« first day (687 days earlier)      last day (4490 days later) » 

07:00
Yes.
Is there a reason to? Just curious
Because I use the e.g. <cstdio> form of headers, which I find consistent with C++ headers.
I do it for the same reasons as @LucDanton.
better qualified than not
Qualify ALL the things!
07:21
"Could you please do this for me?"
0
Q: Can you please Help me in implementing Segmented Sieve of Eratosthenes and Sieve of Atkin C++?

Loers AntarioCan you please Help me in implementing Segmented Sieve of Eratosthenes and Sieve of Atkin in C++ ? I wrote a code for the ordinary sieve of Eratosthenes , it worked pretty good generating primes under 10^8 in 2.6 seconds , but it used a lot of memory basically a Boolean array size[10^8] and an in...

Medal of Honour, Allied Assault not running on my new acer e1-571 laptop. The irony of it is, my main motive for buying a second laptop was so I could play it (and some other games) multiplayer. :'(
@Rapptz Could you please downvote me?
@ApprenticeHacker Wait, that game came out in 2002. A microwave oven could probably run it.
lol
@EtiennedeMartel then why is the garbage I bought not running it. :'(
07:24
@ApprenticeHacker What am I, psychic?
The game just goes blank when I start it
that's called a "bug".
@ApprenticeHacker Because Acer.
and then comes the usual "not responding.. close program"
@ApprenticeHacker Oh, probably drivers then. Or the OS.
07:24
Win 7 x64 Home
Hmm, try running it in compatiblity mode.
Done that.
If it was because of crappy hardware, you'd just get low frame rate.
I see.
Let's see if acer provides good drivers
Anyway, I'm gonna get some sleep, it's 03:26 here.
07:26
night
268 MB intel driver + 330.9 MB Nvidia Driver. This shit better work.
I'll play the old Commandos Behind Enemy Lines in the mean-time.
07:51
hi
all
can anybody help me
Post it on SO
ok
ok i know
SO as in StackOverflow
I'm the only one here.
could you plase
tell
if(c=2; c<=n-1 c++) { if (n%c==0)
that statement doesn't even make sense.
You mean for right
07:56
what are the result
if i m enter n number is 5
is it equals to condition
or not
@Rapptz
pleasee help
me
i m new in c++
Your statement doesn't make sense.
if statement checks for true or false.
yes
what would be the result
Nothing because it won't compile.
actully i have all the code
but what does it stand for
if (n%c==0)
If n divided by c's remainder is equal to zero
08:02
if 5%5
@SandeepTiwari how about RTFM
the result is 1
just a gentle hint
5%5 is zero dude
what happens if i enter 9
@Rapptz
08:05
Read a book.
@SandeepTiwari Why are you asking us when you can try it out yourself. This is not a help forum.
RTFM is an initialism for the direction "Read The Fucking Manual". This instruction is sometimes given in response to a question when the person being asked believes that the question could be easily answered by reading the relevant user's manual or instructions. In expurgated texts, substitutions such as "read the flaming manual" or "read the friendly manual" are used (or similar variants). Initialisms similar to the one above include GIYF ("Google is your friend") and LMGTFY ("let me google that for you"). These indicate that the item under question can easily be researched on the Wor...
not many know that rtfm.mit.edu still works!
:)
this is a discussion forum i m just discussing the possibilities
@Cheersandhth.-Alf wtf?
it's from The Old Days, when programmers were not 10-year old American girls
08:07
Aug 25 at 22:00, by sbi
If you are new here, please read the newbie hints right away, and only post here afterwards. Thank you.
@SandeepTiwari Have you tried running it? (It won't compile though)
the days when e.g. Lena (Playboy mag photo) was established as standard test case for image processing
@DeadMG Morning
Lenna or Lena is the name given to a 512×512 pixel standard test image which has been in use since 1973, and was originally cropped from the centerfold of November 1972 issue of Playboy magazine. It is a picture of Lena Söderberg, a Swedish model, shot by photographer Dwight Hooker. The image is probably the most widely used test image for all sorts of image processing algorithms (such as compression and denoising) and related scientific publications. The anglicised version "Lenna" of Lena Söderberg's actual name comes from the Playboy article where Playboy changed the original "Lena". ...
hm, time for Lenna again
[original Lenna[(i.sstatic.net/tj433.jpg)
^ THe original (nswf?)
For some inexplicable reason the original was removed from the Wikipedia article!
@Cheersandhth.-Alf I don't think you should onebox nsfw pictures.
08:12
@cheers
i dont want it
why are u posting these
unnessa
picksss
@SandeepTiwari for your and others' education. now tell my why are you bothering us with inane questions?
do you really think than i m talking to you
im not asking anyquestions to you
do you get it
Why are you here?
i have some doubt that's why i m here
@rapptz
08:19
@SandeepTiwari go here stackoverflow.com/questions/ask
Okay, I'm gonna head to bed now. Night.
09:15
@sehe That is proper awesome. Thanks. I’ve never used this particular Boost library
@Xeo I first had that but it caused me to invert all my conditionals so I dropped it.
@Xeo Well I’m a right fucking idiot, am I now? Of course it works. Duh.
@sehe Incidentally, that composition syntax really necessitates polymorphic lambdas:
header | transformed([](s) { s.length() })
Hmm. transformed doesn’t seem to work with lambdas anyhow. Weird.
(I’m probably just doing something wrong.)
09:49
Hi.
10:01
[C:\temp]
> taskkill /f /im openfiles.exe
SUCCESS: The process "openfiles.exe" with PID 5072 has been terminated.

[C:\temp]
> taskkill /f /im openfiles.exe
SUCCESS: The process "openfiles.exe" with PID 5072 has been terminated.

[C:\temp]
> taskkill /f /im openfiles.exe
SUCCESS: The process "openfiles.exe" with PID 5072 has been terminated.

[C:\temp]
> _
not!
@KonradRudolph Yeah I tripped on that. Thought: fuck it :) I have used range with boost phoenix for great effect before:
5
A: How to filter or "grep" a C++ vector?

seheUsing a little bit of Boost, you can: std::vector<int> v = {1,2,-9,3}; for (auto i : v | filtered(_arg1 >=0)) std::cout << i << "\n"; This sample uses Phoenix for implicit lambdas defined by expression template (_arg1 >= 0), but you can use any callable (C++03 or h...

That links to another example with much more Boost Range fun :)
@sehe Nice! Except that using Phoenix with member functions is no fun
what's the advantage over writing just "if( i >= 0 )"
@Cheersandhth.-Alf Not having to spell out lambdas
you don't have to spell out any lambda writing "if( i >= 0 )"
also, it's
1. more clear, and
2. more efficient
10:04
@KonradRudolph Apart from it not working with transformed, you could just use phoenix::bind(&std::string::length, _1) and be happy
@Cheersandhth.-Alf Gross generalization
plus, it's less to study (actually nothing more to study) in order to write the code
@Cheersandhth.-Alf I don't suggest anyone studying this for the sake of studying it.
@sehe That’s what I meant with “no fun” :p
i was just reminded of early 2000's when lots of folks used std::for_each for ungood reasons, creating a lot of complexity with workarounds for lack of proper binding functionality in standard lib
10:06
@sehe I see that you were following the polymorphic-lambda discussion on cpp-next. Any word on whether we will be able to omit the return keyword in the next standard? I.e.
they thought it looked cute with those for_each
auto id = [](x) { x };
instead of
auto id = [](x) { return x; };
return is far more clear
one should consult the old poem about Unix' echo
especially last line
10:08
@Cheersandhth.-Alf There are codebases that have a lot of code like this. Actually, I like doing this syntax for quick prototyping. I'm not usually thinking 'performance' then. Instead I focus on data flow. If I can get away with writing less code, and staying very flexible, I'll do that.
@Cheersandhth.-Alf Even Bjarne uses for_each in ungodly places in his code examples … brr
@Cheersandhth.-Alf Totally redundant. And makes concise expressions much less concise
Look at it like this: I can use C++ as my scripting language with Boost Range/Phoenix. Makes me think about collections in similar ways as in C#.
The Unix and the Echo

There dwelt in the land of New Jersey the Unix, a fair maid whom savants traveled far to admire. Dazzled by her purity, all sought to espouse her, one for her virginal grace, another for her polished civility, yet another for her agility in performing exacting tasks seldom accomplished even in much richer lands. So large of heart and accommodating of nature was she that the UNIX adopted all but the most insufferably rich of her suitors. Soon many offspring grew and prospered and spread to the ends of the earth.
@Xeo thanks. I was just slightly adjusting the code by Konrad. Thanks for that po:: tip (I've never used it, but I figured there was a more direct way to get that to work) /cc @KonradRudolph: here
war is upon us!
@sehe I’ve already answered that …
58 mins ago, by Konrad Rudolph
@Xeo I first had that but it caused me to invert all my conditionals so I dropped it.
10:15
@KonradRudolph Ok, I wasn't sure. I somehow didn't actively get that ping. I just stumbled across it, and didn't actually read on to see whether you replied
not surprising, I pinged Xeo, not you ;)
@KonradRudolph I meant Xeo's ping
I still don’t know what possessed me to proclaim that getline would skip empty columns …
I didn’t even try that out first, I just assumed (since istream > str would skip to the next non-empty field)
@KonradRudolph That's because you didn't say getline would skip empty columns. YOu meant that using istringstream with std::istream_iterator<> would skip empty columns (that's after reading with getline(cin, '\n'))
@sehe No, that’s not what I said, nor meant
// We cannot use a `stringstream` with `getline` in the following since that
// would skip over multiple occurrences of the delimiter when columns are
// empty; we want to preserve those empty columns.
okay, I’m in the kitchen, cooking breakfast
10:21
@KonradRudolph surely was what I thought you must have meant... becuase, erm, otherwise it didn't make much sense :)
@KonradRudolph Good mmmmooooarning :)
don’t try defending my feeble mind, that’s really what I meant :p
@ScottW And eggs, yes
@KonradRudolph it happens. Really, I didn't consciously defend anything, it was just the logical conclusion my feeble mind reached, despite it not being quite what was written :)
10:50
Bacon slows you down. Emprically proven by the Lounge
-10
A: What's your most controversial programming opinion?

Mason WheelerIf it's not native, it's not really programming By definition, a program is an entity that is run by the computer. It talks directly to the CPU and the OS. Code that does not talk directly to the CPU and the OS, but is instead run by some other program that does talk directly to the CPU and th...

haha
@sehe doesn’t matter, I feel good now :)
morning :)
@Nils That’s the problem. Most of those truly “controversial opinions” are just very simply objectively wrong
@Nils Jon Skeets response is so clear. Love it: stackoverflow.com/users/22656/jon-skeet
10:55
That’s true for most of those posted by Bill on his blog
Could anybody get the Qt5 beta compile on win?
I appreciate the idea of getting some real controversial ideas – but well …
@Nils I recently tried installing Qt on Mac. It was an utter failure. The installation simply crashed the whole time
okay, but what about this?
102
A: What's your most controversial programming opinion?

HuntrodsC++ is one of the WORST programming languages - EVER. It has all of the hallmarks of something designed by committee - it does not do any given job well, and does some jobs (like OO) terribly. It has a "kitchen sink" desperation to it that just won't go away. It is a horrible "first language" t...

> It has a "kitchen sink" desperation to it that just won't go away.
He has a way with words
ah, I take that back, he’s an idiot
I actually thought he might be talking about real C++ but he just talks about C with classes
@KonradRudolph The Qt5 beta?
11:00
5 beta what?
Because 4.8 runs nicely on my mac, except that it is complaining all the time that my OSX version is unsupported.
@KonradRudolph well, he's entitled to. After all, we criticize Javascript, Php and Java for all the bad code it sollicits in the wild... It's only fair that people observe the amount of pain inflicted onto the world by (wellmeaning) programmers 'using' C++
Ah. No, not a beta.
4.7.4
@sehe That would be a good point. I don’t particularly like C++ either, for exactly that reason. It wasn’t the point he made, though.
He simply had no clue about C++
as four our criticising PHP and Java, I think I’m at least somewhat proficient in those languages and I don’t criticise straw-men here, but actual defects
Ok, here’s a controversial programming opinion which isn’t utter crap (well, I might be biased):
58
A: What's your most controversial programming opinion?

Konrad RudolphAll variables/properties should be readonly/final by default. The reasoning is a bit analogous to the sealed argument for classes, put forward by Jon. One entity in a program should have one job, and one job only. In particular, it makes absolutely no sense for most variables and properties to e...

@KonradRudolph Did you compile it yourself?
@Nils No! I just downloaded the installer (wizard) and ran that
11:04
@KonradRudolph yeah would love to have const by default.
@KonradRudolph The binary distros are crap IMHO.
well, amen
@KonradRudolph Nobody writes const int * const a;
@Nils well, C++ makes this tremendously more inviting, auto const a = …;
It will then make the pointer point constantly to what it points?
int i;
auto const myPtr = &i;
What will be the type of myPtr?
it will make the pointer const, not the pointee
int* const
11:10
So I would have to write const auto const myPtr = &i;
I fail to understand what is better about this.
11:23
Hey folks, anyone here to discuss a design decision?
I'm working on an iOS app, and I'm using two enums to drive parts of my display.
I'm just wondering if it's stupid idea to merge the two together.
@Moshe I’d use pixels …
@KonradRudolph :-D
@ScottW Hilarious? He’s a fucking tool
what annoys me more though is the sheer number of upvotes he got from people who think that he actually has a point
@Moshe What kind of enums? (i.e. what do they represent?)
@KonradRudolph I'm writing a slideshow kiosk app. One set of enums is all of the announcement types.
There's a subset of announcements that have "options", basically configurations of a certain subset of announcements.
I'm trying to decide if each of the configurations is really a separate announcement type.
Because the second enum represents an API which gets called via a dispatch table.
11:32
Not all announcements in the first enum actually use the dispatch table or the API, some are based on some other data.
are enums the right tool in the first place, rather than polymorphic classes
@KonradRudolph I'm using Objective-C, not C++, but pray tell, what do you mean by polymorphic classes?
well, it sounds like your configurations actually have associated behaviour so they should be objects, not merely integers
I may be mistaken though
it’s hard to judge like this
11:45
@Moshe Objective-C has inheritance too.
@DeadMG Puppy, I need your advice on some code
woofing right here
@DeadMG Aren’t puppies rather yapping or yelping?
@ManofOneWay Uh, you gonna tell me what you need me to advise on or what?
@JohannesSchaub-litb guy
Konrad...
IMO, "cat" should have been called "echo"
because it actually takes its input and gives it as output
12:22
@JohannesSchaub-litb "cat" is short for "catenate", because it actually concatenates its inputs
@KonradRudolph i confirmed that one can now write e.g. for( auto const i : IntRange( 1, 3 ) ), with const loop variable. nice
@johannes: what's that thing with std::rel_ops, they not looked up via ADL when just using namespace std::rel_ops in namespace of relevant class?
@JohannesSchaub-litb If you think that you’re using cat wrong ;)
@Cheersandhth.-Alf You can? That is fucking awesome :)
and only logical
… and it follows directly by the definition of range-based for loops in the standard :)
Konrad happy :)
@Cheersandhth.-Alf Ah well, so long, non-range based for loops and thanks for nothing. I’ll not be seeing you again in my code.
@Cheersandhth.-Alf btw, auto i : ... won't be const?
Herb Schildts' books are definitely ones of the best. They contain nice and easy to follow examples. — Johannes Schaub - litb 3 mins ago
12:33
Just make the type deducible ;-)
@Abyx hm i don't know. will it?
@JohannesSchaub-litb Dude, you are one heck of a troll
@Cheersandhth.-Alf dunno
@KonradRudolph hm :/
12:35
okay guys, you lost me
maybe it depends
Damn, I wanted to install a blog github-based today … I see, I won’t manage to do that after all
@DeadMG Sorry, I needed to go shopping really quick. I'm back now. Yes, so I am making a 3d engine for the iPad and I want to create some model class which basically is a model in space that you can move around. I want to abstract away the matrix stuff and instead use stuff like object.tx += 0.5f (for moving in x-direction) and object.ry -= 40.0f (rotating the object with respect to the y-axis)
@DeadMG I'm not sure though if this is good design. ideone.com/kppmh
@Cheersandhth.-Alf Wait, I need to back up. What’s the overhead of that, compared to a classic for loop? There shouldn’t be any, but I’m not confident enough in compilers.
@DeadMG Right now, I have a struct for each axis and transformation, with overloaded operators
12:40
The page at lysator.liu.se/c/schildt.html is equally wrong
it says "If main() is declared as void, I don't know of any compiler that will return 0. Indeed, the standard forbids it to !".
The Standard does not forbid a compiler to do anything as long as it is not observable
noone working with C will observe a compiler putting "0" into a return value register when returning from a void function
indeed that page immediately afterwards talks about the as-if rule. I'm left wondering how they could have made such an error there
you are being too harsh
you are right, but I think the author (wrongly) simply didn’t consider that the return value of main doesn’t need to echo the program’s exit value – which it normally does
wait, that makes no sense, since the program returns a value regardless of whether main is void
ok, curry on
@KonradRudolph as far as I can see, the page itself is also too harsh on my of the "issues" it finds in the Schildt book
lol
@KonradRudolph ah now I see what it means by main returning someting
i guess it is talking about "$?" ?
I would lookup in POSIX...
ok, @Cheersandhth.-Alf, the following should compile and do the right thing, with 0 overhead over classical for:
it doesn't belong to the C Standard!
int main() {
    for (auto const i : range(1, 5))
        cout << i << "\n";

    for (auto const u : range(0u))
        if (u == 3u) break;
        else         cout << u << "\n";

    for (auto const c : range('a', 'd'))
        cout << c << "\n";
}
12:49
@KonradRudolph what's range(0u)
(Welcome to Python)
Xeo
Xeo
@JohannesSchaub-litb Infinite range?
@JohannesSchaub-litb An infinite range of unsigned, starting at 0. Duh.
ohh
as far as I know in python you need to say "xrange"
just saying "range" will evaluate to a non-lazy range
probably filling up te memory
@JohannesSchaub-litb Well, fuck Python < 3.0
12:50
hmm
how is it in python3 ?
true that. I've had many 'WTFs' with python; all of them were gone in Py3 as far as I remember
Python 3 has dropped that nonsense with lazy ranges. All built-in range functions are lazy
(range, map, …)
no need for xrange, imap
which is really the only sensible decision
but it will invalidate earlier range values if the range needs to reallocate to have more elements
12:51
… so?
:5194229 ; 107  :     for( auto const i : IntRange( 1, 3 ) )

	mov	esi, 1
$LL20@main:

; 108  :     {
; 109  :         display( i );

	push	esi
	call	?display@@YAXH@Z			; display
	inc	esi
	add	esp, 4
	cmp	esi, 4
	jne	SHORT $LL20@main

; 110  :     }
@KonradRudolph does it not conflict with the GC then?
what if you store x = range[0] and range is lazy
@JohannesSchaub-litb I don’t understand what you mean
no overhead that i can see
and later reallocates
12:52
@Cheersandhth.-Alf Wow, I just jizzed my pants
then x becomes dangling?
@JohannesSchaub-litb Uhm? No, since the GC tracks references
isn't python ref counted
cpython that is
maybe, doesn’t matter here though
so x points at the first element of [lazy range item1, item 2, item 3, item 4] memory block
12:54
well, there is no such memory block
the block needs to grow, is reallocated. then it needs to keep 3 items around in memory just because we still access the first item
the items are in separate, independent memory locations
Xeo
Xeo
@Konrad: Ah, I see. You could use a notifier, though! po::bool_switch()->default(false)->notifier([&](bool b){ use_header = !b; })
@KonradRudolph i wonder about cache locality here
12:54
@Xeo I considered that … but simplicity over cleverness.
@JohannesSchaub-litb Lol. In Python?!
@KonradRudolph why not
hmm
Xeo
Xeo
@KonradRudolph Meh, I simply dislike calling count
or won't it have much effect
@JohannesSchaub-litb Because there is zero priority for efficiency in CPython
12:55
@Xeo Oh, I can understand that. But then, I dislike the whole API …
Xeo
Xeo
heh
@KonradRudolph that's bad
Xeo
Xeo
Yeah, it can be a bit of a pain
Xeo
Xeo
But ProgramOptions itself is atleast pretty nice as a whole package
12:56
@KonradRudolph when lazy iterating, will it trow away old elements that it already iterated over?
or does it just grow the list
@JohannesSchaub-litb if nothing references them, sure
there is no list
i wonder whether to implement that feature myself too
hmm
i don't remember what form of "list" the range() function returns.
list or dict or map or vector
@JohannesSchaub-litb a lazy range is just an iterator
whatever exist in python xD
@Cheersandhth.-Alf ohh
Xeo
Xeo
Reminds me
12:58
@JohannesSchaub-litb in 2.x it returns an array (Python "list") and in 3.x a "range" object, IIRC. :-)
Xeo
Xeo
3 hours ago, by Konrad Rudolph
Hmm. transformed doesn’t seem to work with lambdas anyhow. Weird.
i.e., in 3.x it's a constructor camouflaged as a function
Xeo
Xeo
You need #define BOOST_RESULT_OF_USE_DECLTYPE to make lambdas work
@Cheersandhth.-Alf ahh neat
"generator" i guess
isn't that the buzzword for it
why the fuck do i get these "you can perform this action in X seconds" everytime now
@KonradRudolph or close to. there is the string concatenation optimization.
13:00
@JohannesSchaub-litb because you're on fire
@Xeo before any inclusions :)
@KonradRudolph i wondered whether to write a GDB script that traces calls to certain clang functions and the arguments passed
then one could draw a diagram with the result graph allowing you to step through the instantiation process of all the templates
@Cheersandhth.-Alf Yes, and there is an -O compiler flag … which removes comments from they bytecode ಠ_ಠ
is this possible at all?
@JohannesSchaub-litb That sounds pretty nifty
13:37
Joan Armatrading 1972 - Whatever's for us [@192 kbps]
^ nice, difficult to find free version :-)
13:49
Hi. Is there anybody who can help me? I just need to now one thing:
grammar police says: know, not now
actually it's an awesome album (i'm halfway through)
Strings are char arrays ended with '\0'. Arrays are being translated by compiler as mov instructions:
char str[] = {'a', 'b', 'c', '\0'};
equals
mov byte [pos], 'a'
mov byte [pos+1], 'b'
mov byte [pos+1], 'c'
etc
is it same with "strings"?
stupid evaluations described it as spotty early work, but this is much better than 2nd album (where she was tricked into "pop-style"-ing everything, argh)
@user35443 Sorry, you appear to have mistaken this place for the C helpdesk
13:53
it's valid C++ code, isn't it?
@user35443 still not a helpdesk, is it?
who said this was the C++ helpdesk?
and strictly, it might be, but I don't give a shit, since it's not code I'd ever help anyone write
@user35443 Last time I looked at the disassembly of such code, 4 chars were moved at once, so your example would only require a single mov instruction.
@user35443 it is exceedingly unclear what a "string" is, but if you mean literals, FWIW: auto stuff = "lit"; is roughly equivalent to const char stuff[4] = { 'l','i','t', '\0' };
And if by "strings" you mean std::strings, then the constructor will be called with a const char* argument, and what happens inside the constructor you can see for yourself inside string.
13:56
@FredOverflow I think the asker subconsciously adopted the as-if rule there
@sehe No, auto stuff = string_literal is the same as const char* stuff = string_literal.
7
Q: auto with string literals

FredOverflow#include <iostream> #include <typeinfo> int main() { const char a[] = "hello world"; const char * p = "hello world"; auto x = "hello world"; if (typeid(x) == typeid(a)) std::cout << "It's an array!\n"; else if (typeid(x) == typeid(p)) std::...

@FredOverflow erm okay, thanks. I meant to illustrate the type of the literal itself. Never anticipated auto would lead it to decay. Hm. Sorry about that
@sehe What you mean is decltype("lit")

« first day (687 days earlier)      last day (4490 days later) »