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user1804599
9:00 AM
> Writing XML is no problem in TinyXML. You just new up some objects, attach them together, send the document to a std::ostream, and everyone's happy.
 
user1804599
I'm not happy if I have to use new.
 
user1804599
So not everyone is happy.
 
fuck me it's icy out there
 
Xeo
@sehe Hm, didn't have any trouble with it I think
So far
 
near enough skated to work
 
Xeo
9:02 AM
However, I've only used it for reading files, not writing them
 
not to self, 'skated' is not with a c and two t's
 
@thecoshman I hate to think I'll have to leave the warm office to go to the uni
:S
 
Xeo
@thecoshman It's coooold, yeah. Luckily not slippery.
 
inb4 #uni-sucks
 
@Xeo That means you're using it for the intended purpose (which is extremely narrow)
 
9:04 AM
@thecoshman of course it does
 
@Xeo it's a perfectly deadly 0. Warm enough for it to be wet, cold enough for some of that wet to be slipper shit
 
as opposed to everything being slippery shit?
 
@BartekBanachewicz you know why it's called U-ni right?
 
Xeo
> Temperature: 0.53000000000003°C
 
lol, slipper shit
 
Xeo
9:05 AM
lol
 
@Xeo this 0.00000000000003°C is comforting
 
Xeo
Nothing was frozen when I came here, so no slippery slopes
 
@Xeo my phone isn't that pedantic... I need to upgrade it
 
@thecoshman do tell
 
Xeo
@thecoshman That's not my phone, rather our IRC channel's resident bot-for-everything.
 
9:06 AM
someone help me come up with a good naming scheme for signals (the observer pattern kind)... most of them are public, rarely private
 
HE SAID PATTERN
 
also they are class members, not functions
 
Added a code sample based on Boost Property Tree (don't want to be only cynical :)) — sehe 16 secs ago
@thecoshman not to pirate: "note is not with an extra e" (R. Magritte)
 
> You could pre-process the XML before loading it, using another XML library like Expat or whatever.
 
so far... (public) Signal<Thing> SignalThingHappened; (private) Signal<Thing> signalThingHappened; (public) Signal<Thing> sig_ThingHappened; (private) Signal<Thing> sig_thingHappened;
 
9:08 AM
@BartekBanachewicz Dates him, doesn't it
 
@sehe I didn't know whatever was an XML library
 
I think Expat originates from Java. Not sure about C versions
 
@Pris is that Signal an FRP signal or something completely weird and different?
 
FRP?
 
@sehe not that it makes any difference
@Pris Functional Reactive Programming
 
user1804599
9:09 AM
I've seen someone call his signal handler sig_heil.
 
Xeo
@BartekBanachewicz Think Signals and Slots (i.e., event dispatching)
 
what's a slot?
 
Xeo
delegate
No wait, what are they called in C#?
Where you can just attach callbacks to, and call them
 
uh, tempted to ask what's a signal then
@Xeo delegates
 
user1804599
"slot" is the Dutch word for the Swedish word "slut."
 
9:11 AM
basically closure objects
 
@BartekBanachewicz yes its 'FRP' i guess. My slots are just functions. They can be member functions or free functions
 
user1804599
@Xeo event
 
@Pris if you "guess" it's not FRP. Also see above message.
 
@BartekBanachewicz okay, I guess its not. Its whatever Qt is
 
user1804599
But they suck, use Rx observables instead.
 
9:11 AM
Qt is an OOP library
 
Xeo
> Signals represent callbacks with multiple targets, and are also called publishers or events in similar systems. Signals are connected to some set of slots, which are callback receivers (also called event targets or subscribers), which are called when the signal is "emitted."
 
FRP isn't about OOP.
 
Xeo
From Boost.Signals2
 
@Xeo so you call the signal and it calls all of the delegates?
sounds like a big fancy name over something painfully simple
@bananu7 Thanks for that! We've made sure the right team are on this for you. Someone will contact you over email, shortly :) /B
woah.
I'm actually pleasantly surprised.
 
@BartekBanachewicz how is it a 'big fancy name'... seems like a straight forward description
seriously though, what kind of prefix should I use? Signal? Sig_? Signal_? something elese?
 
user1804599
9:14 AM
// At this time, RxCpp will fail to compile if the contents
// of the std namespace are merged into the global namespace
// DO NOT USE: 'using namespace std;'
 
user1804599
nice.
 
don't prefix anything why would you
it's in the signature already
 
you dont have to but it makes code more readable for me
 
don't repeat signature information in names
@Pris you can just mouse over the variable to get its type, making the code full of hungarian notation isn't a good idea
 
that advice is fine for some stuff. But if you have a signal called "DoStuff", and you refer to it in a source file... it seems like its not a very descriptive variable name
 
9:16 AM
> /BF
Best Friends?
 
Yeah, I dont have hungarian notation for anything outside of the signals
 
Be Fiercely Fucked
 
@Pris if you have a signal called "DoStuff" then you're just bad at naming things.
 
its just an example, a real example is "CreateWindow"
 
9:17 AM
Or bad at coming up with enticing examples
 
the problem is signals sound like functions
 
@Pris I always respond to that by calling ThrowItOut
 
@BartekBanachewicz It's not that simple. It simply seems that way on the surface.
 
@Pris createWindowSignal sounds acceptable.
 
@Pris The problem is you find this a problem (it takes getting used to). If you have clear enough names, the convention becomes less interesting
@рытфолд this must have been some mature coder
 
9:19 AM
I use one-letter names because why not
 
I guess pen testing comes from penance? Shoe retailer not fined for data breach, because they'll do some pen-testing http://grahamcluley.com/2015/01/shoe-retailer-office-lost-details-one-million-customers-hack-escapes-fine/
 
user1804599
In Vim if you do yy it copies the whole line.
 
@BartekBanachewicz sssht the pawlice will hear
 
one letter names are never acceptable for anything outside of iterators and indices
 
user1804599
However if I then p it pastes it on the next line rather than at the cursor position.
 
9:20 AM
@Pris is there an One-Letter Name Police that will go after me?
 
i am the law
 
they're acceptable when they're acceptable, duh.
also I don't use iterators and indices typically; most of my combinators are point-free
But then again, xs is a perfectly fine variable name.
 
xs? axis? access?
 
@Pris that's idiomatic for "Xs"
like you know, BALLs
 
OH: "Side effect? Sigh, defect"
2
 
9:22 AM
@sehe ROTFL
so good
 
I use x to take the place of certain things sometimes like xform == transform, cnxn == connection
 
Xeo
ew
 
@Pris And many - similar - applications
 
I also admit to using g to bind get (and ask) sometimes
 
@Pris You missed a pretty crucial point in xform and xmission. cnxn should just be conn
 
9:24 AM
i had a mental debate on whether or not to use cnxn or conn... but then i just wiped my Connection class so all was well
 
Why the hell would you stop having connections, only because you don't "have a class" form them
 
the point is that if its name doesn't give you anything more than "it's a connection", it might as well be one letter name
 
the decision to scrap the class was independent of the naming problem
two birds though i guess
 
Connection connection;
// vs
Connection c;
the first one is just longer.
It conveys precisely the same amount of information
 
Connection c;
// ... 20 lines later
c // what's 'c' again?
 
9:27 AM
@sehe :'( you so mean
 
@Pris it's of type Connection, what could it possibly be?
A Car? A Cooler? A Catastrophe?
 
idunno about you, but I don't like the idea of mouseovering everything that isn't immediately apparently to me in my code
 
@BartekBanachewicz no, more (unless you want to just rely on IDE help)
 
tbh i dont even like using the mouse when writing code, i scroll using the keyboard too
 
@Pris hint there's "show tooltip" key binding in most editors
 
9:28 AM
I use conn
 
@thecoshman IDE, compiler, whatever
@Pris 20 lines fit on the screen perfectly. If you don't know and don't want to use the mouse or tooltips, just look up
 
everyone should pastebin a small sample of their code so we can insult each other
 
@BartekBanachewicz and you were complaining about Perl
 
@thecoshman In Perl it's perfectly possible for one-letter names to screw you over.
 
@BartekBanachewicz ... same in any language
 
9:30 AM
@thecoshman bullshit.
 
@thecoshman no appreciation for the awesome paradoxical pun?
 
@thecoshman 0/10 come back next time
 
@BartekBanachewicz int connection; // still clear what it is
 
actually not
 
@sehe no, should be int i; // totes a connection k
 
9:31 AM
@BartekBanachewicz It is. It's just not clear "how", "why" and all other guarantees
 
@sehe oh okay
 
> auto connection = accept(); // still clear
 
@thecoshman There's no obvious relation between a "connection" and "an integer"
@sehe of course
 
@Pris I think a 20-line function is longer than it needs to be anyway. A Connection variable named c in a 6-line function is hard to misinterpret though.
 
eh 20-line isn't that long
 
9:33 AM
if you're asking me, it's way longer than I'd be willing to maintain
 
@AndyProwl are you serious?
 
@Pris absolutely
functions should be small
 
isValid :: Player -> GameState -> Move -> Bool
isValid player game (Move start end) =
    and [isCurrentPlayer, isNotOutOfBounds, isValidUnitAtStart, isValidDestination, isNotTooFar]
    where
        gmap = game ^. gameMap

        isCurrentPlayer = player == game ^. currentPlayer

        isNotOutOfBounds = inRange (bounds gmap) start && inRange (bounds gmap) end

        maybeUnitAtStart = (gmap ! start) ^. unit
        isValidUnitAtStart = case maybeUnitAtStart of
            Just unit -> unit ^. owner == game ^. currentPlayer
 
I really don't get this nonsense of not writing descriptive names. Either you are using a fancy IDE that yes has code hinting, but also code completion so it's easy to type the long names, or you using a shitty IDE where the descriptive name is a god send.
 
with intent-revealing names
 
9:34 AM
This is a 20-line function
 
@AndyProwl statistically, I can agree. However, it hugely depends
 
but it's structured
 
Ideally functions should be small and everything should be as stateless as possible... but thats never the reality in code ive seen
 
@BartekBanachewicz so take it to the logical next step, auto c = accept(); // wtf is this?
 
also here's my general code formatting style paste.kde.org/p4nkiq4hn
 
9:34 AM
@BartekBanachewicz actually, this is a real boon of lambdas in C++. Less entropy because more lexical structuring
 
@Pris That's because the languages you read don't facilitate such functions in a nice way, they're not idiomatic, problematic or whatever.
 
(flame shield engaged)
 
I rarely use inline "lambda expressions". Because, I love my lambdas named. So they're actually local functions
 
@BartekBanachewicz i only read C and C++
 
@Pris I would argue the code you've seen was not well written. But I realize it's easy to say so without demonstrating it - which I cannot do. However, IME my code became much more readable and maintainable since I've started putting a serious effort into making functions short.
 
9:35 AM
@sehe I love where bindings too (but I am careful not to overuse it)
@Pris precisely. Try reading a functional codebase.
@sehe mostly because once you have working modules, you can make those top-level module-level functions that are easier to test
 
I can see how functional code is good in a lot of ways, but it feels a bit cargo culty to me at times
 
personally, I aim at functions no longer than 6 lines, with no more than one conditional and/or try/catch block. I sometimes go up to 10, but never longer and I'm not proud of myself when doing that.
 
@BartekBanachewicz I use local functions when I feel I need to factor the body, but the extracted functions are not generally applicable/reusable. Often, this could be achieved with more refactoring, but I'm not ashamed to admit I don't always do that immediately.
 
> The Tauriel-Legolas-Kili love triangle has also been removed. Indeed, Tauriel is no longer a character in the film, and Legolas only gets a brief cameo during the Mirkwood arrest. This was the next clear candidate for elimination, given how little plot value and personality these two woodland sprites added to the story. Dwarves are way more fun to hang out with anyway.
 
user1804599
I use a local lambda for this trick: github.com/rightfold/styx/blob/master/virtual-machine/src/… (note the reference type return type)
 
9:37 AM
that was something I'd remove too
 
@Pris IDGI
 
A well factored mediumsize function body is already a lot better than straight ahead imperative "Script" pattern code.
 
the whole Tauriel business was pointless
especially the ending
 
idgi?
 
@sehe But it doesn't have to be reusable. That's the point of giving it its own module.
@Pris I don't get the "people are saying good things about it so it must be fishy" attitude
 
9:37 AM
@AndyProwl I don't aim for size. I aim for clarity and responsibility. And, yes, I end up with roughly the same
 
to me, length of functions is not such a concern, it's more about what it's doing. I favor using intermediate variables, rather than calling functions in other function calls. If I had foo(bar()); I'd rather see that as auto thing = bar(); foo(thing); Especially helpful when it comes to debugging
 
@thecoshman ew. ewww
 
@BartekBanachewicz The point I'm making, now functions are a viable "module" scope for this purpose. Vastly beats having non-descript "private" helpers in the enclosing scope.
 
but of course, intermediate variables results in longer function names.
 
@sehe Of course the goal is not size itself
 
9:39 AM
It's what you said though. Interesting :)
 
@BartekBanachewicz it's not a hard and fast rule
 
The hard an fast rule is that none of the rules should be allowed to start being perceived as hard and fast
 
something like typeOf(Parent(Parent(Parent(baseThing)))); is 'fine' imo
 
@sehe yeah well having real modules probably helps
 
@sehe Look at the moon, not at the finger. I aim for size because it has a correlation with clarity - and especially SRP
 
9:40 AM
@thecoshman admittedly in such languages it gets unreadable as heck
typeOf . Parent . Parent . Parent $ baseThing
fuck parens
 
fuck parents?
oh
 
@AndyProwl Still interesting you substituted it. This is not analogous with pointing at the moon
 
@AndyProwl ({})
 
@BartekBanachewicz yeah got it
 
I know it's a bad joke okay
 
9:41 AM
@BartekBanachewicz it's not the brackets that make it hard to read, it's the backwardness of it. I have to read it right to left to understand it. basething.parent().parent().parent().typeOf() is a better flow, brackets aside, you read it left to right, like normal text.
 
@thecoshman of course it isn't! LawOfDemeter. Magic number (why three parents?). Make accessors that describe what you're actually achieving there
 
@thecoshman then define (<.>) that composes right-to-left. Or use =<<. F# defines <| and so does Elm
that's just personal preference
 
Hi there
 
@sehe when a function is longer than N lines, with N very small, it tends to be less clear and to violate SRP. Hence, it's a good rule of thumb to aim for small functions - it's an objective indicator. Of course it's not enough, but it's one of the ingredients
 
@BartekBanachewicz well if you're using an 'object' language, then member functions make more sense, in this case.
 
9:44 AM
And since I don't believe a 15 lines function can be clearer than 3 well-named, extracted, 5 line functions, I just simplify things saying that I aim for small size
 
@thecoshman meh limited concepts from the 90s. If you're using an "object" language, then you're limited to what's available in it obviously.
 
@Rerito hi
 
that being said, function composition as operators is pretty much essential for readable code for me
 
@AndyProwl Yet you didn't say "I aim for small functions". You said "I aim for 6 lines". (modulo elaboration)
 
either like boost does with its manipulators (|) or Haskell's (.) or whatever
@sehe the only thing that was missing in lambdas were scope captures by const&
 
9:46 AM
@AndyProwl I know places where 1 function of 10 lines does outrank several smaller functions in readability and maintainability.
 
@AndyProwl I find though that when you start taking it too far, you spend more time writing functions than logic. If all you're doing is pulling out the three steps of the one flow of logic, I see no point. If there are bits such as "work out if I should do A or B" and then "do A" and "do B" then sure, four function if(ShouldDoA()){ doA() } else { doB() } (or something to that effect)
 
@sehe Yes, because that's where IME functions tend to reach the optimum clarity (btw I did not mean to write "exactly" 6, but "up to 6"). It's a rule of thumb. Saying that you aim for "clarity and responsibility" on the other hand, while absolutely correct, is subjective and does not help someone else realizing how to achieve those goals.
 
@sehe especially considering C++ doesn't have monads and you have to either use class context or be explicit about scope
 
@thecoshman It's not about the typing
 
@sehe Me too, but they are exceptions IME
 
9:47 AM
It's easy to create a swamp of little helpers and drown
 
@sehe of course not
 
@AndyProwl Oh sure. But they're daily exceptions :)
 
code needs to flow like water, guys
you start at the top and go down the stack
and throughout you should be able to create chunks of logic in your head
 
@BartekBanachewicz I find myself writing more and more accidentally monadic patterns in C++. And be very content with the outcome
 
@sehe Still. Guidelines should cover the majority of cases while still being helpful. "Aim for clarity" covers all, but does not say how to concretely achieve the goal. It's like "be a good man".
 
9:48 AM
@AlexM. from yesterday's discussion we got to the fact that Tweens should be write-only in update function, and read-only in draw function
 
proper naming is more important than length in this regard
@BartekBanachewicz I don't think that would be uncomfortable IME, yup
I set up a tween, link it to a callback then fire and forget
 
@sehe I kinda think sometimes that if we could abstract State to mean both a -> a and C++ish a&... it could be nice. But otherwise it's hard to do flexible contexts
 
@thecoshman Indeed it is possible to take it too far - like pretty much everything. It ultimately depends on the concrete situation. It also greatly depends on how well those names are chosen.
 
@AndyProwl I think guidlines such as "try to avoid functions longer than 6 lines" is counter productive, you just end up with foo(){...} foo_part2(){...} foo_part3(){...}
 
@thecoshman that's the point of intent-revealing names
 
9:50 AM
@AndyProwl Clarity is rather concrete. Code review checks this concrete metric. And yes, you can state "smaller is by definition more clear". But you cannot say (3 x small function) is always clearer than (1 medium + 2 small) functions.
 
@AlexM. well we also talked about reactions and FRP
 
depending on the implementation you might want to make your tweens query-able by name or sth and stoppable from update
 
not by name, by value
 
@AndyProwl yes, but if it's just one long flow of logic, or calculating some value based on lots of logic, I'd rather see the intermediate steps, rather than someone cramming it all onto one line, or breaking out this little parts into functions that on their own don't really offer much use
 
in Unity using the iTween library tweens are components added to scripts which may be referenced by a tween controller or sth
 
9:51 AM
@sehe All right, I should not talk in absolute, but since I started applying this rule of thumb, I haven't found a situation where a 15 lines function could not be made clearer by refactoring into two or more smaller functions.
 
sometimes deleting a gameobject that spawned a tween causes the controller to still try to do stuff with the tween in some situations, but that's probably the controller programmed badly
 
--update:
t <- createTween ...
myTweens %= append t

--draw:
getTweenValue myTweens.getToThatValueSomeHow
 
@thecoshman Mostly agree. However, if those intermediate steps can be given a clear, unambiguous description, why do you need to see the concrete instruction(s) that realize(s) them?
 
@AndyProwl it really depends on the situation.
 
Indeed
 
9:53 AM
@AndyProwl I think you're in a non-typical field, or you don't get reviewed by others enough :)
 
@BartekBanachewicz looks good to me
 
> if those intermediate steps can be given a clear, unambiguous description
 
one thing that sprung to mind though
 
this is often a problem
 
is it necessary for tweens to be referenced in a drawing loop?
say, you tween the position of a sprite
 
9:54 AM
@sehe it can be a problem, it does not mean it is not possible. We know that adage about naming things.
 
technically you only need the position
which can be updated by the tween at each step
 
@sehe I don't think that's the case, but how can I prove that to you?
 
You don't need to. There was a smiley for a reason
 
@AlexM. I understand and sound sensible. But it implies mutable sprite state
 
For example, if you have an existing function that takes a few parameters, and you need to use that function, but all those parameters would be pulled form one object, I'd be inclined to make a function like foo(T t){ foo(t.foo(), t.bar(), t.flip(), t.flop(). t.wat())
 
9:55 AM
@BartekBanachewicz right
 
@AndyProwl And I'll add you my adage: if it's very hard to name the things, perhaps it's not worth it. Always consider the cost/chance of miscommunication
 
@sehe What was the reason?
 
so it's...
 
I could imagine giving the option of either pulling the tween value directly or creating a sprite and a binding
 
if (tween exists) {
    draw(applyTween(sprite, tweenStep));
}
 
9:56 AM
@AndyProwl twitch
 
@sehe Not saying I don't consider the cost. If more clarity is too costly, feel free to stop at some point. But claiming that further extracting/naming would not improve clarity is another thing.
 
where applyTween returns a new sprite
 
user1804599
> t.wat()
 
@рытфолд :P
 
Anyway guys time to do some work
nice exchange again :)
 
9:57 AM
¬_¬ I can't wait for my work Ducky to arrive. This shite is doing my nut in.
 
user1804599
Boost.Context does a stack exchange.
 
Keys some times get stuck, until I press another, like a bug in the scanning, and no right click key
 
but even if your sprites are immutable, shouldn't you be able to do sprite = applyTween(sprite) in the update loop?
 
question... why can't you have the tween with a constant that holds the details regarding the tween, and constant of the 'tweened thing' and then a function that applies the tween to the thing at time T and returns a new constant
 
10:01 AM
created_window.Emit(
win_attrs,
win_init);
// or
created_window.Emit(win_attrs,
win_init);
that didnt turn out right
created_window.Emit(
win_attrs,
win_init);
// or
created_window.Emit(win_attrs,
win_init);
...im terrible at this
 
user1804599
You are indeed terrible at reading the chat manual.
 
where is this manual
 
up your but with a coconut!
 
user1804599
Jan 9 at 13:59, by Cat Plus Plus
Read the rules.
 
user1804599
It's there.
 
user1804599
10:03 AM
You should've read all of it.
 
This Connection is Untrusted
 
user1804599
Trust it and then it's not untrusted.
 
@thecoshman this is a bit oversimplified
 
@BartekBanachewicz yeah, I've no idea what your up to. Plus that relies on somewhere tracking time since tween started
 
yeah well the article sums it up nicely; tweens are just simplified FRP
 
10:06 AM
@harshini You missed the point. You cannot. Not unless you can change the XML. That's a completely different question (it's completely reversed) and you should ask it as a new question, in my opinion. — sehe 22 secs ago
@thecoshman very apt response
 
Lo!
 
user1804599
Is there any reason Vim should disable syntax highlighting when you enter a different window?
 
user1804599
10:20 AM
I always have to do :setf html after I enter a window with HTML. If I leave it and enter it again I have to do :setf html again.
 
user1804599
And that only happens with HTML and PHP.
 
@рытфолд then your filetype detection is not configured right.
 
or Vim hates PHP too
 
@рытфолд Maybe you have some kind of autocommand (try :verbose au to see which plugin might interfere)
 
morning
 
user1804599
10:24 AM
@sehe :verbose au shows pages of text, TL;DR
 
@harshini I'm confused now. Repeating the question doesn't change the answer. It's not that I don't /want to/. It's just not what the library does. — sehe 1 min ago
 
user1804599
Maybe it's the rainbow parentheses plugin.
 
@рытфолд Then get creative or deal with it (:verbose au BufEnter? :verbose au WinLeave?)
 
user1804599
Ah this is the problem: github.com/oblitum/rainbow/issues/9
 
@sehe still in denial
 
10:27 AM
@рытфолд I'm not sure. It shouldn't reset the filetype
@BartekBanachewicz Actually, he's just victimming. "Requirements are God"!
 
@sehe apt my arse
@AlexM. smooth
@рытфолд what? code?
 
+1 for quoting from the horse's mouth — sehe 8 secs ago
I Love UNICODE
@thecoshman I liked it.
 
searching for +'s is too much work :( I'd just say "plus one"
 
@sehe that explains why ass feels so clean
 
hm at least it stopped snowing
 
10:30 AM
By the way, can't you just send the stream itself? Perhaps compressed? That's the best way to make sure that the same XML ends up on the other side — sehe just now
@thecoshman I'm still apting
 
@sehe try yumming
 
pacman!
 
@sehe yeah, I only recall those three
 
10:32 AM
emerge! (actually portage)
 
@BartekBanachewicz I want to move that question to gamedev.se
 
I think this may be off-topic because it is about crowdsourcing homework. — Puppy 12 secs ago
they changed the text.
 
@AlexM. lol it's on SO because it's actually worth anything :P (I agree)
 
the question looks good, unlike most content on gd.se :(
 
> void CGround::CHeightmap::_SmoothTerrain
ouch.
 
10:36 AM
remember that VCS question? it got closed as offtopic at the peak of its popularity
check out the top voted questions on gd.se actually
 
popularity is irrelevant
 
you'll find lots of them being closed
 
@Puppy hihi, straight from hell
 
@Puppy it is
unfortunately in gd.se's situation, if it's popular it's most likely offtopic because it's not a single-answer question that can be solved by throwing math and code at OP
which I don't think it's good
multiple-answer questions should be allowed to also make room for game design
codereview allows people to only review bits of code so that others may post their own
and nobody died
 
user1804599
let rainbow_kanker = ['html', 'htmldjango', 'php']
autocmd FileType * if index(rainbow_kanker, &ft) == -1 | call rainbow#load()
 
user1804599
10:40 AM
@sehe this solved the problem.
 
Xeo
@AlexM. Good Subjective, Bad Subjective etc
 
@sehe He must be taking personal lessons from this guy
 
@Xeo Ugly Subjective
 
@milleniumbug Wow. Mind if I link him to it?
 
@sehe Go ahead :)
 
10:43 AM
Mmm thnking it over
 
Xeo
@BartekBanachewicz Straight to UB
 
is this chat application based on xmpp ?/
 
Xeo
(Remember, _Uppercase is reserved everywhere)
 
Why does everything insist on making noises?
 
10:45 AM
lol
 
Xeo
also, eww, raw memory handling
 
Fuck shit that makes noises for no reason!
Fuck shit that makes noises for a reason!
 
@cipherux why, you wanna hack it? ;)
 
@milleniumbug nice article about pure functions
 
you haxxor you
> Lounge<C++> PwND bY CiPherUx 2015
All ur Base r belong to Us
Freedom 4 all, FighTing the Good Fight
 
10:48 AM
> S: Dad, what is the largest number?
F: Son, there is no largest number.
S: Hrmkay. I'll ask Mom.
That whole page is quite entertaining
 
something is seriously wankered with my remote dekstop, the arrow key is mapped to enter
yes, remote desktop sucks balls
 
@thecoshman We might infer you have a scatophilia issue
 
@πάνταῥεῖ Sure, you keep telling yourself that. Even Siegmund Freud knew that it was all about the rep!
 
user1804599
I eat bread with sugar.
 
10:58 AM
Ok, it doesn't work ...
 

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