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12:10 AM
What's the real difference between C and C++?
 
12:22 AM
classes, templates, a few algorithm libraries, a standard header for fixed-width integers (etc.). It's a pretty huge difference if you've had to code in only the C subset before.
 
So, generics aren't in C?
 
there are no generics in C++ either
 
Or templates, rather?
 
Honestly, C++ stumbles a lot on its own feet as you start needing high-level features, but it's still one of the most viable choices for everything until that point. Rust is getting to be a viable choice, and Java's not a bad alternative to C++ for some situations.
 
Can't like any random person make a pull request on github?
 
1:04 AM
Have you ever used github=
@Darkrifts Please stop trolling, generics, github. generics in C? please fuck off.
 
@CaptainGiraffe I haven't worked with just C before, so I didn't know about generics (what templates are called in C#) in C, haven't messed with Github much before, and Ehsan suggested I do some things on it.
 
@Darkrifts Please don't templates and generics are not the the same.
 
gcc is open source. Generics are bigger than templates; templates generate multiple declarations for different types. Generics abstract away the need for different declarations in the first place
 
@Aaron3468 This is wrong on so many levels
 
Programming terminology is not well-defined. I welcome your definitions.
2
 
1:16 AM
Are there any C gurus in here?
 
@Aaron3468 Oh fuck off again.
 
have I come at a wrong time hha
 
@CaptainGiraffe All I'm saying is that for every term I've learned, there are 3 or 4 definitions floating around (generally the computer science term, and the terms for a few languages with implementations). Generic programming, C# generics, and Lisp generics are all different and the only common thread is the problems they aim to solve.
 
@Aaron3468 Then you should know that lisp c++ and c# are extremely different
 
Isn't that the point I made? That I don't know which definitions you used which conflict with mine
 
1:22 AM
generic is an all a round term for lisp. for c# it is for complier type deductions.
There are no generic types in c++
 
@qaispak You can ask, although whether anybody here is a C guru is uncertain. Certainly, there are some whose knowledge is quite high.
 
I wish I could spell.
 
No worries. Honestly it's difficult to talk about programming sometimes and I can see why you'd avoid using the term except for lisp generics. I usually approach from a cs background so I often use the theoretical definitions
 
I'm going away to sleep with my sugar mama.
6
 
would upvote
Oo sugar mama not sugar grandma, was excited, then realised how conservative u r
 
2:01 AM
 
2:34 AM
@Telkitty I would not expect that much for fish
 
well, 1) fish can be expensive 2) owner can be rich 3) owner can be very emotionally attached to the fish
 
2:47 AM
yeah but I'd think the sheer quantity of one-dollar guppies from pet stores would bring that down
 
I am sure more than 99% of those one-dollar guppies don't make it to the vet
 
I guess it does say vet bills rather than pay to keep your pet healthy with a vet visit, implicitly removing the people that would go, "vet bills? for a fish?"
 
My chickens have not visited a vet
they are healthy so it seems though
 
 
1 hour later…
4:11 AM
fuck I lost 15 minutes debugging an std::mutex problem because I confused .release() with .unlock()
 
especially satisfactory on a Sat night too ;)
 
thug life
 
I am copying and paste descriptions from an iphone app to a similar app in android, but it has been ages since I touched itune connect, I don't seem to be able to find things in their old spot ...
 
@Mikhail So why are you manually unlocking a mutex at all?
 
programming C++ the thug way of course
 
4:21 AM
@JerryCoffin Because the .top() and .pop() step are separate in C++
` std::unique_lock<std::mutex> lk(output_free_queue_m_);
output_free_queue_cv_.wait(lk, [&]{return diconnect_queues_ || !output_free_queue_.empty(); });
if (diconnect_queues_)
{
return;
}
auto output_frame = std::move(output_free_queue_.front());
output_free_queue_.pop_front();
lk.unlock();`
last line had a typo
 
@JerryCoffin some people thinking outside RAII
 
@Mikhail That would explain using a mutex, but doesn't explain unlocking it manually (and the snippet above lacks sufficient context to explain much of anything either).
 
its pretty clear, dude
 
4:36 AM
@Mikhail It's clear enough in itself, but lacks context. Is it exiting a scope immediately after what you posted? If so, you didn't need to unlock manually. If not, you're probably doing too much in one function. But without context, we can't tell what sort of mistake you've made.
 
I'm doing 3 things in the function. I'm getting a new work item, doing work (during this time the mutex isn't held) , and pushing the result onto another stack...
 
@Mikhail That sounds to me like your design is kind of a mess. Code that's doing processing shouldn't normally deal with locking or unlocking an input queue. What you normally want is a concurrent_queue that'll provide a simple "pop" that handles locking and unlocking on its own (but has nothing to do with processing). Then your processing will retrieve an item, process it, and push it to the output (without dealing directly with any locks, mutexes, or anything similar).
Personally a prefer a somewhat different design than the standard library uses though. Specifically, the pop (or whatever) looks something like: bool pop(T &);. This way when (for example) you have a queue with a timeout, it can return false if it times out instead of retrieving an item, so the code doing the processing looks something like T item; while (input.pop(item)) { /* process item */ }
Then when/if it times out, you can do some checking to see if you've reached the normal end of input, encountered an error, or whatever (and react accordingly, of course).
 
@JerryCoffin lol, I like how the lack of context doesn't remove the certainty that he did something wrong
 
4:52 AM
@StackedCrooked If nothing else, marriage has taught me that ignorance of what he's doing or why has no effect on the fact that if he's male, he's wrong.
 
But consider that he's still in uni (albeit doing PhD) and working on a Sat night, I would give +1 for effort ...
 
5:05 AM
@Telkitty This is one place I agree with Larry Wall: a good programmer is lazy.
 
thanks for the compliment :')
 
@Telkitty Good programmers are lazy. Not all lazy people are good programmers.
 
who would have thought?
 
5:23 AM
Just now found out that Chumlee from Pawn Stars is apparently arrested
 
user784668
Why is std::make_heap required to do no more than 3 * (last - first) comparisons?
 
user784668
The typical heapify algorithm requires less than 2 * (last - first) comparisons, so where does the 3 in the standard come from?
 
6:17 AM
My first attempt at lisp is definitely not the most elaborate thing. I'll keep cleaning it up as I go and learn better ways to design.
 
user784668
@Aaron3468 These lone parens :(
 
user784668
@Aaron3468 The idiomatic way is to put all closing parens together, like this: pastebin.com/H7bmzEE9
 
user784668
@Aaron3468 Also note the two spaces per indent level.
 
I learned about the coding style a few hours after I wrote it. Thanks though! Documentation on anything but lisp syntax has been difficult to find
 
user784668
@Aaron3468 Then there's the use of setf to create variables, which is not portable, and even when it works, it tends to create global variables, not locals ones. Prefer to use let instead.
 
user784668
6:28 AM
@Aaron3468 Then there's the fact that hyphens are your friend in Lisp so why battleentity, when it could be battle-entity?
 
user784668
@Aaron3468 Also, (write-line (format nil …)) could just be (format t …).
 
user784668
@Aaron3468 This is roughly how I would've written it.
 
user784668
Actually, wait, (incf … (- foo)) is just (decf … foo).
 
9:36 AM
@AndreasPapadopoulos looks like PA is linked up with Jade Sea this time
 
@LucDanton What the fuck is PA
 
okay alors je mélange les langues mais j’ai le droit
 
 
2 hours later…
Ven
11:22 AM
helo
@Aaron3468 aw "loop" :(
 
12:17 PM
@Ven Yeah, considering I wrote it with about 30 minutes of lisp knowledge, it's really not fantastic. But the loops in lisp are really powerful
I also found out the hard way that you can leak class con/destructors into the surrounding namespace
 
I… what?
 
Is there an issue with putting a mutex in a pointer (unique_ptr) instead of immediately the stack? Does that make any difference at all?
 
@Aaron3468 it’s the name of the class that’s put into scope
forget about constructors and destructors
and linkers
 
12:25 PM
> "Just like a high school history textbook, we're gonna whitewash this table."
 
"Good relationship, just like Jack and Rose" xD
 
@sehe lol, nice. :)
 
@LucDanton I found the issue (in my code, rather than the coliru code I assumed was the same). I was missing a parenthesis in the class...
zzz... Too tired to syntax
 
12:50 PM
lest we forget ...
also check out my (iphone+android+windows phone) apps: telkitty.com/TelKittyDigital/products
as a woman, I need to shamelessly promote myself more ...
 
This has to have some award for irony.
This typing course is suitable for dyslectics, /as long/ as the parents aren't!
 
I thought for a second this was some guide on duck typing
3
 
@Telkitty or... "When you buy your house at IKEA"
 
shameless self promotion doesn't have to have any limit
 
But it does
I'd seriously worry about those marble tiles weighing the walls down
Also, when that van arrived, I sorta expected the whole construction to be loaded up in one go.
 
1:06 PM
Villaboard® lining is a premium sanded fibre cement sheet with recessed edges for flush jointing. Villaboard lining is an ideal internal lining for bathrooms, laundries, kitchens and high traffic abuse areas.
 
The interior does look kinda nice in the end.
 
thank you
despite you still think the outside looks like a shed
 
Well. More than a little actually. It does look nice.
@Telkitty I worry about the construction. To put it bluntly, I'm very impressed with the high end finish on ... a stationary caravan... (sorry?)
I'd be very happy to stay there for vacations, but it would have to have a very special pricetag for me to invest in as real estate
 
the company supplied it had many years experience in building homes & sheds
 
I'd be very very proud if the interior of my own house looked remotely as nicely finished though. Really nice
 
1:11 PM
it looks nice because it's new
@sehe The place is very close to the new train station and a technical park that has the second total largest office spaces in the whole state. In other words, it might get rezoned in the medium term. If it does, I can sell the land for twice as much and I will. So no point invest in a double brick house when it's going to be teared down in 5-10 years time.
 
1:26 PM
Hahaha. @wilx This one is too hot for my timeline, but... very nicely done. I'll watch it in full later and decide whether I RT twitter.com/franifio/status/769594900077830144
@Telkitty No no no. You don't understand
@Telkitty Ok
 
1:44 PM
@sehe That is both funny and stupid at the same time. I am offended. :D
 
You should be.
 
2:08 PM
It's a bit nice that lisp uses keywords to guide interpretation instead of lexical structures. I didn't realize how often I'm fighting with little things like forgetting semicolons after a class.
 
that's not alexical structure problem
 
I used a full stop to indicate it wasn't.
 
your comment makes zero sense otherwise.
"It's nice that Lisp uses this thing instead of this other thing. Now I'm going to complain about something totally unrelated that is close enough that it looks like I think they are related."
 
"that lisp uses keywords to guide interpretation, alleviates little things I didn't notice were problems."
 
the thing that you're noticing has nothing to do with using keywords or not and doesn't alleviate them in the slightest.
 
2:12 PM
Note that the subject is a phrase, not a noun
@Puppy Whatever. I strongly dislike arguments about the means of expression I use when the meaning can be ascertained and the cost of incorrectly expressing myself is low.
 
you can dislike them all you like, but if you want to stop them from happening, you should send messages that don't clearly say totally the wrong thing.
and then argue that I read it wrong, it's just exactly what I just said.
 
3:03 PM
@Aaron3468 (state-ment make-sense? (i am (modified (sure (not too)))) semi-colon)
@Aaron3468 It's not the "means of expression". Words define what your statements mean. You can't use arbitrary words as a means to express something.
The cost is not low.
You /think/ the cost is low (Dunning-Kruger). You think the cause of the friction is others pointing it out.
When you start to rethink things (and observe the minds of the more skilled thinkers) then you'll find they are simply using their minds more effectively.
I'm constantly jealous of Robot, Luc, and many times Puppy too.
It's so nice to be able to waste less time thinking sloppily. I've noticed a side-win: it's much easier to explain things when you are accutely aware of the Names Of Things.
Haddocks' Eyes is a term for the name of a poem by Lewis Carroll from Through the Looking-Glass. It is sung by The White Knight in chapter eight to a tune that he claims as his own invention, but which Alice recognises as "I give thee all, I can no more". By the time Alice heard it, she was already tired of poetry. It is a parody of "Resolution and Independence" by William Wordsworth. == Naming == The White Knight explains a confusing nomenclature for the song. The song's name is called Haddocks' Eyes The song's name is The Aged Aged Man The song is called Ways and Means The song is A-sitting on...
 
user1804599
3:32 PM
G
 
3:50 PM
@AndreasPapadopoulos couldn't agree more
 
 
1 hour later…
4:57 PM
Does the standard have anything that does this? Just wanna check if I'm reinventing the wheel.
template <typename T>
struct SizeOf{
    static const size_t value = sizeof(T);
};
template <>
struct SizeOf<void>{
    static const size_t value = 1;
};
 
Why would you need the size of void?
 
I'm implementing a pointer wrapper.
 
Ell
Eh
 
@Borgleader what is the size of void even? 0? 1?
 
Ell
5:12 PM
It doesn't have a size
 
Ell
I don't see why one would define one
 
@Ell So that you need less special cases across your generic templated code.
 
^^ That. My pointer wrapper uses sizeof(). And when I want it to be raw memory (raw bytes), it won't compile.
 
^ I have never thought about equal pay laws and minimal wage laws like this. Interesting POV for me.
 
5:29 PM
@Mysticial well, there’s std::conditional together with std::integral_constant but that’s not necessarily that better
 
@LucDanton I thought about std::conditional. But then I needed to compare with void. So it seemed easier to just do it manually.
 
@Mysticial there’s std::is_void if that’s what you mean
 
Oh. I didn't know that. :)
 
note that it encompasses more things than what you are doing (i.e. it identifies void const as well and so on), there’s std::same_type<Arg, void> to match just void
 
Now I'm trying to weight the (minor) benefits of going that route vs. pulling in the <type_traits> header into over 100 modules.
Holy shit. No I'm not pulling in type_traits just for that.
 
5:37 PM
You should have already pulled in type_traits, you pleb ;)
 
I've been very careful about what I pull into the top level headers.
 
Is anyone here good with C?
 
<stdint.h> is probably the only thing that gets pulled into everything. Fortunately, that header is small.
 
@qaispak check the C room
 
I am a bit confused about printf vs putchar and EOF
 
5:38 PM
@jaggedSpire Does it exist? Afaik it just keeps dying
 
dunno if that is related to C++ as well
 
nope
 
it is not?
 
@Borgleader I thought there was a healthy one that I saw once
once :|
 
It says -1 should simulate my EOF but when I type -1 it doesn't end my file
 
5:40 PM
oh hey
the present C room is two years old!

C

C stands for Control.
 
@jaggedSpire C stands for Can't seem to die
 
that thing is a barren wasteland
 
it is, sadly, not nearly as active as this room
 
so I take it most on here are purely C++
 
I actually do C# for my job these days, but
Dec 3 '15 at 2:42, by jaggedSpire
I don't know, I was kidnapped and raised by C++ers until I got a case of stockholm syndrome
C++ is my first love <3
 
5:43 PM
Stockholm Syndrome? But we were nice to you :(
 
@Borgleader this was before I found you guys
 
I refuse to take any programmer that doesn't understand C seriously
6
it's like the alphabet
 
@qaispak so you don't take yourself seriously?
 
@Borgleader lol
 
6:06 PM
Guys I have a question about thread safety in a class. Say I have two methods in a class, and I want to exclude calling them together, but I don't want to exclude a single one of them to be called by multiple threads simultaneously. How can I do that? Is that possible?
 
@TheQuantumPhysicist can't you have a semaphore or smth?
 
Task 1: Google semaphore ^_^
Googling :)
 
@TheQuantumPhysicist maybe they aren't the solution
i haven't done that much threading
 
@ChemiCalChems I'm not sure this is possible while being thread-safe
 
that may be your answer
 
6:11 PM
@ChemiCalChems You're right. I'll investigate further and learn more about it. Thanks for the hint!
 
@TheQuantumPhysicist np
 
6:21 PM
@TheQuantumPhysicist i'd have 2 shared mutex, one for one method and one for the other
 
Actually one of them must be unique
@ChemiCalChems
 
not realy
lemme explain
 
you shared lock the methods mutex, and unique lock the other one
 
6:22 PM
wait,
idk if that'd work
 
That's my plan
According to the example in the link you provided it should work
 
shared mutex can be unique locked
 
The example there does something pretty much close to what I wanna do... except that I wanna deal with nasty pointer allocations
 
@TheQuantumPhysicist can't help you there i think
 
@ChemiCalChems You helped a lot with that link, actually!
 
6:23 PM
@TheQuantumPhysicist oh, glad to hear
 
Thanks :)
I'm learning so much today with trial and error that my brain can't take it anymore... it's like every now and then I fall into a problem, and then realize that I'm locked with the tools I have, until I learn that another tool exists that solves the problem
 
@TheQuantumPhysicist happens to every one
 
Feels like my brain is swelling
@ChemiCalChems ^_^
 
@TheQuantumPhysicist that's just c++, it's like that
 
nwp
@TheQuantumPhysicist time to read a book instead?
 
6:26 PM
Well, I'm quite upset because I'm very good with C++, but now I have so much to learn with C++11
@nwp I am reading a book (Concurrency in Action - Practical Multithreading by Williams)
@nwp But there's limited time for this problem that I can't extensively read right now
 
i feel like i'm doing something fundamentally wrong
i keep using structs because i like my members and things to be public
note that it's not a lib i'm coding
it's a game, so there's really no need to enforce encapsulation, specially when i'm the only coder
but it feels like i shouldn't be ignore encapsulation
 
@ChemiCalChems It's one thing I'm really wondering... why was the keyword class invented, when it just differs from struct by access level
 
nwp
@ChemiCalChems these are not related
 
To me it sounds like, although classes and structs are the same, they're not supposed to be used interchangeably
 
@nwp i use them so that i don't have to have as many public tags as classes i code
 
user406009
6:41 PM
@qaispak If you still have your question, feel free to ask it in the question room.
 
@Lalaland thanks for that link
 
Hi boys & grills.
 
user406009
(Even though it's titled C++, I don't think any of us in there really care if it's a C++ or C question)
 
Ell
@ChemiCalChems why do you like them public?
 
@Ell idk, i just don't feel the need to encapsulate anything since i don't normally do crazy stuff
and when i do, the compiler complains anyway, so...
 
nwp
6:57 PM
I have a vector<Node>, but now I need stable iterators. Indexes are not good enough, so now I'm considering list<Node> or even forward_list<Node> which is probably a sign that I'm doing it wrong :(
vector<unique_ptr<Node>> gets thrown into the competition for least terrible
 
@nwp that's probably the best option imo
 
nwp
@ChemiCalChems seems to be strictly worse than forward_list since I don't need random access
 
@nwp in that case, yeah
 
True Lies on TV. I love that film.
 
 
2 hours later…
8:40 PM
So empty...
 
8:53 PM
@nwp meh just go with std::forward_list then
 
nwp
yeah, that's what I did
I feel dirty now
 
Don't be, I find std::forward_list to applicable in more scenarios than std::list
Also iterator stability is one of the cases I don't mind linked lists
You could use std::map, if you can come up with a meaningful key
 
lol, True Lies is hilarious. :D
 
or boost::stable_vector but AFAIR that's similar enough in the count of indirections to std::vector<std::unique_ptr<T>>
 
on that note, what are boost modules you recommend the most for general use?
 
nwp
8:59 PM
@milleniumbug I had a map<string, string> and I'm replacing it with a double radix tree
it's probably not even worth it
 
@nwp It's probably not
 
@milleniumbug It's more than « I don't mind ». It's more along the lines of « I love them! Plus I can merge and relink elements and that's so cool! ».
 
@redspah Boost.Random (no, <random> is not enough), all the container stuff, Boost.Tokenizer, Boost.Variant, Boost.Optional, Boost.StringRef, Boost.Container, Boost.MultiIndex, basic range algorithms, string algorithms, Boost.TypeErasure
 
nwp
oh, yeah, I'll have to implement merging of those trees too, and the trivial inserting of all elements is probably not gonna be good enough
 
9:09 PM
why is <random> not enough for casual everyday use?
 
Because std::random_device is broken
 
@redspah Its not cryptographically random by default
 
You can use boost::random_device or (a shameless plug) my own seed11::seed_device
Also Boost.Random has more generators
 
or just roll your own xor-shift generator :-)
 
So you have a better choice than "small, but terrible" or "good, but huge"
 
9:13 PM
The xor generator was about to be standardized at first, but the committee deemed it useless and error-prone, so they removed it from the draft.
 
Not sure what the error would be, its saved my butt a few times when I was doing VHDL in the late 2000s...
 
@redspah Oh, I forgot iterator facades and adaptors, and Boost.Operators
 
Hey everyone
 
Boost is dead? No, not really.
 
Well, as of now I only need to use filesystem, when we get filesystem in C++ I shall be free.
 
9:28 PM
@redspah Also, Boost is your "get of out buggy stdlib implementations jail free card" so there
Buggy <regex>? Boost. You're free! <thread> not working? Boost. You're free!
 
but what if boost is bug
 
@wilx Radical thinking often helps being creative.
There are some really jarring racist pieces of faith in there. The assumption that "blacks have not been given proper education" seems simplistic to me. I suppose it might have been actually true in the periods of segregation, but that makes that part of the analysis very dated
@LucDanton It will boost it
@milleniumbug I do agree.
 
9:46 PM
@milleniumbug So, I've used GCC targeting x86 and arm, and MSVC, where did you find buggy implementations of these items?
 
hey guys
can someone help me with a problem in eclipse?
 
Sorry, here's a nickle kid. get yourself a better IDE.
 
I personally use vs2015
but I am going to participate in ACM ECPC
and they only have codeblocks and eclipse
and I think eclipse > codeblocks
 
@sehe AFAIK they are still not being educated in the same rate and quality as whites or Asians in USA.
 
haven't used eclipse, in which ways is it better than codeblocks while being a magnitude bigger
 
10:00 PM
@wilx So there are two points to make. In the USA K-12 education quality depends on the funding of your school district which is based on local taxes - its easy to see a 10x difference in funding levels. On the other hand increasing spending (maybe doubling) has had little effect on education outcomes in poorly performing districts. The truth is that they aren't integrated with the rest of the population.
 
user1804599
Guys guys
 
user1804599
I finished a project
15
 
user1804599
 
@Mikhail gcc had a broken one at 4.8 and thread is still not working when using win32 thread model on MinGW
 
@milleniumbug Why are you using MinGW? Instead of MSVC for example...
 
10:06 PM
@rightfold Finished? :)
I cannot believe you. :D
 
user1804599
Well it's as good as usable
 
user1804599
There are two trivial non-critical bugs left to fix, and the rest is nice-to-haves.
 
@Mikhail lol are you joking
Also <random> was quite buggy pre-MSVC 2015
 
I never noticed anything, but I didn't do anything serious with it either...
 
One example: std::normal_distribution not having the iterator pair constructor (that's the most important one)
Or std::generate_canonical returning values from all over instead of from range [0,1)
Similarly, gcc and clang returning values from range [0,1] in std::generate_canonical<float>, but that one turned out to be a bug in the standard
 
10:17 PM
I'm sceptic. Who's hacked rightfold's account?
Or how was the project abandoned in such a way that it's "finished"?
I think that's what Trump says? "Declare victory and leave"
 
Oh, I mistakenly wrote std::normal_distribution when I had std::discrete_distribution in mind
 
Oh. That's normal. Just not very discretely
 
Um, I think its a rectangular distribution...
 
hehe
 
user1804599
10:35 PM
@sehe 🖕🏻
 
@Mikhail Studies seem to indicate that quality is not linked to spending to any noticeable degree at all. For example: washington.cbslocal.com/2014/04/07/…
 
user1804599
It's built with the web framework I wrote yesterday
5
 
@rightfold Okay then, deciphered it:
> <🖕> 128405, U+1F595 REVERSED HAND WITH MIDDLE FINGER EXTENDED
<🏻> 127995, U+1F3FB EMOJI MODIFIER FITZPATRICK TYPE-1-2
That's quite a bit of work for a dismissal
@JohanLarsson Hmm?
 
found them today, pretty good another link
still have not found the song I've been looking for
 
user1804599
10:46 PM
@sehe no I have an emoji keyboard
 
@JohanLarsson Ah. Okay, the [reply-to] seemed to suggest some context I didn't get :)
 
oh, sry, completely random
thought maybe you'd find it interesting
 
Hello everyone,

Will I be "right" to think of late binding as also runtime operation... early binding as compile time operation?
 
@hello Yes, that's reasonably accurate.
 
@JerryCoffin Thanks.
 
11:05 PM
@JohanLarsson Still listening. Though not especially my cup of tea (/cc @Morwenn maybe?)
They're all just there for the food, obviously
 
Speedtest.net gives me 98MB down 96 MB up. SO and a lot of sites feels sluggish?
 
That's volume not bandwidth
 
@JohanLarsson I love that stuff.
@sehe fine. Speedtest reports volume per second. I pay 51SEK for this. That is Three quid. That is per month; not per second. It is usually very reliable.
 
Hehe. 51SEK/s would be epic
 
It would probably be bad business =)
 
11:17 PM
@CaptainGiraffe Probably a routing issue or a CDN being configured. If it persists, drop @StackStatus a tweet
 
Probably a routing thing. clc.stackoverflow is the ip giving me grief right now.
 
Shocked, SHOCKED! I say, that I haven’t heard about @realDonaldTrump saying something insane and evil in the past 24 hours. Is he dead?
@CaptainGiraffe And that's a fqdn, not an IP...
 
@sehe Nope. He's 2 chars (out of 140) away from another insanity.
 
FYI, Trump lost
 
@sehe I was uncertain if I would get away with calling a looked up name an ip. I did not expect to be told so curtly.
 
11:26 PM
@Mikhail He lost his insanity? How is he gonna run for president evil, now
 
@sehe I'm just sad that twitter.com/isotrumpp isn't updating
 
Meh. I thought that was too far of a stretch to be funny. I saw, maybe, 1.5 nice joke there
 
11:48 PM
morning, internet stalkers
 
I'm just here because IRC has been broken since 2004
 
More talking to the real/true trump stalkers ...
 

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