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I doubt it
such stories are common in developing nations and have even happened a couple times in developed ones
 
user1357851
Maybe they tried to kidnap her and sell her as a slave or something ... made her looking dead, then the night she's buried, dig her up and sell her else where
 
Where's your sense of humor, man?
 
working on Wide
 
3:05 PM
lol
 
@Neil To be fair, there's little to no snow right now. It's spring!
 
@DeadMG Your sense of humour is working on Wide? Does that mean you don't take it seriously?
@EtiennedeMartel Fuck spring. Spring is just as cold as Winter.
 
@EtiennedeMartel I figured Canada dealt with varying levels of snow
 
Actually, late winter is warmer than spring. Fuck this shit.
 
Summer, being the hottest time of the year, is the time in which you can enjoy swimming in a pond without having to break through ice first
 
3:07 PM
@R.MartinhoFernandes Maybe where you live. But it's 3 C right now, which is much warmer than winter's average -10.
 
@EtiennedeMartel FFS temperatures are positive in Canada, but not here?
Where can I refund my ticket.
 
@Neil Dat posture :)
kinda cool ^
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Do as I do and blame Stephen Harper.
 
user784668
@R.MartinhoFernandes Merkel's fault
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Nah, my brain is an FPGA, I can repurpose the components.
 
3:10 PM
 
0
Q: C++ merge 2d arrays (reffed by uniqe_ptr) into 3d array

mishI need to merge three 2D arrays into a 3D one. I'm using unique_ptr to reference the 2D arrays. Im quite new to smart pointers and C++ in general, so chances are it's an obvious mistake. int imgsize = 15; std::unique_ptr<float[]> redptr(new float[imgsize]); std::unique_ptr<float[]>...

Look, doing it wrong.
(Just read the title; should be obvious enough)
 
I had to downvote the only answer too
 
user1182183
 
user1182183
if you ever tried that, and love it, I love you too xD
 
hmm
 
3:18 PM
@EtiennedeMartel dat face
 
user1182183
@TonyTheLion DAT CONTRAST ;o
 
user1182183
@ScottW nope, can't hate you for doing nothing :P
 
user1182183
But srsly try it, I always had it when I was a child, now they have opened a polish store nearby
 
user1182183
and they fucking have it!: D
 
user1182183
I feel like a 6year old again xd
 
3:20 PM
Btw, pups, I still haven't more-than-skimmed your tutorial section on Unicode, but I think the most important is stressing facts like "text does not work the way you think it does; no, it's not that easy; no, that solution is broken; no, that operation doesn't even make sense in general", TL;DR text is fucked up, don't assume you know how to handle it.
 
user1182183
@ScottW Ye I am supposed to be 18 ; o
 
user1182183
and when launching my potatoe cannon I feel like a 6 year old devil xD
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes I think that that was the general message, but I'm not sure. I think that I wish to write more about Unicode than is currently written.
like I have a lot more to write about good OO design and concurrency.
 
Also, I'll replace "ß" as my go-to example of fucked up casing. Greek has a diacritic that uppercases to a letter. Much more fucked up.
 
lol
 
3:24 PM
That shit makes toUpperCase a pain to implement.
 
which is why I'm so glad that, hopefully after Bristol, I can make Stephan implement it :P
 
Who's Stephan?
 
STL?
 
Stephan Lavajev...
... Lavejav?
... Lav... ... I dunno.
 
3:25 PM
dude.
you always have to put the T. in.
 
I have no Google and I must spell a name
 
user784668
@ThePhD Lavavej.
 
user784668
That's easy.
 
@DeadMG I expect most stdlib implementers to just wrap ICU.
 
I know the "lava" part is always in there somewhere.
I just never know what to do with the vej part.
 
3:27 PM
@R.MartinhoFernandes Not sure if ICU can handle non-UTF16 formats in reasonable performance
 
Dunno about performance, but it does have an encoding-agnostic interface.
 
Who/What is ICU, btw?
 
It's not compile-time checked though, so yeah, it might have some overhead.
 
International Components for Unicode or IBM Components for Unicode or whatever
Something with components and unicode
 
user784668
 
3:29 PM
> Pity you didn't include APL, invented by Ken Iverson at Harvard, championed by IBM. I used it for 25 years until I retired Thomas Marshall (Tom) Olsen • an hour ago
 
@Telkitty those look functional
 
user1357851
@LightnessRacesinOrbit functional in what ways?
 
Damn serial upvoting.
 
@sehe lol, C++ first-tier?
 
How do you read that chart
 
3:31 PM
Oh, wait, first tier does not mean top-expressiveness. It means "mainstream".
 
Those metrics are pretty broken. However, I still find it enticing to see some stas on real-world data, never mind it is near impossible to draw conclusions
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah. The colour code is enitrely subjective, AFAICT
 
user1357851
Javascript is between C and fortran where C#, C++ and Java are bundled together, whatt??
 
At the very least it encourages me to reconsider some prejudices
 
@sehe Definitely broken.
 
3:33 PM
@Telkitty I can see how that happened. Much in line with "javascript is the assembly language of the web" coupled to "everyone copies hist jquery-x.x.x.js into his own project"
 
user1357851
@sehe Javascript < PHP
 
user1357851
it is client side programming
 
@CatPlusPlus the line in the middle of each box is the median, the lines at the ends of the line are the minimum and maximum, and the box spans the first quartile (25% of results below it) to the third quartile (75% of results below it).
In descriptive statistics, a box plot or boxplot (also known as a box-and-whisker diagram or plot) is a convenient way of graphically depicting groups of numerical data through their five-number summaries: the smallest observation (sample minimum), lower quartile (Q1), median (Q2), upper quartile (Q3), and largest observation (sample maximum). A boxplot may also indicate which observations, if any, might be considered outliers. Box plots display differences between populations without making any assumptions of the underlying statistical distribution: they are non-parametric. The spacings ...
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Watching real data points can be interesting, even if the lense is broken
(I mean, you are following @lowflyingrocks too; this account has "silently" failed to supply updates for... maybe some months (hard to tell); broken lense, still interesting/amusing!)
 
user1357851
Then again Objective C is bundled with perl python and shell script
 
3:37 PM
2005 EF, ~200m-450m in diameter, just passed the Earth at 12km/s, missing by ~26,500,000km. http://ssd.jpl.nasa.gov/sbdb.cgi?sstr=2005%20EF;orb=1
You just missed them.
Don't confuse silence with earplugs-
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Huh. I meant the weeks when the twitter feed was broken.
 
It scrapes the NASA NEO database, so I expect it to be as comprehensive a lens as we have.
 
Is my point. A faulty/flawed/limited lense then, broken is too harsh
(mental note: I have to unlearn the habit of redundant plinking)
 
@sehe It provides no false positives.
 
But plinking is fun. :D
 
3:41 PM
@R.MartinhoFernandes ...
 
Guys, guys. Stop arguing and start hugging.
 
That's different from the data in those graphs: they try to portray something by measuring something else that may or may not be related to it.
 
We were arguing? :O
 
A miss is as good as 16 million miles.
 
I doubt many people would non-jokingly agree that JavaScript is less expressive than assembly.
 
user784668
3:42 PM
@R.MartinhoFernandes assembly doesn't need jQuery
 
user1357851
@MartinJames thus the expression "missed by a million miles" ... only 10X more
 
@sehe IOW, I think there's an important distinction to be made between potentially missing data and potentially having misleading data.
 
Say, that does the value_type represent for you?
 
user1357851
@sehe what's Loc/Commit?
 
@LucDanton What?
 
3:46 PM
@EtiennedeMartel Why do you always assume everyone's arguing? It's very rare that anybody here actually is.
 
@Telkitty Lines of code per commit.
 
@Telkitty Lines of code per commit
 
E.g. that of a container, and its associated iterators.
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Woot: +1 for consistency :)
 
user1357851
Commit is a measure of what?
 
3:46 PM
No commit comment.
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes The most important thing being that we should realize that we rarely find accurate data. And even if we do, we rarely know how to draw correct conclusions. The marginal area where we do is called "Mathematics" :)
@Telkitty Of suicide
 
Xeo
@LucDanton Back to that problem again?
 
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Because I'm always angry.
 
@Xeo Expression trait vs strictly metaprogramming type trait? Not this time :)
 
@EtiennedeMartel Makes sense
 
3:48 PM
@R.MartinhoFernandes The Telkitty has a valid point: the stats completely miss out on all of teh android app developers, which have no clue about revision control to begin with
 
user1357851
I mean the likes of C++ and Java are usually used for bigger projects, thus more lines?
 
I'm going back to my variant and I think I'll use a policy-based design. Considering if a value_type-ish concept makes sense, and what it should mean.
 
@Telkitty That's hardly relevant when measuring human "units of work" (i.e. commits)
 
user1357851
@sehe people do a commit per task, and bigger the task = more lines?
 
robot
 
Xeo
3:49 PM
@LucDanton What would you need such a concept for?
 
can Haskell type check mutually recursive functions?
 
@Xeo Corner cases like storing a const int and recursive variants.
 
@Telkitty That's irrelevant. High LOC/commit is likely to imply one of: 1) people committing too coarse-grained; 2) people working on code that is way too coupled; 3) language that is less expressive and thus requires more code to express the same ideas. Size of project means nothing here.
 
@Telkitty nope
 
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes Or.... Puppies people just not committing frequently enough.
 
3:50 PM
@DeadMG I guess it depends on the functions.
@Xeo That's 1)
 
Xeo
Oh, right
I wanted to bash Puppy anyways.
 
@Xeo Actually, most of my recent commits are fairly fine-grained.
 
Xeo
Good for you, then
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Er, assuming that they would otherwise type check.
 
I asked because e.g. the value_type of std::vector<int>::const_iterator is int. How does that make you feel?
 
user142019
3:52 PM
 
$ ghci
Prelude> let f x = 1 + g x where g x = if x == 0 then 1 else (f (x-1))/2 in f 10
2.0
Prelude>
 
Also can there be a container or container-like thingy such that its value type is const int?
 
@Zoidberg Type annotations is cheating when he is interested in type inference (yeah, his fault for not being clear, but I can read minds like R. Giskard)
 
@DeadMG Yes, see above.
 
3:53 PM
ok
 
Xeo
@VinayakGarg WTF
 
I don't want to write the same function declarations twice in a row with subtle differences. =[
c++ y u do dis 2 me q_q
 
well I think that the DeferredType business is going to be my best bet.
 
Hindley-Milner is easy to implement, btw. At least in Haskell. We had that as a project.
 
@Xeo ah
 
3:55 PM
I think it's easy in Prolog too.
 
I imagine it is. Express the four(?) rules, let the engine do the rest?
 
I'd be more interested in it if I found a definition in English.
 
also
 
@LucDanton Yeah, the engine is great at doing unification, so it's easily exploitable for this.
 
user1182183
3:57 PM
Read [this](http://www.forbes.com/asap/2000/0403/056_3.html) and well, the last sentences are kinda true:
> Fortunately for us of the high tech criminal element, only a small percentage of companies make computer security a high priority, and there is little pressure from the marketplace on Microsoft, Sun Microsystems, and other major software vendors to stop turning out code that is rife with security flaws.
 
user1182183
hm my link doesn't get parsed?
 
Because your shit has too much markdown.
Break that shit up.
 
also
 
@DeadMG You said that before.
 
when you're talking about a type system whose primary use is in immutable garbage-collected languages
I'm thinking "Is it going to handle my rvalue references?".
 
3:59 PM
For the purposes of type inference, I don't see how that matters.
 
Point Light = Position measured to individual surface pixels, Directional Light = Single Direction, all the time?
 
because
 

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