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15:00
I'm off to the guy, bye!
no, what you'd need to know is that which types are which is determined by the language and not any kind of practical reason
there's a big difference between "You need to know the GC in-depth" and "You need to know that the GC, and object-orientation, are completely orthogonal concepts and in this language they happen to be put together."
I don't really think you need to know that as a beginner.
for( e: vector){} , is available in any compiler?
no, that's not legal C++0x, it would have to be for(auto e : vector) {}
@MartinhoFernandes It is most definitely essential to know.
pardon me for syntax
15:05
I don't consider it essential.
You can write many good programs without it.
you can also write good programs without boost but still many uses
I could write many good programs without using the Standard library
do you think that it's not essential for beginners to use classes like std::string?
It's again a language issue.
yes
i am not very good coder like you guyz
but abstraction is alsways good for me
always*
I just did something so ugly
#define fprintf(x, fmt, ...) dbg_printf(fmt, ##__VA_ARGS__)
15:09
@DeadMG I think it's essential to learn about strings.
when you teach a beginner programming, you need to be sure of exactly what you're teaching them
I don't think it's essential to learn about memory details.
I never said anything about learning about memory details
@hexa Why the token paste?
all I said was that it was essential to know that memory management and OOP or functional programming or procedural programming are orthogonal
15:10
@CatPlusPlus it's a GCC extension
And how would a beginner make sense of that?
@hexa What's a GCC extension?
Memorizing that without understanding it sounds like cargo-cult.
Token paste is most certainly not a GCC extension.
how about, "In some OOP languages you delete your objects explicitly"?
15:11
Neither is __VA_ARGS__ in 0x.
@CatPlusPlus it is in this case, and it is not being using it like you think it is
@CatPlusPlus Imagine the macro without the ##
"In some OOP languages you can manage the memory of all types explicitly. Here in Java we don't do that so that you can focus on OOP."
@CatPlusPlus and then I supply no args to it
15:11
Yeah, it would work perfectly fine.
....
Oh, wait, GCC fails at no args.
Gosh, this is difficult. Everyone's having a separate conversation. Pardon me for temporarily plonking you guys :)
MSVC doesn't have silly problems like that.
That sounds somewhat reasonable.
I agree that it's important to make it clear that "this is not all there is to programming."
15:13
so any compiler supports range based for loop?
How to do a strike in chat?
triple hyphen, if I recall
strike
---strike---
Check the compiler docs, duh.
GCC 4.6 or 4.7 does, IIRC.
ok
MSVC, dunno.
15:15
MSVC doesn't , i already checked
If you want compatibility then use BOOST_FOREACH.
Or std::for_each.
not allowed to use boost
yes for each is ok
That's stupid.
then find a new job
very less companies uses boost here
15:17
It's counter-productive.
:)
What license does Boost use?
The Boost license.
it has it's own license
15:18
wow
It's free for any use, AFAIR.
I'll never understand why some software companies frown on open-source.
in my experience
FOSS tends to suck, horrifically
Industry is full of stupid practises.
@DeadMG What is your experience?
Boost doesn't suck.
15:21
true
Being FOSS is not a quality indicator.
I tend to view that as the exception, rather than the rule
(And it's not like proprietary source doesn't suck.)
Adobe cough
heh
There are as many sucky proprietary stuff as there is sucky FOSS stuff.
OS has that advantage of being easier to improve on.
15:23
And review.
Another person with damn singletons. We need title-based filtering, not just tag-based one.
Any possible security vulnerabilities are right there in front of your eyes.
Unless it's in C.
While with closed-source, you have to pray that they even make it public.
@CatPlusPlus Of course it's C. What part of "security vulnerabilities" did you not understand?
C code is always nigh unreadable.
Better than Perl, but still.
15:27
But you know what's worse? Some will use open-source (as in, you can see the code, not the OSI definition) stuff from MS, but forbid it from anywhere else.
@Fred ugh, can't compile your solution on ideone. Max recursion depth hit.
Did you read the complete answer? :)
Your upvote will have to wait till I get home :P
> Due to the manual backtracking, the default template instantation depth of g++ is not sufficient and has to be increased slightly. I'm sure there's a better solution with "natural" backtracking. Once I find it, I will my update my post.
I just skimmed over it.
Is there no way to increase ideone's recursion depth?
15:32
@FredOverflow Testing TMP programs ?
I don't think so.
0
A: Solve the eight queens problem at compile-time

FredOverflowSo far I have managed to find a single solution which is returned as an int and printed in octal base: 04752613 This means the first queen should be placed at y = 0, the second at y = 4, the third at y = 7 and so on. First, some useful meta-functions: template <typename T> struct retur...

@MartinhoFernandes nice
@FredOverflow Nope.
I like the use of bitfields to store the data.
You can increase time limit when you have an account, but that's it.
15:35
@MartinhoFernandes thanks
My first attempt started something like template <int y0, int y1, int y2, int y3... and I immediately got bored :)
15:49
-5
Q: Why people are so good at language understanding at the same time find it difficult to formally parsing a Sentence.

gstar2002Take the title as an example. Normal people can read the sentence in several seconds. Even trained Linguiscs students will need clearly more time to analysis the grammar structure. So I am thinks that, there maybe no parsing stage in human language understanding. At least not in the same sense Li...

Oh the irony.
@FredOverflow Since you're doing this by columns... You know, the first queen should only be placed between a-5 -- a-8.
or conversely, a-1 -- a-4
There are only 4 unique positions for the first queen.
Should reply to @Fred.
@MartinhoFernandes "The irony and the idiocy". Sounds like a good "made for television" drama! :-)
@Xaade I don't see why?
. . . 1 . . . .
. . . . . . 2 .
. . . . 3 . . .
. 4 . . . . . .
. . . . . 5 . .
6 . . . . . . .
. . 7 . . . . .
. . . . . . . 8
^ @Xaade This is a valid solution.
@StackedCrooked Yes it is, but it's only a transposition and/or rotation of another.
15:57
@StackedCrooked All the positions on one half of the board are essentially the same as those in the other half.
@JerryCoffin And or rotated.
@Xaade I see, you're reducing redundant branches
Except a1 is a black corner, and a8 is a white corner. :P
@StackedCrooked 92 => 12
Is it easy to generate the fundamental 12 solutions?
If so, getting the remaining 80 would be easy.
15:59
@MartinhoFernandes So, this is in respect to positions on a grid, you can double and invert after you find a valid solution to restore to the previous 92.
I don't know of any solution that does less than 8! checks, though.
The problem is that this doesn't reduce all the way to 12, because you can still return a rotated answer at much as 4 times if the 4 edge queens are in a rotation pattern.
@MartinhoFernandes Recursive should eliminate some of those 8! checks. If you can't continue, you won't branch down wrong answers.
But I never dabbled much in it.
honestly, you could start with a 4x4 grid, find unique solutions and build a row and column onto it.
Oh wait @Fred's solution does less than that.
16:03
That should be way less than 8!
Everytime you add a row and column, you only check for one more queen.
Yes, wikipedia says 15,720.
recursively build the correct answers, then add another row column.
And that it can be lowered to 5,508 .
But then you have possibility of moving a queen down a column when adding a row.
@Xaade Don't think so.
@Xaade Exactly.
16:05
Hmm....
This doesn't have optimal structure.
If, you added a row first, allowed queens to shift down, and then added a column. You could recursively build, then remove any that result in problems later on, destroying its branch.
Would that give a big improvement?
It would eliminate mirrored answers.
Let me think some more...
This is just a reduction in the algorithm to find correct sudoku answers.
Well, reduction then expansion.
Hmm, shares similarities.
16:10
I wrote a su-doku solver once
but past a certain point, I had to brute-force it
Instead of insuring a number exists in only one 3x3, you're insuring they don't exist in the same diagonals.
And you only do one number.
@DeadMG I had to write one for my 2nd year Haskell course.
I'd be interested in solutions that involve different races of queens, 8 in total.
So you had to fill the board
uh, there's only one race of queens
Queens of the same race can attack each other.
I mean, sudoku but with queen numbers instead of 3x3 subdivisions
like
1234
3421
2
shit, you can't do 4x4
16:13
it wouldn't be queen numbers
because you can interrupt races
you could have, e.g.
121
343
565
12435
43512
21453 shit, can't be solved
124356
651243
346512 good so far
Cya tomorrow guys!
124356
651243
346512
213465
562134
435621

Interesting, I can't do it without repeating 2 numbers in the center, and 1 number on either side of the center.... It's unsolvable no matter how many numbers you add.
The left to right identity repeats one in the center, the right to left identity repeats 2 in the center, and 1 on either diagonal on the side. No other numbers are repeated.....
Interesting pattern
2
A: Solve the eight queens problem at compile-time

FredOverflowMy meta-program finds all 92 solutions. They are printed as error messages: error: 'solution' is not a member of 'print<15863724> This means the first queen should be placed at y = 1, the second at y = 5, the third at y = 8 and so on. First, some useful meta-functions: template <typ...

@MartinhoFernandes: update, now I have all the solutions :)
16:27
Interesting, error messages allow you to return more than one result.
No one said you couldn't error on compile.
So essentially, you're using the compiler as your program, and error messages as your output.
Meta-programming is programming.
If you want to try it out:
Neat.
Sorry, but can't really upvote or accept before I get home. I don't know my password and don't have a login cookie on the site.
:)
I'm sure I can wait :)
Ok, is recursion really a complicated beast that so many struggle to understand?
I prefer iteration to recursion usually
16:42
@MartinhoFernandes I've struggled with it
but recursion can handle things that iteration can't
like what?
@DeadMG for example?
Everyone I know that programs had little to no trouble understanding it.
@MartinhoFernandes citation needed
16:42
But I find mentions here and there that it's complicated.
@FredO: Tree iteration is a good one
@DeadMG You can always simulate recursion with iteration and a software stack.
I guess I had most difficulty with understanding the complexity theory behind recursive algorithms like quicksort
16:43
it would be "fun" to express a tree iteration iteratively instead of recursively
sure, but that's just simulated recursion, it's not really not iteration
The @CatPlusPlus definition of "fun".
non recursive algo's are easier to understand from a complexity viewpoint, I think
"fun" == painful, I suppose
@TonyTheTiger Ever heard of the Master's Theorem?
@MartinhoFernandes Yes I have
16:45
It makes figuring out the complexity of some recursive algorithms easy.
I enjoy recursion, until something goes wrong...
@MartinhoFernandes yea, if you understand how it works
Of course. I wouldn't expect anyone to try figuring out the complexity of an algorithm without understanding it first ;)
Isn't mutual recursion a tad more powerful than iteration?
Banana-splits!
16:48
I always had trouble understanding the recurrence relation:
a is supposed to be the size of the problem and b the size of the subproblem, but isn't that essentially the same? I have seen algo's where a and b are different numbers, that confused me
Do you know binary search?
Oh, a is the number of subproblems!
n/b is the size of each subproblem
.
Oh wait, you can understand that one. You have trouble when a!=b.
16:51
so what then is meant with the size of each subproblem ?
Lemme see if I can remember one.
@MartinhoFernandes Binary search can easily be implemented with iteration.
@FredOverflow On a tree? :P
there is 2T(n/4) + 1
so the problem is split into 2, and the size of each subproblem is n/4??? huh??
@MartinhoFernandes sure, why not
16:53
That could mean for example, that you break the data in four parts and discard two of those.
You're left with only two subproblems, and each one is a quarter of the original.
what happens to the discarded ones?
They're not relevant to the algorithm.
You could be deciding your next move in a game of... some board game.
so if you had an array of 10 pieces of data, you'd first split it in half, and then split the half in 4 bits, of which you discarded two
hmmm, I guess I'm thinking with array's only too much
16:57
Some moves can be discarded immediately, because you can easily see that they don't lead anywhere good.
And those would be the two quarters discarded.
hmmm
btw, matrix multiplication is a good example for this type of recurrence relation
I don't know efficient matrix multiplication.
Mine is always N^3.
:(
haha, not necessarily worried about it's effiency, just how they got to N^3
In the mathematical discipline of linear algebra, the Strassen algorithm, named after Volker Strassen, is an algorithm used for matrix multiplication. It is faster than the standard matrix multiplication algorithm, but would be slower than the fastest known algorithm for extremely large matrices, and is useful in practice for large matrices. History Volker Strassen published the Strassen algorithm in 1969. Although his algorithm is only slightly faster than the standard algorithm for matrix multiplication, he was the first to point out that the standard approach is not optimal. His ...
Yes, seems like it.
f(n) = 7f(n-1) + l4^n
Except there's no n/b.
yea, I just noticed
hmmm
17:02
But it's a good example of one where (the number of subproblems * the size of each) is not the original size.
yes it is, and that confuses me
Well, you were the one that mentioned that algorithm :)
yes I did, cause I was hoping you could help me understand that recurrence relation
esp the a and n-1 bit
Ok, gimme some time to peruse that wikipedia article.
17:08
Ok, I think I got it.
wow, that was fast
:)
The example in wikipedia is not the best, because it uses 2x2 matrices, and there's no recursion involved.
But let's say we were multiplying 3x3 matrices.
I actually got this algo from "Introduction to Algorithms" by Cormen et. al
@MartinhoFernandes yes
The algorithm starts by defining those 7 matrices.
Each of those is the product of two matrices of size (n-1)x(n-1), in our case, 2x2.
You understand that part, right?
so we do 7 times (n-1)x(n-1) and the result is the 7 matrices
yes
17:11
Ok. The multiplications for each of those seven matrices, we do recursively.
Thus, each of those 7 is one subproblem.
And each has size n-1, right?
17:13
That gives us the 7f(n-1) part.
The remaining (I4^n) comes from the sums and subtractions performed in the end with those 7 matrices.
ok, sure
I was more interested in that first bit, seems it was fairly simple after all
hmmm
And that's how the relation arises.
Thanks for the help :)
17:14
Now, don't ask me why the algorithm does indeed work.
:)
I won't ask you
@MartinhoFernandes The Dwarf Fortress definition of fun.
Hah! I'm familiar with that one.
Goblin Camp is a clone-ish of DF, right?
Maybe just inspired by it, I guess.
More inspired than outright clone.
18
Q: Why should I buy a barrel of blood?

Martinho FernandesI just noticed a dwarven caravan brought about a dozen barrels of blood from various sources, and a few barrels of ichor too. What's the use of this? If there's any, how can I "collect" the blood from my victims?

This will be somewhat implemented in the next version of DF :)
17:19
@MartinhoFernandes Nobody mentioned blood sausages ?!
Is that some real food, or a joke?
One can never be sure.
It's also known as black pudding.
Black pudding, blood pudding or blood sausage is a type of sausage made by cooking blood or dried blood with a filler until it is thick enough to congeal when cooled. The dish exists in various cultures from Asia to Europe. Pig, cattle, sheep, duck and goat blood can be used depending on different countries. In Europe, typical fillers include meat, fat, suet, bread, sweet potato, onion, chestnuts, barley, and oatmeal while in Spain (morcilla) and Asia, potato is often replaced by rice. Regional variants The Americas As German Americans are one of the largest ancestral groups in th...
Oh, so one can use blood as food?
So it goes.
17:22
Now I want to run a fortress feeding my dwarves with nothing but blood!
@MartinhoFernandes we have a variant here, which I think is quite nice
I would have thought a similar Portuguese delicacy would exist.
Oh, we have!
I completely forgot.
It's just that our word for sausage doesn't apply to those.
I think the names are non-obvious most of the time.
17:23
'Black pudding'? Really?
What's the French name?
@MartinhoFernandes boudin
Ours is "verdes". Which is the word for green.
Boudin.
in Dutch it is: Bloedworst
17:25
@TonyTheTiger and bloed is Dutch for blood?
@MartinhoFernandes yep
Man, heating the oven takes forever.
and worst is sausage
Did you light the fire?
@CatPlusPlus lol
@CatPlusPlus what you trying to heat up in the oven?
17:26
I want my pizza dammit.
I thought so
lol
Pizzas come from ovens?
It takes 8 minutes to make itself. But preceded by 30 minutes of damn oven heating up.
I thought they came from motorcycles.
I could order online, but it takes them about 50 minutes to prepare and deliver.
17:27
That implies that it will never heat.
I went to this place in LongBeach (near LA) and it was awesome Pizza: meneds.com
man
it's been months since I've eaten anything but tins and yoghurt
@MartinhoFernandes never heard of DF before... should I invest time in learning it?
And that thing has no thermometer display, only 'at the selected temperature' light.
So I don't even know the progress.
I want an oven with a progress bar!
you could stick a thermometer in?
17:29
@FredOverflow It has a steep learning curve.
But I really like it.
Is DF harder then C++? :)
I don't have any.
Yes.
@FredOverflow Imagine that the compiler erases your source code each time you fail compilation.
It's like writing a machine code in dwarvish.
@sbi this does not apply to you? reddit.com/r/pics/comments/iurf1/…
17:30
That's a start.
@TonyTheTiger Besides, I'm kind of skeptical as to how well home thermometers handle temperatures of >200 degrees. :P
@MartinhoFernandes ghc once had a bug that did exactly that :)
> Bad programmer, I don't wanna see your program again! And I'm gonna make sure I don't, too!
Roguelike compiler.
DF looks like a C64 game. Is it available for C64? :)
I don't think so.
It's fairly recent (last decade), compared to C64.
17:32
It would need a hall of fame: 'code killed by syntax error'.
30 points.
DF wouldn't run on a hundred C64s.
Oh yeah that.
You need a beefy CPU to run it.
I only have 1,8 GHz or something...
not even sure
That should be fine until you start surviving.
evil grin
Is it real time or round based?
Real time.
17:34
Dammit. Cat always beats me.
Until you get about 100 dwarves.
That CPU single or multi core?
Though I don't remember if they did anything to be better at multicores.
I have an 1.8GHz dual core and have decent FPSs with ~80-90 dwarves..
Dwarves are little people, right?
@CatPlusPlus hahah yea
@FredOverflow With beards.
17:35
ok
@MartinhoFernandes Never had a catsplosion, eh?
I increased the look-ahead in ANTLR to 3
@FredOverflow Well they're more the 'Snow-White and the 7 Dwarves' kind here.
@CatPlusPlus Twice.
@FredOverflow and they live underground digging for precious metals
17:35
now it's spewing six trillion million warnings, but no errors yet
Now I kill cats on sight.
Slaves to Armok: God of Blood Chapter II: Dwarf Fortress, also called Slaves to Armok II: Dwarf Fortress, but most commonly known simply as Dwarf Fortress, is a freeware computer game by Bay 12 Games for Microsoft Windows, Linux, and Mac OS X set in a high fantasy universe that combines aspects of roguelike and city-building games and is primarily known for its unique level of complexity and difficulty. The title of the game is inspired by its primary focus on the construction, management, and exploration of dwarven fortresses within the game world. Development started in October , followe...
I only keep males.
@DeadMG Your grammar must really suck if you need a lookahead of 3...
17:36
I think the worst parts of UI are military and labour.
oh freeware, cool
@CatPlusPlus Especially military.
@FredO: It seems to only test the grammar with inputs of the lookahead size
Therapist takes care of labour, but military I could never figure out completely.
When I last played, boozecooking still existed. I checked recently and now cooking food requires a mix of drink and some other food right?
17:37
I didn't play for quite some time.
@LucDanton Yeah.
like I have a catch rule and it complains that catch( matches catch(...) and catch(variable_definition)
But I saw a description of a lobster ice cream on reddit.
Have to go.
bah, the coupling it hurts

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