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sbi
2:00 PM
@TonyTheLion The Tony way, certainly.
 
@sbi so I'm a brat now... At least I Googled it! I just picked a random result
@sbi You got it!
 
sbi
@KonradRudolph So you don't use traditional enums and you dislike enum classes. What's left then?
 
@sbi What I dislike about enum classes is that I have to provide the boilerplate code to stream them, rather than have C++ provide it for me
 
sbi
@TonyTheLion No, if I had it, it'd be called "the sbi way".
@KonradRudolph Ah, so you dislike boilerplate code. I can certainly sympathize with that.
 
@sbi You strange ape creature
 
2:04 PM
@sbi Seriously! Can you please tell me why C++ forces me to write this bullshit?!
 
@KonradRudolph Any particular part of that you'd like to label bullshit?
 
because it's c++ obviously
 
sbi
@KonradRudolph Really, just look at what I said here for the last 20mins. Are you absolutely sure you want me to answer this now?
 
@DeadMG The istream operator is high-octane redundant redundancy
 
user142019
@KonradRudolph I thought about something like this: stacked-crooked.com/view?id=5c4d5f19ba0ea991d12f0b20906fccc3 but I can’t get it to compile. :<
 
2:07 PM
@sbi Not sure what you’re referring to
 
@TonyTheLion I am sure you have
@sbi animals looking derpy for one thing, drink and wenches for another
 
@Zoidberg'-- Yes, because you cannot convert a reference-to-enum-class to reference-to-underlying-type
 
sbi
@KonradRudolph Actually, expected initializer before ‘&’ token seems to indicate some other error.
 
@Zoidberg'-- Also, syntax error – the & belongs after the type, not the variable name
 
user142019
@KonradRudolph oh, duh.
 
2:13 PM
Why are things so frecking complicated and non-obvious
argghhhhh
 
hmm, doesn’t work either … it occurs to me that I’m not actually sure what in >> some_char does with regards to surrounding whitespace. I thought it discarded it but it doesn’t appear to be so simple
 
@TonyTheLion go on...
 
oh project config stuff
and xml
and horseshit
 
user142019
I/O streams suck.
 
@TonyTheLion xml? it must be great
 
user142019
2:15 PM
@KonradRudolph that’s idiotic.
 
user142019
@TonyTheLion Sounds like Oracle Crapware Pro Ultimate Enterprise Edition.
 
lol
also svn is annoying
 
user142019
Superversion
 
goo.gl/maps/fOLjF (google street view) [NSFW]
6
 
user142019
Why are Javadocs always so inconsistent and full of typos and God why don’t they get the terminology right.
 
2:20 PM
@Zoidberg'-- subversion?
 
user142019
1 min ago, by Tony The Lion
also svn is annoying
 
@Zoidberg'-- because Javadocs
 
user142019
These Javadocs look like they were written by somebody who never wrote any of the documented code.
 
oh well, that sucks
 
user142019
They fact that I must Java sucks even more.
 
user142019
2:23 PM
And this API is horrible. It makes me do downcasts because they didn’t figure out generics (or doesn’t Java support generic methods?).
 
1 read documentation 2. realize out of date 3. ???? 4. Frustration
Java only figured out how to do endless inheritance trees of interfaces that lead to nowhere...
 
user142019
If it walks like a duck and quacks like a duck, it’s a duck. Who needs explicit interfaces.
 
user142019
Interfaces are zerotons.
 
Unless it is a factory singleton disguised as a duck.
 
who needs Java?
oh wait, idiots in this world are aplenty, therefore Java is a necessary evil :P
 
user142019
2:28 PM
Douchey enterprise people.
 
user142019
And my school, because they think teaching OOP with Java is a good idea.
 
user142019
And because they think teaching OOP from the beginning is a good idea, rather than imperative programming.
 
Okay, can somebody point out the error in this code for me? I must be stupid
 
Who needs imperative programming nowadays ? (Dumb) people are now able to write thousands of lines of code and are cheaper.
 
user142019
2:31 PM
I don’t understand why they assume people can handle polymorphism and abstract classes when they cannot even write a fucking for-loop.
 
user142019
not in >> ch? Does ! have higher precedence than >>? Or does not have different precedence from !?
 
@Zoidberg'--: I guess this is a way to "attract" people. While necessary, saying "In my school you will learn basic pointer arithmetic and how-to write loops" is somehow less attractive than "In this school, we work with the latests languages and frameworks and concepts that only Java can provide"
 
@Zoidberg'-- …
well, cheers mate
 
user142019
not in >> ch would be false >> ch which converts the Boolean to an integer and then bitshifts is by zero, I think.
 
And when you see how many jobs out there are Java-based, no one can blame them.
 
2:33 PM
don’t we all love weak typing?
 
user142019
@ereOn people are attracted by Java?!
 
@Zoidberg'--: Actually, yes. A lot of people.
 
user142019
 
Not everybody is willing to learn proper computer science or programming. A vast majority just wants to work in the field because they love computers. For this kind of non-impassioned people, Java seems like a good thing.
You can code easily and have the feeling that you are doing something mind-blowing because of all the fancy terms.
 
user142019
@KonradRudolph this is the most horrible weak typing I’ve ever seen. You convert a stream to a Boolean, that Boolean to an integer, and then the char to an integer and bitshift it. T_T
 
2:37 PM
@Zoidberg'-- and that result back to bool
 
user142019
That’s four implicit conversions in one short expression.
 
user142019
Convert++
 
Four bugs in one simple expression masked by weak typing, that must be some kind of record
 
user142019
PHP probably holds the record, but this should come quite close. :^)
 
user142019
2:39 PM
if ($password_hash == md5($_POST['password')) { <— one of the most ubiquitous security bugs in PHP code.
 
@Zoidberg'--: Care to explain ?
 
user142019
PHP converts both operands to integers (since the strings are long hexadecimal integers), truncating around the middle since it doesn’t fit in an integer, then compares those integers. So only the first halves of the hashes have to be the same and it’s true.
 
user142019
You should use === instead to do string comparison rather than integer comparison.
 
why would the result of md5 be converted to an integer ?
 
user142019
Because the string matches [0-9a-fA-F]+, so it can be converted to an integer, so PHP will.
 
2:41 PM
If this is true, PHP never ceases to surprise me...
 
user142019
Basically, if you use == in PHP you’re an idiot.
 
user142019
The worst thing is that people use MD5 for passwords, rather than a very slow hashing algorithm.
 
0
Q: What is the best way to compare hashed strings? (PHP)

webnat0Should I use if(strcmp(md5($string),$hash)==0) or if(md5($string)==$hash)

Well, I wouldn't use MD5 for new websites or for existing websites which require a high-security level.
In other cases using MD5 isn't that bad.
(haha, for those who speak french, this is hilarious : md5.fr)
"Cipher with MD5 !"
 
Basically, if you use == in PHP you’re an idiot. -FTFY
 
user142019
 
2:47 PM
> PHP arbitrarily disallows exceptions in __toString functions
lol
 
user142019
0
A: What is the best way to compare hashed strings? (PHP)

Zoidberg'--If you compare strings, use ===. You must use ===, not ==. == will convert both operands to integers if they can be interpreted as such, and because an MD5 hash doesn’t fit in an integer, it will be truncated around the half. Therefor, only the first halves of the hashes have to be equal. See ht...

 
I upvoted you :)
 
user142019
Never thought I’d repwhore for a PHP answer in the Lounge.
 
heh
seems to have worked
 
Well, we do the community a favor.
It is a bug, and a vicious/important one.
 
user142019
2:53 PM
Actually, the conversion is a feature. That it truncates around the half, not so much.
 
user142019
And we trust our passwords to systems written in this shit.
 
I know of a banking company that doesn't hashes its passwords at all.
When you think about that, this is still better.
 
user142019
The first time I used C, I compared strings using == and I didn’t understand why it didn’t work. :^)
 
@ereOn my bank only just upgraded their login process from account number + 4 digit pin + stupid security question to a real username and password, along with a security code they email or SMS you
@Zoidberg'-- I've seen someone do that and have it work because the compiler was lumping them all in the static section :-P
 
@Collin: That's nice. At least they improve : I emailed mine with three very detailled (and polite) mails explaining the issue of limiting user passwords to 8 characters.
They answered with the most stupid explanations I've read.
"Your credit card has only a 4 digit code and its secure ! So don't worry about the password limitation to 8 characters, it is twice as secure as your credit card !"
"Except that not anyone has my credit card at their disposal for the pin code to test..."
 
2:59 PM
IO-streams again: how do I clear the fail flag after reading something in until EOF?
 
@KonradRudolph clear()
but if something is at EOF.. why is it still useful?
 
@Collin That clears the error state as well as the EOF state!
 
so clear(std::eofbit)
might be clear(iostream::eofbit) or something
 
std::ios::eofbit
seems to do the trick :)
ok, now let’s see how slow C++ is in reading in 2 mio records
 
<---- needs upvotes </chat.circlejerk>
 
3:06 PM
ok, 8 seconds, that’s OK
incidentally, where’s the Robot?
 
donno, I haven't seen him here all day
I think he may be working...
 
hrr
Hi, why does a constructor require access to the parent's class destructor? For example, this does not work:
class A { private: ~A(); }; class B : public A { B() {} };
gcc complains: "In constructor B::B() : error: A::~A() is private"
 
@hrr Because the alternative makes no sense; a derived class is-a superclass, so it needs to construct (and later destruct) the superclass aspect of itself
 
hrr
@KonradRudolph Sure, it needs the constructor -- but why it needs access to the destructor, too?
 
@KonradRudolph nope, you can just leak it
 
3:12 PM
@hrr What happens in detail when you do B x; inside a function?
 
hrr
@KonradRudolph Let us say I never do this. I just do new B();
 
@KonradRudolph nobody said about B x;
 
@hrr and how do you destroy the object again?
@Abyx UB (for nontrivial d’tors)
 
hrr
@KonradRudolph I don't destroy it. The private destructor in A would forbid this (which is why I want A::~A() to be private).
 
@hrr What purpose does this serve? It leaks
 
3:17 PM
@hrr btw, it won't compile because of private A::A()
 
hrr
@Abyx Actually, A::A() is public. Even if I make it explicit, class A { private: ~A(); public: A() {} }; class B : public A { B() {} }; it does not compile.
 
so... perl... is there too much hate here for a quick question...?
 
hrr
@KonradRudolph Unless of course I track all B instances...
 
no hate, but I just don't know perl
 
@hrr You still need to destroy them
 
3:20 PM
It's not that bad IMO, once you are aware of the tricks it performs in the background
 
@thecoshman Perl is a good language, ask ahead
 
1
A: What is The Rule of Three?

user1891160This are the 3 rules in c++. These 3 rules are followed in our programming. Destructor - Destruct all the object's members Copy constructor - Construct all the object's members from the equivalent members in the copy constructor's parameter Assignment operator - Assign all the object's members...

lolwut
 
@FredOverflow C++ – now preached in a church near you!
 
@KonradRudolph erm, I was going to ask about something along the lines of function or setError and return but I just found out about the 'do {}' which nicely groups a serious of commands. Whilst i am fairly sure I could get away with out, I think it makes the code more readable, so I shall keep it
but it's good to know there is a fellow perl chap in here :)
 
3:34 PM
@sbi Sadly that is a bit too ambiguous for me: I hope to write effective code everyday :)
@FredOverflow Emergency. From jan 21 (were you reading up on Als' former activity ? :))
 
so I now have unless function do { setError; return };
 
perl!?!?!?! Get out of my yard
 
@sehe No, I was notified on the original, and the duplicate caught my attention.
 
More like PHP, am I right?
 
@FredOverflow :) Als had a name change though. I noticed today
 
user142019
3:37 PM
Hmm, let’s see if one of the Nokia 3310s we have still works.
 
@wilx Wokay. Good enough :)
@Zoidberg'-- "we"? And: why?
 
PHP sucks.
 
@hrr It would be a serious defect if the Standard allowed you to create objects you could not destroy.
 
@sehe no
 
user142019
@sehe we, my family, the members of the house I live in. And because I want to play Snake.
 
user142019
3:37 PM
@wilx not as bad as Java.
 
lol
 
@Zoidberg'-- QBasic was delivered with a Snake clone IIRC.
 
PHP is the worst non-joke language.
Much worse than Perl.
 
@Zoidberg'-- I don't know...
 
user142019
3:38 PM
PHP is the worst language in which your code doesn’t look like a law book.
 
@wilx Java presents stiff competition.
 
perl is an alright language, just convoluted, PHP is just shit
 
@Zoidberg'-- Write your own damn snake :)
 
user142019
Perl is nice if you need to dig through data and find things.
 
I strongly disagree. Java is decent enough.
 
user142019
3:39 PM
Perl 6 is very nice.
 
user142019
@sehe In Haskell using OpenGL? Thank you very much, now I have something to do.
 
@Zoidberg'-- Perl is nice if you need to dig through typeglobs and get off on awkard $\{$\ref} syntax that shouldn't be necessary
@Zoidberg'-- Cool. Go in peace
 
@Zoidberg'-- vapourware :P
 
user142019
Perl 6 has lazy evaluation. :3
 
user142019
I like C since it’s a simple language.
 
hrr
3:40 PM
@DeadMG Hm, the Standard does allow me to do class Indestructible { private: ~Indestructible(); }; -- so there might be another reason I am missing?
 
@FredOverflow That brings back memories. :D
 
@hrr indestructible could destroy itself.
 
Also, hello everyone.
 
user142019
Imperative programming is good.
 
but when you inherit from it, the derived class has to destroy it.
 
user142019
3:41 PM
C++ is fun if you do it right.
 
user142019
Otherwise, not so much.
 
@KonradRudolph actually... can I just run this past you function or print_string and return if function returns a false value, it will print_string and return, right?
 
hrr
@DeadMG I see. Interestingly, as long as B does not have an explicit destructor, it is allowed: class A { private: ~A(); }; class B : public A {}; So I can do new B() which is impossible to be deleted, no?
 
dunno
but inheriting from a class with a private destructor is really kinda dumb
I doubt anyone put a lot of thought into the spec or implementation of such a scenario
 
@thecoshman hmm, yes, it should
precedence of and being higher than that of or
but I’d write print_string and return unless function, I think
 
3:49 PM
@KonradRudolph hmm... not sure exactly how unless would work in that context, plus the logic is sort of backwards IMO
 
@thecoshman I’d say that it’s more idiomatic except that the TIMTOWTDI trolls would hurt me if I did
but unless is pretty logical: x unless y always does what you expect, no matter the value of x
 
@KonradRudolph :P as this is more or less code just for me, I'd rather it made most sense to me :P
I see what you mean...
 
user142019
Wait I’m writing Snake in C++ right now.
 
user142019
I would do it in Haskell. xD
 
do it in both, then compare the fps, post a poor question to SO about it, ... , profit!
 
user142019
3:54 PM
:D
 
@thecoshman You never write code just for you. At the very least, it’s also for your judgemental and slightly deranged future you
 
@KonradRudolph and he knows where you live
 
@thecoshman except don't compare fps. Compare spf :)
 
@jalf indeed, but that is not how you make a trol post is it :P
 
@Zoidberg'-- I'm not familiar with that expression
 
4:00 PM
@KonradRudolph ¬_¬ god I was such an idiots five seconds ago... I best get back to minding my gold hoard
 
I thought a law book would be confusing
 
user142019
Is there a way to declare a struct’s ctor to initialize all members even if those members are PODs? I currently have this and it’s very verbose:
 
user142019
struct Input {
    Input() : w_pressed{}, s_pressed{}, a_pressed{}, d_pressed{} {}

    bool w_pressed, s_pressed, a_pressed, d_pressed;
};
 
you can simply use a non-static data member initializer
 
user142019
So, struct Input { bool w_pressed = false, s_pressed = false, …; }; right?
 
4:03 PM
or you could just w_pressed {}
afaik
 
user142019
Ah yes that’s also possible. Thanks.
 
user142019
Most of the logic is already done.
 
Ell
for snake? o.O
 
Well.
This weather is fucked up.
 
4:18 PM
@Ell it's hardly a complex game
 
Ell
@thecoshman how would you implement it?
give each tile a counter?
reduce it every x seconds, when he eats food increase the tail counters, when the counter is 0, it's the floor, when it's 1 it's the snake
 
@KonradRudolph Hey there.
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes the robot’s back :)
 
@Ell not too sure to be honest, perhaps a linked list of currently used body squares, just push a new head and pop the tail to move forward one. as it grows, just push a new head without the pop operation
any way, home time for me :D
 
@TonyTheLion Nah. Spent all day curing a cold.
 
4:24 PM
@R.MartinhoFernandes :(
 
Fuck off, it's raining in the middle of december.
Fuck you, Stephen Harper.
 
user142019
@Ell it’s very simple. Basically this:
 
user142019
void go_up() {
    auto point = snake.front();
    --point.y;
    snake.insert(std::begin(snake), point);
    snake.pop_back();
}
 
user142019
And of course I need to add a check so you go game over if you eat yourself, but I just had diner.
 
user142019
4:30 PM
I need to do everything inline since my Game class is a template. :P
 
user142019
void move_to(Point<std::size_t> point) {
    auto cell = field.cells[point.x][point.y];
    if (cell == Cell::Snake) {
        throw std::runtime_error{"Game over, sucker!"};
 
@Zoidberg'-- Why is it a template?
 
user142019
@EtiennedeMartel width and hight of the game field.
 
why am I reading sob stories at work?
fuck you internet
 
@Zoidberg'-- Why do you need to template that?
Is it because templates are cool?
 
4:36 PM
@Zoidberg'-- oh you. Compare performance (LOL)
 
Or is there a real need to not hardcode that to size_t?
 
user142019
I could use a runtime-size matrix but this is easier.
 
Sounds overengineered.
 
Ell
Indeed
but if it's easier, why not?
also @Zoidberg'-- if you get this done tonight I will be impressed :3
 
user142019
The hardest part is the OpenGL part.
 
4:38 PM
Reason is the thing it is standing to
 
user142019
Currently I have this. pastebin.com/T0YFM6Ye
 
Ell
skore?
 
user142019
Because I also have a member named score. xD
 
lol
@Ell I was about to post that
sckore is the next one?
 
user142019
No I only need two.
 
user142019
4:41 PM
One is a getter.
 
user142019
Wat the fuck.
 
user142019
daknok% clang++ snake.cpp -std=c++11 -stdlib=libc++ && ./a.out ~/Desktop
zsh: segmentation fault  ./a.out
 
user142019
Oh, the snake is empty. Of course it segfaults.
 
user142019
I love valgrind.
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes What I meant to ask you: since you’ve adopted the convention of naming header files .h++ – is there any side-effect to that? I.e. do all systems support it fine?
 
user142019
4:46 PM
std::array<std::array<Cell, H>, W> cells{{{{Cell::Empty}}}};
 
@KonradRudolph Specifically, it's a fair bitch to get VS to treat them properly.
 
baah :/
 
user142019
Fuck this shit. I get a segfault unless I run it using valgrind or a debugger. T___T
 
user142019
4:50 PM
daknok% lldb ./a.out                                                  ~/Desktop
Current executable set to './a.out' (x86_64).
(lldb) run
Process 60997 launched: '/Users/daknok/Desktop/a.out' (x86_64)
Game over, sucker!
Process 60997 exited with status = 0 (0x00000000)
(lldb) ^D
daknok% ./a.out                                                       ~/Desktop
zsh: segmentation fault  ./a.out
 
user142019
@TonyTheLion hmm maybe.
 
user142019
But there is no way to go game over if you never change direction.
 
auto cell = field.cells[point.x][point.y]; this going out of range can be UB
 
user142019
Oh maybe a stack overflow.
 
you're not checking that point.x or point.y are within the range of the vector
 
user142019
4:53 PM
They must be.
 
but what if...
 
user142019
Oh no.
 
user142019
You’re right. :P
 
> terminate called throwing an exception
> abort() called
 
oh look, it throws
 
4:53 PM
(Google Chrome)
 
markdown fail
 
I simply don’t understand the chat :/
 
user142019
@TonyTheLion thanks. :^)
 
user142019
Now, the snake wraps around if you hit the edge of the screen.
 
user142019
Now the OpenGL stuff.
 
4:57 PM
That's the EZ part.
(I'm not serious)
 
wut
Chrome just crashed again from the exact same bug, same uncaught exception, same thrower
 
IME Chrome got buggier over time, not less buggy
 
ah
the plot thickens
Huh, chrome just crashed worldwide apparently
 
It's a conspiracy
 
11 days early
 
5:10 PM
I'm using Chrome and mine didn't crash
 
@KonradRudolph MSVC fucks up something apparently. I added one autocmd for my vimrc to run set filetype=cpp when opening any of those.
 
Hi guys! I'm studying for a technical interview, and a friend told me that a very common question is "write some code with time O(log log n)"

I know that for instance Quick sort has O(nlogn) for the average case, an selection and bubble sort have O(n^2) but I can't think of any algorithm with O(log log n)
any advise on that? How to approach those problems?
 
@Abyx that's a pretty amazing feat of stalking
 
@AlanChavez Stupid question.
 
@KonradRudolph Happened to me too
It's happened twice so far.. "Whoa.. chrome just crashed"
 
5:14 PM
you could just for(int i = 0; i < log(log(n)); ++i) std::cout << "What the fuck.";
 
Happened within the last 20 minutes?
 
@DeadMG why do you think it is a stupid question :P ?
 
because
 
is it a stupid question from me, or from the interviewer? lol
 
firstly, log log n is a completely random and uncommon runtime
and secondly, there are infinite algorithms which execute in log log n, and it doesn't mean you know jack shit about them
 
5:15 PM
that's what I think :P
 
I know Jack Smith. Oh, no, that was John
 
my chrome just crashed twice in a row
 
@DeadMG Cpt. Obvious
using opera <whistle/>
 
user142019
I use Safari and I never have any problems.
 
beach ball isn't a problem :)
 
5:25 PM
@melak47 Same
I'm frankly a little surprised that chrome would crash if there were no longer google
It's as if they never foresaw a time in which there would be no google
 
user142019
Gmail also seems to be down in some countries. Is Google having an internal troll?
 
@melak47 Hm, that's strange my Chrome crashed several times too
 
Being sick sucks.
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes I hear you, robot :( Been sick since yesterday.
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Ha, reminds me of those times, when I was a student, where I would go drink while being sick.
 
5:30 PM
@R.MartinhoFernandes update your anti virus? :p
 
user142019
This is cool.
 
user142019
 
@Neil It's actually the opposite. Had they foreseen it, it would not crash, but exit gracefully.
 
Shortest I can think of: new XText(unescaped).ToString()sehe 17 secs ago
^ I just needed that. Don't ask
@Zoidberg'-- A firsh swimming in half-a-melon, which is far too small?
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yet there it is, chrome crashed twice
 
user142019
5:32 PM
@sehe or is the fish far too big?
 
Xeo
3
Q: How to write a streaming 'operator<<' that can take arbitary containers (of type 'X')?

Drew DormannI have a C++ class "X" which would have special meaning if a container of them were to be sent to a std::ostream. I originally implemented it specifically for std::vector<X>: std::ostream& operator << ( std::ostream &os, const std::vector<X> &c ) { // The specia...

sigh, so many "wrong" answers.
And I'm too lazy to post a correct one.
 
I ought to write a program that responds to questions I'm too lazy to answer
But I'm too lazy to do that
 
> This user has been temporarily suspended by a moderator and cannot chat for 2 days.
 
user142019
@Xeo indeed. They all forget that they accept anything, not just containers.
 
^^ That's what happened to the guy who was trying to make a private room.
 
Xeo
5:35 PM
@Mysticial Ahahahaha, golden.
 
in Room for JABFreeware and CC Inc, 9 hours ago, by balpha
@JABFreeware @CCInc @HangBot This room is not private. There are no private rooms on chat.stackoverflow.com except for the moderators, and you have no business harassing people. I'm suspending the three of you from chatting for three days, because that's not at all the kind of behavior we want to see here. You're welcome to come back afterwards, but please behave.
 
@Mysticial Bitches got owned.
 
Xeo
I'm surprised you didn't star that yet. :3
 
When I see that :3 smiley, I always think of cats.
 
user142019
@EtiennedeMartel and if I post the same picture but of humans instead of cats it’s NSFW? Fuck cats.
3
 
Xeo
5:42 PM
I think that's where it originally came from.
 
user142019
> A symbol meant to represent the cat face made by anime characters when they say something clever, or sarcastic, or are commenting on something cute.
 
Speaking of urban dictionary, I accidentally came across this one today: urbandictionary.com/…
 
so coming back to this idea of using one of my machines as a build machine, that can provide latest builds of boost etc, would an Ubuntu dedicated box be good for that? You can install Clang, GCC, I guess GCC could cross compile to windows or would you need a win box for that?
 
user142019
5:54 PM
 
@Zoidberg'-- My first reaction was literal "what.".
 
@Zoidberg'-- yes, this totally ^
 
user142019
I find it strange because it’s not generic.
 
user142019
Way too specialized.
 
user142019
> Anal sex with anyone who has diarrhea.
 
user142019
5:56 PM
Would be way better and more maintainable.
 
@Griwes I wonder if @CatPlusPlus knows what's this about.
 
@EtiennedeMartel If you are referring to him being a Pole - I'm one, too :P
 
@Griwes Yeah, I know.
 
user142019
My father is/was one too!
 
5:58 PM
But you don't know, so maybe the other Pole knows.
 
There are only two poles.
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes In this room? Yes.
 

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