« first day (1034 days earlier)      last day (4143 days later) » 

16:00
Stack can grow.
@Pawnguy7 Check you linker docs - that's where it's set.
Oh wait, what am I thinking.
That is the heap.
The heap is unlimited, unless you're stuck in 32-bit mode.
Well, practically unlimited.
16:01
The free store
inb4 Bjarne
Xeo
Xeo
what "inb4"?
lol.. in before
Xeo
Xeo
I know what it means
I meant "why inb4"
Don't 4chan.
16:03
@Xeo As in the obvious "correction" from "heap" to "free store".
Xeo
Xeo
@Xeo The rest isn't going to happen. Doing full markdown parsing on long multiline messages can be costly and it opens up the path for trolls to be extra annoying. Chat isn't intended for posting long fully-formatted messages. — Anna Lear 14 mins ago
My kernel hasn't heard of this "free store" you're talking about.
CHAT ISN'T INTENDED
Who cares what you want, lusers.
any idea about what does the standard mean by source character set, or it's basic version. is it my source file character set that I used to save the source code(file input ) , or it's what the file input get converted to like in (-finput-charset=option), so here "option" get converted to the source character set ?
Chat should be made up of slang, acronyms and poor punctuation, obviously. Jesus Xeo...
@Xeo because the first time I read that term was in a book written by Bjarne
16:06
@AlexDan source char set is just that
Do you think the clipboard would be an interesting topic to learn and share about?
@AlexDan No, the compiler/preprocessor can't do encoding/decoding of character sets. That option is only for you to tell it that you're going to supply source code in a specific char set
@Chemistpp Well, AFAIK, there should be a comma after 'long' in that meta extract, so we have the poor punctuation, at least.
user1804599
> We are working to mitigate a large DDoS. We will provide an update once we have more information.
user1804599
Fuck you GitHub.
16:10
@TonyTheLion I read somewhere that the first thing the preprocessor do is convert the file to the source charcter set which is by default UTF-8, and if (-finput-charset) isn't specified then no conversion is done, and the cpp will treat the file as if it was encoded in UTF-8.
I'd be surprised if it does that, but I don't know for certain what happens.
"Physical source file characters are mapped, in an implementation-defined manner, to the basic source character set (introducing new-line characters for end-of-line indicators) if necessary. The set of physical source file characters accepted is implementation-defined." (§2.2/1-1)
implementation-defined mapping to an implementation-defined source character set.
Sounds good to me. :3c
oh interesting
@ThePhD No, implementation defined mapping from an implementation defined physical source file character set.
Ell
Ell
16:18
And the basic source character set is? o.O
Ascii?
Something like that
@Ell The basic source character set is defined by the standard: "The basic source character set consists of 96 characters: the space character, the control characters representing horizontal tab, vertical tab, form feed, and new-line, plus the following 91 graphical characters" [upper and lower case letters, digits, punctuation]
Do you have like Standard's quotes at the ready?
PDF has table of contents, you know.
Has the standard expanded that for unicode?
16:20
Ahahaha no.
You can use \uXXXXXX in identifiers if you want.
@ThePhD No -- to support Unicode input, it would encode each unicode character as \Uxxxxx (or at least act as if it had).
Ah.
Lulz.
and what does it mean by physical source character set, is it the encoding that I chose to save my file in, or it's what the cpp by default read (UTF_8).
@AlexDan The physical source character set is whatever is stored in your source file.
user1804599
16:33
Argh.
user1804599
I want to install Elixir but GitCunt is still down.
user1804599
I want my money back.
why do you hate them so much for going down when they have been DDoSed
it's not really unreasonable
q_q
I'm apparently doing something wrong again. :c
@DeadMG I'm trying to get all struct/function/namespace declarations in a translation unit.
I've been trying to get it to behave, but it's not. :c
What I'm doing is using the whole clang::ParseAST() thing, letting it finish with an EmptyASTConsumer,
as far as I know, the ASTConsumer doesn't do anything of use at all unless you need to do extra stuff with the AST as it's parsed.
16:38
and then afterwards, calling sema.getASTContext().getTranslationUnitDecl(); and iterating from the Translation Unit Decl's iterator
show code.
Do you want to just be invited to the Bitbucket? Might make it easier to read. :D
sure
@DeadMG Write Access Granted
@TonyTheLion sigh. I tried, but entering this, a very basic answer, proved to be very painful to do on my phone...
16:42
@ThePhD OK then. Link to source file?
Sure, I just uh
Haven't pushed in a really long time
Gotta let it push. x3
lol
I've been doing somewhat stable committing on my machine, though.
Since I'm the only one contributing, it hasn't really been an issue. :3c
I was 50 meters away of a bombcar when it exploded. I felt alive suddenly when I saw bleeding people being evacuated http://t.co/FvwIT2j9mf
o.O where the bloody hell is he
user1804599
Hmm.
16:43
@sehe Need a good voice recognition program -- phones are really only suited to voice as their input.
@TonyTheLion also, the same question had already caught my eye on the [spirit-general] mailing list
user1804599
Is two billion database records many?
Ell
Ell
yah
well.
@Borgleader Looks like Islamistan.
user1804599
@DeadMG The Netherlands?
16:45
but I actually think that Stephano is in Madrid right now, or somewhere in Europe.
I thought he was in France until recently so I'm kind of surprised
Ell
Ell
@not-rightfold ping me when gitfag comes back online :)
user1804599
@Ell ok.
user1804599
I need to download Elixir, Geef and Cowboy. :<
user1804599
Homebrew's version of Elixir is terribly outdated.
16:47
@not-rightfold Are you talking about all the rows in all the tables, or a single table with 2 billion rows? For the former, it's not particularly huge. For the latter, yes, pretty big.
also depends on how much data is stored in each row.
user1804599
@JerryCoffin A single table.
let's face it, if each row is like, 32bit timestamp, 8bit value, it's not gonna be the same as 2 billion rows of 5kb data per row.
user1804599
More specifically: the table stores changes in stock (of a warehouse). These are (id, product_id, value, status) tuples.
@JerryCoffin voice input indeed nothing to sneeze at. I hardly envision myself entering SO-level markdown copy using it, thoug h:)
user1804599
16:49
They'd be grouped by product_id and values would be summed pretty much very often.
user1804599
I'm probably not going to do this, but I'm just wondering.
user1804599
Something like SELECT sum(value) FROM stock_changes WHERE product_id = $1 GROUP BY product_id.
@sehe I don't either -- dictation works well when it's to an experienced secretary so you can dictate the five sentences that matter, and expect them to handle the details. Otherwise...not so much.
user1804599
Argh how does HAVING work.
user1804599
I've never understood why GROUP BY was needed.
16:53
It's WHERE on aggregates.
@not-rightfold to group things :P
user1804599
I've used GROUP BY only once, and that was because I wanted to select records from one table into an array and associate it with a key from another table.
"I've only used this feature once, and that was because I wanted to do exactly what it was designed for."
@not-rightfold To calculate a sum for every product_id, instead of sum of all rows.
user1804599
@CatPlusPlus But I already do WHERE product_id = $1. Hence the misunderstanding.
16:56
That's only filtering.
user1804599
Grouping happens before that?
user1804599
Ah, thanks.
vOv I'm not that good with SQL.
user1804599
array_agg is awesome.
Baaah. If I had more money than sense, I would pay someone to document the hell out of the OpenSSL C API
user1804599
17:00
No, you would pay someone to write a decent wrapper around it.
Ell
Ell
@IntrepidBrit What bit are you struggling with?
@DeadMG The fun starts right around there and it explodes right about here (TranslationUnit's constructor just calls the mark function with is what the second link points to, so ya dun have to look at it)
(TranslationUnit's constructor, that is)
user1804599
@Ell GH is back up.
Ell
Ell
@not-rightfold thanks :)
@ThePhD Just curious- why a unique_ptr for ASTContext and Sema?
17:01
I'm not struggling per se - I'm just manually implementing envelopes (among other things) to help get my head around OpenSSL
Ell
Ell
It's a disgusting API, I agree with that
@DeadMG Before, TranslationUnit was instantiated outside the compiler. I needed a way to keep the ASTContext and Sema alive, so I could call sema->getASTContext()
right.
For ease of use in this situation, I've moved TranslationUnit into Compiler
I could probably change it to not have that at all and just pass it directly.
but what I'm really seeing here is that your classes are a bit.. strange.
each Sema and ASTContext is good for only one translation unit.
they really should go into whatever class you use to represent per translation unit code.
infact, everything except the options is only good for one TU.
if you try to re-use Clang objects, you will get fucked hardcore, I assure you (been there; done that)
17:04
Okay.
I'll move everything into Compiler, then.
well, I have an Options class for all the options, and a TU class for each TU.
@JerryCoffin what about if the physical source character set contained characters that are not part of the basic source character set, do you have any idea how the compiler may implement this ? is it going to replace these characters with their equivelent universal charcter name or encode them using UTF-8, etc. ?
so what exactly was the problem again?
Er.
After moving everything into Compiler.cpp, it actually works fine.
Re-using clang objects is a bad idea, it seems.
yep.
17:07
Wish they would tell you these things. ._.
Also, uh.
@ThePhD They do; if you ask.
... I think I have compiler instance sitting around and really doing nothing...
Should I just throw it out?
@ThePhD I think you have to give one to the preprocessor..?
Oh. Yes. You do.
I certainly have one because I had to have it, at least in whatever version of the API I was using when I first made this code.
so
17:10
Guess it is necessary.
I'm sure you can imagine why it took me so long to get started with Wide.
Definitely.
And all I'm doing is parsing. I'm not even starting codegen or actual linking and shit.
hmm
Of course, you'd have less problems if you didn't make C++ interop a thing to have right out of the doors.
getting started with parsing and stuff was pretty tough, but the codegen and linking are the real recurrent problems.
@ThePhD I would, but then I would be missing basically the most fundamental Wide feature.
I mean, let me put it another way.
17:12
Do it like rightfold, build it from scratch. :P
if I didn't have C++ interop, before writing even the most basic samples, I would have to implement a massive chunk of the language.
you can't have "Hello, World" without an I/O library, for simple example.
I suppose that is true.
You'd have to spend a lot of time writing OS interop and shit.
Haha, man that'd suck so hard. :P
right.
whereas as soon as I finished the most basic C++ interop, I had "Hello, World" right away, and a whole bunch of the rest of the C++ libraries
@AlexDan Given the constraints at hand, my first reaction would be to encode as universal character names. I don't think you can use UTF-8 (you're restricted to exactly the 96 named characters) though you might be able to make it fit under the "as if" rule.
@DeadMG But now you're arm-and-leg tied to C++.
17:19
eh
Is it truly worth it?
you mean, "Is it truly worth getting all of those libraries and programmers for basically free?"
Ell
Ell
but then you get all the bad bits too :O
like what?
Like C++.
Ell
Ell
17:23
^
wouldn't you be basically writing c++?
if you used a c++ library in wide?
well, that really depends on what you define as "writing c++".
@JerryCoffin I guess using UTF-8 is part of the implementation-defined, for example, I tested this in GCC. I wrote a source code that contain a non-basic source character set character "Æ’" and I specified the physical source file encoding as cp-1252. and I used -E flag to get the cpp output, I found out that "Æ’" was encoded in UTF-8. so clearly GCC didn't replace non-basic characters with their equivilent universal character name, but instead used UTF-8 to encode them.
but for simple example, Clang 3.3 doesn't have generalized lambda captures, Wide does, but there's no restrictions on using a Wide generalized lambda capture in a lambda you pass to C++.
@AlexDan No, that wouldn't be IDB -- it would be under the as-if rule. IDB is only where the standard says so, and has to be documented. As-if rule basically just means they can do what they want, as long as it produces the right result.
@not-rightfold aaaargg?
user1804599
17:37
@sehe No, array_agg.
user1804599
Turns groups into PostgreSQL arrays. Useful when selecting 2D data.
17:50
@DeadMG Puking in a terminal.
@EtiennedeMartel With digraphs!
BOOYEAH
I just reflected a cpp file. Now to hope it works. :3c
user1804599
Heh they redesigned erlang.org.
@not-rightfold Web site responds slowly. Clearly their backend isn't written in Erlang, or else Erlang is slow. Either they don't really believe in it, or it sucks. Either way I'm not bothering to learn it.
It's your ISP.
user1804599
18:02
It works fine here.
user1804599
@Rapptz lol
@JerryCoffin Loads fine here.
user1804599
> Server: inets/5.7.1
user1804599
This response header says it's written in Erlang. :P
user1804599
The website is uglier than ever before.
18:04
Yes, the previous one was so pwetty.
user1804599
The previous one was also bad, but less bad than the current one.
@Rapptz It loads all right, but it's relatively slow. Consider: i1212.photobucket.com/albums/cc452/jcoffin01/…
Compare the time for the data coming from Google compared to the data coming from Erlang.org.
user1804599
> Complains about slow websites, uses Photobucket.
The former I've had cached for a long time, the latter is my first time visiting so it isn't cached. (Not to mention one's a big company while the other one isn't)
Can't quite see how my (or the hotel's) ISP can cause that sort of difference.
@not-rightfold Seems to be faster than Erlang.org. In any case, I probably wouldn't bother learning whatever language Photobucket is using either. The difference, of course, is that Photobucket doesn't represent a programming language like erlang.org does.
user1804599
18:12
Photobucket is slow as a dog.
only tinypic is worse than photobucket
user1804599
filevoid.net is best.
Google has a massive CDN, erlang dot org doesn't.
@CatPlusPlus They also have a much larger load.
I get 2.78s total with no cache.
18:18
Given their likely load, erlang.org should be able to run on some piece of crap that was obsolete 10 years ago, and still respond quickly.
Ell
Ell
what's a "soft" system?
I get 1.69s
And tbh most of this time is browser waiting.
@not-rightfold Dogs can be quick.
Your analogy sucks more than yourself, Mr. Vacuum Cleaner.
They could get their content to load more in parallel, but that's not a backend issue.
1.17s with cache.
18:20
Most of my time was from loading jquery
Goddamn jquery.
@Ell Presumably you mean the "soft" from "soft realtime". "Soft realtime" is a phrase, where "soft" doesn't mean much by itself. Soft realtime means there's some boundary on response time, but it's a "soft" boundary -- it's all right to respond slower as long as it's only a little slower and only once in a while (opposed to hard realtime, where any violation of response time requirements is simply a bug).
posted on August 15, 2013

One of the biggest differences between copying and moving happens in code that we don't write.

Ell
Ell
@JerryCoffin Ahh thank you
I should probably read this Dr. Dobb thing... (the blog in general, not that specific article)
18:27
It's fun sometimes.
Other times, boring as hell.
I don't read blogs.
I read GotW sometimes
GotW?
> Its like you are in a new country with a different language while its obvious to people indigenous to know a route and immigrant will take his time.
No, it's like staring at a sign that says "go right" and asking where to go.
What happened to the reading comprehension prereq for doing anything programming-related.
Brave new world.
Lul.
18:40
@CatPlusPlus its possible OP doesn't read english
only knows how to write
Right.
> someone on stackoverflow suggested that it has to be
>
> git push -f
>
> I did try that one too
I always push butans without understanding what they do.
especially when my important code repositories are involved.
@DeadMG Life would be so boring otherwise...
There is way too much new in this code. — Rapptz 12 secs ago
why do people do this
because they don't know better
18:50
6 hours ago, by Tony The Lion
Upvotes > shame. — DeadMG 50 secs ago
^^ lol! That's our puppy. :)
Fuck you, GitHub.
Next unfinished project: a Git hosting service.
Look at the latest revision, then look at the one I did.. How did I introduce that typo? It was there in the original code.
@Rapptz Hmm?
Edit Warz.
19:03
You did add it, though. Then it was removed, and then jrok readded it.
What typo.
Oh, wait.
Waaaaaiiit.
This is so fucking confusing.
Oh, no, you did not add it. You simply left it there.
The extraneous brace.
And then Yakk removed it. And then jrok brought it back.
It's like people really like that brace.
Shitty formatting.
19:05
Yup
I need to be rich.
I want to be able to afford stuff like this: limestonenetworks.com/dedicated_servers/server.html?id=53
@CatPlusPlus Holy titballs!
120 / mo?
1.4K a YEAR?
What would you put on it?
I don't know, but I want it.
19:07
@CatPlusPlus dgwadwahjdwjd FULL ROOT ACCESS
#wtb
Uh root access is not special.
yeah extremely common
Maybe for you ~~rich~~ people it is.
But I've never had full access to the whole machine by myself. ;~;
:laffo: at the 64MB RAM one.
> 440 Gbit Bandwidth
Lolwat.
@CatPlusPlus Wtf
1.5 GB disk space only?
What do they expect people to run off that?
19:10
But yeah you get full access in every VPS/dedicated server package, it's only not given in shared hosting.
@ThePhD IRC shells, stuff like that.
That's some very barebones stuff. o.0
You'd probably get that 256 minimum.
Well, definitely not building code on a 64 MiB machine.
There are a lot of cheap VPSes available.
user1804599
Ugh fuck you void*.
19:12
Well, unless you need Windows Server.
But I'd really like a powerful dedicated box. :3
I mean just look at that fukken Hetzner box.
@CatPlusPlus Those are really cheap.
@CatPlusPlus Is that price per month?
That IS expensive...
I'd need a steady job before I do something like that =/
19:18
Yes.
It'd be perfect build server, though.
Drop a hypervisor there, and chop the server in half for Windows/Linux agents. :3
Mmm...
Shh shh, you're making me want it too. :c
user1804599
Yay I can now use libgit2 from Elixir!
user1804599
Well, open and close repositories. :v
Git hosting service confirmed.
lol
user1804599
19:27
:P
user1804599
Hey, I need to have something to do while on vacation.
Wow, this is some relaxing shit.
@Rapptz I need a find_seq, something that searches one container for a contiguous set of elements in another container.
@not-rightfold Write code for the chat.
Does you know if that exists in the std ?
user1804599
@CatPlusPlus I want to learn more about Elixir and Erlang NIFs.
user1804599
19:33
Ain't gonna happen if I write C# code.
@ThePhD and what does it return?
@Rapptz Uh. I dunno. Anything would be useful at this point. :3c
An iterator to where it appears in the target container, maybe?
user1804599
inb4 BEAM to CIL compiler.
Just trying to understand the question.
user1804599
@Rapptz He means std::string::substr but more generic.
19:38
@Rapptz coliru.stacked-crooked.com/… Something like this
It's more for education ro something.
Like find_seq or find_subset or something
std::search.
user1804599
std::search.
user1804599
Dammit Rapptz.
Oooh.
Okay.
@Rapptz Why is Lia so fucking hard to port?! D:<
Visual Studio sucks
19:44
What's Lia?
Something silly I wrote in my free time
=[
@Rapptz So far I got almost everything right... except this one
template<typename Function, typename... Args>
struct result_of_impl<Function(Args...), Void<decltype(std::declval<Function>()(std::declval<Args>()...))>::type> {
	typedef decltype( std::declval<Function>( )( std::declval<Args>( )... ) ) type;
};
Particularly, VS seems to be choking on Function( Args... )
Ah yeah.. regular result_of sucks..
Does it, though?
What case did regular result_of fail for? :O
Everything
19:55
Oh. Well, okay.
I think they're planning on fixing it in C++14
Doubt it.
I've heard VS2024 will have it.
Not likely.

« first day (1034 days earlier)      last day (4143 days later) »