« first day (750 days earlier)      last day (4191 days later) » 

2:00 PM
lol
 
@DeadMG which programming language do you like?
 
user142019
@Falconapollo C++.
 
inb4 Wide
 
IcedCoffeeScript <---- Dafuq?? Sounds like a drink more than anything else
 
C++ FTW
 
2:00 PM
@TonyTheLion No shit.
 
Man, I got lost in the depths of computer architecture.
 
user142019
@TonyTheLion It’s CoffeeScript without the callback hell.
 
@Zoidberg'-- so many, is it possible to learn them all?
 
user142019
@Falconapollo I don’t see why not.
 
@Falconapollo For some
 
2:00 PM
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yes shit.
 
user142019
I’m not an expert in any of those except for IcedCoffeeScript.
 
user142019
And I’m very proficient in Python and Ruby.
 
user142019
And somewhat in Haskell, and I’m a total noob in Erlang and Elixir.
 
lol, Ruby.
 
user142019
Ruby is the only language I’d want to write web apps in.
 
2:02 PM
@R.MartinhoFernandes then, how about Perl?
 
user142019
Perl is terribru.
 
I've only written one or two scripts in Ruby IIRC
 
@Zoidberg'-- how about nodejs
 
Why would you ask me about Perl?
 
so I'm not very familiar
 
user142019
2:02 PM
@vulcanraven Node.js is not a language, you fool.
 
oh javascript i mean
 
user142019
I prefer IcedCoffeeScript over JavaScript.
 
I always read Node.js as Node dot jokes
 
user142019
@TonyTheLion I always read it as nootjes.
 
@TonyTheLion, duh!
 
2:03 PM
@Zoidberg'-- lol
@vulcanraven oh
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes because Perl is more popular then Ruby in China
 
@Falconapollo in China - 'nuff said.
 
user142019
I also like Zoidlang.
 
user142019
Which is not implemented yet.
 
2:04 PM
Ruby.self.destroy!
 
user142019
And probably never will be.
 
@Falconapollo I don't like badly-typed languages in general.
 
I like Lion++.
 
Which is better, Ruby or Perl?
 
Ell
badly-typed :L
 
user142019
2:05 PM
@Falconapollo depends on what you want to do.
 
@Ell There's also "barely-typed", like PHP.
 
Ell
My favourite programming language is XML
 
Perl is a parenthesis war
 
I would vote for Ruby .. but its still evolving
 
user142019
@R.MartinhoFernandes hehe bash.
 
user142019
2:05 PM
Bash has no type system.
 
@Ell it's not a programming language
 
@TonyTheLion You mean Lisp?
 
it's a meta description language
 
Ell
I was only joking :)
 
PowerShell
 
2:06 PM
@R.MartinhoFernandes oh, man, I always get them confused.
Lisp != Perl
 
user142019
Python is executable pseudocode. Haskell is executable mathematical notation. Lisp is executable punctuation. Perl is executable line noise. PHP is executable dog shit.
 
@vulcanraven hmmm PS reminds me of PHP with it's $var thingies
 
@vulcanraven yes, PwerShell is also good, but it depend on Windows
 
It is really ^ beyond my expectations. And my expectations were pretty ... low.
 
Ell
2:07 PM
ruby is executable prose!
 
@Zoidberg'-- wonderful summary
 
@TonyTheLion, thats correct, but you can call Net-Object followed by Microsoft.CSharp @"using System.Drawing.. // Csharp code goes here"
:)
 
@sehe I'm going to watch that for giggles.
 
@Falconapollo, thats so unfortunate.. the language must be pervasive like CPP, JS, PHP and even C#..
 
hi, guys. what OS are you using? Windows, Ubuntu or other?
 
2:10 PM
Windows
 
WindOS
:)
 
@TonyTheLion it's long. I should have kept a list of WTF quotes. Like... they have HashDoS because their hash function is so... braindead (hash += 33*nextchar). Also, "You can check the type of your parameter. You can raise an exception when it doesn't match" - no shit. I mean, assembly fits the same description IIRC.
 
user142019
@sehe that guy must be shot.
 
Linux
 
I hate Windows, though i'm using it. Windows 8 is dog shit
 
user142019
2:10 PM
@Falconapollo OS X, of course.
 
@sehe which flavor?
 
@Zoidberg'-- I don't concur. We need to keep him as a reference example.
@vulcanraven All. Debian, preffably
 
@sehe WTF!
 
Fedora and MintOS.. don't know why I don't really care about Ubuntu..
 
user142019
Ubuntu is terrible.
 
2:11 PM
but many people do care.. Debian is lovely though :)
 
@TonyTheLion lots more, but I'm good at forgetting those. Also, I was being distracted by 2 kids and the chat ;)
 
user142019
Gentoo and Fedora ftw.
 
@Zoidberg'-- Getting there, IMO.
 
@Zoidberg'-- why? it's free
 
user142019
@Falconapollo PHP is also free, your argument is terrible.
 
2:12 PM
@vulcanraven I tried Mint 12 for ruffly a year now. Will be going to Xfce+Debian next change
 
I can also get shit for free
 
@Falconapollo ?!
 
it comes right out my arse, for free!
 
@Zoidberg'-- +1
 
WindOS-Eight and Fedora !
 
user142019
2:12 PM
All software is free for me.
 
xubuntu has been nice to me so far
 
user142019
Real people use LFS.
 
Win8 was also free for me :)
 
He wanted more dynamic web pages, so he invented PHP. Way to go. :P
 
user142019
@TonyTheLion He could have used Perl.
 
2:13 PM
lol
 
Windows 8 is going to be the best Apple ad ever.
 
user142019
@TonyTheLion The fucking idiot didn’t realize you don’t need CGI to write web apps in Perl.
 
@sehe, Mint's UI is soothing.. its a colorful world..
 
^ I'm not so sure yet /cc @Zoidberg'--
 
@Zoidberg'-- how can you do that?
 
user142019
2:14 PM
@Falconapollo The Pirate Bay
 
(or colourful for that matter)
 
pirate != crack
 
damn look at all those PHP "programmers"
 
@Zoidberg'--, ThePirateBay FTW!
 
@vulcanraven you crack it?
 
2:15 PM
@sehe, yeah who cares about the UI. Some people just need to get things done.. thats why the computer was invented
 
@vulcanraven Yeah, and it suxxors. It's significantly slow on my nvidia. And it frequently garbles displays on session switching. I've gotten used to that.
 
user142019
I care about the UI.
 
@Falconapollo, no-no I don't.. i meant I dont have to :)
 
user142019
It must be usable and work well.
 
user142019
UIs that get in my way are terrible.
 
2:16 PM
@vulcanraven pirating software is not cool!
 
user142019
@vulcanraven I want to get things done, indeed. So I need a UI that’s gives me the opportunity to do so.
 
@vulcanraven Precisely. But I don't like how Mint is slow. I haven't quite figured out how/why. It just is. So, I'm going back/down to debian
 
@vulcanraven i'm confused. how?
 
@bamboon, yeah man thats true.. but its just for testing purpose..
 
user142019
2:16 PM
I will never buy anything from Microsoft since Microsoft supports DRM.
 
2 mins ago, by sehe
pirate != crack
 
@bamboon, I tried Win8, will buy a new laptop with preinstalled 8 :)
@Falconapollo, people out there do it for me..
just saying ..
 
user142019
@sehe maybe not, it needs to be terribler than Vista for that.
 
He thought a little bit...
 
@Zoidberg'-- lol, and Apple doesn't?
 
2:17 PM
meh I wish he'd thought more than just a little bit.
 
@sehe yes.
 
user142019
@R.MartinhoFernandes not that I’m aware of.
 
user142019
iTunes Store music is DRM-free.
 
@sehe you are right
 
2:19 PM
@Zoidberg'-- Uh.. Mac Store, anything iPhone/iPod?
 
i think pirate only exists in China. it seems i'm wrong.
 
@Zoidberg'-- ow. that's cute.
 
user142019
@Falconapollo wat.
 
user142019
That makes no sense.
 
@Falconapollo considerably
 
2:20 PM
@Zoidberg'--, thats right ..the UI is for usability and easy of access but beyond that, its waste of time... (I mean its the designers' job to think it throughly)
 
user142019
I always pirate music, movies and software.
 
@Zoidberg'-- you are in French?
 
@sehe What's cute? The blindfold?
 
user142019
@Falconapollo I see that as an insult.
 
user142019
I’m Dutch.
 
2:20 PM
@R.MartinhoFernandes precisely. Kids can be cute because they have the strangest world views. That way
@Zoidberg'-- He said "in French"
 
user142019
@sehe He meant “in France”.
 
@sehe, I guess Linus in some talk on youtube slapped middle-finger nvidia for the graphic-card driver issues and inconsistencies..
 
@Zoidberg'-- yeah.
 
not sure. He probably meant "French".
@vulcanraven Well, no need to guess, he did. But ubuntu hasn't got those issues. Of course, Ubuntu has it's own crap. Soooo Xubuntu or Debian+Xfce to the rescue
 
@sehe its on nvidia.. linux is awesome :)
 
2:22 PM
@sehe no. it's my fault to spell "France" as "French". forgive me, please
 
user142019
@vulcanraven he did.
 
user142019
And NVIDEA indeed sucks donkey cock.
 
user142019
ATI FTW.
 
meta API?? WTF
 
@Zoidberg'-- yes man.. if I could, I would post the link here
 
2:23 PM
Is there such thing as an unclose vote?
 
@Falconapollo I use both.
 
@Zoidberg'-- NIVEA?
 
user142019
 
@Collin Yeah. The mythical reopen vote
 
@sehe, thats one of the charms of using Ubuntu..
 
user142019
2:24 PM
@sehe ooit opgevallen dat Torvalds op Mr. Visser lijkt?
 
1724
Q: The Definitive C++ Book Guide and List

grepsedawkThis question attempts to collect the few pearls among the dozens of bad C++ books that are released every year. Unlike many other programming languages, which are often picked up on the go from tutorials found on the Internet, few are able to quickly pick up C++ without studying a good C++ book...

has gotten a couple of close votes (again)
 
@Zoidberg'-- In die foto, yes
 
@Collin it's a good summary
 
"Any idiot out there can write impressive websites"
lol
He wrote PHP for idiots, it's clearly visible! Hah
 
@Collin Just all upvote this comment:
Then, perhaps flag for mod attention if it (nearly) gets closed
To the misguided individuals who keep closing this question randomly: Please leave this question open. It has been discussed on meta multiple times and the verdict was that, despite this question not fully adhering to current moderation guidelines, it does more good than harm. Also keep in mind that there are — literally!thousands of links to this question all across the Internet. — sbi Aug 21 at 12:55
 
2:26 PM
@sehe Did that a long time ago :-P
 
@Collin So did many others. But not quite enough :)
 
@Zoidberg'-- Meh, they're both a bunch of assholes.
 
user142019
I have an Intel GPU. XD
 
@sehe I remember I was configuring mysql for Ruby on rails on a remote server for a clien, and the server had older version of mysql installed and few RIAs consuming it.. that was the day I been through lot of crap.. it took me 4-5 hours just to setup MYSQL and make all the apps up and running.. And I think I am good with Ubuntu! You can never master that sucker.. (ofcourse unless you are Linus) :P
 
user142019
I don’t care about the GPU; as long as I can play Minecraft it’s fine.
 
user142019
2:27 PM
PostgreSQL > MySQL.
 
user142019
MySQL is terrible.
 
@Zoidberg'-- My GPU has to be fast enough for Solitaire.
 
user142019
Piece of Oracle shit.
 
Speaking of Linus, he's giving KDE another chance.
 
@TonyTheLion Yeah, that was a good one. And teh whole subsequent rant "people don't care about all the crap behind the scenes" (literal words). "They just want their shopping cart to work and be safe.". Proceeds to describe crappy hash function - which is open to DoS because they 'optimized it' (meaning: they manually unrolled it in the hopes that better assembly gets generated)
 
2:29 PM
@sehe the fuckin hash is ridiculous.
 
@vulcanraven Little to do with Ubuntu. It has to do with Linux. Or rather, not preparing your projects properly for deployment.
 
speed down PHP <--- LOL
 
user142019
The only thing PHP is good at is telling which people you can better avoid.
 
@vulcanraven I mean, I'd give a standard LAMP instance a whirl, rsync my site in there, copy the site config and - job done
 
@TonyTheLion Doesn't Java use practically the same hash function for strings?
 
2:29 PM
hash function fail..
@FredOverflow I know nothing about Java
 
Linux sucks. I never recommended Linux to anyone that asked me about it, because I knew I'd become their helpdesk for life.
 
@FredOverflow Nope. It uses good magical numbers and prime factors
 
user142019
@sehe LNMP. Linux Nginx MongoDB Python.
 
I have watched so many videos on Channel 9 yesterday ..all day long... that I am convinced that Cpp11 with VS2012 is worth giving a shot :)
 
Oh right, it uses 31 instead of 33.
 
user142019
2:30 PM
Apache is terrible.
 
@FredOverflow lolwut.
 
@FredOverflow I don't know the actual numbers by heart.
 
user142019
Any production web server that cannot handle C10K is not worth its existence.
 
It's basically hash = 0; for (char c : s) hash = hash * 31 + c.
 
@Zoidberg'-- inb4 "nginx is webscale" lol
 
user142019
2:31 PM
Who cares about webscale.
 
WTF stupid solution have they implemented to fix the HashDoS
 
@sehe, yeah the clean installation is a piece of cake, but when it comes to upgrading the instance in use, it makes lot of mess.. dependencies issues mostly
 
user142019
Nginx handels C10K because it’s not written by idiots who have no idea what they’re doing.
 
@FredOverflow This seems to say it is slightly more involved: stackoverflow.com/questions/785091/…
 
Someone cares enough about your site to take it down?
 
2:32 PM
@TonyTheLion Well, limiting user input isn't stupid. It's just amazing they hadn't thought of that earlier
 
@sehe No, it's the same formula, just unrolled.
 
it's 10:32 pm. it's Monday tomorrow, i have to go to bed. bye, guys!
 
user142019
The only good part of LAMP is the L part.
 
@sehe but the better solution would be to actually get a decent hash function
but again, it's PHP.
 
user142019
And WAMP has no good parts at all. :P
 
2:33 PM
@TonyTheLion It wouldn't solve much. You could still craft a payload that exploits the hash properties
 
user142019
There is no one-size-fits-all hash function.
 
user142019
You need a different hash function for each use case.
 
The problem with the hash function is really that it is so periodic, so it is easy to get accidental collisions too.
 
user142019
Unless you have one-byte keys in your hash table.
 
@Zoidberg'-- So, the use case is PHP strings here
 
user142019
2:34 PM
Then you want an identity hash function. :P
 
@sehe right. The collisions are the the thing that allows the easy HashDoS, no?
 
[MyOuterWorld](){auto MyInnerWorld = MyOuterWorld;};
 
@Zoidberg'-- Or perfect hashes in any other pre-known domain
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Who's taking down who's site?
 
user142019
2:35 PM
For a hash table of (name, phone number) pairs you want a different hash function than for a hash table of (email, phone number) pairs.
 
Not yours, don't worry.
 
I guess lamda in C++ is much straight forward than that in Ruby..
 
ah
 
user142019
Even though both name and email are strings.
 
@TonyTheLion Not essentially. Collisions can be generated for any other hash function. It's just way too easy here. The hash-table implementation might actually mitigate the problem by using a tree for large buckets.
 
user142019
2:36 PM
@vulcanraven Ruby has three different kind of lambdas.
 
user142019
You have Proc, lambda and blocks.
 
@sehe right
 
@sehe When your hash-table needs trees for buckets, something must be wrong.
 
@Zoidberg'-- nice how you failed to fix handels -> handles :)
 
user142019
Hash table of (string, array of hash tables) pairs.
 
2:37 PM
@R.MartinhoFernandes I concur. However, for high security scenarios, where input cannot be controlled/limited, it may not be a bad idea
 
@Zoidberg'-- Three? Last I read about it, there were at least five.
 
@Zoidberg'-- thats right..
 
user142019
@R.MartinhoFernandes hmm. Linky?
 
how would you compare it with CPP's lambda
 
user142019
CPP has no lambdas.
 
2:38 PM
I mean [TrapedMember](){TrappedMember and ScopedMemebers}..
 
user142019
CPP only has macros and macros suck.
 
@Zoidberg'--, CPP 11 has lambdas .. silly!
 
user142019
C++ ≠ CPP, silly.
 
user142019
The C preprocessor or cpp is the macro preprocessor for the C and C++ computer programming languages. The preprocessor provides the ability for the inclusion of header files, macro expansions, conditional compilation, and line control. In many C implementations, it is a separate program invoked by the compiler as the first part of translation. The language of preprocessor directives is agnostic to the grammar of C, so the C preprocessor can also be used independently to process other kinds of text files. Phases Preprocessing is defined by the first four (of eight) phases of translatio...
 
Well its C++ 11
 
2:40 PM
@Zoidberg'-- I'm grepping for it. Chat search is not helping.
 
user142019
It’s C++11, not C++ 11.
 
user142019
@R.MartinhoFernandes ah okay. Maybe I come across it sometime.
 
user142019
You don’t say std::c out << "Hello, world!\n"; so you don’t say “C++ 11”.
 
so anyway, what can you put inside () in this C++ expression [](){}
 
user142019
2:42 PM
void, a list of function arguments, whitespace or nothing.
 
and square brackets have trapped elements from outer scope .. []
what's the difference?
 
user142019
int foo;
[=foo] () { return foo + 1; }; // takes foo by copying it, takes 0 arguments and returns foo + 1
 
user142019
[&foo] () {...} takes foo by reference.
 
user142019
And function arguments are just ordinary function arguments since lambdas are functors.
 
user142019
It’s what you’d pass to operator().
 
2:44 PM
how about this expression .. [global1, global2](var1, var2){}
 
user142019
It captures global1, global2 and takes two arguments named var1 and var2.
 
wats the diff between var1 and global1?
 
user142019
auto a = [c] () { return c + 1; };
std::cout << a() << '\n'; // a takes no arguments
auto b = [] (int d) { return d + 1; };
std::cout << b(c) << '\n'; // b takes one argument
 
but since we don't call it, its sequential, how can we set the value?
 
@Zoidberg'-- Ah, seems some stuff got deprecated now. There used to be this proc thing, which was not exactly the same as Proc; and it seems the fifth was the fact that methods are also treated specially.
 
2:45 PM
oki :)
we can call it indeed
 
14
Q: 😃 (and other unicode characters) in identifiers not allowed by g++

sftrabbitI am to find that I cannot use as a valid identifier with g++ 4.7, even with the -fextended-identifiers option enabled: int main(int argc, const char* argv[]) { const char* = "I'm very happy"; return 0; } main.cpp:3:3: error: stray ‘\360’ in program main.cpp:3:3: error: stray ‘\237...

 
user142019
@vulcanraven you want to set c like [c] () { c = 42; }?
 
thats awesome! :)
 
user142019
You’ll need to capture c by reference: [&c] () { c = 42; }.
 
its like the function pointers..
 
user142019
2:47 PM
Lambdas that don’t capture anything can be converted to function pointers.
 
so [=c] and [c] both capture by value ?
 
user142019
I have no idea what [c] does.
 
user142019
[=c] captures by value.
 
user142019
And you cannot capture by move, IIRC. I don’t know why.
 
[=c] isn't a valid capture list.
 
user142019
2:50 PM
Oh of course.
 
user142019
[c] captures by value then?
 
auto MyDelegate = [](char* ANSI, int Type){//do something then return something};
 
user142019
ewwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww const char*
 
lol
sorry
 
user142019
ewwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww char*
 
user142019
2:51 PM
Even worse.
 
so we can treat it as function pointer?
 
user142019
[] (std::string const& ansi, Type type) {} FTFY
 
user142019
@vulcanraven yes.
 
user142019
Meh.
 
lol yeah man or we can take cstring
 
user142019
2:52 PM
C-strings are terrible.
 
std::string const* ansi look great!
 
user142019
std::unique_ptr<std::string*>* ansi
 
i hate cstring myself.. standard string FTW!
 
user142019
#include <cassert>

int main() {
    int c = 0;
    auto foo = [&] () { c += 1; };
    foo();
    assert(c == 1);
}
 
[&] captures everything from the outter scope?
 
user142019
2:54 PM
[&] captures everything by reference.
 
user142019
[=] captures everything by value.
 
user142019
[=, &c] captures everything by value except for c, which it captures by reference.
 
thats great
 
user142019
The good, the PHP and the PHP.
 
Anyways: I thought the whole people don't care about the crap behind the scenes <-> They just want their shopping cart to work and be safe clash. It's not like PHP has a particularly shiny track record there
@Zoidberg'-- lolwut
 
user142019
2:58 PM
@sehe THEY TOLD ME TO USE std::unique_ptr AND std::string!!1
 
@Zoidberg'-- taking const char* is really quite ok for cases where you want to 'self-document' the fact that embedded NUL chars cannot be used
 
@Zoidberg'--, can you help me solve the VS2012 riddle. I am trying to compile the tesseract project in VS2012..
 
@Zoidberg'-- ahem
 
its giving me 100's of such errors: c1xx : fatal error C1083: Cannot open source file: '..\..\cube\tess_lang_model.cpp': No such file or directory
 
@vulcanraven We have a nice Q&A site here: Stack Overflow
 
user142019
2:59 PM
@sehe problem with char const* and all other raw pointers is that it’s not clear whether you want a pointer to an array of char consts, or a pointer to a single char const.
 
@Zoidberg'-- an owning pointer to a std::unique_ptr to a ptr to a std:: string? what?
 
@vulcanraven the project file is broken/the files have gone missing
@Zoidberg'-- Well, that's not always a problem. Note how std::ofstream::open() takes a const char* for similar reasons
 
user142019
@sehe what if your file system allows NUL characters in filenames?
 
user142019
You’ll be screwed to death.
 
"null".
Why do you feel the need to abbreviate a four letter word?
 
3:01 PM
@sehe, on project page, it says "Windows build files required in addition to the source code to build Tesseract 3.02 on Windows with VC++ Express 2008."
 
@Zoidberg'-- Not possible in C/C++ (really) standard libraries, nor POSIX
 
user142019
It’s called a NUL character.
 
@Zoidberg'-- So what? You're already screwed to death.
@Zoidberg'-- No, it's not.
 
@vulcanraven So, drop the project file at the right place in the source tree
 
user142019
The null character (also null terminator), abbreviated NUL, is a control character with the value zero. It is present in many character sets, including ISO/IEC 646 (or ASCII), the C0 control code, the Universal Character Set (or Unicode), and EBCDIC. It is available in nearly all mainstream programming languages. The original meaning of this character was like NOP—when sent to a printer or a terminal, it does nothing (some terminals, however, incorrectly display it as space). When electromechanical teleprinters were used as computer output devices, one or more null characters were...
 
3:01 PM
@Zoidberg'-- It's a null character. NUL is the three letter abbreviation.
 
user142019
> abbreviated NUL
 
51 secs ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
Why do you feel the need to abbreviate a four letter word?
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Mmm I've always thought so. Whatever happened to the three-letter codes for control codes?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Disambiguation. NUL is char for me, NULL is ... well, probably int (at best)
 
user142019
@R.MartinhoFernandes because all control characters are abbreviated to at most three characters.
 
@sehe Such disambiguation is almost never needed.
Especially if you say "NUL character".
 
3:04 PM
@R.MartinhoFernandes Which is precisely what I use it for. Yeah, NULL character is okay too. But I'm too darn lazy to type embedded NULL characters if I can just type embedded NULs
 
user142019
I say '\0'.
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Well, who does? I never do <whistle/>
 
4 mins ago, by Zoidberg'--
@sehe what if your file system allows NUL characters in filenames?
 
user142019
Your arguments are all invalid.
 
> <whistle/>
@FredOverflow Which is... well pretty fast:
Jul 4 at 22:01, by FredOverflow
new Solitaire record 2:11
Aug 15 at 18:04, by FredOverflow
I almost got bored playing Solitaire, but I knocked it up a notch: now I'm playing left handed while eating semolina with my right hand and watching Beavis and Butthead simultaneously. My record is currently 2:44.
Oh well
 
user142019
3:10 PM
7
A: Why does io:format support ~n when \n does the same thing?

Alexey RomanovAccording to "Programming Erlang", ~n outputs the platform-specific new line sequence (\n on Unix, \r\n on Windows, etc.). I think \n just writes the \n character, but am not sure.

 
@vulcanraven doc/setup.html#initial-build-directory-setup contains the description AFAICT(I don't do tesseract nor windows, so you're on your own reading that :))
 
user142019
It has to do with CRLF, indeed. /cc @Rapptz
 
@sehe, I am on that one .. have found this tesseract-ocr.googlecode.com/svn-history/r683/trunk/vs2008/doc/… :).. looks like it requires the mingw, cygwin to compile the project!
 
@vulcanraven nah. There wouldn't be MSVC project files in that case. Of course, you can use GCC in MingW/Cygwin alternatively
 
@sehe, no this bundle is specifically fo vs2008.. but tesseract uses Leptonica as its image processing engine, which requries some shell commands
one thing I don't understand that Windows PowerShell does have ls, rm, diff, sleep etc, then why can't the applications make use of it.. PS as a primary shell for windOS
:)
 
user142019
3:17 PM
lol windOS
 
using linux_text = basic_text<utf8, std::string>;
// ... or ...
using posix_text = basic_text<utf8, std::string>;
// ?
 
user142019
I’d say POSIX.
 
user142019
Linux is not the only POSIX system. There are also OS X, Solaris and OpenBSD, for example.
 
3:33 PM
@R.MartinhoFernandes The second doesn't attract the 'Linux is just a kernel' trolls.
 
My Boyfriend's Jewish.... and he LOVES the jokes
And he picks on Nazi just as much... especially because I'm German.......
btw-- that not eating German's joke.... null and void .
ROFL at the last line
 
@LucDanton Well, my doubt is whether UTF-8 is ubiquitous in POSIX or just Linux.
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Those kind of considerations are not quite in my comfort zone.
 
user142019
I have a muslim friend and he also loves/makes jokes about muslims and Allah.
 
But, does he eat germans?
 
user142019
3:35 PM
No, but he eats ham and then he pretends he “didn’t know”.
 
That's the spirit. So, he's pretty much a Muslim in the way most people are 'Christians'
 
user142019
Yup.
 
Meh, POSIX, it is.
 
user142019
Just do:
 
user142019
using posix_text = basic_text<utf8, std::string>;
using lesser_platforms_text = basic_text<utf8, std::wstring>;
 
3:39 PM
@Zoidberg'-- It wouldn't be that funny anyway, but being wrong takes away the very small amount of funny it might have had.
 
Mmmh, some Rust designer is outlining design consideration of closures. I notice one of the things that can be specified is 'onceness', whether the resulting closure object (or whatever the terminlogy is for Rust) may be called more than one or not. I've been thinking about that sort of thing in the back of my head ever since I realised the implications of perfect-(re)storing.
 
Erm. What is 'Rust'? (in this context)
 
A programming language.
 
user142019
A map in Modern Warfare 2.
 
 

« first day (750 days earlier)      last day (4191 days later) »