are peeled on demand.
 
Xeo
1:27 PM
I also got to the definition of loop on my own in Haskell, but C++ really doesn't seem to like that idea :/
 
@MartinJames stay longer. get thome practice then ;) There's a new brewery in Hamburg, the first new one in over a hundred years. GREAT beer =)
 
Xeo
(Also, checking the implementation through only the type signature is awesome)
 
Yes it is :)
@KonradRudolph I'm not as annoyed by juggling parameters as I used to be in C++03.
 
@ArneMertz Usually, I go to Frankfurt. Time before last, it was Berlin. I stayed for ~ 3 days. It did not do my waistline, wallet or head any good at all.
 
Xeo
@KonradRudolph Currying be awesome.
 
1:31 PM
@Xeo More awesome would be if bind were called partial ;-)
 
@KonradRudolph That said, can you link me to that discussion?
 
@KonradRudolph do-notation is more important.
 
@MartinJames but you keep on going back ... bravo!
 
@CatPlusPlus Is it? Why not overload operator >>= for that?
(or <bind> as I suggested in the reddit discussion)
 
@Telkitty猫咪咪 Customers :(
 
1:32 PM
@KonradRudolph Because lambdas.
 
Xeo
@KonradRudolph Wrong associativity, also do-notation may be implemented on top of bind, but is so much more awesome than >>= + lambdas in the general case.
 
Because bound variables.
 
@MartinJames heh, now imagine living permanently there
 
2 days ago, by Konrad Rudolph
@DeadMG And I agree that expected has richer semantics than optional but the latter can be used (and is used) in the same context – i.e. not having a value doesn’t necessarily mean we move on, it means an operation has failed. Case in point: reading a value. For instance, I have a function optional<T> read_value(istream&) that is part of my core tool box
(& ff)
 
[save the environment!](thread the environment) { /* hey this is actually interesting */ }
 
1:34 PM
@R.MartinhoFernandes Okay, so the same objection I voiced yesterday [two days ago] and in the reddit thread
 
The thing is, it looks nice in the examples at the end of the post, but those are way too simple.
 
@Xeo Hmm, is assignment right-associative in C++?
 
(of course it is)
 
Xeo
@KonradRudolph Yes.
 
1:35 PM
well just use >> then ;)
 
overload : >_<
or ^_^
 
possible as well
hehe, the kitty operator
 
@ArneMertz Don't tempt me :)
 
Xeo
I've taken a liking to lift(x).then(...)or something
 
You have separate functions for each part, and you never have a variable that you bind for use later down the chain. Every single one is used immediately and never again (and hence can simply be omitted). As soon as you start doing it like that, you quickly end up with Grendel.
 
1:36 PM
>_< //omg I am not sure whether this is going to explode operator
thread unsafe ... use at your own caution
 
@Telkitty猫咪咪 why or, why not both?
 
@KonradRudolph Thanks.
 
fuck me, I'm so fucking tired
fucking stomach kicked me back awake at 3, 4:30, and 5:30.
 
@ArneMertz depends what you want to use it for
 
@DeadMG :( OK, I'm bad too, but I did deliberately poison myself.
 
1:39 PM
there there
 
I must say that debugging MaybeT m is a pain tbh.
"Here, have some return Nothing" is always a bit disconcerting.
 
void fn (){}
 
Xeo
This does not exploit anything, the instance is gone as soon as foo returns. This is bad.Xeo 38 secs ago
sigh
 
Then again my last use of MaybeT m was to slap on an retries = attempt `mplus` retries and forget about failures :D The attempt fetched stuff on the Interwebs, too. (There's actually no MonadPlus for that MaybeT m but that's a detail.)
 
@Telkitty猫咪咪 anything useless ;)
cat >_< meow
 
1:45 PM
@Xeo It actually fooled me for a second
 
FUCK JAVA WITH A CAR THROUGH THE KNOB!
 
a car through the knob? owch.
 
Xeo
> Unary postfix "?" used as the condition to ternary "?" would invite the "??" sequence which introduces a trigraph. That's just a unary "!" away from disaster.
Damn
 
Xeo
Well, don't use postfix-? in the conditional operator then! It already invokes a contextual conversion
 
1:50 PM
After remembering named operators exist, now I kind of wish there was `` for that purpose with proper precedence.
 
@LucDanton Wrong stack order?
 
user1804599
@Xeo Hahaha.
 
lift ^ n $ return Nothing isn't really any better :p
 
I wonder if you could abuse operator overloading to provide a do-notation alike.
 
1:53 PM
18 mins ago, by Luc Danton
[save the environment!](thread the environment) { /* hey this is actually interesting */ }
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Any specific reason?
 
Xeo
bound variables, function invokation
 
@DeadMG You need to transform nested lambdas into a flat structure.
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes That's not what I had in mind.
 
Well, that's what do-notation is about.
 
user1804599
1:54 PM
Macros!
 
Either you play the compiler and take care of lifetimes or you play the compiler and take care of control flow when you do the usual auto attempt = may_fail(foo, bar); if(!attempt) /* handle */; auto&& actual_result = *attempt; ...
 
ah, function invocation would undoubtedly screw me.
I could only make that work implicitly if the function were an optional<T>.
 
Xeo
[]foo would kinda help, or atleast make it a little nicer
 
Basically, you need AST rewriting capabilities.
 
@DeadMG I would have thought you'd already be sick of [x = std::move(x), y = std::move(y)] and the like :p
 
Xeo
1:55 PM
@R.MartinhoFernandes Well, expression templates give you that
But still fugly.
 
user1804599
What would the result look like?
 
user1804599
As in, usage.
 
@Xeo At the wrong level for this.
 
Expr. templates have their own crust regarding environment juggling though.
 
@LucDanton lol.
 
Xeo
1:57 PM
Something like do_[ _a <= get_foo(), _b <= get_bar(), apply([]baz, _a, _b) ] is what immediately comes to mind for me.
 
nah
 
@Telkitty猫咪咪 done: coliru.stacked-crooked.com
 
my first idea was something like this
 
Xeo
Atleast that's what came to mind some months ago, and I haven't really thought about it since.
 
At first I was worrying that generic code would be needing [x = std::forward<decltype(x)>(x), ...]. But that never captures a reference as a reference, so actually generic code is fucked.
 
Xeo
1:57 PM
@DeadMG So it's actually nothing like do-notation and just an extension to optional
 
the outcome seems similar to me.
 
@DeadMG Consider std::optional<T> f() { auto x = something(); auto x2 = something_else(x); return x + x2; } (see args to something_else)
 
Xeo
Except do-notation is general, and extension to optional is... just that.
Oh, and what the robot said
 
@ArneMertz wrong link …
 
4 mins ago, by DeadMG
ah, function invocation would undoubtedly screw me.
 
1:59 PM
What you wrote is just lifted +.
 
I could make it work if something_else were an optional<functor>, but not otherwise.
 
Xeo
liftA2 (+) x x2
:D
 
Mmh I do have apply(f, args...) for applicative notation. I like using it.
 
@KonradRudolph why that?
 
Xeo
Or x <^(+)^> x2 as the robot's fancy
 
2:00 PM
@Xeo I've not seen any other uses for it.
 
@ArneMertz … unless you wanted to link to an empty coliru pad …
 
@KonradRudolph narf. ok here it is
that "share" button. I'm use to just copy the address from ideone
 
frankly, even this kinda smells like "We really wanted exceptions"
 
@DeadMG Your loss :P
 
@KonradRudolph should be similar to the <namedOperator> thingy you hat going some time ago
 
2:02 PM
@ArneMertz lol
 
@ArneMertz Shoulda used kitty paws in the example: auto x = "">_<"" ;
 
@DeadMG I do like capability-based polymorphic code of the (..., Failure m, ...) -> m a sort and it doesn't taste like excepton handling.
Also, there are exceptions. And they taste like exceptions.
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes I did intend to provide that for Wide.
 
@DeadMG Actually, function invocation is not what I wanted to point there. Make it std::optional<T> f() { auto x = something(); auto x2 = something_else(); this->x3 = x2; return x + x2; } instead.
 
2:05 PM
Is there a do's and don'ts of named operators? Maybe I should test what it looks like for, say, ranges.
 
Quick meta-question for you guys. A user is actively changing cplusplus links to cppreference links. This is being discussed on Meta atm. Perhaps some of you could state whether or not there is some community consensus on this? meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/194788/…
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Eh I think that it's basically the same point- that I can only really use expression templates to fill in some gaps, and definitely not others.
 
@LucDanton yes. The Do is: "use them to confuse anybody who hasnt been in this chat and/or follows @klmr on twitter" ;)
 
I don't like cplusplus.com, but I don't think doing that is warranted.
 
2:07 PM
Fuck cplusplus.com let it die.
 
received this email from a guy who I have not talked to for a long time "Can we talk? I know you got my ?message (etc etc).. this is really serious and I don't know how much longer I can hold it in before I break down."
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Well, feel free to post a dissenting answer since I said that it absolutely was warranted :P
0
A: Links being changed to cppreference,com

DeadMGWhen the original reference is to cplusplus.com, then YES. That site is notorious for being inaccurate and generally bad in a very large number of ways, at least amongst those of us who have had the misfortune of visiting it. I downvote all answers that link there without hesitation. That guy d...

2
 
And while I silently retreat, I'll let @DeadMG and @R.MartinhoFernandes fight to the death. :p
 
Robots don't sleep.
 
Xeo
lol
 
2:09 PM
@Bart I'll get the doughnuts..
 
Xeo
But robots get drunk and fall into a coma I bet :P
 
but robots hold naked ladies in their arms as if nothing happens
 
@Xeo That doesn't sound like a winning strategy.
 
Xeo
It does for the other party
 
(However, waiting for a puppy to fall asleep before you shamelessly chop it in half does)
 
2:10 PM
Getting drunk is the only winning strategy.
 
@ArneMertz I dunno, I like exploring mostly syntactic changes. Last time I tried wrapping all the range operations into member functions to see if it helped with chaining, making it as if C++ had the uniform calling syntax thingamajig.
 
Xeo
The chaining is why I fancy the lift(x).then(...) stuff for example
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes You will almost certainly be asleep before I will.
 
Disclaimer: I don't condone the murdering of puppies, even though I can help with your strategy.
 
@LucDanton well, to smoe extent, such things can be valid. However, I would not sparkle them all through your code. You are creating some kind of embedded DSL with such things. Those should be constrained to crertain code areas. I've done that as well.
 
2:12 PM
@Xeo In the end I wasn't too impressed with the result which is what prompted me writing the variadic compose/pipe, which I think are very viable alternatives. (Then again I'm a fan of functors.)
 
Xeo
mh
@ArneMertz Luc loves his EDSLs
 
@Xeo as do I. just introduced one in my team for tree pattern matching and information extraction.
 
Carrying a naked sleeping beauty in a robot costume is trully evil - people would never suspect you could commit a hedious crime (which you would) and the sleeping beauty would not know, being a lazy b!tch asleep
 
yeah, I remember
 
2:14 PM
I should flesh that out better some day.
 
totally going to write a story about "sleeping beauty & the creepy guy in Robot costume" one day when I have time
 
@TonyTheLion Sounds like a job for a strongly-typed-bool
 
@Xeo I don't really have EDSLs beyond the 'C++11 Phoniex with better compile-times' :p
brb overheating
 
@WhozCraig funny. I didn't remember it, despite me having trolled that ancient acient-question-trolling comment with my own comment little over a year ago :/ — sehe 35 secs ago
@LucDanton Looked at Proto v5 lately?
 
@LucDanton have a link?
 
2:23 PM
@sehe No. I thought it was mostly in Eric's head / unpublished repos?
 
This terminology is new for me. Also, I have never considere 'catch' blocks active. 'try/catch' blocks, maybe. Then, still, 'active' seems like a strange notion that isn't really consistent with the C++ abstract machine model. I'd opt for 'exception handlers registered in the current callstack', but I'd be interested if you have a source for your terminology. — sehe 4 secs ago
@LucDanton It's on github, proto0x, IIRC
 
Xeo
@LucDanton ... aren't a and g duplicated?
 
@sehe There is a Standard notion for that, something like 'currently selected handler'.
@Xeo Oh boy. There's val and ref, which you may already be familiar with, but there's also var. With an aaaarrrr.
 
Xeo
.. ugh
 
@LucDanton Nice. Puppy already noted seeing something similar.
Meanwhile, I think I'm having the first documented case of an answer with standards quote but no votes :/ stackoverflow.com/a/18467835/85371
 
2:28 PM
QUICK DOWNVOTE
 
@Xeo Is that directed to the naming scheme or your reading abilities? :p
 
Xeo
I'll go with "both" :P
 
@DeadMG Yay
 
@sehe You didn't actually get downvoted, did you? Cause if you did, it totally wasn't me.
 
Xeo
> // TODO: can't quite debug this yet, GCC crashes -- expecting incorrect result in the meanwhile
lol
 
@DeadMG Not yet :/
 
Xeo
hahaha
 
@EtiennedeMartel I don't condone this campaign
 
@Xeo I think that comment is obsolete because I don't recall any of my tests failing right now. But yeah, it used to -- it would read garbage instead.
 
@sehe You look really dirty on there.
 
Xeo
2:32 PM
@LucDanton So, what was the difference between val and var now?
 
@Xeo I have a brain dump to keep track of things.
ooo I could use decltype(auto) for all those notional lambda expressions.
 
Xeo
heh, needs return (lvalue); for one of them then, I think
 
That's a thing? :s
 
Collega die op kantoor via iPad zijn hond naar binnen roept omdat hij per ongeluk op afstand de deur thuis heeft geopend. #alleenbijTweakers
 
Xeo
@LucDanton Well, that's how decltype(auto) will work, I think, if you want a reference to a local / member object
Since it inspects the return statement
 
2:36 PM
^ "Colleague calling his dog back inside via his iPad, here in the office. Because he accidentally remotely opened the frondoor at home. #onlyatTweakers"
Big lawl
 
Xeo
And just return lvalue; would be like decltype(lvalue), while return (lvalue); results in decltype((lvalue))
Atleast that's my intuition.
 
That sounds daft.
 
Xeo
Of course, auto& works just fine aswell for that case :P
 
@Xeo Oooh. Do you reckon "they" will make this so devilishly subtle?
 
2:37 PM
@LucDanton nice. but that's not very "domain specific" is it?
 
@Xeo SO AWESOME
 
Xeo
@sehe Well, what other option do they have, really?
 
@Xeo Some kind of decoration. Yeah. Sigh. C++ will be even more fun. And even more treacherous
 
@ArneMertz Well I wouldn't or couldn't use that or Boost.Phoenix for all of my code.
 
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes I smell a tinge of sarcasm in that message.
 
2:39 PM
I could check with my snapshot that has decltype(auto). May also do something else entirely though :p
 
@sehe They did it before. Would be kinda weird to add an exception to the exception to the rules.
 
Xeo
@ArneMertz The domain is "building expressions" :D
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes :/
 
@LucDanton well, neither would you use a given standard container or templates or lambdas for all of your code ;-)
 
Xeo
@ArneMertz My whole code is lambdas
Unlimited Lambda Works
 
2:40 PM
Yes, but I can use a container on its own, and templates and lambdas are actual language features.
 
@Xeo well okay, I guess it's somewhere near "domain specific" and "general"
 
Xeo
(Nobody will get that one...)
 
@Xeo yeah but that's because you dived into fix and loop recently :P
 
I liked "divided".
 
Xeo
haha
Should I rename myself and make a second account?
 
2:42 PM
FIXeo?
 
Mr. Fix and Mr. Loop.
 
Mr. Poop.
 
Ms if
Mrs else
 
Fix is the cop from Around the World in Eighty Days. I can't remember a character named "loop" anywhere, though.
 
Poop jokes? I'm in
 
2:50 PM
If you are looking for dirty jokes you come to the right place, C++ developers are known for their lacking of hygiene ... especially the guys
 
@Telkitty猫咪咪 Hey, I woke up way too late this morning, alright?
 
@Telkitty猫咪咪 yeah, raw pointers all over the place
 
sure ... what about that huge pile of dirty clothes in your wardrobe?
 
What's a wallrobe?
 
a wardrobe I think
one thats inside the wall or so
 
2:54 PM
Garderobe, maybe..
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes A wallrobe is a robe to be worn by a wall -- like a tapestry, but made to (sort of) fit instead of just being a square or rectangle.
 
@JerryCoffin some sort of textile wallpaper for Hundertwasser- and Gaudí buildings? :D
@MartinJames wich is etymologically the same as a wardrobe
 
My reaction to most the shit I get asked
 
@ArneMertz Well, it has another meaning, too.
 

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