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14:00
Anyway, wow. I just learned that linear RGB 0.5 drops to 0.218 after gamma correction (2.2). That's... amazing, I guess.
@BartekBanachewicz you just mentioned a lot of things that in isolated I would be know what they are, but when combined into that sentence result a vomit ball of nonsense
@thecoshman If you render 0.5 linear RGB to a display that's then mapping it to 2.2 gamma curve, you will lose more than a half of brightness
@BartekBanachewicz by '0.5 lenear RGB' do you mean where all three components are 0.5?
@thecoshman doesn't really matter. R, G and B are orthogonal in gamma correction
I mean, apart from iOS driver bugs that caused leakage, if you read OpenGL-tagged questions a lot
bah, gamm correction, IIRC a nice idea that failed to be implemented correctly by anyone
I'm looking at you shitty IE with your darker then they should be PNGs
14:17
g'day!
There is a function named fromWide in our codebase at work /cc @DeadMG
@refp hi
@R.MartinhoFernandes ouch.
14:32
0
Q: C++ vector of pointers, vector declaration and deletion of pointers

user1570742Let's assume I have a singleton class: class Singleton { public: Singleton getInstance(); void doit(); std::vector<Object*>& getVector(); private: std::vector<Object*> _vector; }; class Delegator { public: void main(); } In the doit method I p...

Return of the multiton.
woof
"Let's assume I have a singleton" there's your problem — thecoshman 8 secs ago
Ell
Ell
Hi puppy
hi
man
Xeo
Xeo
So, my first day at work until now: Learning the source code and.... playing games. :)
14:38
Christmas decorations are way more work than they're worth.
@DeadMG who says they have to be 'Christmas' decorations?
my mother, it would seem
... I would say 'fuck her' but I doesn't seem quite right in this context
3
Yes, it's called "Inline functions". — DeadMG 56 secs ago
Awesome comment.
14:48
I have two unsigned long longs and want to calculate something power modulo. x = m^e (mod n)
Java provides the BigInteger class and I need something similar for C any ideas?
user142019
There is no standard big integer type.
@R.MartinhoFernandes No easier solution?
Implement one!
aargh my head hurts if I only think about it!
user142019
14:50
8
Q: Bigint (bigbit) library

Łukasz LewI'm looking for a c++ class/library that provides 1024 bit and bigger integers and bit operations like: - bit shifting, - bitwise OR/AND, - position first zero bit speed is crucial, so it would have to be implemented with some SIMD assembly.

@Nils Not that I know of.
What about boost?
@Zoidberg'-- Implemented with some SIMD assembly...
user142019
Maybe TTMath.
And I don't need a really big integer, just unsigned long long would be enough.
user142019
14:52
> How big the values can be is set at compile time.
@Nils Missing. They probably cannot just grab GMP because license.
yes
Not even boost helps me now I am lost!!!
:D
what about objective-c
Does the requester even know what SIMD means? It's a class of instruction sets on a processor...
ttmath::ErrorCode err = parser.Parse
ewwww
user142019
14:54
lol
user142019
@Nils Foundation has no big integers.
I mean, I know it's not a total faux pas, but it's gonna force the code to be platform-specific...
@DeadMG It's C++, what were you expecting? Oh wait.
user142019
There is NSDecimalNumber which can hold and perform operations on gigantic numbers, but that's it. It's not arbitrary length.
@Zoidberg'-- Sounds like a floating point number.
Tek
Tek
14:54
Newbie here, anyone care to tell me what I'm doing wrong?
pastie.org/private/km8gozu5hntg1bodxpp4a
`error: request for member ‘push_back’ in...`
user142019
@R.MartinhoFernandes decimal.
TTMath had a nice idea
but poor execution imo
@Zoidberg'-- What about it?
NsInteger
@R.MartinhoFernandes it's old C++, to begin with
14:56
What do crypto libs in C use then?
user142019
@Nils NSInteger is a typedef for long or (IIRC) long long depending on the architecture.
@Zoidberg'-- Still floating point.
yeah I basically would ned modpow(base, exp, mod) for unsigned long long
user142019
@R.MartinhoFernandes ah of course.
user142019
But you can use an exponent of 1. xD
14:58
@Tek, std::vector<T>::data returns pointer to T, not pointer to vector
@Tek What is getABCList supposed to do?
kinda disappointing that there is no BigInteger for C except the GNU stuff
Tek
Tek
@R.MartinhoFernandes Just return the vector pointer so that I can call push_back
Ell
Ell
Why do we have int? Why not use int32 or some other specific type?
@Nils who uses C anyway
15:01
Erm, why are you reimplementing member variables?
What about openssl.org do they also use the gmp stuff?
@BartekBanachewicz I was also referring to C++
user142019
[[NSDecimalNumber decimalNumberWithString:@"42"] decimalNumberByMultiplyingByPowerOf10:10 withBehavior:[NSDecimalNumber defaultBehavior]];
user142019
xD
@Nils Why are you reffering to C++ by saying "C"? It's like reffering to blue by saying "orange"
15:03
@BartekBanachewicz Linux, gcc, clang, Apple, Microsoft, many embedded hw suppliers and and and
@Zoidberg'-- OMG WTF is taht.
@Nils wat? Ah, you meant my earlier post. Please link to it if you refer to something I said earlier.
user142019
@R.MartinhoFernandes It creates an autoreleased instance of NSDecimalNumber and multiplies it by the 10th power of 10.
@BartekBanachewicz I correct I find it disappointing that there is no standard lib for C and C++ like there is BigInteger for Java.
@BartekBanachewicz yes
Tek
Tek
@R.MartinhoFernandes So that I can do (other, not implemented yet) checks on the vector before returning it.
15:04
@Nils Java sucks anyway, so it having some sort of biginteger library really doesn't change that
@Tek Why would you want to return a vector anyway?
Simply return a reference then.
Tek
Tek
@BartekBanachewicz I don't, I just want to return the pointer.
@BartekBanachewicz Sure it does, but this problem is solved better over there IMHO.
@Tek why would you want to return a pointer to vector anyway?
Tek
Tek
@BartekBanachewicz You mean from a vector? 'Cause that's what's in the code I linked.
15:06
@Nils gcc is being translated to C++
@BartekBanachewicz It's done already.
@BartekBanachewicz Who uses gcc anyways :P
Answer poor devs who have to deal with old unixes :)
@Nils Probably homebrew.
user142019
@Nils give me a second.
15:07
@Tek You're really doing some cryptic shit there, to be honest
Doesn't Apple's toolchain primarily use gcc? Wait, they own part of LLVM, don't they... herp derp
I believe you can program FPGA with cross-gcc
@Ell I'm pretty sure there's dozens of SO questions about that, but I just can't find them :(
@Ell Too much typing.
15:08
@Ell like int32_t? (which is standard in C++11)
From Wikipedia: "In 2005, Apple Inc. hired Lattner and formed a team to work on the LLVM system for various uses within Apple's development systems. LLVM is an integral part of Apple's latest development tools for Mac OS X and iOS."
@ShotgunNinja does it mean you can use cross-ARM-LLVM to compile objects and they should link with objective C ones?
@BartekBanachewicz FPGAs use an HDL, like Verilog or VHDL, don't think there's a GCC for that
@BartekBanachewicz It might be...
Tek
Tek
@BartekBanachewicz What's so cryptic about having a simple class that stores the alphabet in a vector that can later implement methods to do arithmetic on the alphabet it stores?
@Collin I've seen compilers spawn FPGA processors and hardware-implemented language runtimes... Squawk VM comes to mind.
@Collin ah you might be right. These are cool stuff, still.
user142019
@R.MartinhoFernandes huh? Homebrew is a package manager.
user142019
@Nils any of these (not GMP):
user142019
daknok% otool -L /System/Library/Frameworks/Security.framework/Security
/System/Library/Frameworks/Security.framework/Security:
	/System/Library/Frameworks/Security.framework/Versions/A/Security (compatibility version 1.0.0, current version 55179.1.0)
	/usr/lib/system/libcorecrypto.dylib (compatibility version 1.0.0, current version 1.0.0)
	/usr/lib/libbsm.0.dylib (compatibility version 1.0.0, current version 1.0.0)
	/usr/lib/libobjc.A.dylib (compatibility version 1.0.0, current version 228.0.0)
15:10
@Zoidberg'-- Sigh.
5
Q: Is there any advantage of using non-fixed integers (int, long) instead of fixed-size ones (int64_t, int32_t)?

lamefunMaybe performance? I feel that using non-fixed integers just makes programs more complicated and prone to fail when porting to another architecture.

@Tek returning a pointer to encapsulated vector
@R.MartinhoFernandes But that won't actually create a bitstream that can run on hardware, right?
@BartekBanachewicz A data member which is returned via pointer by a getter is not very encapsulated.
@Collin I honestly don't know.
15:12
@R.MartinhoFernandes Maybe not yet? They're comparing it to Altera ISE and the Xilinx stuff, but I can't tell
@FredOverflow that's the point
@R.MartinhoFernandes Are you implying int is not strongly typed? ;)
Tek
Tek
@BartekBanachewicz The encapsulation is for running checks on the vector before returning the pointer.
@Tek What kinds of checks?
@Tek What will you return if the checks fail?
user142019
15:13
@BartekBanachewicz exzeption!
@Zoidberg'-- of course apple does not like gnu stuff
Tek
Tek
I could throw an exception
Who does besides software commies?
@Tek return an exception or throw an exception? ;)
user142019
@Nils if they dynamically link it it's fine, not?
Tek
Tek
15:13
Throw... you know what I mean, heh.
@Tek What happens after you return it and the user modifies it? Shouldn't you check then too?
user142019
@FredOverflow return an exception and throw a vector.
@Tek so you cant just do alphabet->getABCList()->push_back, because in case getABCList throws, it won't be dereferencable
Tek
Tek
LOL
@Zoidberg'-- nah
ask a lawyer
15:14
@Zoidberg'-- throws a vector at whatever
I've seen methods return exceptions... the guys were used to programming in C, and returning int error codes.
@Zoidberg'-- for lgpl probably
user142019
GPL for libraries is terrible.
user142019
If you release a library under GPL, fuck you.
@BartekBanachewicz Erm, that is not a problem, because if getABCList throws it won't be dereferenced anyway.
15:16
> GPL is terrible.
FTFY
user142019
Liquefied petroleum gas, also called LPG, GPL, LP Gas, liquid petroleum gas or simply propane or butane, is a flammable mixture of hydrocarbon gases used as a fuel in heating appliances and vehicles. It is increasingly used as an aerosol propellant and a refrigerant, replacing chlorofluorocarbons in an effort to reduce damage to the ozone layer. When specifically used as a vehicle fuel it is often referred to as autogas. Varieties of LPG bought and sold include mixes that are primarily propane (), primarily butane () and, most commonly, mixes including both propane and butane, depending ...
Tek
Tek
@R.MartinhoFernandes Why would I need to?

@BartekBanachewicz I wouldn't need it to be dereference it if it throws though, that's why it's there in the first place.
Well, it seems weird that you are checking if your internal state is invalid right before you give it away in a way that it can be made invalid.
haha
enjoy!
Is that the video where he eats something? :)
15:19
Not gonna open a video with RMS Titanic on the thumbnail.
lol RMS Titanic
user142019
> Stallman only obtains his food from open sores.
Tek
Tek
@R.MartinhoFernandes Well, It'd want it to stop what it's doing if the exception is thrown.
@Zoidberg'-- eew!
user142019
Blewrg.
15:20
Isn't it HMS Titanic... Oh, Stallman.
@Tek That's how exceptions work.
user142019
Man.
user142019
That video is fucking filthy.
user142019
Bin it.
Guuuuuys quick question
Tek
Tek
15:21
@FredOverflow Yes, and people are still asking me why.
@Tek But if thrown, the exception is thrown before whatever it is that will be done.
@ThePhD too late
user142019
@Tek The point is, if you think the error might be common, exception is not a good way
@FredOverflow It's never too late to seek knowledge!
15:22
@ThePhD I'm leaving work soon, so hurry
I'm trying to figure out Joystick Input on Windows, and so far I'm being told to go try two different things. Anyone ever mess with Joysticks (GamePads) on Windows?
@ThePhD But you weren't quick enough for a quick question.
Tek
Tek
@BartekBanachewicz I'm open to suggestions.
@FredOverflow My fingers are slow at the moment. :c
@BartekBanachewicz Being common is irrelevant.
15:22
@ThePhD DirectInput
you should use exceptions if you cannot guarantee that your caller can still complete their contract, even though your function failed.
@DeadMG Exceptions are fast when they are not thrown.
any code is fast when it's not executed
vector& get() {
    if(the_vector.empty()) throw "tis empty";
    return the_vector;
}
// ....
foo.get().clear(); // there you go, empty and no exception.
speed of error handling is usually irrelevant
15:24
The point is the checks are likely worthless.
@Tek maybe just wrap the whole vector, with your own functions
object.getter().mutator() is a symptom of weak encapsulation.
2
Returning a pointer to a member std container looks really terrible to me.
If you give out a reference to a modifiable vector, there is no guarantee whatsoever that whatever checks you did before returning it would still pass.
So just don't give out the whole object.
15:25
And if you can have a member variable in an invalid state it is time to rethink your invariants.
This answer is clearly, demonstrably, and obviously WRONG. It's wrong logically because proving floating point processors have errors doesn't prove that a series of multiplies produces less precise results than that of the pow() function. IE: the litmus test is NOT perfect precision, it's the precision of the pow() function. 2nd, this answer fails technically because it contradicts the obvious fact that pow() relies on a convergence routine, while multiplies do not. See my answer below for more details. — RocketRoy 12 hours ago
Um...
user142019
@Nils and people that love each other. Love is indirectly in the air!
Tek
Tek
@BartekBanachewicz So I could wrap the vector and lets say... add a specific check that if a value is already in the vector push_back would return false?
15:27
Is that guy seriously going to disagree with an obviously right answer?
@FredOverflow Hokay. I'll gow it that, then. It seems like Microsoft keeps saying DirectInput is not the way to program for games, but the things is DirectInput supports like a million things that the new XInput does not...
@Tek You need to expose your own push_back function that validates the data before it becomes invalid, instead of exposing the whole vector.
@Tek Alphabet::AddLetter
Ell
Ell
Does anyone here know maple?
Tek
Tek
15:29
I see
Or the annoying software?
user142019
@Ell Maple? Canada?
Ell
Ell
Then software
the *
@ThePhD Oh, is DirectInput deprecated? I wouldn't care too much, though. I still use DirectDraw :)
user142019
@Ell What is it?
15:30
@FredOverflow Has been for, about, eight years.
@Mysticial you'd have to prove that 6 multiplies produces more error than the pow() function, NOT that it produces less than perfect precision. He's just plainly retarded
@FredOverflow Bahahaha
@Ell Well, I know what it is. That is all. I managed to avoid the classes where I would have to use it.
@FredOverflow Heh, yeah, what @DeadMG said. But XInput is.. ... really just for Xbox 360 controllers. So DirectInput is actually far stronger than the two, despite its age.
Well, it had more time to mature.
Ell
Ell
15:31
@zoidberg software for doing maths on, my brother is doing his coursework on it know
If all else fails, I might just program to the metal on this one. It'll be a good learning experience.
not really
@BartekBanachewicz Well, we know that error is introduced due to imperfect arithmetic and representation of numbers... Maybe he's just approaching it as a scientist, not a programmer.
the reason DirectInput is deprecated isn't because it was replaced with XInput, it's because the raw Win32 API is usually fine for this matter.
@ShotgunNinja he's citing IEEE!
15:32
@DeadMG Oh, do Gamepads fire Win32 events? Didn't know that.
@BartekBanachewicz Rather than producing his own argument?
user142019
@Ell oh I used WolframAlpha for math homework.
user142019
(If I even did my homework, which I didn't.)
user142019
I used it in year four.
@Zoidberg'-- heh I am just a big fan of Dr Sheldon Cooper
15:33
@FredOverflow What do gamepads have to do with anything?
Ell
Ell
I'm trying to find a way to define a function which takes a function as a parameter. Not sure if that is possible in the maths world?
user142019
@Nils Who's that?
@Ell In what language?
user142019
@Ell f(g) = g(2) I think.
user142019
If that would even make sense. xD
Ell
Ell
15:35
@deadmg in maple language, not sure its proper name
@Zoidberg'-- That would be perfectly legal.
@Zoidberg'-- Some pop-culture icon which is supposed to represent or parody our superior intellectual culture, I think.
12 mins ago, by ThePhD
I'm trying to figure out Joystick Input on Windows, and so far I'm being told to go try two different things. Anyone ever mess with Joysticks (GamePads) on Windows?
This answer is the best piece of writing on this website, hands down. — benzado Jun 21 '11 at 23:27
Kind of an exaggeration, don't you think?
I mean, mathematics is relatively untyped- you can just say f(x) where x is whatever the fuck you want it to be.
15:36
@R.MartinhoFernandes lol yeah
@DeadMG No, functions map sets to sets.
user142019
@DeadMG it could also mean multiply g by two. :P
Ell
Ell
@zoid I mean I need f(y(x)) => something
user142019
@FredOverflow :^)
15:36
0
A: What breaking changes are introduced in C++11?

Vapour in the AlleyWe found a breaking changed that is only revealed at run-time. It is reported to Microsoft. See: Microsoft Connect site The issue revolves around the use of a native pointer type in a virtual method override across multiple DLLs. This implementation relies on the code construct “#pragma make_pub...

What. The. Fuck.
Please delete.
user142019
@Ell give me a second.
Ell
Ell
meh never mind copy and paste has solved it, but its an icky solution
@Zoidberg'-- What? :)
user142019
@FredOverflow Category theory!
I'm off cu guys
15:38
@Zoidberg'-- I'm afraid you're way over my head.
@DeadMG You can treat types as sets as the two are isomorphic. Category theory, motherfucker, do you speak it?
user142019
absolutely not
How about dogegory theory?
@FredOverflow Downvoted
Ell
Ell
15:39
What is that o symbol called?
function composition
Composition symbol?
user142019
@Ell function composition.
#define u8 "abc"
const char *s = u8"def"; // Previously "abcdef", now "def"
huh?
user142019
@FredOverflow The morphisms in the category of sets are functions.
15:40
@Collin String literal concatenation rules may vary...
@Collin UTF-8 string literals.
I seem to have pulled a Robot on the star board :D
Does this chat have a star leaderboard hooked up like the C# room?
@ShotgunNinja AFAIK, theirs covers the whole chat.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Oh, it's not that the concatenation rules changed, it's that u8"string" means something specific
whew
@ShotgunNinja Just got an YSOD.
Seems they are running a debug ASP.NET site.
¬_¬ the random star message of mine "@R.MartinhoFernandes oh, that's a mighty big cock you have there"
@Zoidberg'-- Is that a generalization of, or a contradiction to, what I said?
Ell
Ell
Ysod? :L
user142019
15:43
@FredOverflow I think it's the same as what you said.
Xeo
Xeo
@Ell yellow screen of death
Ell
Ell
my mums laptop gets a bsod when a HDMI is plugged in
@Ell Ysod is the new iPod.
I also think we have a new best way to work out who should be on the owner list
Ell
Ell
Ohh
15:43
@Ell yay drivers!
@Ell Yellow Screen of Death. The error page you get on ASP.NET if you have debug stuffs on.
user142019
> The arrows or morphisms between sets A and B are all functions from A to B.
So arrows have directions, hm? :)
Xeo
Xeo
Hm, I have a problem. I have 5eur left in my pocket, and the bank's already closed for today.
ask on SO
Xeo
Xeo
15:45
And I got 1.8k eur on my account. :|
Xeo
Xeo
I forgot my PIN.
I know for a fact that ATMs do exist in Germany.
You must never use an ATM
@R.MartinhoFernandes really?
15:45
@Xeo Guess what I am going to say.
@Xeo For how long have you forgotten it already?
Xeo
Xeo
@FredOverflow A year, roughly.
user142019
@FredOverflow Well, morphisms (AKA arrows, not to be confused with Control.Arrow) map from A to B, so you could say they have some kind of direction.
And you never bothered to get a new one?
Xeo
Xeo
15:46
And I've always been too cheap to order a new one.
@FredOverflow Hey, it costs 10eur!
"You suck" does not really do it justice.
what? you have to pay for a new pin?
Also, how can you not get by just fine with 5 Euro?
what the hell sort of shit faced bank do you use?
Xeo
Xeo
Also, until recently I lived in Berlin, where the banks stayed open till 6pm :|
15:46
You guys need better banks
I changed my PIN once and it didn't cost me anything.
@Xeo Is that true?
forget pin => get over the fact you are an idiot who probably shouldn't have a bank account in the first place => go to bank and ask for new one => open letter with new pin
how is that hard?
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yes, getting a new PIN or a new card before they expire costs ~10eur.
Anyway, paying 10€ to gain unfettered access to 1.8k€ sounds like a good deal to me.
15:50
@Xeo Wat? It's free here.
Xeo
Xeo
Atleast with the Volksbank.
Call it a stupidity charge.
No one told me any of that at the Sparkasse.
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes I only got that money today. It's for the initial furniture.
15:51
@DeadMG you, like I, live in a sensible country where things makes sense
Xeo
Xeo
@thecoshman Well, the PIN before that I didn't forget for over 2 years, because I used it daily.
@ShotgunNinja ah, now it all makes sense
Xeo
Xeo
And I still know it.
Xeo
Xeo
The new one... I didn't use very often.
15:51
@thecoshman No we don't.
@thecoshman I thought you lived in Ireland.
@R.MartinhoFernandes placing the currency sign after the value is so unsettling for me
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes Dunno if they have the same rules.
@thecoshman No one does.
@DeadMG me more then you :D though I am still finding it hard to get used to what km really mean :P
15:52
lol
@thecoshman 1 kilometer = 0.621371192 miles
@FredOverflow Round to 1... ehehehe
but god damn it! I will buy my milk in pints till the day I die! who ever heard or a 'litre' or milk
@FredOverflow it's of knowing what the value is, by more not being able to think in km
@thecoshman It's all the rage over here.
15:55
@R.MartinhoFernandes I here you even have wimpy not quite a pint pints
@thecoshman I don't know that and I lived with the metric system all my life.
km = some indeterminate large distance bigger than a block and smaller than a city.
A British pint of milk seems a bit much...
still, I proclaim we should make use of duetric, basically the metric system, but with base 12 numbers
best thing about imperial units, UK pint > USA pint
Ell
Ell
15:57
We buy milk in 2 pint bottles I think
@thecoshman My stepdad seems awfully proud of his British pint glasses in the kitchen cupboard.
Ell
Ell
we buy cream in those quantities as well
@ShotgunNinja rightly so :D
Ell
Ell
whatever a big milk bottle is xD
@Ell That's a little over a litre.
15:58
you buy PINTS OF CREAM? you must have serious weight issues
At least it's not pints of lard...
@thecoshman Btw, 1 litre > 1 pint (any of them).
:P
@R.MartinhoFernandes yeah, but 0.5 < 1
@R.MartinhoFernandes liter, ftfy

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