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09:00
@Potatoswatter DeadMG: double standard
bitch all you want
@Potatoswatter yes it does
user1804599
Message to Harry Manback is funny.
JBL
JBL
Dec 6 at 21:44, by Etienne de Martel
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@DeadMG I am yet to encounter any difference between windows and linux gcc. Also there's cygwin. And you have linux build on teamcity, no?
09:07
I have no idea what you are attempting to say
user1804599
TeamTitty
Whatever. Dump vc++.
I'll give you a good binning.
@rok invalidated iterators.
People sucking at c++ all around
coming from the guy bitching about C++ not having first-class functions...
09:13
@DeadMG functors don't count?
of course they do
Because it doesn't have them.
the implication was that he was accusing other people of not knowing C++ when he clearly knows nothing himself
ah
I didnt say I know everything
09:14
I didn't say you should.
But you're just bitching so I'll let you vent
I merely said that if you want to accuse other people of sucking at C++, you might want to grasp the very basics first yourself.
If that makes you feel better or something
yes, never mind
you can accuse other people of sucking, and that's not just bitching at all, but when other people accuse you of sucking, you don't have to engage with them or anything, just shrug it off.
I am not sure if you see the difference between " my map segfaults halp" and "i dont consider c++ functions first-class"
09:17
I'm wondering what qualifies a function as being "first class".
well, I do ssee the difference
the first only requires an unusual runtime condition, and the second requires some kind of blindess
It means you can do everything with it that you can do with other objects
Ah, like lisp or javascript.
Or haskell, yes.
Just put C++ functions inside std::function objects and you get first-class-ness.
09:19
perfectly legal to do with a std::function or a functor or a function pointer anything you could do with any other type.
> In languages with first-class functions, the names of functions do not have any special status; they are treated like ordinary variables with a function type.
which is quite true in C++
they are function pointers
Sure, but most C++ platforms won't let you emit a function on the fly, which is the really interesting part about these "first class" functions to me.
er, emitting functions on the fly and first-class functions have absolutely nothing whatsoever to do with each other.
JBL
JBL
@BartekBanachewicz How is std::function not a "function type" ? (Genuine question).
09:23
the name of a function is clearly not a std::function, though.
not that that really matters
A good question is "what can't you do with function pointers that makes them non-first-class"
user3010322
@DeadMG Indeed. Only compiler that's actually trying, and I can't wait to take my work with MinGW in Visual Studio and port that shit straightaway to Clang.
"First class" functions are wasteful to support without alternative on a Harvard architecture machine, which C++ supports. Therefore C++ must have something like a function which is not an object.
Don't complain about the existence of impure things you don't need to use.
user1804599
FCFs don’t have to be function pointers.
@CatPlusPlus You can't point to anonymous functions.
Well, you can in C++11 :)
As long as you don't capture anything.
09:26
I was just about to say, yes you can.
@FredOverflow That makes anonymous functions special, not function pointers
@Potatoswatter That's not true. Supporting Harvard-architecture is just about not guaranteeing roundtrip or size equality with void*.
@CatPlusPlus Functions being first class includes the notion of having function literals, just like having int literals such as 42 and 123.
The problem with function points is that they don't contain a userdata/this pointer. While there are workarounds, I don't know any good ones.
int x() { }
09:27
That's not a function literal, that's just a named function.
What's the difference? Named functions in Haskell are also statements, not expressions
I don't believe FCFs require anonymous functions.
not that this matters since we have them
Function literals are also called lambda expressions. In Haskell, you can write \n -> n + 1 without giving the function a name.
why is it so hard to load rightfold's profile
jeez
09:29
@Jefffrey Why do you want to do that?
because he has an awesome hat
and i wanna steal it
user1804599
You cannot get it anymore.
I don't see a hat in rightfold's profile. Do you mean his horn?
user1804599
09:29
It only works on the 19th.
user1804599
Oh, wait. 20th. I said nothing.
That just looks stupid.
user1804599
My hair sticks out of it.
user1804599
09:31
Besides that I like it.
it's a stupid Christmas hat.
you were expecting?
that hat makes your avatar even more femanly
user1804599
I just accepted a hat, but it doesn't seem to show up here.
oh man
i need a starred message for that
user1804599
09:33
@FredOverflow I had a problem, so I decided to use caching. Now I had a problem.
and you won't give it to me now
lemme try with the JS room
Is the hat at least visible for you guys on my SE profile?
JBL
JBL
@FredOverflow Yep
@DeadMG what does size equality with void * have to do with harvard architecture?
or actually what does size equality with void * mean ?
That every pointer will fit in void*
Function pointers might not
09:36
Except function pointers and member function pointers and data member pointers, but those aren't pointers, anyway :)
because the two buses might be different in size?
right.
you could only implement function pointers if the code address space was not larger than the data one
@FredOverflow Function pointers are.
success
JBL
JBL
Dat hatwhoring.
09:42
things are out of control
JBL
JBL
Worse than Valve bigots.
@EtiennedeMartel I did :) (yes, I know the message wasn't for me, but I got notified)
At this day and age Amazon still cannot handle my name with "á" in it.
@Potatoswatter Link to supc++
user1804599
@wilx “wilx” has no á in it, silly.
09:48
x is stl map
the hint: get it
user3010322
auto e: x takes things and copies them, soo.
And Amazon's delivery fees are outrageous. Book £6.43, shipping & packaging £9.18.
@Potatoswatter About 1., the opposite was once stated as a goal by Stallman. :(
I see a shitstorm ahead
JBL
JBL
09:49
@RokKralj You still have map.size() copies.
@wilx I never paid shipping for books. Even when I was in Portugal, ordering from the UK.
user1804599
Go away and never come back ever again.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I would have used the German site but I do not understand enough German to handle it. :)
morning robot
morning deadmg
Ell
Ell
09:51
morning jefffrey
And Amazon does not let me use English on the German site.
@rightfold about predefined numeric types, I think Quantity should be defined always.
@wilx oh come on man
user1804599
@BartekBanachewicz What is Quantity?
user1804599
There are different kinds of quantities.
09:52
@wilx Do they allow you to use German on their English site? >_<
dang., you're right
user1804599
Such as length and mass.
maybe Count?
Count dracula;
@Ell Hi.
ok, this is getting stupid
09:52
What does that buy over 'number'
user1804599
Map, Array and stuff will probably use typedef Int Size.
@BartekBanachewicz Ugh, that's a horrible idea.
@CatPlusPlus The evil plan is to kick out all numbers from the base language.
user1804599
I’m getting insane.
Good luck with that
user1804599
09:53
Let me.
Ell
Ell
We don't need to do that
not that language.
Ell
Ell
What about when we want to do math?
If it's a dimensionless number, it's a dimensionless number.
@Ell you have to define a context for the values.
09:54
It's really unnecessary
user1804599
Or Int[Element].
"number" means "quantity" anyway.
user1804599
With measure Element.
@Telkitty I do not see why it could not be switchable with German being the default for amazon.de.
@wilx I'd say it would be a waste of time given the target audience.
09:55
@R.MartinhoFernandes Retarded UNIX philosophy of "script everything, nobody needs a library"
@wilx i.e., I think "because it requires resources that would be better used elsewhere" is a perfectly reasonable excuse for not providing the German site in a language other than German.
room died
post ponies.
user1804599
<
oh god. Only now I realize how brilliant that was.
BTW look at the starboard, there's an arrow :3
10:12
no, really?
Is there any other good site for buying books other than Amazon?
@wilx I've bought stuff from bookdepository.co.uk before.
user1804599
The Pragmatic Bookshelf.
you know, we basically have 4 ways of drawing stuff in web
> canvas
> WebGL
> SVG
> CSS dom transforms
user1804599
Flash
10:21
MySQL++'s website seems to have vanished :/ That's not good
yeah, right. What I was thinking, svg is a DOM elemet too
@LightnessRacesinOrbit How is that not good? :P
user1804599
Because people might be using the library and they want to read the documentation?
@BartekBanachewicz Because it's an excellent library that I happen to use, and I would like to read the documentation, plus it's a sign that perhaps the company disappeared.
you use MySQL?
@BartekBanachewicz Yes.
user1804599
10:22
Shut up about MySQL.
(here it comes)
@LightnessRacesinOrbit What company? You know that the MySQL company was bought by Oracle, right?
user1804599
MySQL++ isn’t by Oracle.
@Potatoswatter lol, I didn't know that
10:23
@Potatoswatter Yeah, four years ago. But MySQL++ has nothing to do with Oracle.
user1804599
Although Oracle not existing anymore would be great news.
they should also buy PHP foundation, so it all could be nuked at once
oh right I forgot that both MySQL and PHP are a well-established technologies in the modern web
and there are people dealing with them on a daily basis
I'm glad you've remembered now.
10:28
There are people dealing meth on a daily basis, don't make it right.
Or nuclear radiation.
user1804599
PHP is not illegal and is not bad for your health.
user1804599
inb4 joke about PHP being bad for your health (no it isn’t).
@rightfold do you mean physical health or mental health?
user1804599
Both.
10:31
@BartekBanachewicz I don't think there are many nuclear radiation wholesalers roaming the streets.
"Hello, I would like some nuclear radiation please."
"Certainly, sir."
user1804599
You cannot compare PHP to meth.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit I know, right?! Can you imagine the world we would live in if that would be true?
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Plutonium can be found everywhere these days.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Happened in Mexico a couple weeks ago.
In Mexico you can find anything
10:35
I should rewrite my CV to LateX
JBL
JBL
> If we ping Santa, can there be packet loss?
Lol
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Not the same, but reminded me of this en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goi%C3%A2nia_accident (warning, it's horrible)
I have to ask how this question got so many upvotes distributed everywhere: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/20701569/code-infinite-loop-cannot-print-only-once#20701591
It's a dupe of five billion maybe harder to find questions.
> A wheel type radiotherapy device which has a long collimator to focus the radiation into a narrow beam.
that's basically a nuclear radiation gun
@R.MartinhoFernandes The recent Mexican incident was essentially the same, except they caught it faster.
10:42
the description of what happened to those guys is horrible
> On September 16, Alves succeeded in puncturing the capsule's aperture window with a screwdriver, allowing him to see a deep blue light coming from the tiny opening he had created
@BartekBanachewicz I warned.
@R.MartinhoFernandes it would make a great sf book if it wasn't real :|
IIRC it was Cobalt 60. Pu is next-to-useless as a radiotherapy tool - it's primarily an alpha emitter and most of its radiation does not even leave itself.
@MartinJames It was caesium.
Albert Stevens (1887–1966), also known as patient CAL-1, was the subject of a human radiation experiment, and survived the highest known accumulated radiation dose in any human. On May 14, 1945, he was injected with 131 kBq (3.55 µCi) of plutonium without his knowledge or informed consent. Plutonium remained present in his body for the remainder of his life, the amount decaying slowly through radioactive decay and biological elimination. Stevens died of heart disease some 20 years later, having accumulated an effective radiation dose of 64 Sv (6400 rem) over that time period. The current...
10:47
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yikes!
@chris Because low-hanging fruit
It seems that alcohol is far more dangerous than Pu.
> Thinking the capsule's contents were either valuable or even supernatural, he immediately brought it into his house. Over the next three days, he invited friends and family to view the strange glowing substance
@MartinJames Who wants to eat Pu? Yuck!
@BartekBanachewicz It's painful to read.
@Potatoswatter Keeps you warm in cold weather.
10:48
@R.MartinhoFernandes my rate of WTFs/minute is dangerously high
It's like when you're watching a movie and constantly thinking "No, no, no, no, don't do that!"
@BartekBanachewicz Yeah - I had a quick look at SO. One sequence-point and one 'size of struct is always 4' so far :(
@BartekBanachewicz None of this would have happened if Christianity hadn't been introduced. They were pretty much right that it was supernatural, where they went wrong was the "loving God" part.
> As you can see, I am aware of the fact that i have to use pointers instead of real arrays because those cannot be returned. source
What?
@MartinJames The Russians used plutonium power sources for Arctic radio beacons; farmers found them and used them as space heaters.
10:51
@TonyTheLion where I can downvote that?
(Or fishermen, whatever.)
@Potatoswatter well RTGs are still used nowadays, they are super effective in space
@BartekBanachewicz Less fishermen there.
Or on Mars.
Sunds reasonable, if you neglect that the radio beacons would be disabled.
10:52
free(primeResult); //Same as above
return primeResult;
@Potatoswatter well, it also wasn't only Arctic IIRC
basically the problem was that russians lost a few of those due to coastline changes
lolwat
Free pointer, then return it. Yea very useful.
Good job. As Cat would say
Undefined behavior is the only way to have a chance at performance better than theoretical optimality. Think about it.
@BartekBanachewicz Russians lose submarines to coastline changes, what's your point? ;)
@Potatoswatter Cilk Plus shouldn't even compile shrug
@BartekBanachewicz Well, the Pu used in the RTG's has a half-life of ~80 years, so not much of an environmental risk.
JBL
JBL
10:55
Meh. After removing that Release/Debug mismatch, my string still contains garbage in addition to the correct chars.
@MartinJames The risk is more about military security — dirty bomb potential.
Freeing up the memory and then returning a pointer to it, is like emptying your food container into the bin and then handing the empty container to your wife to eat out of. — Tony The Lion 21 secs ago
@MartinJames as long as you don't consider "people dying" as an environmental risk
@TonyTheLion zomgwat.
My analogy my suck
but I made an attempt
@TonyTheLion you can totally eat out of an empty container, if you put something in it again. You can't really fill a free'd pointer again :/
10:58
Freeing up the memory and then returning a pointer to it, is like throwing away your full food container before eating it. — Tony The Lion 2 mins ago
changed it
Good save!
nah, more like, eating it after you've already eaten it once
user1804599
Dude.
@Potatoswatter OIC. Someone may have stolen the Pu. I wish them the best of luck with it. Hopefully, they will kill themselves while trying to weaponise it.
10:59
@melak47 a = malloc(); free(a); a = malloc();
user1804599
@BartekBanachewicz postpronies
@MartinJames You don't need to weaponise it.
The world is just lucky all the radiation source thieves have so far been xkcd white beret guy, not black fedora guy.
@R.MartinhoFernandes True - irrational fear factor.

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