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user1646075
6:02 AM
@Mysticial STAND BACK! Shields up!
 
1.32 GB/s read
1.61 GB/s write
bottleneck seems to be the older 1 TB drives hooked up the old and shitty controller.
 
user1646075
so - what kind of improvement is that so far? what were the olrder numbers?
 
I'll run it again and see what the variation is.
 
user1646075
what testing tool are you using for that, btw?
 
need help with log4c
I am getting started with log4c and I have .so that is invoked by Apache.
 
6:08 AM
Hi?
I wanted to do something but forgot.
 
Can't wait to run some Pi benchmarks on this:
 
user1646075
@R.MartinhoFernandes go/stay home? begin holiday?
 
@Mysticial Dang, not enough to see what's next beyond drive Z.
 
@MarkGarcia Nothing.
That's the printer room in the new office.
 
how to use log4c with c++
 
user1646075
6:20 AM
all it needs is more flashing lights. and a few jacob's ladders maybe
 
@CatPlusPlus I'm getting this amazon.de/SainSmart-3-2-TFT-LCD-Display/dp/B008HWL8QS/… and a few odd knobs and buttons and make my own.
 
vertical taskbar wtf
 
user1646075
lol. why not? plenty of space there, allows running 60 progs, each with their own task button
 
@MarkGarcia If you run out of drive letters, you can use NTFS mount points. I've tried and tested. Not because I needed it, but because other people with more than 26 drives asked about it.
NTFS mount points let you go unlimited.
 
@Mysticial lol I though robot was joking.
 
6:35 AM
The other option is to RAID pairs of drives together so that they only show up as 1 drive letter. But then you pay for it with RAID overhead.
 
@Mysticial And not having control of which drive the data ends up in.
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes right
 
okay github can't handle a few thousand source files :/ Showing user error Failed to create a new commit. System.InvalidOperationException: Collection was modified; enumeration operation may not execute. been trying for hours to fix this urgh!
 
I think I've seen people committing thousands of files before.
(By accident)
 
6:44 AM
It's telling you to create a new commit! It's the user's error as you can see. :P
 
user1646075
a few thousand is no big deal. is this first commit?
 
yeah.. anywya done with command line works
github gui sucks :(
 
user1646075
I shouldn't post endless imgur - that's LRiO's job, but this cracked me up nsfw from Peepshow
 
user1646075
that's one fine show.
 
7:10 AM
See. A night's sleep fixed all my browser/internet woobles.
Good morning
 
I wonder if I can find some people to play Paranoia sometime next week. @Xeo would you join in?
 
user1646075
7:31 AM
morning.
 
Hm. What's better, 2 256 GB SSDs or 1 512 GB SSD? Both would be roughly the same price.
 
user1646075
then go for the compact-er-er-er option?
 
Not buying now, but in the foreseeable future.
@GuruAdrian I should have room for more.
 
user1646075
2 x 512!!!
 
Sometimes ppl are dragging me into despair ...
 
7:36 AM
jesus
 
> Okay, I see, thanks, but after modifications I have some problems with destructor if (e != 0) { delete[] this->e;}, error message: "Project name has triggered a break point" and program exits. – Cieja 2 mins ago
 
user1646075
@Rerito shakespeare?
 
just release the goddamn movie on the internet and be done with it
 
@GuruAdrian Hey hey, let progression work its way first. ;)
 
the movie is so fucking famous now, they would probably gain money from all of this
 
user1646075
7:37 AM
sony have a history of being pussies
 
Well with that, might be better to stick to 1 256 GB first + existing HDDs.
 
@GuruAdrian I think I understand their position tbh.
 
The dude doesn't even :
- Give his ctor/dtor implementation
- Realize a break point is made to ... well stop the program when it's reached
 
user1646075
it was probablty lulsec
 
Marketing technique spotted
They're building such a hype about it
 
7:40 AM
@Rerito Who are you referring to "they"?
 
Dunno the studios behind the movie ?
That's what it feels like anyway
 
lol so Sony hypes up their movie through releasing info on the damages done by the hack. Nope.
WTF ISP
 
could be
 
Terrorist threats for a movie about North Korea sorry but I'm not making any sense of that
 
@Jefffrey Then their marketing team must become brilliant enough to not make any more damages.
More like a vengeful insider as some articles suggest.
 
7:47 AM
@MarkGarcia what damages?
if handled properly (release on internet networks) it's probably all gain
 
@Jefffrey Public perceptions of the hack.
 
@GuruAdrian Except when it comes to screwing over their customers.
 
Maybe it's Microsoft, just not unto the PS division as you know, the obvious. ~conspiracy~
 
@Rerito It's about ethics in games terrorism.
 
user1646075
they invented the DVD mandatory viewing setting for copyright warning, forced advertising, and the like, didn't they. We have one DVD - the relatively recent Journey to the Centre of the Earth, and it takes a full FIFTEEN minutes to get to the actual movie. All that crap is totally unskippable.
 
7:53 AM
Did you get it in Australia?
 
user1646075
damn you Sony!
 
None of the DVDs I own has any of that crap.
 
user1646075
yeah - it's a good fun kids movie, but the freaking wait to get to it. sheesh.
 
But you Ozzies are messed up when it comes to that sort of thing.
 
user1646075
hmmmm - maybe our region is small enough to suffer. I have noticed that bluray's don't try pulling that stupid trick. would probably drive people to the internets
 
7:55 AM
@GuruAdrian Not even fast forward or something?
 
user1646075
this is a plain DVD
 
user1646075
nup - "operation is not available"
 
I don't even know they can do that.
 
user1646075
can't go to menu, can't skip, can't 32x
 
That on a DVD player or a computer?
Buy a better player.
 
user1646075
7:56 AM
general players.
 
user1646075
a toshiba did it. a sony did it. a wierd-ass brand did it.
 
user1646075
anyway, most of the kiddie disks I managed to rip and re-burn.
 
user1646075
and, as I said, mercifully the blurays don't seem to do it here.
 
@GuruAdrian That, and you guys bring it upon yourselves.
 
user1646075
actually, THAT is the reason aussies torrent so much!
 
user1646075
7:57 AM
i cracked that journey to the center of teh earth movie by torrenting a rip and re-burning it to disk
 
user1646075
take THAt sony
 
user1646075
they can take my money, but not my soul
 
Buy the DVD and download a high quality rip. Problem solved, conscience still clear.
Just disable seeding. ;)
 
@GuruAdrian Gosh that's so frustrating. Same here with nice anti-piracy spots, movie trailers for movies which have stopped being projected in theatres long ago
So annoying
 
8:01 AM
France?
Why am I not surprised?
It's been years since I saw those kinds of warnings outside of comedy shows.
 
user1646075
@MarkGarcia almost ;-)
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Exactly !
 
user1646075
 
> My own case is cheap because I don't care (I'm not even sure where the side panels are). If you absolutely don't care and just want a tin box that keeps your parts from falling out, don't spend the money.
 
8:07 AM
Bored.
Let's watch some Beer and Board Games.
 
Plus, you have to control for the fact that some people are into being blindfolded.
8
 
Hi @sehe
 
moanings
 
8:22 AM
This OP also seems kinda high
 
morning
 
Hi Tonee
 
@ParkYoung-Bae corrective action taken
 
lol. thanks :) I'm hesitating on deleting it too
 
@sehe I think it was you that recommended fugitive a long time ago. I’ve had it for a long time but didn’t really have the opportunity to play with it until this week. It’s awesome! And that was just :Gvdiff.
 
8:28 AM
@LucDanton I love how Gstatus just refreshes itself. And the way it (almost always) DoesTheRightThing with window splits and diff modes
Fugitive is the only git interface that makes me actually take advantage of the staging area (because it's so damn easy to stage/unstage hunks)
 
I did add whatever it takes to refresh a diff to my C-l binding though, am I doing something wrong?
 
It's the bee's knees for pre-commit reviewing
@LucDanton If you mean :diffupdate then yeah, Vim sometimes requires a little prodding.
 
@ParkYoung-Bae The tic tac yeti is called Georges in french tv commercials
 
@sehe What kind of workflow is that?
 
@Rerito That would explain it
 
8:31 AM
I'll just go through :Gstatus item by item (I think with D?) and review all hunks. Then, either I "diffput" (dp) the hunks or (in status window) stage the whole file (-), This immediately selects the next file so, D to review that. Rinse, repeat.
 
oo that sounds neat
 
Sometimes I'll decide to make something a separate commit, I go back to an already-staged file and just (this is soooo win) selectively unstage the related hunk from it. Now, everything else is still staged, except for this one "undone" hunk. I love it
 
Actually I’ve been looking for a finer than file level granularity for a long time and none of the things I tried have stuck. Will definitively try.
 
The only gripe I have with it is that Fugitive depends on commentchar being # in commit editors
 
@sehe Now you’re making me wonder if there’s an easy way to 'swap' the staged and unstaged changes…
You figure out you’re overcommitting yourself, so you move out some select bits, swap, and then commit.
 
8:34 AM
Mmm. That's not a feature I guess. Perhaps with stash + commit -A
 
user1804599
@chopperdrawlion4 That's a very weird definition of "submit" — rightføld just now
 
user1804599
What an idiot.
 
@rightføld Why? Because he uses a term that is not exactly what you expect?
Or because he clearly misunderstood your question (probably cause he isn't a native speaker?)
 
user1804599
With his definition, this question would read: "Question says it all. I browsed around Github but cannot find a way to view what hour someone any repository on githubbed a commit, say 3 months ago. Is there a way to do this?"
 
user1804599
8:54 AM
Git and GitHub have no notion of submission.
 
"submit" == "push". I would think that's obvious.
 
@rubenvb why do you have it2?
 
@StackedCrooked for the second range? I didn't want to use an index here.
 
Oh, I see you don't want to modify the meaning of begin2.
 
Yeah.
It'll probably get optimized out anyway (I hope).
 
8:58 AM
@StackedCrooked I changed the same thing in my comment
@rubenvb It will. Likely
 
I wouldn't be opposed to using begin2 directly.
 
Me neither. Or begin1 for that matter coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/ce939199348423ee
Long live C++ and value semantics
 
@sehe, your version is what I had originally, well, kind of. I figured the if's in the loop were ugly :-p
 
Xeo
@sehe That's not... zip. That's alternate or something
 
user1804599
Ugh, fucking pebkac.
 
9:03 AM
@Xeo I didn't come up with the name :)
 
@Xeo Then what is zip? I can rename it to unsorted_merge or something.
 
@rubenvb I think the three loops are uglier.
 
I'm thinking how I'd do an implementation which has no redundant comparisons.
 
@rubenvb interleave
 
@sehe But but but ~purrformance~
 
9:04 AM
@StackedCrooked you can't. Well, you could maybe with goto :)
 
@rubenvb [a, b, c] [1, 2, 3] -> [(a, 1), (b, 2), (c, 3)]
 
user1804599
@StackedCrooked std::unordered_map<std::pair<T, T>, int>
 
@rubenvb Irrelevant. Look at generated code first (cough)
 
@sehe I was thinking goto but afraid to say it :)
 
user1804599
Someone entered orders without order lines and it jammed the third-party accounting software API lol.
 
9:05 AM
@StackedCrooked You can always cps-with-lambdas your way out of this
 
Lambdas could be used to avoid the goto I think.
 
^^
 
@sehe Oh, right.
 
user1804599
@StackedCrooked Use lambda calculus to simulate a Turing machine.
 
... use vacuous buzz words to simulate SO conversation
 
9:06 AM
@rightføld Ok. I did it.
 
zip :: [a] -> [b] -> [(a, b)]
zip _ [] = []
zip [] _ = []
zip (a:as) (b:bs) = (a, b) : zip as bs
or something
 
@StackedCrooked good boy. you get a cookie
 
@Rapptz OK, renamed the function. And used conventional first instead of begin/it.
 
O(min (length a) (length b))
Holy shit I love Haskell
I'm becoming bartek-like
 
@Xeo I like interleave for that.
 
Xeo
9:10 AM
@rubenvb Zip makes it so you get values from both ranges at the same time (i.e., pairs or tuples)
 
D has round_robin.
 
user1804599
I like infix notation zip.
 
user1804599
Zip in PHP is done using map. :P
 
user1804599
array_map(function() { return func_get_args(); }, [1, 2, 3], [4, 5, 6], [7, 8, 9]) === [[1, 4, 7], [2, 5, 8], [3, 6, 9]]
 
that is not a zip.
 
user1804599
9:15 AM
That's definitely a zip.
 
user1804599
It just zips three arrays instead of two.
 
oh wait, I misread it
 
user1804599
@sehe use std::transform
 
user1804599
There is an overload that takes two pairs of iterators for input.
 
what you talking about guys?
 
Xeo
9:16 AM
Zippers
 
user1804599
Zip algorithms.
 
no.
 
user1804599
Similar in Clojure:
 
user1804599
user=> (map vector [1 2 3] [4 5 6] [7 8 9])
([1 4 7] [2 5 8] [3 6 9])
 
user1804599
I like variadic map.
 
9:19 AM
Clojure seems nice
Does it have tuples?
Does it even lift?
 
user1804599
@Jefffrey No, you just use vectors.
 
Clojure seems terrible
 
user1804599
Or you use maps if you want named tuples.
 
@rightføld you try it. I'm not your bitch
 
user1804599
I always liked this algorithm:
 
user1804599
9:29 AM
user=> (def fibs (cons 0 (cons 1 (lazy-seq (map + fibs (rest fibs))))))
#'user/fibs
user=> (take 20 fibs)
(0 1 1 2 3 5 8 13 21 34 55 89 144 233 377 610 987 1597 2584 4181)
 
user1804599
Lazy sequences are fascinating.
 
Xeo
so verbose
 
Haskell is very concise in that regard.
 
Xeo
fibs = 0 : 1 : zipWith (+) fibs (tail fibs)
 
user1804599
(def fibs (map first (iterate (fn [[a b]] [b (+ a b)]) [0 1]))) also works.
 
9:41 AM
At $100 - I will add a title bar and nav header
At $150 - I will throw in some basic CSS
At $1,000 - I will include a poorly-written FAQ, and will remove all uses of inline CSS
lol kickstarter
 
9:55 AM
hi
@Rapptz At $1500 I'll remove the "start: while(1) { if(0); goto start; }" from the main program?
Unless my fortune cookie said that: twitter.com/marcodiiga/status/527553889856663552
 
user1646075
    procedure fib()
        local n1 := 0, n2 := 1
        repeat suspend (n1 :=: n2) +:= n2
    end

    procedure main()
        every writes(" ", fib() \ 10)
        write()
    end
 
user1646075
boom!
 
> By starting your Videostripe membership, you are expressly agreeing that we are authorized to charge you a monthly membership fee at the then current rate, and any other charges you may incur in connection with your use of the Daftcode service to the Payment Method you provided during registration (or to a different Payment Method if you change your account information).
That's why you should read the terms of use of things.
 
what animals do we have here in zoo<c++>
 
@chmod711telkitty bugs, mostly
 
10:06 AM
no frog? :'(
 
user1804599
Fuck Christmas songs.
 
@rightføld I SECOND THAT! youtube.com/watch?v=mfsxxh9PlZ0
 
user1804599
How about some radio jamming.
 
ah.. : (
 
user1646075
@chmod711telkitty bears, lions, lobsters
 
10:08 AM
didn't know there were lobsters in zoos ... in the zoo's restaurant you mean?
 
I really need to poop
 
user1804599
Go poop
 
That helped, thanks.
 
user1646075
giant lobsters! from deep ocean space!
 
user1804599
 
user1804599
10:16 AM
% [ $[ $RANDOM % 6 ] == 0 ] && rm -rf / || echo *Click*
zsh: no matches found: *Click*
 
user1804599
:(
 
TIL that not sleeping is an inadequate substitute for sleeping
out until 6.30am what was i thinking
 
Xeo
lol
 
user1804599
@LightnessRacesinOrbit I hope you have a painful day full of regret.
 
10:22 AM
And goat cheese is so delicious
 
user1804599
Sheep cheese master race.
 
@rightføld Roquefort and Ossau Iraty ... Yum yum
 
OP wants to make Win32 buttons and handler functions for click events on them that outputs text to an imaginary console in his GUI app. What has the OP tried so far?
Structures and tables — Oen44 35 mins ago
 
user1646075
Korean and Italian have best eating sounds
 
user1804599
@Rerito oszczypek
 
10:24 AM
@LightnessRacesinOrbit "oen" means dumbass in Flemish.
 
@rightføld Won't find it in France unfortunately :(
 
@rubenvb I shall have to remember that one
 
user1804599
Checking your privileges results in a race condition.
 
user1804599
Catch the exception instead.
 
10:33 AM
I need it to not throw and work
 
user1804599
try harder.
 
which it did it at one point
 
yes
 
user1804599
It definitely will.
 
user1804599
10:35 AM
(\x.xx) (\x.xx) subtitute the xs and you will get (\x.xx) (\x.xx)
 
I read it as (\x. x * x) instead of (\x. x x) for some reasons
 
user1804599
lol
 
user1804599
% echo '\ x . x x' | sed 's/\\ x .//g' | sed 's/ x/ (\\ x . x x)/g'
 (\ x . x x) (\ x . x x)
 
user1804599
:P
 
which I guess would be a type error, unless you defined * for functions, in, say, church encoding
wtf mac, why would you be trying to open a .rar file with VLC
 
10:41 AM
 
wat
 
@rightføld kisses for all :)
 
user1804599
Sometimes I wish integers could be infinite.
 
for some definitions of some words, they might be
 
user1804599
Like infinite floats.
 
10:49 AM
that is such a troll bait I don't even
 
@rightføld you mean parallel curves, on a hyper surface, with respect to time, praise Cthulhu?
 
user1804599
?
 
inb4 "But they are infinite" -- "No, because ... some weird pedantic interpretation of the word "infinite" and/or "integers""
 
user1804599
I mean std::numeric_limits<double>::infinity().
 
user1804599
I want that for integers instead of floats.
 
10:52 AM
oh, but that flioating point spec defines a representation for infinite, integers don't... well normally. Every bit pattern maps to a well defined value.
> Molten glass is transparent. So why doesn't it look transparent? - because fuck whatif hurting my head with this shit!
oooh, nothing like a language barrier to wind you up
 

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