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12:00 AM
@DeadMG You shouldn't eat those 2 pound texas burgers
 
not funny
 
who set the current lounge description?
 
no idea
 
must have been very tired of questions... :-)
hah
Does anyone have a compiler that compiles this:
#include <exception>

int main()
{
    std::exception_ptr const    p   = std::current_exception();

    (p == nullptr);             // OK
    (p != nullptr);             // Bah!
    (p == 0);                   // OK
    (p != 0);                   // Nix!
    (!!p);                      // Nyet!
    (static_cast<bool>( p ));   // Nope!
}
^ Bug report
If people vote these reports up and click that they can reproduce, then possibly bugs are fixed faster
 
 
2 hours later…
2:15 AM
@CheersandhthAlf Both GCC and clang do.
If you are new here, please read the newbie hints. Thank you.
16
 
Xeo
3:08 AM
I just noticed that I've been going at my redstone circuits in Minecraft for 4 hours straight...
Time for some sleep, I guess.
Atleast everything works.
 
Are you in American?
 
3:49 AM
is any body alive here ?
i have a little question
why vs2008 compiller says me c2144 on a such code
class Codon
{
char data;
public Codon(char* seq);
public bool setSequence(char*seq);
public char* getSequence();

};
 
4:29 AM
> For help with other issues, try dialling 911.
lol. :D
Good Morning all!
damn the time difference. No one's here. :'( . And I can't come here later in the day as I have to study. Somebody? Anybody?
 
4:52 AM
heh
sup
 
hey.
lol, this really happened to a friend of mine. :D
 
lol
 
1
A: Integer range based template specialisation

Seth CarnegieYou can use std::enable_if to make your own handy compile-time range testing class: #include <iostream> #include <type_traits> using namespace std; template<int Start, int End, int Val, class Enable = void> struct crange { }; template<int Start, int End, int Val> struc...

My first SFINAE answer :D
 
Geez, you're almost capped already...
reminds me of my first 2 months here...
 
I had a lucky few answers today
But non of them have been accepted
 
5:00 AM
I had two lucky ones yesterday (or today, in my timezone). Went well over the cap...
Sometimes, I wish you could just transfer a question to a different day, lol.
 
The highest I've ever gone over is 305
305 total, not over
 
I've done a 325 thanks to a +50 bounty
 
nice
never gotten a bounty before
bounty questions are typically about how to make a specific program do something
it seems
 
The most I've gone over the repcap (by votes), is well... infuriating...
 
Yeah, the other day I had 18 votes that weren't counted because I capped
Thanks to that, I just cap and leave SO for the rest of the day
by the way how do you tell what time it is for the SO servers
 
5:02 AM
I answered 2 questions yesterday, and 14 to the repcap.
Repcap resets at 6pm in my timezone. That's all I care.
Was that you who just upvoted me?
 
:) thx. It was an old question. And I almost never get two upvotes on the same day on an old answer unless it's one of my top ones.
I remember checking back in November: At the time, I lost a total of 20% to the repcap. (mostly from my 60-day repcap streak)
I always stop when I hit the cap, or when I'm close to hitting the cap in anticipation of residuals.
 
yeah
Yay my SFINAE answer was accepted :D
I learned SFINAE to answer that question
 
nice!
And now I checked 2 days ago... Even though I've been very inactive now. I've lost 40% of my rep to the repcap.
 
How can you calculate that
 
5:08 AM
I imported the numbers from the audit page.
And did a count on [0].
 
damn, I hate it when someone else's brief 3-line long answer gets upvotes simply bec. he submitted it 12 seconds before I submitted mine. :(
 
@IntermediateHacker that happens to me all the time
FGITW
 
@IntermediateHacker Yep, all the time. But it balances out when you're the one with the shorter answer that's first. :)
 
lol
@IntermediateHacker I don't think static is the right word for it btw
And how do you only have 1804 rep
@Mysticial have you messed around with [common] lisp before? I was considering learning it
 
5:11 AM
My 92-point answer is my most notorious example of fastest short answer that got all the votes.
 
@SethCarnegie I don't know. maybe bec. I don't answer a lot of questions. I've posted only 40 answers.
 
link?
 
@Mysticial link please, curious.
 
@SethCarnegie I dropped that LISP class within 1 week. The parenthesis madness made me shit in my pants.
92
A: What is the difference between str==NULL and str[0]=='\0' in C?

Mysticialstr==NULL tells you whether the pointer is NULL. str[0]=='\0' tells you if the string is of zero-length. In that code, the test: if ((str == NULL) || (str[0] == '\0')) is used to catch the case where it is either NULL or has zero-length. Note that short-circuiting plays a key role here: T...

 
@Mysticial the parentheses and everything being an s-expr is awesome to me
> Seth, Thanks a lot. If there was a way to mark your answer as useful multiple times then I would click that button a hundred times!
I am proud of my SFINAE answer.
 
5:13 AM
To be honest, I totally didn't deserve 92 votes on that. But for some reason, that question made it #1 on the hot-list.
 
@Mysticial ah yeah, I upvoted that answer lol
 
@Mysticial I had a Scheme class last semester. Wasn't that bad.
 
I love lisp because it basically makes your program a data structure
and a data structure a possible program
 
@Mysticial lol, I feel sorry for the other guy. :D
 
@EtiennedeMartel I was eventually forced to take a Scheme class to graduate. It was stupid...
 
5:14 AM
CL > Scheme
 
Lisp sucks. That also extends to both its dialects.
 
Both? There are at least 20
 
Stupid as in, I was the most experience programmer in the whole class - because it was everyone else's first programming class... sigh...
 
And lisp is awesome
@Mysticial been there, done that, sucks
 
why would anyone ever need to learn lisp ?
 
5:15 AM
@IntermediateHacker lol! thanks!
 
@IntermediateHacker Artificial intelligence (especially planning) at the academic level.
 
@IntermediateHacker no one needs to learn it, like no one needs to learn C++
 
@SethCarnegie C++ is used for Systems programming. There are jobs out for it. What company wants lisp developers?
 
user406009
Lisp is an interesting language in that it forces you to program in ways you might not have experienced before.
 
@EthanSteinberg Might as well use Haskell then if you want to learn functional programming.
 
5:17 AM
@EthanSteinberg and ways you might never need to use again.
 
user406009
Isn't lisp simpler than Haskell?
 
@EthanSteinberg Initially, I thought it was the functional part that killed me. But I'm fine with Mathematica - which is also a functional language... so...
 
@IntermediateHacker Like I said, none. Most Lisp is used in academia.
 
@EthanSteinberg not sure, Haskell's syntax is very complicated but lisp has reader macros and all kinds of macros and stuff
Lisp is just a generally cool and unusually-designed language
 
@SethCarnegie Every time I look at Lisp, I feel like it was designed to be easy to parse, not easy to read.
 
5:18 AM
@EtiennedeMartel it's pure awesome that (a b c) is both data and code
The only thing is that the parentheses are very difficult to read to establish a structure in the code
 
all (those (bracke()ts) ) give() m(e a h(e((adache)) ) )
2
 
Doesn't help me solve practical problems though.
 
@InterMediate yeah
@EtiennedeMartel that's because you don't know lisp
no wonder
 
Last time I saw "real" Lisp (or at least something that looked like it) was with PDDL.
 
Java Ruby doesn't help me solve problems because I don't know Java Ruby
 
5:20 AM
What is Lisp good for anyway?
I mean for modern programming use?
 
@EtiennedeMartel it's a general-purpose language
 
My progress was: TI-Basic -> C++ -> Java -> C -> x86 assembly
 
Don't ask me deep questions because I don't know much about it yet
 
@SethCarnegie I mean, what does it do better than, say, C++ or C#?
 
@EtiennedeMartel I don't know lisp so I can't say
 
5:21 AM
All strictly functional languages have the advantage of being trivially parallelizable.
 
@Mysticial Lisp is definitely not even close to being strictly functional
 
@Mysticial Yes, but why not use ML, Haskell or Clojure? (And none of those are strictly functional)
 
My progress: C++ -> Python -> C# -> C -> C++ -> Java -> Vala -> C# -> C++ (true story, it took three rounds for me to learn C++ ).
 
@EtiennedeMartel And I don't know any of them, so I wouldn't know. :)
 
@EtiennedeMartel it's the same answer that you would give for "why would you use language X over Y?" It's just whatever suits your needs/you like
 
5:23 AM
@SethCarnegie I'm currently arguing that Lisp is rarely, if ever, the best tool for any particular job.
 
It's like Python vs. Ruby
 
In that case, if you include revisits, then mine really is:
Mathematica -> TI-Basic -> Matlab -> C++ -> Java -> C -> x86 assembly -> C++ -> x64 assembly
 
It comes down to what you like
 
@Mysticial lol.
 
And now my preferred language is some mix of C and C++. Which I use depends on what I'm doing.
 
5:24 AM
x86 assembly is a little interesting. I only once coded a tiny windows notepad-clone in it using FASM, it was quite interesing. Loading all the *.DLLs manually, using their native methods etc.
 
@IntermediateHacker My progress: C++ -> PHP -> Java -> C#. Did some SPARC assembly and some Scheme. Currently trying to learn Python, but my laziness does not help.
 
Mine is -> C++ ->, or:
 
I never got the point of being able to write entire programs in assembly. Only enough to read it fluently and write inline assembly with loops and such.
 
@EtiennedeMartel nice, you learned all the mainstream languages first. Python isn't that difficult, you'll need mostly a day or two to grasp its syntax.
 
 >  C++
|      |
 C++  <
I don't like python personally Personally, I don't like python
nor ruby
 
5:27 AM
I had to do a little bit of Python for one of my classes. It kept crashing on my machine... didn't go to well.
 
@IntermediateHacker I already grasp its syntax. The problem I have is that the standard library is huge.
 
@EtiennedeMartel why is that a problem
 
@SethCarnegie I used to code entirely in Python, but its lousy performance bugged me so much I resorted to other languages.
 
According to Herb Sutter, C++'s biggest weakness is the lack of a huge standard library
 
@EtiennedeMartel isn't that a good thing?
 
5:28 AM
@SethCarnegie Because I don't like having to wade through pages of documentation just to get shit done.
It's not a problem with the language, it's a problem with my laziness.
 
@SethCarnegie Which I totally agree on. They don't even have a bignum library.
I remember when I first started with the bignum stuff, I'd benchmark my code against Java's BigInteger.
 
@EtiennedeMartel just get an IDE like eclipse etc. Randomly standard library import modules and check them out using Code-Completion. That's what I did.
 
you don't have to know about the whole library to get stuff done. nobody knows it all, even the people who made it
 
*that was during my Java days.
 
@IntermediateHacker Eclipse supports Python?
Well, well
 
5:29 AM
eclipse supports damn near everything in some form or another :)
 
@EtiennedeMartel yes.
 
and if it doesn't, and you're feeling froggy, you can write a plugin for it that does
 
Knowing the whole C# or Java library can be useful for SO. You can probably answer every other question with just the right library function.
 
pretty much, yeah :)
that's one of the few things i still like about java
 
WCHAR * temp = L"HelloWorld";
LPWSTR xml = temp;
std::wcout << *xml << std::endl; // It is just printing first character 'H'. Its understandable but how to print the entire sequence. Why is this behavior different from std::cout
 
5:32 AM
and one ireally like about c#
@Mahesh std::wcout << xml << std::endl; ?
 
@Mahesh std::wcout << xml << std::endl;?
 
it's not different from cout
 
user406009
@Mahesh That is the same behavior as std::cout.
 
user406009
We really need a #geordi here for times like this.
 
you're telling it to print the character pointed to by xml
 
5:34 AM
Ask on SO. :)
 
Man its really coffee break.
 
lol
 
@EthanSteinberg @SethCarnegie Thanks guys.
 
I wonder if you can mix cout and wcout. On Linux, you can't mix printf() and wprintf()
 
i imagine you can, but you probably won't like the results :)
 
5:37 AM
I learned the VERY HARD way that you can't mix printf() with wprintf().
 
what happened?
 
Which works fine on Windows btw...
 
@Mahesh what have you done with the real Mahesh
 
@Mysticial I am writing code for a UNICODE application.
 
When I tried to port my hobby project to Linux...
 
5:38 AM
So, what else I need to take care of.
 
Which was... btw... a good 130,000 lines at the time...
 
@SethCarnegie ?
 
I propose semicolon count as a metric for code length instead of line count
 
user406009
Why do you even need wprintf on Linux? Everything is UTF-8 IIRC.
 
@SethCarnegie Scroll down a bit to the table here: numberworld.org/y-cruncher/algorithms.html
I have line lengths and byte sizes...
 
5:40 AM
What the hell is the character coding system ? This is the first time I am writing a Unicode application. Win7 wlan api forces me to use it :(
 
Lines: 177,675
Bytes: 5,913,475
Files: 561
 
A byte count is kinda meaningless though
I have no idea how long a 270,000 byte long file is
 
@SethCarnegie It's better than just lines though.
 
no semicolons :(
 
Counting semicolons is hard since they can be embedded anywhere
 
5:41 AM
yeah
 
as is a semicolon count, when a = b; counts as much as a += (b*sizeof(int) * getIntCount()) + 1;
 
And for-loops...
 
and loops of any kind, really
 
Though I don't use for-loops though so it's not a problem. (only for OpenMP do I need them)
 
but particularly for loops
 
5:44 AM
@cHao same with line count
 
byte count makes some sense if you subtract out all the indenting
 
@SethCarnegie so why should we be encouraging people to (or at least, not discouraging them from) packing 20 statements onto a line?
 
also not something that I implemented in my line-counter script
I can't imagine someone writing numerical code with Java names...
 
@cHao how is counting semicolons encouraging someone to pack more statements in a line?
 
perform4PointComplexFastFourierTransformRadix2ThreadedForward()
 
5:46 AM
@SethCarnegie it's definitely not discouraging it. when a; b; c; d; e; f; counts just as much as the same code on 6 lines... :P
 
Though I do prefer line-counts since it relates to how much I need to scroll up and down.
The Microsoft coding standards for spacing and naming are definitely not well-suited for numerical code...
 
what would be the best method to work with unicode input and output in c++?
 
wstring?
 
depends on what you need to talk to. most *nix stuff uses utf-8, not utf-16
so a regular old string would do you fine
brb
 
5:50 AM
wchar_t is also different on Windows and Linux...
 
@cHao I don't see how that's a problem
since it does the same thing it should count the same
 
Also another thing that annoyed me when I was porting those 130,000 lines to Linux...
 
it's the line count that would make a difference
 
so I will have to use #ifdef for windows (wstring) & linux (string)?
 
@fadedreamz That's what I ended up doing...
 
5:53 AM
I feel bad bashing Java all the time without actually having learned it
 
@Mys
 
I think your msg broke...
 
"portability is just an illusion ..." :P
@Mysticial ... yes, wrong \n :)
 
Well, it took me 3 years to write those 130k lines. And only about 2 weeks to port it. I'd say it wasn't that bad.
 
@Mysticial: :O
 
5:57 AM
That project has bloated itself to almost 400k lines now since I'm rewriting most of it. But it'll should shrink down to ~150k once it's done and I clear out all the old junk.
 
@Mysticial: Well, I am just a total newbie C++ programmer ... I got lost easily in the lots of ifs and buts ... Long way to go .. :'(
 
Yeah, don't try to write a large program unless you really plan ahead... Give it a few years. It takes a bit of experience.
 
yeah, that. you take on too much too early, it tends to get really discouraging, and before long you end up hating it and/or never finishing it
best to start small and work up to the more complex stuff
 
@cHao Yep, that's exactly what I did. I wrote a ton of little things that were self-contained and self-satisfying. Then I started putting them together to make a bigger project.
 
6:17 AM
Yay just got the Epic badge
 
@SethCarnegie Interesting, the script usually runs 2-3 hours after a new day. It's way past that.
In other words, if yesterday was your 50th, you should've gotten it a few hours ago.
Congrats though. :)
 
@Mysticial my /reputation page says
> earned at least 200 reputation on 49 days
 
Hmm, so it probably gave it to you as soon as you broke 200 today.
 
Part of the new rep system?
 
The audit page for that number updates at around the same time the tags update - which is 2-3 hours after the day.
no, it was always like this.
I can't remember exactly when I got the Epic badge myself. I do recall I woke up in the morning with it.
lol, I got Epic before my first gold badge. Now I remember why I was desperately flagging things like crazy back then...
 
6:23 AM
lol
@Mysticial are you legendary yet?
 
I remember being one of the only 10ks to have no gold badges.
@SethCarnegie "earned at least 200 reputation on 147 days"
getting there... only need 3 more good days
 
Wow
close
 
Must... get... there... before... 40k...
 
@Mysticial that should be no problem
Wow this is dumb, I cannot get SBCL to work with CUSP in eclipse
and it's the only good lisp ide I can find
 
Once I hit 150, I should be "effectively" gone from all the very basic FGITW questions. Though I might poke my head in one from time to time.
 
6:29 AM
Yeah lol
Like I said before, FGITW questions are the only ones I can answer
But I do those pretty well I think :)
 
I'm starting to think that having too much rep could be detrimental in the future when I'm looking for a job.
 
Hahahaha
 
@SethCarnegie That was the same with me during the first 3 months. Then it started to get really old. Every one in a while, something exciting will happen (such as the x = x++ question). But it still got boring. And after I finally missed a repcap over Thankgiving, I started to pull back. By that time I had 2 Guru badges and so I started focusing my attention to looking for good questions that are capable of getting a lot attention.
 
Well I would do that except I don't know enough to answer any questions that are capable of getting a lot of attention, unlike you
for instance, I had never heard of denormalised floating point whatever whatever
 
Though I'm actually pretty surprised now. I've only seen 1 dumb question go 100+ since November. They were happening every other week back in October...
@SethCarnegie Now that my repwhoring days are over. I guess I can start spilling my secrets...
 
6:38 AM
Do tell
 
I use an autorefresher. Mods, if you see this (and there's 5 of you in the room right now), please don't ban me. Nearly all of my good answers are also because of this.
Auto-refresher set to a 5-second timer on a seperate monitor.
 
lol, that doesn't help when you don't know what you are talking about
 
So as long as I'm awake and in front of the computer, I see everything in my tags that passes through SO.
@SethCarnegie ???
 
I don't have the knowledge required to answer the questions you do
so it wouldn't matter if I was precognitively aware of all questions asked
 
Anything tagged C/C++/Java/Performance passes through my eyes within 1 min. of being asked.
Typically within 20 seconds actually...
 
6:42 AM
I made a program in C# that used the SO API to query for new C++ questions every 10 seconds
but for some reason the API is more heavily cached than the website
so questions would appear 2-5 minutes later than they did on the site
 
I used to just click through on anything that looked like I can answer.
Now I click through on something once every 10 min. or so. So I do a lot more observing rather than answering.
And after a while, you start get a "feel" of what questions will "make it" or not.
For example, this question:
270
Q: ":-!!" what is it in c code?

chmurliI bumped into this strange macro code in /usr/include/linux/kernel.h: /* Force a compilation error if condition is true, but also produce a result (of value 0 and type size_t), so the expression can be used e.g. in a structure initializer (or where-ever else comma expressions aren't per...

 
I predicted it would hit 250 when I first saw it. It hit 330. I wasn't too off on that. I didn't realize reddit would give it another 50 some votes.
 
Wow
did you answer it?
 
I didn't know the answer to it.
 
6:46 AM
Neither did I
 
and I woke up roughly 30 min. after it was answered
The trigraph question...
 
What do you predict about this excellent novel question
0
Q: Using the new operator with an object's non-default constructor

vanchagreenWould something like: classname* p = new classname(parameter1, parameter2, ...); create a pointer that points to an object initialized using a non-default constructor with signature: classname(parameter1, parameter2, ...)? Thanks!

 
I knew it would go 100+. I didn't have prediction at the time though.
 
Less than 10. lol
possibly closed
 
6:47 AM
"Mysticial has gained the ability 'prediction'"
Level up
 
user406009
The level up should be first, then the new ability.
 
user406009
You obviously have a race condition. </sarcasm>
 
Now I'm not perfect though. I have mispredicted a few times...
 
@EthanSteinberg it's just the messages that are ordered that way
@EthanSteinberg since level_up calls give_abilities, which messages first, then it returns and level_up messages
 
@Mysticial why would a question about basic application of not operator, get many votes?
Is it time to start posting questions about "what does ~i-1 mean?"
 
6:49 AM
@CheersandhthAlf The trigraph question?
 
Was it trigraph? I mean I see four characters, not three
 
227
Q: What does the C ??!??! operator do?!

Peter OlsonI saw a line of C that looked like this: !ErrorHasOccured() ??!??! HandleError(); It compiled correctly and seems to run ok. It seems to like it's checking if an error has occurred, and if it has, it handles it, but I'm not really sure what it's actually doing or how it's doing it. It does loo...

I knew that would hit at least 100. But I didn't try to predict how much over 100.
I was also one of the first to upvote it, but I didn't know the answer... :(
 
Let me test.
 
Also answers can typically gain more upvotes if they have a quote from the standard somewhere in them
 
@SethCarnegie That actually isn't in my equation. Standard quotes don't seem to matter.
 
6:52 AM
Hmm
 
They only matter on pedantic things. Pedantic things rarely ever make that high.
 
I seem to get more (or, beat the FGITW answer) when I include a passage from it
 
And actually, I failed to predict how high both my top answers would go...
The loop question for example, I predicted 50 - 70. But then it got reddited.
 
I still haven't had a super answer yet
my top answer (21 votes thanks you guys -.-) is about a stupid question
 
@SethCarnegie It has been noticeably harder now. Stupid things like x = x++ don't make it as high as they did back in September...
 
6:57 AM
@Mysticial didn't seem to stop you :)
 
And it does take a lot of luck. The question has to be interesting at the very least.
@SethCarnegie Mainly because I've been getting better at finding things that I think will be good.
I've seen at least 15 100+ questions pass through my eyes within 10 min. of being first asked.
So you get a feel for it.
 
All righty, does this question qualify for reddit votes?
0
Q: What does the +~ (approximate addition?) expression do?

Cheers and hth. - AlfHere is the perplexing code I found myself writing for this posting: #include <iostream> int main() { using namespace std; cout << 45 +~ 3 + 1 << endl; } IT PRINTS 42! But why? And why did I include the "pc" tag for this question?

 
no
 
That falls along the same lines as this question:
9
Q: What is the difference between != and =! in java?

Prometheus87I was looking over some mock OCJP questions. I came across a really baffling syntax. Here it is. class OddStuff { public static void main(String[] args) { boolean b = false; System.out.println((b != b));// False System.out.println((b =! b));// True } } Why does ...

 
7:03 AM
ok i deleted the q
 
@Mysticial How silly.
 
If it was that easy to construct good questions, I would've been doing that already.
 
@CheersandhthAlf that is the algorithm that the computer in HH2tG used to calculate the meaning to life
 
And if you are wondering, my prediction "equation" does tend to heavily favor answers by Jon Skeet or Eric Lippert.
*It's not really an "equation", since it's mostly just a gut feeling I get when I see a question, but you get the idea.
 
7:07 AM
@Mysticial oh, I expected to see the formula
And a proof
 
@SethCarnegie lolz
I've been very wrong at times, so it can't be proved. :)
I predicted 80 - 100 on the != and =! question that I just linked. I only hit 25.
 
Maybe if someone asks about the relative precedence of ?: and =, with example that falsifies the most likely answer?
 
For the denormal question, I predicted 20 - 30 if it didn't make it on reddit. And 100 if it did make reddit. Instead, it went 500...
@CheersandhthAlf Those can go either way. I wouldn't be able to predict those until at least 1 hour after it was asked.
 
I am a jack of one trade and a master of none :(
 
can you get the reddit guys to upvote bug reports, so that something gets done?
 
7:13 AM
@CheersandhthAlf Reddit is a wild-card in all sorts. In fact, I haven't seen a single SO question make reddit since the denormal question did...
 
OK, I have a CHALLENGE TO THELOUNGE.
As it turned my HodgePodge Program example for the @cat's showcase of lounge members' projects, suddenly gained a fair amount of complexity.
 
I don't like challenges
See you guys tomorrow
 
cya
 
I wanted a worker thread's initialization to be done on that thread, but with exception on initializationfailure propagated to the parent thread.
 
I should probably be heading to bed too, got class tomorrow
 
7:21 AM
And at the same time I wanted Thread t( ... ) to start the t thread
Plus, if feasible, ordinary polymorphic behavior.
The solution I ended up with is partly ungrokkable to myself.
 
7:39 AM
2 hours ago, by IntermediateHacker
all (those (bracke()ts) ) give() m(e a h(e((adache)) ) )
^^ interestingly, that message didn't use a single bracket.
 
Hi sehe
 
> Not SO proper. Go there for programming questions. For help with other issues, try dialling 911. This is not a helpdesk, and we offer no service guarantees.
Now I understand why the room-owners wrote that in the caption.
 
7:57 AM
2 hours ago, by Mysticial
I learned the VERY HARD way that you can't mix printf() with wprintf().
@Mysticial: I just tried it (looks nice BTW) - my Validation*.txt is reported just fine:
Validation - Pi - 50,000,000.txt: Little-endian UTF-16 Unicode English text, with CRLF, CR line terminators
 
I can open that in vim, and it isn't scrambled. So , perhaps you mean you would want it another encoding, instead?
 
Just got out of the shower and I hear a ping. :)
 

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