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Xeo
12:06 AM
@sehe where'd you get that graph
ah, found it
Hm. Linear since '14, where I stopped answering.
That's all passive rep
 
whoa
 
Basically linear since forever (well, since I started using SO at all). I can assure you that's not passive rep
 
Xeo
I could push and easily get 100k pretty soon, but that would mean I'd have to break my 2 year abstinence on answering
 
ITT: Xeo compares answering on SO to sex.
 
Xeo
There's also abstinence on alcohol or cigarettes or drugs or...
 
12:18 AM
@sehe it would be frightening if it were
 
So, um, SpaceX is looking for a sniper that shot the rocket, maybe from a nest at top of competitor's building... https://www.washingtonpost.com/pwa/?postshare=6821475347047571&tid=ss_tw&utm_content=buffer24cd3&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_campaign=buffer#https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/economy/implication-of-sabotage-adds-intrigue-to-spacex-investigation/2016/09/30/5bb60514-874c-11e6-a3ef-f35afb41797f_story.html
 
@milleniumbug Never going to happen unless your Poker site is competely clueless.
@milleniumbug Oh /dev/random is out of entropy. Lets use /dev/null/ instead
 
You know that's FUD. But, hey. If you wanna be paranoid, of course the right course of action is to stop caring at all (?)
 
1:23 AM
@sehe Distance smooths the line...
 
run away from SO you say? got it
 
:)
@JerryCoffin What's really most impressive here is that you have significant rep on other SE daughters
 
@sehe The only one of those that reflects any significant amount of recent activity is the decidedly non-linear purple one, which is CodeReview.
OTOH, a quick check shows that despite minimal recent activity there, I'm still on the first page of users on Programmers (for one example).
 
@sehe Now that I'm getting used to functional stuff, I'd say Haskell might actually be fun to work with in Production. C# is decent yeah, it's just the generics that always gave me that little pinch to the butt.
Python for me is decent, but it's decent for small projects. I can only imagine Production Python being... well, a monster of a snake. :v
 
1:47 AM
Anything not small in Python is annoying, I hate not having a type system to watch my back
 
> If there is one topic that has been a consistent theme of Phil Wadler’s research career, it would have to be types.
that’s one way to open a paper
 
2:44 AM
@ThePhD an anaconda, if you will
a type system is generally one of those things I rely on a lot. Maybe because I got a lot of my formative programming experience from C++
 
jww
Is there anyone available for chatting who is proficient in both C++ and Visual Studio? I need advice or narrowing down a problem
 
 
1 hour later…
3:52 AM
@sehe I wasn't surprised, but I was making the joke that there probably you were right to question whether a study existed. Your comment about skepticism isn't misplaced though
@Borgleader I solve that with tons of unit tests, but I agree. Python with type might be an interesting language
 
 
1 hour later…
5:20 AM
@LucDanton I think I'm missing something. You said something about it being possible to return brick-objects if it's constructed inline at the return statement? coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/2b5849526bc4845e
 
5:52 AM
yeah but that’s a copy/move
return expr; means the same as return_type return_value = expr;
so if you have return { blarg }; that’s the same as return type return_value = { blarg }; and if blarg is a different type that’s not a copy/move—hopefully there’s an appropriate constructor instead (or it’s aggregate init)
btw the same rules are used for constructing parameters, i.e. eat(expr) is morally equivalent to parameter_type parameter = expr;
@Mysticial good thing the appropriate std::atomic constructor is not explicit otherwise you’d have run into a particularly annoying situation
 
@Mysticial compare (more or less fixed in C++14, backported to C++11 with recent libstdc++)
@Mysticial oh dang something just went 'click' in my head
Sep 25 at 23:45, by Luc Danton
if you control the type I suggest the constructor
there should be a way around that
 
6:10 AM
I managed to solve the problem of not being able to construct inline.
So I was revisiting the problem.
 
aka the scope guard trick
 
That might take some time for me to parse. lol
 
@Mysticial you should probably start here if that trick is not familiar to you
I don’t remember who is usually credited with that trick, an old resource suggests it’s Andrei
 
7:19 AM
Good morning.
For raw pointers I can do ++p but when I have a unique_ptr this is way more complicated ++(const_cast<Foo*>(p.get())) is there a better way?
 
it’s not sensible to try to increment the value a unique_ptr holds
 
I can do that with raw pointers. I am converting some old code.
What is a better way?
 
keep incrementing the usual kind of pointers, let the unique pointers hold the value they should hold, and no other
 
p = ++(const_cast<Foo*>(p.get()))
 
in general if you’re using const_cast and you have to ask whether that’s correct, then it’s a safe bet to assume it’s not and that you shouldn’t do it
in this particular case it is not correct and you shouldn’t do it
 
7:50 AM
@PatrickM'Bongo tiens c’est triste ça
 
8:11 AM
If I recall, wasn't unique_ptr introduced in order to prevent pointer collisions caused by pointer arithmetic? Pointer arithmetic is probably going to invalidate that contract or die trying.
 
I thought it was just for RAII?
 
@Aaron3468 there is no such collision
 
Maybe. I'm just going by memory (which generally means I don't expect to be correct)
 
Collisions are unavoidable if it involves someone's mother.
 
unique_ptr was introduced to as a safe alternative to auto_ptr, i.e. you can put it in collections and stuff :)
 
8:13 AM
What happens if you put an auto_ptr into a collection?
 
@Aaron3468 there is no 'maybe' either
 
auto_ptr moves the memory so your collection will get messed up.
 
@Aaron3468 note that my objections were to changing the held values, not pointer arithmetic per se
 
@sehe You mean just try it? Anyway, found the answer:
5
A: How can I determine the period of my pseudo-random number generator?

Mark BoothAs J.D. suggests, if you constrain yourself to full cycle LCG PRNGs then the answer is easy, by definition it's simply $m$. From the referenced wikipedia page: Period length The period of a general LCG is at most $m$, and for some choices of a much less than that. Provided that $c$ is n...

 
Ah, then I did a poor job of expression. Because if unique_ptr just holds and monitors access to an object, and then deletes the object when it is RAII'd, then issues would occur if one unique_ptr bumps into another, or when a normal pointer also has access to the memory of a unique_ptr
 
8:21 AM
given std::unique_ptr<int[]> p; use cases such as p.get()[n] are pretty much a given
 
@Aaron3468 They can't bump into each other. The fields are private. Unless you do stupid shit like this:
int* ptr = new int;
std::unique_ptr<int> a = ptr;
std::unique_ptr<int> b = ptr;
 
user1804599
lol unchecked indexing
 
@Damian Does that even compile? const_cast<Foo*>(...) is a scalar rvalue, and you shouldn't be able to increment that with ++.
 
In other words, pointer arithmetic isn't usually a responsible way to manage memory
 
user1804599
@fredoverflow thanks
 
8:23 AM
@Aaron3468 I'm a fairly big offender of that. :)
 
@Aaron3468 you’re waaaaayyy over-thinking this
 
@Aaron3468 Sure, that's why you don't let raw pointers outlive their smart pointers. Only use the raw pointers for parameters and local variables and stuff.
 
> poor conversationalist. returns to coding.
 
OK, so this does not work!
int i[8] {1, 2, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9};
unique_ptr<int> a { make_unique<int>(i[2])};
cout << *a << "\n";
int* p = a.get();
++p;
a = make_unique<int>(*p);
cout << *a << "\n";
After my ++p it points somewhere random.. not at the next element in i[[
i[]
 
looks like you have some learning to do
 
8:36 AM
What is this I don't even...
 
@Damian make_unique is allocating an int from the free store and initializing it with the value from i[2]. Incrementing that pointer gives a pointer to the next int-sized chunk of memory on the free store (well, most likely--according to the standard, all that happens is that you get undefined behavior).
 
@Damian If you want to iterate over an array, just use raw pointers. Only use smart pointers when there is an ownership problem.
 
OK, I will keep raw pointers and stop abusing the smart pointer system ;-)
 
There's so much confusion in this industry.
 
8:46 AM
@StackedCrooked Yeah. It really makes you respect all the basic questions you get during interviews.
 
@Damian Here is a contrived example where smart pointers are useful:
Human * makeBaby(Human * mother, Human * father)
// Will the user remember to delete the baby, or will it leak?
{
    // ... fancy DNA logic ...
    return new Human(a, b, c, d, e);
}

// Better have the baby be managed by a smart pointer!
std::unique_ptr<Human> makeBaby(Human * mother, Human * father)
{
    // ... fancy DNA logic ...
    return make_unique<Human>(a, b, c, d, e);
}
Note how mother and father are still raw pointers. The function doesn't take ownership of them.
 
@StackedCrooked Confusion seems to be the rule. throw understanding;
 
@Mysticial What questions did you get? How would you like "How come you can't std::sort a std::list?" as a question?
(That's just the first that came to mind.)
 
@fredoverflow Reverse a linked-list in place. Is it possible to make a template virtual function? Implement shared_ptr. Find the sum of all integers from 1 to N without a loop.
 
Implement shared_ptr? In a thread-safe manner, without bugs? How many weeks does the interview last?
 
8:52 AM
@fredoverflow No thread safety. Standard 1 hour interview timeslot.
 
Okay, that's perfectly reasonable.
(N * (N + 1)) / 2 or something? I don't like those kind of questions where you either know some formula or don't.
Reverse a linked list, I like it.
The template virtual function question is interesting.
@Mysticial How do you feel about algorithmic questions like "Implement any O(n log n) sorting algorithm of your choice"?
 
@fredoverflow That's one you can figure out "on the fly", so to speak. Gauss did when he was something like 8 years old? I didn't realize it at the time, but reinvented it when I was around 10.
 
Some of the harder questions that I've gotten are:
- Implement a single-producer, single-consumer lockless queue.
- Implement the min/max flow algorithm.
- Implement `std::pow`. (non-integer base and power)
- Find the square root of a fixed point number using fixed point arithmetic.
 
Yes, you can do it with examples, like all integers from 1 to 10 is (1+10)+(2+9)+(3+8)+(4+7)+(5+6)... but what are the chances you stumble upon this insight during a job interview? :)
@Mysticial holy balls
 
@fredoverflow With or without support for weak_ptr?
 
8:57 AM
@JerryCoffin good question
 
The broadest question that I've ever gotten was, "implement google search".
 
I know too little about Internet technology to answer that question :)
 
hi there, question, if an if statement has only one line I can omit the braces, does this apply to while statements too?
 
yes
But I would suggest to always use the braces to keep future maintainers of your code happy. It's not like there is a tax on braces.
 
@fredoverflow Which one in particular? Or all of them?
 
9:01 AM
alright thanks
 
@fredoverflow I've also gotten a number of questions that seemed extremely difficult at first. Until I realized that it was NP-complete. And that was the answer.
 
oh yeah after that it’s plain sailing
 
@Mysticial the lock-less monster
 
I forgot what the question was like. It was some sort of knapsack-like problem but carefully disguised using some number-line thing. The guy was like, find an N^2 algorithm to solve it.
I was like... "Wait... wut... that looks NP-complete."
 
And that's all they were looking for?
 
9:07 AM
yeah
To eat up the rest of the time, he asked me to implement an exponential time algorithm to do to it.
 
So they just wanted to separate the hackers from the computer scientists?
 
@Mysticial Be pretty cool if somebody accidentally proved P=NP out of desperation in a job interview...
14
 
Well in interviews they want to see how you cope with NP-complete.. so you need ask / discuss assumptions. All part of the game..
I guess I means not complete informaion.,
 
@Mysticial Doesn't NP mean "non-deterministic, but still polynomial"? :)
Just invent your own non-deterministic language during the interview, and Bob's your uncle!
 
@fredoverflow No idea. All I care about is, NP-complete = give up right now.
 
9:11 AM
@Mysticial What building blocks were allowed for implementing std::pow?
 
@fredoverflow No libraries. Only primitive types.
@fredoverflow Yeah, I got that question and the job.
 
@Mysticial Did you nail it? Or did you get close enough?
 
The only one of the 4 on that list that I didn't get at least from a conceptual stand-point was the min/max flow.
I didn't get an offer from them. :)
@fredoverflow I nailed it without too much hesitation. I was somewhat familiar with the basic algorithm and the x86 semantics that make it work. But I've never implemented one before. But that was still good enough for me to get a working version within the time-slot.
 
I don't think I ever had to write code or crack any kind of problem during an interview. Probably because the employers already knew who I was :)
 
The pow and square root problems are were too large to actually implement. It was mostly just a conceptual thing.
The pow one was tricky in that there's a lot of ugly non-convergent and numerically unstable corner cases to enumerate.
 
9:18 AM
Square root is easy, just use Newton's method or simple bisection.
 
@fredoverflow At least on x87 it's actually fairly trivial.
21
A: How can I write a power function myself?

Jerry CoffinAB = Log-1(Log(A)*B) Edit: yes, this definition really does provide something useful. For example, on an x86, it translates almost directly to FYL2X (Y * Log2(X)) and F2XM1 (2x-1): fyl2x fld st(0) frndint fsubr st(1),st fxch st(1) fchs f2xmi fld1 faddp st(1),st fscale fstp st(1) The code end...

 
Somehow I assumed the inverview was in C++ or something :)
 
@fredoverflow The natural language for this level of function is assembly. Besides, if they expect C and you do the job in assembly, they have no choice but to award bonus points, if only for having big brass balls.
 
@JerryCoffin Insanity.
(I hate x87 assembly with a passion.)
 
Wait, doesn't x87 have fsqrt instruction? ;)
 
9:21 AM
yeah
 
@Griwes Because of the stack instead of registers?
 
I don't think I was allowed to use those.
 
@fredoverflow Sure--but that doesn't work very well for raising to a power (other than 0.5).
 
Just throw an exception if the desired power differs from 0.5
Wait how do you throw exceptions in assembly ;)
 
NaN
 
9:22 AM
@Mysticial That Indian bread?
Jawa restaurant, I wonder how well they handle accumulating garbage...
 
@fredoverflow The FPU can generate a few hardware exceptions. The biggest problem isn't getting it to do so--the big problem is keeping it from doing so all the time. It can throw an exception for any and all inexact results (which, of course, is pretty much all of them in floating point).
 
How does SSE compare in this regard?
 
SSE doesn't have any of that fancy shit.
 
@fredoverflow SSE has the primitives necessary to implement a Taylor or McClaurin series.
 
9:32 AM
@JerryCoffin That was my solution to the pow question. a^b = e^(log(a)*b)
exp(x) and log(x) each have series expansions which I knew off the top of head.
The last part was to recognize that the series for exp(x) is numerically unstable for large negative x. So you need to invert it and take a reciprocal.
And log(x) isn't convergent outside of (0, 2). So you need to use argument reduction formulas to bring it into that region.
 
good $ time gentlemen
@Mysticial i'm getting a sandy system in a week :) going to have fun
 
Why Sandy? That's 5 years ago.
 
well, it's going to become ivy soon, but.. because 5% ipc increase and i got this one for cheap
wanted to get a broadwell 8 core xeon off ebay but realized that was not worth the price
 
If you have the budget for an 8-core Broadwell, why are you looking at Sandy? You can just get the top-of-the-line 4-core Skylake.
 
well, the key part was "ebay":" it's an ES
4 cores - well, kinda used to 6 or more cores, you know, for buliding stuff and running vm's
also 3D modelling
 
9:46 AM
> L'adresse électronique saisie doit être de la forme abc@exemple.com.
 
@Mysticial I have an "Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E3-1230 V2 @ 3.30GHz", what bridge is that?
 
@fredoverflow not Mysticial but it's ivy coz v2
 
I have the 8-core Haswell chip overclocked. It's good except that single-threaded tasks suck because Windows tosses the thread around so much that it never has a chance to clock the core up. And I don't want to disable power-savings.
@fredoverflow Ivy Bridge
 
that's a non overclockable ivy bridge xeon probably without igp
 
At the time I bought the components, there were rumors that Haswell had heat problems IIRC.
 
9:48 AM
@Mysticial exactly, i want overclocking just because i like it and like benching around a little
while those 10 and 8 core xeons are great they have low single thread performance and are locked
 
@fredoverflow Yes. The desktop chips overheat because Intel stopped soldiering the IHS to the chip. All the Haswell chips run really hot under AVX. But the server ones will downclock on AVX so they're less likely to overheat.
 
@iksemyonov Do you use benchmarks that test for correctness like Prime95 or whatever it's called these days?
 
@Mysticial aren't the HEDT haswells soldered? i was under the impression that it was the plague of 4790k and such
 
@fredoverflow Yes. The latest Prime95 with AVX will "destroy" Haswell chips because it pushes the AVX to the extreme. My code will do that too, but not to such an extent as Prime95.
 
@fredoverflow i think i used one that calculates a lot of fft's, guess it's prime95
 
9:51 AM
@iksemyonov Yes, the HEDT's are soldered. But I don't count those as desktop chips, since they're really server chips branded as desktop chips.
 
oh i see
 
Anyway, I probably won't upgrade before my CPU dies, which is probably another 5 to 10 years or something :)
 
i was looking at this one: 2667 v4 es 3.20 ghz - 8 cores, 20mb
 
In reality, Intel hasn't had a "desktop" line of processors since Nehalem.
It's notebook, or server.
 
@fredoverflow yeah i hear you :) but the mobo died on me and finding an x58 motherboard is hard today
@Mysticial what's the physical difference?
 
9:54 AM
The normal desktops use the notebook chips. The HEDT use the server chips.
 
Wait: Ivy, Haswell, Broadwell, Skylake, so I'm already 3 generations behind?!?
 
yeah
 
more like 2
tick-tock
@fredoverflow don't worry the ipc increase is minimal if sites like anandtech are correct
 
@fredoverflow I’ve started refreshing my desktop cos the current parts are 6 years going
 
@iksemyonov You're not going to be able to overclock that btw.
 
9:56 AM
@Mysticial exactly, that's why i'm going 3930k and then 4930k for now
 
Locked CPU multiplier, locked base clock strap, and locked memory multiplier.
 
will get everything except avx2 which is the only sad part about this deal for me
 
Just get the 6-core Haswell or Broadwells.
 
What will be the successor to Skylake, and when will it be out?
 
might, but it's too expensive and compated to ivy e.g. what's the pic increase, 5%?
 
9:58 AM
@fredoverflow Cannonlake. It supposed to be out 4 months ago. But it's not looking more like 2018.
 
@fredoverflow think it's called kaby lake
 
@iksemyonov I don't think that counts. lol
 
wwwait, what about the kaby lake scheduled in 2017.. oh alright
 
Kaby Lake is going to be like Devil's Canyon Haswell for Skylake.
The so called, "refresh".
 
no solder still?
 
9:59 AM
doubt it
 
The following is a partial list of Intel CPU microarchitectures. The list is incomplete. Additional details can be found in Intel's Tick-Tock model. == x86 microarchitectures == pre-P5: 8086: first x86 processor; initially a temporary substitute for the iAPX 432 to compete with Motorola, Zilog, and National Semiconductor and to top the successful Z80. 186: included a DMA controller, interrupt controller, timers, and chip select logic. 286: first x86 processor with protected mode including segmentation based virtual memory management. Performance improved by a factor of 3...4 over 8086. i386: first...
ah
 
Unless AMD Zen puts up some real competition to make Intel solder the desktop chips again.
 
@Mysticial what time is it there right now?
 
Where I live?
 
must be morning if i understand correctly
yep
 
10:00 AM
5 AM. I'm probably going to sleep in the next hour or so.
 
i was actually planning to see you in the (mine) evening today
 
@iksemyonov Long past time that a sane person would be asleep.
 
wanted to ask you 2 questions about a profile
 
Holy shit, they're down to 10 nm soon?
 
@JerryCoffin nicely said as always
 
10:03 AM
@fredoverflow 10 nm "node". Has very little to do with actual lithography anymore.
 
@Mysticial should i better get in touch with you tomorrow?
 
@Mysticial ...and at least based on the benchmark data that's leaked so far, that doesn't appear particularly likely.
 
@JerryCoffin what if it clocks all the way up to 5
 
@iksemyonov Then it'll do all right on an absolute basis, but really badly on a MIPS/watt basis.
 
well, do we know anything abou the wattage yet?
 
10:12 AM
@iksemyonov Nothing specific (to my knowledge) but given the fabrication process they're using, there's no way to do 5 without burning a lot of power.
 
up to the point where the old 32nm would consume less?
i really don't quite catch these developments, doesn't a shrink mean less power or only up until a certain frequency?
 
@iksemyonov That's a tough comparison--their 32 nm was an SOI process, but this will be bulk silicon.
 
i really don't quite catch these developments, doesn't a shrink mean less power consumption or only up until a certain frequency?
@JerryCoffin oh, then i should read up first
need to go run a bench, be back later
 
@iksemyonov Shrinking reduces dynamic power but increases static power (leakage). As you go to higher frequency, power consumption rises non-linearly though. First, you get a linear rise in dynamic power, just because you're switching more often. But to get to higher frequency, you also (usually) have to increase the voltage, and the power is proportional to the square of the voltage.
 
oh right, u^2/r
 
10:32 AM
@iksemyonov Maybe, depends on how busy I am.
@iksemyonov It's actually closer to cubic if you're trying to increase the frequency. For example, my 5960X is about 1.0 vcore @ stock 3 GHz. I currently run it at about 1.2 vcore @ 4.0 GHz. At stock with AVX, it draws about 160 W (Max TDP is 140). Overclocked it draws around 280 - 300W. (1.2/1.0V)^2*(4.0/3.0 GHz) * 160W = 307 W. Which is in the same ballpark as what the meter says.
This chip will do more than 4 GHz. But 4.0 is the upper limit as far as heat goes - even for a very large AIO water cooler.
 
use phase change cooling noob
 
10:49 AM
I just debugged something interesting and I'm not exactly sure why it happens. You can declare an std::array with size 0x10000, but declaring it with 2^16 only contains 18 elements.
 
2^16 is XOR, not exponentiation.
 
That would definitely explain it. I really don't use xor or exponentiation much in C++
 
use React noob
 
I guess I could use it as a front-end. Is it a framework with support for a strongly-typed language back-end or is it only for UI components?
 
it's pretty much just for HTML UI, and the backend is dealer's choice
we use TypeScript at work
 
11:00 AM
Ah, I see. It seems very snazzy, so I'll keep it in mind when I do web-design :3 For the time being, few if any of my projects need to render html
 
user1804599
12:00 PM
Use Halogen.
 
user1804599
TypeScript is shit.
 
user1804599
@Ven gaem is going good
 
I like TypeScript
there's a few bits that could be improved but that's pretty much the same for everything
 
user1804599
Hmm.
 
Ven
@rightfold cool
 
user1804599
12:14 PM
I need a 2D sparse matrix that I can extend in any direction.
 
user1804599
I think I'll just use a hash table from pairs to elements.
 
user1804599
I want to lazily generate world.
 
user1804599
12:43 PM
impl Universe {
    pub fn body_at(&mut self, xy: (i64, i64)) -> Option<&mut Body> {
        let roll = hash(&xy);
        if roll % 4 == 0 {
            None
        } else {
            Some(self.0.entry(xy).or_insert_with(|| {
                if roll % 10 == 0 {
                    Body::Star
                } else {
                    Body::Planet(HashMap::new())
                }
            }))
        }
    }
}
 
user1804599
This is so cool. or_insert_with ftw.
 
HMM
according to this I will have enough for a deposit on a house in 16 months time
 
The bachelor puppy pad, a reality?
 
1:08 PM
could well be
 
 
2 hours later…
3:08 PM
Yes he has to manually close the socket connections manually. and implement the "Destructor" himself. nice answer. — amanuel2 6 mins ago
I don't have the strength
 
@sehe you could link him youtu.be/l12Csc_lW0Q?t=32s
 
Wat :/
 
3:26 PM
@LucDanton Mais toujours pas de .con ?
 
When you realize that O(n(n+1)/2) is still O(n²) u_____u
 
@rightfold excuse my ignorance but what language was that? must be something functional
 
@PatrickM'Bongo T pas assez important pour avoir ton propre TLD
 
@Borgleader lol
 
[17:18:53][Step 1/1] ./include/reaver/vapor/analyzer/optimization_context.h:115:47: error: inline declaration of '_get_futures<reaver::vapor::analyzer::_v1::statement>' follows non-inline definition
[17:18:53][Step 1/1]             inline auto optimization_context::_get_futures<statement>()
[17:18:53][Step 1/1]                                               ^
[17:18:53][Step 1/1] ./include/reaver/vapor/analyzer/optimization_context.h:115:47: note: previous definition is here
[17:18:53][Step 1/1] ./include/reaver/vapor/analyzer/optimization_context.h:117:24: error: no viable conversion from '
That's it. I'm done trying to make my code work on Clang <3.9.
That actually drops me to a healthy set of two total compiler+boost configurations I'm gonna care about from now on. lol
 
3:39 PM
That's probably saner that way :p
Make awesome products and force people to use up-to-date free stuff.
 
I tried hard to do this. But I don't want this to differ between things that I'm actively developing (I'll do older supported versions if I ever release something with a maintenance branch for a given version, which I hope I won't have to do...), so despite the fact most things work with them, I don't care anymore.
 
user1804599
@iksemyonov Rust; it's imperative
 
@rightfold so that's how it looks, cool
@rightfold i got fooled by the let and those two vertical bars ||
that looks functional enough?
 
lol
I skipped lunch today and now I'm so Hungary I could eat a whole barrel of diacritics.
This is physically painful.
 
3:44 PM
ahh, wait, judging by the context, it must be a lambda, correct?
 
3:57 PM
@Griwes you're just jealous
 
Of his ability of making puns that hurt people? No, not really.
 
Xeo
@iksemyonov lambda with empty params, ye
 
Ell
4:30 PM
@Griwes I don't get it :(
 
@Griwes Oh wait. Did someone get offended? I wasn't prepared for that
 
Hurt. As in physically.
 
@Ell Have you ever read Hungarian?
 
It physically hurts when you read some of his puns.
 
I'd rather have bad puns than dramatic hyperbole
 
4:32 PM
heh
 
Ell
@sehe not for long
I guess they have a lot of diacritics
but isn't diacritics supposed to be a pun or something?
 
@Ell One @Griwes doesnt like I guess
but you know what they say, ppl who live a critic, die a critic
 
@Ell "I'm so Hungary" is the pun, the comment about "barrels of diacritics" is what makes it painful.
 
Ell
I was going to say, it was the "barrels of diacritics" where I was expecting a 2nd pun :P
 
4:52 PM
I am home, alone...
My name is not Kevin.
 
Ven
Hi
@Borgleader et bim
 
user1804599
5:13 PM
I am so bored.
 
user1804599
Help.
 
@rightfold so am I, at 6AM.
 
@rightfold Masturbate.
 
user1804599
No.
 
user1804599
I want to make software.
 
5:14 PM
TBH, so am I. I am also sad.
 
user1804599
@fredoverflow Polynomial given the capabilities of a non-deterministic machine
 
user1804599
That people even bother with this shit ^
 
5:51 PM
didn't even fix the trailing } bracket
 
He's got 2 rep for this though, right?
 
hello !
what's the best way to do a example ( ctrl + c ) -> ends current program in c or c++?
 
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