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5:00 PM
I'm leaving work now. See you later.
 
user1804599
> you guys have coding guidelines? you lucky bastards.
 
user1804599
lol
 
Ell
hmm. Need to get cmake & vs2012 working
 
 
user1804599
LOL
 
5:04 PM
rofl
 
user1804599
Should I use vectorName.push_back(std::move(student)) or vectorName.emplace_back(std::move(student)) when I want to move student into a vector?
 
This is totally going to be my leaving party's official pic
People usually embed a funny pic in the mail announcing when and where the party happens
 
need to write up a full proposal for hash container alterations
 
@Ell in your PATH :p
 
@Aardvark push_back
 
user1804599
5:08 PM
Okay, then I got it right. :)
 
you could also insert :p
 
user1804599
Oh how nice. A downvote because I told OP to not use pointers while OP didn't state he couldn't not use pointers.
 
@Aardvark let me fix that for you
 
All those homework questions suck
I mean if the obvious solution is to not use pointers then the exercise is clearly not a good example of pointer use
It's not that hard to find working instances of well-known solutions
 
@Aardvark Did I get the correct one?
 
user1804599
5:15 PM
@Chimera which one?
 
I mean what the hell is going on with those Animal, Cat and Dog classes
 
@Aardvark the one you got downvoted on.
 
user1804599
XD
 
user1804599
Which one did you think got downvoted? :P
 
Ell
what is the name of the vs2012 compiler?
 
5:17 PM
@Aardvark the python question that was at -1 :-)
 
user1804599
@Chimera you really use pointers in Python. :P
 
@Ell MS C/C++ Compiler version 11
 
user1804599
@Chimera It was this one.
 
@Aardvark derp
 
user1804599
What is an example situation you need shared ownership for, by the way? I never encountered one and I cannot think of anything.
 
Xeo
5:20 PM
@Aardvark Graphical resources are a common situation in games, unless you preload per scene.
 
@Aardvark if two classes love each other very much, they might get married and share ownership of things :p
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes: Given my question earlier today (hey, I'm up to 3 now!) do you think I'd be wasting my time writing up a proposal for iterator_traits to add a compare member that would default to std::less<value_type>, but be defined as the key_compare by [multi_]map, and then have set_intersection, sort, etc., use that comparison by default, instead just std::less<T>?
 
user1804599
@Xeo What about Boost.Flyweight?
 
[Of course anybody else who'd care to comment is welcome to do so as well...]
 
Xeo
@Aardvark That'd be like the preloaded resources, wouldn't it?
@JerryCoffin A proposal for C++11 (that didn't make it) was to enforce SCARY iterators.
 
user1804599
5:23 PM
@Xeo you create for example flyweight<GiantTexture> multiple times with the same data, and it only stores that data once.
 
@Xeo SCARY ?
 
@kbok C/C++ compiler 17, not 11.
 
user1804599
flyweight<std::string> foo{"bar"};
flyweight<std::string> meh{"bar"};
// both will refer to the same std::string object
 
@JerryCoffin Oh yeah. Right
 
Xeo
@kbok Basically, for a map<K, V, Comp, Alloc>, the iterator has no interest in Comp and Alloc
 
5:23 PM
VS2012, VS11, CL17
 
Xeo
And SCARY iterators don't rely on them, so you can have auto it = one_map.begin(); it = other_map.begin();, as long as the maps have the same key-value-pair.
 
@Xeo But what would it be used for ? You can't compare iterators from two different collections can you ?
 
Xeo
@kbok Basically, it's all about genericity (although that's kinda moot with auto, but hey)
 
Why does boost::iterator_facade sometimes make use of a proxy for the result of operator[]?
 
@Xeo Oh yeah, without auto it's useful indeed
 
user1804599
5:27 PM
boost::flyweight<T> is like std::shared_ptr<const T> on steroids.
 
@Xeo In this case, what I'm interested in is getting (for one example) meaningful results with std::set_intersection when applied to std::maps. Right now, set_intersection says there's no intersection if the mapped values are different, even though the keys are equal.
 
Xeo
@JerryCoffin any_iterator? :s No idea currently, sorry.
 
My idea, however was to keep the comparison function buried in iterator_traits, so the iterators themselves could be SCARY, but you could still get at the comparison when/if you wanted it.
 
> C++ syntax is very hard.Microsoft must implement new native language such as C# syntax.
Apparently the English syntax is very hard too
 
Xeo
@JerryCoffin That still wouldn't work, if the iterators don't know shit about the comparator / allocator.
 
5:29 PM
@kbok Much harder than any programming language, AAMOF.
 
Oh, there's a pretty clear explanation in the docs for Boost.Iterator.
 
Ell
hmm. to ogre or not to ogre
 
@Xeo Why couldn't it? Just to be clear here, I'm thinking in terms of a specialization of std::iterator_traits<std::map::iterator> that would set up the traits' comparison function to the parent map's comparison function (though I'll admit, I'm a bit uncertain how to handle a situation where you have two maps with the same value_type, but different comparators).
 
Xeo
@JerryCoffin That won't work. Non-deduced context, you're not going to get the comparator
(And just in case, with SCARY iterators there's no class iterator inside the container.)
 
@Xeo Why not have an otherwise empty iterator that inherits from a base?
Would be assignable from any other iterator, and still its own type.
 
Xeo
5:40 PM
Hm
 
const int i = 0; [i]() mutable { return i++; } doesn't work, how weird. I think my lazy-eval stuff doesn't do that.
I suppose I'd really want something in the spirit of [mutable i].
 
Xeo
@LucDanton That should work, shouldn't it?
 
@Xeo Well I didn't check the capture rules and I'm not going to, but if it's specified that the conceptual member of the closure object has the same type as the captured entity (object?), then it works as specified.
struct foo { const int i; ret operator()() { /* can't modify i */ } };
I'm so elated that I fixed my unit tests that I'm too lazy to add more. If those would break, more things to fix!
 
Xeo
> The type of such a data member is the type of the corresponding captured entity if the entity is not a reference to an object
:|
Well, capture-initializer will fix it!
(I hope)
 
I'm kinda on the fence here -- having object literals of a kind is going to be weird.
 
5:46 PM
if I have an object that represents disjoint ranges of values, what do I call it? (sample: 3-7, 15, and 22-124)
 
Xeo
disjoint_ranges?
 
Ell
disjoint_range
 
Boost.Range calls that a joined range. Assuming it makes some sense as a single range.
Otherwise I suppose it's a range of (unrelated?) ranges.
 
@Ell @Xeo good idea
 
Xeo
LWS still dead. Maaan.
I just had a great idea for zip_with :|
 
5:52 PM
hmm
discussion on isocpp about whether or not default-initializing POD variables would negatively impact performance.
 
Xeo
They're always default-initialized, aren't they? Except that default-initialization means no initialization for them, IIRC.
 
right
I meant, scrapping default-initialization and always value-initializing.
 
Ell
windows is a pain to develop on :'(
 
It should be called uninitializing when you don't set the values to 0
 
lol
 
5:54 PM
Default/value is confusing
 
Xeo
@DeadMG Yeah, I saw it.
 
I know
 
Xeo
I don't see why you'd need that, especially with C++11 {}
 
hmm
it's not so much about needing that, it's more about simplifying the Standard, removing a cause of UB, and improving consistency.
 
Xeo
And "breaking" a shitton of code?
Whilst introducing a new keyword for not initializing stuff?
 
5:56 PM
oh, I don't agree with that
 
Xeo
I don't think that's ever gonna happen.
You can't just change the default behaviour of stuff. Same with that rediculous "safer switch" proposal.
 
I don't really see that it's going to break anything. I think that compiler optimizations will be fine in this circumstance. But if they're not, then obviously the idea should be scrapped. no_init is obviously a bad idea.
@Xeo Eh. It can't break the correctness of anyone's program, it's only a hypothetical performance penalty, and it might well aid the correctness of people's programs.
 
Xeo
@DeadMG I don't see the "hypothetical", atleast not in the majority of cases.
 
 
@Xeo Well, for one, I expect that for the vast majority of variables, the compiler can prove it doesn't need to perform additional work.
 
6:00 PM
There's something wrong with the new Shitty Post Detector (tm)
 
and for two, the price of zero-initializing a variable, for the vast, vast, vast, vast majority of variables, is extremely slim.
 
45
Q: Review-beta: Obviously good answer in low-quality

DustinToday I came across an OBVIOUSLY good answer in /review. It had 7 upvotes, contained lists, paragraphs of explanation, and well-applied sample code. It was also moderately long. How does a question like this get flagged for review? I don't really know how the algorithm works. If this is low-qua...

 
@DeadMG It could well break the correctness of real-time programs.
 
Do you think I should file a bug ?
 
@DeadMG What about memory allocation? I think a fair share of programs prefer to use new char[blah] than static_cast<char*>(operator new(blah)).
 
6:01 PM
@LucDanton Real systems like Windows already zero-initialize such memory.
probably not every request, but a lot of them
Mysticial had a big problem with it always zero-filling his pages
 
@Mysticial Ah, OK :)
 
Of course, Boost.Test doesn't have test assertions for ranges, but there's one for iterators. Who would use Boost.Range and Boost.Test in tandem amirite?
 
@DeadMG If you honestly want it, why no use a (truly trivial) template to supply it: template <class T> struct init { T t; init(T t=T()) : t(t) {}; typedef init<int> Int; typedef init<long> Long; (etc.) and just define your variable as Int x; instead of int x;?
 
How does x + x work?
 
There's a little more to it than that, but we're talking about ~10 lines of code to handle all the types you care about.
@LucDanton A part I left out: operator T() { return t; } (and yes, in a case like this, supporting implicit conversion is quite harmless).
 
6:08 PM
@JerryCoffin Is what I've been doing (approximately). But having an implicit conversion can produce different results to the real thing when dealing with overload resolution, for example. I think there's a reasonable case to suggest that int i; not being initialized is not exactly a positive aspect of the language. I think that if metrics were to fail to show any significant performance detriment, it should be removed.
 
Xeo
@JerryCoffin template<class T> struct default_init{ default_init() : value{}{} T value; };
Okay, the {}{} feels awkward.
 
struct you_suck { you_suck() = default; T value {}; };
Meh, still needs an additional constructor.
 
plus, I think it's quite a bit more complex than you suggest- for example, type traits would report incorrectly.
 
Xeo
@LucDanton Hm, does it really? I didn't look too much into non-static data-member initializers
 
@DeadMG I can see adding, but if it were added, I think it should still be under programmer control -- e.g., a #_Pragma init so it would be easy to turn it on with minimal modification to existing code, but still make it easy to leave existing code alone.
 
6:11 PM
I wouldn't disagree with that
 
Xeo
@JerryCoffin #pragma or _Pragma, IIRC
 
@Xeo Jerry's version is convertible from T.
 
Xeo
@LucDanton default_init<int> i{42};!!
 
Not an aggregate.
 
Xeo
Hmpf
 
6:12 PM
@Xeo Okay. I'm less concerned about spelling than the basic idea of how to implement it.
 
doesn't that mean that std::array<init<int>> is also not an aggregate?
and therefore cannot be initialized with a list or uniform initialization?
 
Xeo
Aggregateness has nothing to do with member types, IIRC
 
Ya, aggregate is not recursive.
 
Xeo
Else it wouldn't be useful for much.
 
0
Q: Way to check complexity of algorithm

JoshuaI recently had a friend challange me to solve a question that he saw on a job interview: "N elements are split into k arrays. Find an algorithm that returns whether any of the elements are identical in (k logN) time." Please do not provide an answer, I'd really like to solve it myself. The que...

^^ Is that the halting problem?
 
6:18 PM
"How to solve the halting problem in Java"
 
Okay... I thought I just killed the room for a sec
 
Programmatically finding the complexity of an algorithm either sounds like an interesting research area or a misunderstanding of complexity theory. I'm not familiar with regexpal but I don't see what it has to do with complexity tbh.
@Mysticial No.
 
4
Q: Why can the condition of a for-loop be left empty?

MarlonWhy is the condition in a for-loop allowed to be left empty? For example for (;;) compiles fine. Why does this empty expression evaluate to true but the following if () {} while () {} will both fail? I want to know if/why the for-loop is an exception to this case.

Silly question
Might as well be asking why octals are supported but not binary
 
@LucDanton Hmm... The reason why I thought it might be the halting problem is that if you rephrase the question as: "Is the complexity of this program equal to X?"
Which might be very well undecidable.
 
It's probably undecidable to find worst case complexity for arbitrary algorithm
 
6:21 PM
@Mysticial It's acceptable that such a program is incapable of giving a result for any program as long as it can give results for some programs.
Also see: optimizers.
 
Personally, I think it's mostly "much adieu about nothing" -- I can hardly remember having a problem from an uninitialized local. Doing some quick searching on SO, I'm only seeing a couple of questions that indicate others are running into problems from it either (and most of them are on the order of "how do I check that all my variables are initialized?", not "I'm getting this symptom", and somebody answering "you've clearly left some locals uninitialized.")
 
If you don't understand uninitialized values then you probably don't understand C++
It's practically the first case of UB you'll learn about
 
lol, cHao just called Ben Voigt an idiot. :)
 
@Mysticial You just gotta love it. Given a chance, you suppose he'd probably tell Herb or Bjarne they just don't understand C++ at all?
 
@Mysticial: It's not completely bullshit, but the difference isn't anywhere near as big as some idiot's benchmarks would have you believe. Like i said, about 10% on some occasions. Others, i've seen iostreams actually be faster when someone bothered to try for performance. — cHao 3 mins ago
Aww... that trillion digits of e question didn't make the newsletter today... :(
 
6:32 PM
@Mysticial I know a good optimization for calculating the most digits. Count the binary digits rather than decimal.
 
> I was using ostringstream, but my company doesnt want me to use any streams because it has horrid runtimes.
So, there's a runtime for streams now?
 
He probably meant run times
 
The pipe was too thin
 
Only so much water can go through that
 
6:34 PM
1
Q: What will a+++b compile to and how does the compiler decide?

musicmatzeThis is not a question related to any stuff I'm currently doing but anyway interesting for me. What will int a = 5; int b = 6; int c = a+++b; compile to? c = (a++)+b; or c = a+(++b); (answer to this part of the question see below) and, much more interesting: How does the compiler deci...

 
Does anyone know what makes select (on a TCP socket) return?
 
^^ Anyone know the dupe for that?
I've seen it before, just can't find it.
 
@Mysticial can't find that
 
Here it is
7
Q: 3 '+' symbols between two variables in C

Angus#include <stdio.h> int main() { int a=8,b=9,c; c=a+++b; printf("%d%d%d\n",a,b,c); return 0; } The program above outputs a=9 b=9 and c=17. In a+++b why is the compiler takes a++ and then adds with b. Why is it not taking a + and ++b? Is there a specific name for this a...

 
nice find
 
6:38 PM
so a++++b is invalid ?
 
@Mysticial you're smart, do you know the answer to "what makes select return" besides a timeout?
@kbok yes
 
@SethCarnegie select return? I've some C sockets before, but I've never seen select.
 
@SethCarnegie @Mysticial doesn't know C stuff
 
@kbok I bet he knows more than he lets on
 
@SethCarnegie success
select returns on success
 
6:40 PM
Define success
 
data is available
 
On how many sockets
 
The return value is the number of sockets watched that contains available data
 
What if you don't use a timeout, does it wait for all of them to be available?
 
For any of them yeah
 
6:42 PM
All of them for any of them? What does that mean?
 
select timeout is upper bound
If you use 0 timeout, it will never wait
There's little point using select if you want indefinite blocking
 
> If timeout is NULL (no timeout), select() can block indefinitely.
 
Ok, so how do you wait for any socket to be ready without looping constantly and checking each one?
 
Sep 7 at 16:03, by Fanael
TIL Mysticial doesn't know C.
 
Or right, pointers
 
6:44 PM
@SethCarnegie select returns as soon as any socket is available for reading
 
Sep 7 at 16:11, by R. Martinho Fernandes
What, now @Mysticial doesn't know x86 assembly?
2
 
@Mysticial hahaha
 
Once select returns, you go search for the socket(s) that you can read
 
@CatPlusPlus if select returns when any are ready, why is there little point in letting it block indefinitely?
 
You don't have to search anything, it modifies the socket sets to only contain ready sockets
 
6:46 PM
Yes, I know
 
Oh yeah right
 
@SethCarnegie I was thinking about something else, nevermind
 
Ok that settles it then, thanks kbok
 
np :)
going home now
see ya
 
Is there any problem using select for thousands of sockets?
 
6:49 PM
What are you writing?
 
@SethCarnegie Oh and you missed this one. :)
Nov 1 at 8:22, by Zoidberg'--
user image
2
 
The irony is the charts
 
charts?
 
@Mysticial 10000k? Woa.
 
off the charts I meant, I accidentally that sentence
 
6:50 PM
ahaha
 
@CatPlusPlus I'm writing a server that maintains a constantly-open TCP connection with every computer the client is running on
 
How can I force using a local library over the system library in linux? I linked my executable by explicitly to a .so in my project/lib directory (../lib/libluajit.so) I set LD_LIBRARY_PATH to my project/lib directory and exported it, then ran my executable. Somehow it's still picking up the system libluajit-5.1.so.2 (confirmed by both gdb and ldd) How is that even possible?
 
I thought that it would be bad to have a separate thread for every client
 
Yes, it's bad.
Don't play with select directly, just use libev or something like that.
Or asio or whatever the equivalent for the language you're using
 
@CatPlusPlus is that more scalable?
 
6:52 PM
kpoll/epoll is usually better than select, and you're going to be writing event loops for this anyway, so get the boilerplate out
(IOCP on Windows)
 
That's annoying
chrome autocompletes "iocp" to that, when I meant to search
 
I/O completion ports
 
The server will run on Linux only so IOCP isn't for me, I guess I'll look at epoll/kpoll or libev
 
8
Q: Can we raise the reputation required to chat, maybe on a per-room basis?

DeadMGAnother day in chat, another day of low rep people endlessly asking questions there, dumping their code, and generally behaving as if we're stackoverflow.com instead of chat.stackoverflow.com. Can we raise the barrier here a bit? It might stem the tides. Edit: Per-room rep control would be fine-...

 
Won't be implemented.
 
6:59 PM
then they can suffer the endless screenshot dumping
 
They'll just remove it.
 
user1804599
Then file a censorship bug report.
 
I don't think it's that much of a problem.
 
I shouldn't get this irked when people post unanswerable questions and then get frustrated because people "randomly" downvote them.
4 edits later his code still doesn't give the error he claims it does.
 
@CatPlusPlus Probably.
 
7:06 PM
@SethCarnegie But the real question: which is more annoying: Chrome auto-completing to that, or the simple fact that it exists at all?
 
@SethCarnegie yeah, I dislike chrome's autocomplete, I'd rather it waited for a tab or something
@JerryCoffin I thought chrome only auto-completes sites you've been to.
 
If you type single word, it tries to find domains first.
If you want to search you have to use search prefix
-1 for Every time somebody dumps his question in the room, I'm going to dump a screenshot here. See how much you like it. While this is a nice request and I approve as I said in my answer, part of your responsibility as a chat room owner is to keep the room on topic. Abusing MSO just to try and coerce the devs into building a feature for you is counterproductive and unlikely to work. — The Unhandled Exception 7 mins ago
 
@JerryCoffin Staffed by volunteers, the IOCP food shelf distributed 714,233 pounds of food in 2011-12 to 3,903 individuals. Seems like an organization that does some good in the world.
 
Have they ever actually implemented a feature requested for the chat?
 
I think comments oneboxing, and https oneboxing.
 
7:10 PM
hmmm
 
Amazing.
 
but I've been here for two years now and that's all I can name.
 
not like they are major things
 
even the highly upvoted feature requests for chat are utterly ignored, all the time.
it's very neglected
 
But we can change topics guys, this is the most important thing
What more do you want
 
7:11 PM
yes, they're not really advancing their chat much, despite the fact it's actually fairly popular
 
@MooingDuck Could be -- I'm not sure. I don't recall it doing anything weird to me, but I'm probably a pretty poor tester in that respect (I don't really do a whole lot of browsing, per se).
 
whatever...
 
STACKOVERFLOW NEEDS WRITE LOCKS
 
@Eloff Probably -- but if that particular organization didn't exist, I suspect the same people would probably donate somewhere else that might be less annoying.
 
@MooingDuck where? post editing? I think it's charming
 
7:13 PM
@TonyTheLion From their perspective, a primary question is probably whether anybody else is sufficiently competitive that they need to improve to remain popular.
 
I think they do some edit locking now
It used to be more funny when two people edited at once
 
@sehe On a new question, I saw three answers. I edited two of them twice and the third once, and all five edits were immediately overwritten.
 
In that it makes you realize you are doing joint efforts.
 
@JerryCoffin well, it's up to us then to invent a competitor so they stop slacking!
 
@MooingDuck Well. Sounds to me like you just might have been a bit impatient?
 
7:15 PM
@sehe I saw a problem, I fixed the problem. There was absolutely no indication whatsoever that anyone else was working on the problem.
 
@TonyTheLion I wonder if their usage agreement (somewhere in the fine print) prohibits using their chat to collaborate on the design of a competitor intended to put them out of business... :-) (I'll bet Microsoft's does...)
 
lol
I don't want to put them out of business at all, I just want to pressure them into giving us the features that have been requested time and time again.
was a typo
 
Hmm... solar eclipse starting in about an hour. I don't think I can get to Australia in that time... :(
 
@TonyTheLion I don't want to put them out of business either -- but I can see how they might think of it that way.
 
right
> I like offending people, because I think people who get offended should be offended.
 
7:20 PM
@Mysticial What? Did you lose your SR-71 again? What is the world coming to?
 
Erm, @Zoidberg's theory
who hasn't been online since 7days
lol
 
Damn... One of these days, I need to see one of these eclipses...
 
@TonyTheLion ...and I miss him deeply. Waitasec -- no I don't!
 
{| |} The Lockheed SR-71 "Blackbird" was an advanced, long-range, Mach 3+ strategic reconnaissance aircraft. It was developed as a black project from the Lockheed A-12 reconnaissance aircraft in the 1960s by the Lockheed Skunk Works. Clarence "Kelly" Johnson was responsible for many of the design's innovative concepts. During reconnaissance missions the SR-71 operated at high speeds and altitudes to allow it to outrace threats. If a surface-to-air missile launch was detected, the standard evasive action was simply to accelerate and outrun the missile. The SR-71 served with the U...
@JerryCoffin erm. I didn't think you'd be one of the people to miss him.
 
I missed the one in May because I was in Europe at the time.
 
7:22 PM
@MooingDuck You saw a problem in three answers to the same question?!
 
@TonyTheLion Well, my aim is pretty good, but there are limits when I don't know where people are.
 
user142019
hi
 
ohai
talk about the Devil
I awoke him
 
user142019
It’s been a long time.
 
7:22 PM
yes, where the fuck have you been?
 
@Zoidberg'-- It has. Did you rewrite your homework?
 
user142019
I had to do very much homework. :<
 
I'm charging you with wilfull neglect of the Lounge :P
 
user142019
And family things.
 
@sehe One typo, one that I thought needed another sentence, I added a clarifying comment to some code... just random things. Only one error per se.
 
7:23 PM
@Zoidberg'-- Hopefully merry things
 
user142019
@sehe hengstendingen!
 
wtf is that?
 
user142019
But yeah, my uncle and aunt were married for 25 years.
 
congrats to them :)
 
user142019
Or however those are called in English.
 
user142019
7:24 PM
Thanks. :P
 
@MooingDuck Right. Likely less random than the edits that the respective authors had planned. It would be rather coincidental if they were other third-party edits and they failed to spot said typo's, I guess?
 
user142019
@JerryCoffin I didn’t miss you either. :)
 
@Zoidberg'-- LOL. Please aim to miss
Or, aim to please the miss
 
user142019
My ØMQ router and dealers are not working. ;_;
 
user142019
ØMQ y u no easy to debug.
 
7:27 PM
because it hates you
why else?
 
To annoy him
 
Ell
ØMQ y u no easy to type on UK keyboard
 
to make his day, personally, more diffuclt
 
user142019
I had a test last week and there was this question:
 
user142019
7:29 PM
var sum = 0;
for (var i = 1; 1 < 3; ++i) {
    for (var j = i; j < 3; ++j) {
        sum += (i + j);
    }
}
 
user142019
What is the value of sum after the loop has ended?
A: 9; B: 12; C: 15; D: 18
 
user142019
Stupid person who created that test forgot to add the correct answer to the list of answers.
 
@Zoidberg'-- Hmm...looking around, I don't seem to be bleeding, so I guess I won't worry about that. :-)
 
Strange titles are rarely added to Wikipedia under the guise of real encyclopedia articles. Occasionally Wikipedians lose their minds (especially on April Fool's Day) and if their posts are good they wind up here. Silliness can come in the form of creativity, insanity, or just boredom. As with other "", often it seems a shame to delete the best of this humor which has been submitted to us under the . Unlike , however, some of these article names were made for good reasons, on real topics that the writers thought might be useful for Wikipedia. That doesn't always mean that – out of contex...
 
@Zoidberg'-- looks like A to me, I'd have to run it to be sure
 
user142019
7:33 PM
@MooingDuck it is an infinite loop.
 
@Zoidberg'-- wait, is that supposed to be i < 3?
 
I wondered when someone would notice the '1<3'
 
user142019
@MooingDuck I guess so.
 
user142019
@MartinJames I did immediately.
 
Maybe it would eventually except with an overflow, with some compiler debug options?
 
user142019
7:36 PM
It is JavaScript, so it is a floating point number. I don’t know the exact overflowing rules.
 
@MartinJames I was just wondering what language that was and how it handles overflows :D
 
OH, Javascript - OK, all bets are off.
 
iFatigue - The endless cycle of Apple products that are released at the pace of a rampaging water buffalo and have little to no practical advancements over the previous versions.
lol
Interview (text) with Barbara Moo
 
They're practical advancements to the manufacturers of headphones, chargers etc. who have to continually provide profitable new plugins to connect to the new socketing.
 
7:45 PM
 
user142019
Haha
 
@TonyTheLion Oooh.
 

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