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14:00
@EricFinn yes
@DeadMG Today, I'm not sure.
I am.
you haven't been around for as long as I have
Also, how can I be sure that these claims are truly random. Can we accurately measure it.
@DeadMG I think he meant that he's not sure he has two working brain cells today.
oh right
14:02
@Xeo I’m actually not using C++ at all recently (shame), only R, and R has the nice feature of inheriting its semantics from Scheme, which makes it fully introspective and allows powerful metaprogramming
@DeadMG Maybe my remaining brain cells will respond to more coffee.
Xeo
Xeo
@KonradRudolph Not like I'm doing any C++ coding either
> I am not ask someone to explain the theory
@KonradRudolph Using a demangler can get you pretty far.
@StackedCrooked What would you use this for here?
14:06
> "Statistically these are the safest cars on Pandora. Let me throw some numbers at you... Five! Twenty-three! Eight Hundred and Six!"
@chmod711telkitty Did you just answer your own question?
I only have one example, one measurement, obviously they are going to put the experiment with the best result on that wiki page
but the result of one experiment doesn't necessarily make it correct ... and it is slightly off as you can see
...
I. Don't. Even.
It's not one experiment. You didn't even check the citations, did you?
user1804599
@KonradRudolph I think he's referring to introspection in general.
next episode: telkitty denies evolution.
14:08
I'd need to experiment a little to see how to use this for an options library. But one of my recent projects was an RPC library which makes handy use of demangling.
I thought your mutant horse was a horse of engineering and science.
@chmod711telkitty of course it's slightly off, so what? Did you even look at the error predictions?
I am still waiting for some one to answer my question
No one will.
Those things are publicly available and easy to find.
... if one is willing.
14:10
Physics is not a human powered search engine for "numbers ONLY"
Five! Twenty-three! Eight Hundred and Six!
@R.MartinhoFernandes damn it was writing "25"
// shared header between client/server
struct Increment : Command<int(int)> {};

// server
Server server;
server.registerCommand<Increment>([](int n) { return n + 1; });
server.listen(port);

// client
Client client(serverip, port);
client.send<Sum>(1); // returns 2

// full C++ interface. everything related to serialization, protobuf stuff, etc is hidden from the user
But what would one except from someone that calls a table on wikipedia "1 experiment" without even checking the citations?
@R.MartinhoFernandes because they conducted many experiments and only the measurement from this one seems kind of close
@chmod711telkitty Did you check the citations now?
14:12
I can find many numeric examples of Pythagorean theorem.
It cites a physics textbook.
@Shog9 it seems the stars stopped dancing. no need to intervene
@chmod711telkitty The Pythagorean theorem is not valid in hyperbolic spaces.
That's the problem with looking only at the numbers.
@chmod711telkitty wait you're still struggling with understanding the difference between a theory and a theorem?
I mean they sure look similar in writing, but c'mon.
@chmod711telkitty You mean the experiments run daily, confirming relativity daily, by the mere existence of GPS, which would not work without relativistic physics?
14:14
2 hours ago, by Bartek Banachewicz
@chmod711telkitty right, GPS utilizes elves
user1804599
@StackedCrooked s/Sum/Increment/
@chmod711telkitty Did you notice those values didn't come from some traceable experiment? You don't even know what the numbers you find are.
I wonder what you are expecting people to give you.
with numeric results and explanation of the experiment too
that's what I need ...
So many citations
@chmod711telkitty you haven't read that, have you?
14:18
You know something is really good when it links to more of the author's stuff to prove a point
I mean, the very first sentence states: Current experiment results are 1.75. Current theory states 1.75. My theory states 1.68.
yes, the writer was calculating the bending of the light using gamma ray, relativity's calculation is off by 4%
@chmod711telkitty What explanation? I don't see it.
@BartekBanachewicz lol
How can you ask on Stack Overflow? By pushing "Ask Question".
@chmod711telkitty he merely said that he formulated a different equation. So what? He explicitely states "That is why I deny that I have overturned Relativity"
14:21
@chmod711telkitty lol what
@chmod711telkitty Can you make more of fool of yourself?
There are no gamma rays there.
"gamma" is a greek letter used in the formulas.
You can easily test this by grepping the page for "gamma ray"
Xeo
Xeo
Is there a Greek letter that sounds like 'ray'?
@BartekBanachewicz But he also said that Einstein was wrong. He’s an idiot
@chmod711telkitty You don't even read your own sources. How pathetic.
He says that his theory gives results that are off by 4%, and still in spite of that, is "correct".
> I then show that my number, 1.68, is correct, even given the most recent experiments. It is correct because my correction to gamma and the field equations yields precisely a 4% error.
Sounds like a joke.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I try to not read own sources. It's too depressing.
@R.MartinhoFernandes It's not.
you've misread it.
what he's saying is that the gamma constant they've used to determine their value is incorrect (i.e., 4% off).
therefore a 4% difference between his final value and the value they calculated from their observations is to be expected.
14:26
@Xeo no. "r" is rho
whether or not the gamma constant actually is wrong is another question.
@KonradRudolph not denying it
14:29
Thanks for finding us a treasure trove of hilarious crackpottery.
> If this paper was useful to you in any way, please consider donating a dollar (or more) to the SAVE THE ARTISTS FOUNDATION. This will allow me to continue writing these "unpublishable" things.
lol the guy sounds totally legit @chmod711telkitty
@rightfold vOv
> To these people, I say that it is not I who am doing the calculus wrong. It is Newton and Leibniz and Cauchy and everyone since who has been doing the calculus wrong.
oh boy, it gets better
> I have earned the right to write this paper by first writing three important papers on the foundations of the calculus.
14:32
> In kinematic situations like the orbit, the correct math and physics includes the analysis I provide in this paper, in which π=4.
HELLO PEOPLE
I love how he just assumes everything he ever wrote is right, and citable
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes I... what?
So, what did I miss?
This is good for a drinking game
3
14:33
Apparently he does orbital computations using taxicab geometry.
If you find a link to self, drink
> I don't esteem Hilbert and never have, but in this case having him as an ally is a considerable boost.
Xeo
Xeo
Pi is the relation between circumference and radius.. how the fuck can that be two different values in different situations?
3
It's hilarious
Taxicab geometry, considered by Hermann Minkowski in 19th century Germany, is a form of geometry in which the usual distance function or metric of Euclidean geometry is replaced by a new metric in which the distance between two points is the sum of the absolute differences of their Cartesian coordinates. The taxicab metric is also known as rectilinear distance, L1 distance or \ell_1 norm (see Lp space), city block distance, Manhattan distance, or Manhattan length, with corresponding variations in the name of the geometry. The latter names allude to the grid layout of most streets on the i...
14:34
I'm amazed you actually read this drivel
@Xeo you'd need to read his papers on how he redefined calculus from ground up. Basing on false assumptions, you can prove any-fucking-thing you want
In taxicab geometry, circles are squares.
So, perfect for orbital calculations.
because orbits are squares
and earth is flat on a back of a tortoise
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes Ahahaha
@Xeo Redefining mathematical terms can yield different results, and may be useful depending on situation. This is well established
Of course, it’s also well established that mathematics do not change when physics change (but provability may change when laws of physics are modified, which is quite interesting in itself)
14:36
@Xeo It's not a joke. (Using it for orbital mechanics is a joke, though and would not yield different results anyway)
@R.MartinhoFernandes Right, Manhattan length. I like that one.
oh yeah
@Xeo (it's the diameter, though)
dark energy blows my mind.
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes Right, I knew something was off
14:39
> In that paper I showed that the corrected equation a = v2/2r is analogous to the equation C = 2πr or π = C/2r. This allowed me to discover many interesting things not commonly known.
IOW
> In that paper I started off with bullshit which took me to even more bullshit.
Xeo
Xeo
> They can’t admit that π is wrong, because that would make everyone look very stupid.
dat reasoning
flawless
> In other words, the current numerical value of π is nothing more than a mathematical error: it is the standard margin of error, caused by a fabulously false postulate.
> Never once in the history of the universe has (...) existed all at once.
14:42
At first I read his name as "Miles Davis", and then I thought "He did maths too?"
> The common answer to my demonstration above is that at the limit, defined as it currently is, the total length of the steps never approaches the arc, because even with a very large number of steps, the distance between each step and the curve remains real.
NO WAY
@R.MartinhoFernandes more manhattan distance calculations incoming
I can't believe that's Zeno's Achilles and the tortoise paradox.
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes oh gawd, ahahaha
Did he skip school when they taught limits in calculus or something?
14:44
> The arc is defined as a curve composed of linear or straight vectors, therefore it can never be continuous
@EricFinn s/ when they taught limits in calculus//
@R.MartinhoFernandes Oh, that old chestnut.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Confirmed: troll.
It is Achilles and the tortoise.
So it's not a circle, then. It's all jagged.
14:44
@KonradRudolph Nah
@R.MartinhoFernandes Maybe he time-travelled from the ancient Greece?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah, right, unless the number of steps is infinite, as we all know.
> A static circle and a circle drawn by motion are not the same. The number π works only on the given static circle, in which there is no motion, no time, and no drawing. Any real-world circle drawn in time by a real object cannot be described with π.
How did he get through basic HS math?
@R.MartinhoFernandes What the fuck.
14:46
@Avery Do we have any evidence he did?
"I'm gonna make my own pi, with blackjack and hookers"
If we define π as 4, the rest of circles should fall like a house of cards. Checkmate.
@EtiennedeMartel :lol:
@CatPlusPlus Two different games in one line. Must be true.
He's a genius.
14:49
intwestling
@EricFinn I mean... yeah. I guess he could've just gotten into this after HS, most of his stuff takes some pretty advanced theorems into arguments.
@Griwes It's not even that.
Not entirely fitting, but still.
It's so much more outlandish.
14:50
I know. :P
> Only rarely will a mistake in absolute numbers affect engineering of any kind.
What about for ( int i = 0; i <= size; ...? :D
We have to thank @chmod711telkitty for showing us the genius of Miles Mathis.
@R.MartinhoFernandes certainly
@R.MartinhoFernandes Wait. "Mathis"? "Math"?
@EtiennedeMartel That's why his mathematics are always correct and everyone else is always wrong.
And pi is different for moving circles.
14:51
That said, it's not that outlandish.
He defined something called a "moving circle", which is not a circle (despite the name), and then went un to "prove" that pi is 4 with that.
I too, can invent new things and define new rules on those things.
@EtiennedeMartel The guy actually believes we were building cars wrong because pi is 4.
@EtiennedeMartel It's wrong still.
@BartekBanachewicz You mean Bézier doesn't work?
> Shouldnt all of our machines immediately break and crash? Not necessarily. Because we make the same mistakes in all our equations, the equations are correct relative to each other.
:D
What the fuck is this guy taking.
14:53
Star fest today?
I want to try it.
now I only have to wonder who is more fucked up in the head; the guy or telkitty
> The derivative of an acceleration is a velocity.
> an acceleration
14:54
> a velocity
btw the articles have numerous spelling/punctuation errors, which isn't really unexpected
@R.MartinhoFernandes Le acceleration.
It actually might make sense, since he claims Newton's definition of the derivative is wrong and provides his own.
@BartekBanachewicz Most likely the guy; I suspect telkitty is just a student that heard something from a professor, maybe misinterpreted it, and believed it. It sounds like this guy is trying to redefine a large chunk of mathematics.
@EricFinn I don't want to have to relearn calculus, we have to stop this guy :p
15:03
@melak47 but look how simple they would be
Xeo
Xeo
@BartekBanachewicz Oh look, it's the implies operator!
@Xeo we wrote it as ⇒
Xeo
Xeo
wait, why False `implies` True == True?
@Xeo because if your premise (p) is false, you can prove or disprove anything you want
Xeo
Xeo
ah
15:06
The floor is wet.
If it is not raining, then the floor is wet.
If it is raining, then the floor is wet.
that table messed me up when I first saw it, specially the F imp T -> T
I also like p ↔ q where only p = true && q = true = true and p = false && q = false = true
if and only if
sigh
I remember how we argued on some mathematical notations here
what was it about
ah, set theory
15:10
4 > Pi, 4 wins
No, it's a draw!
@melak47 Case closed.
there is a burger chain here that all hamburgers have male names (or neutral) and all chicken burgers have female names, and changing a burger to a chicken burger is changing it to the lady version.
@ÓlafurWaage "I would like the she-burger version of this one, please"?
15:12
@melak47 one is called the president, and the chicken version is the first lady
@ÓlafurWaage That's the classical proof by misleading induction.
@R.MartinhoFernandes isnt there some old fable about this proof
31 mins ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
I can't believe that's Zeno's Achilles and the tortoise paradox.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I like to call it "by the thickness of pen"
@BartekBanachewicz Proof by misleading induction is a lot more general.
15:14
@BartekBanachewicz I don't think the pen is the thick one :)
penis mighter than sword
Most people understand proofs by induction intuitively, but not being aware of the mathematical definition are easy to fool into accepting a proof that misuses induction.
@BartekBanachewicz yes, and then a new theory arises to address those concerns. That's how science works. Adaptation. In contrast to religion and pseudoscience.
There's an xkcd for that.
heck, there's tim minchin for that
> Science adjusts it's beliefs based on what's observed
Faith is the denial of observation so that Belief can be preserved.
it rhymes!
@BartekBanachewicz That's from Storm, right?
15:17
@EricFinn correct :)
I don't understand forall. in Haskell.
@Jefffrey technically it's not haskell, it's from that extension IIRC
@BartekBanachewicz that situation is theoretically almost possible.
wait, there's one better
> almost
15:19
I mean, for some definitions of "better"
What definition of "better" did you just use?
The best one
magnets are magic btw
those troll faces don't look as real as my avatar
maybe some IT related ones
15:21
@Jefffrey you can superheat a fluid, and it will start cooking/exploding once an impurity is put in. Same with freezing.
@BartekBanachewicz works on linux also i.imgur.com/ayczdzV.png
@ÓlafurWaage DISK COMPANIES WILL GO BANKRUPT
HO HO HO
the great zero challenge is gone apparently, hardware.slashdot.org/story/08/09/06/189248/…
Store everything on The Cloud.
15:25
cat /dev/cloud | more
@ÓlafurWaage what was that about
and windows has ADS, so filename maximum length is not an issue!
take a hdd, zero it out and if any disk recovery program or company can recover any data from it, they will get a million dollars
> Hrm.

Wayback Machine doesn't have that page archived.
Well done.
15:28
@BartekBanachewicz Depends. There's implicit forall in every signature
@R.MartinhoFernandes wut
Also in different places forall means slightly different things
Also Transistor is out in a week
Oh, wait, two weeks. Stupid Steam
@R.MartinhoFernandes %3a. fucking urls.
ya, looking forward to transistor
user1804599
15:29
> whorem ipsum
user1804599
lol
loved the voice over for bastion
@ÓlafurWaage Data recovery companies forever said that one-pass is enough
apparently at that time there was some debate going on about it
this is 4-5 years ago iirc
Besides if you want to be sure sure, you just shred the disk not fill it with random crap :v
Also magnets
15:33
no SO notifications. sucks.
dat moment when your download speed is limited by disk IO
#thrash #thrash #thrash
this wifi is giving me 2,3 Mbit/sec throughput on last night's TV, but my tablet's disk controller and/or SD storage stops to wait for the buffer every few seconds unless I limit the download to like 1Mbit/s
and canes everything else running, too
that seems really crappy :(
it's just not designed for this
user1804599
15:48
@TonyTheLion My role model.
which text editor should I use on Windows - qtdestroyer or jaclipse ?
user1804599
Emacs, IntelliJ or Vim.
Windows. C++.
and I don't like sublimetext
VS obviously
15:50
VS is slow. I work on a fork of chromium and VS is fucking slow
user1804599
Vim.
In vim I know only :q and :wq. and I don't wanna know more
also hjkl is insane.
user1804599
You don’t have to use hjkl.
user1804599
Arrow keys work just fine.
@rightfold nor vim, duh
15:52
@R.MartinhoFernandes WTF
user1804599
You don’t have to use any editor.
user1804599
Use Notepad.
user1804599
Use edit.
user1804599
edit best editor.
15:53
I edit using sed
I have a mystery "array out of bounds"
I have no idea where it goes out
have you tried AddressSanitizer?
I'm using C#
fuck C++
user1804599
Meh, C#.
user1804599
@TonyTheLion Use the stack trace, Luke.
15:58
doesnt VS show you the error using a 3D slideshow with bill gates narrating?
@rightfold Yea gives me the function where it happens, but I need where in that function.
@ÓlafurWaage lol, I wish.
user1804599
Don’t write functions that contain very much logic.
user1804599
Also stack traces without line numbers suck.
output to the console a and b and c and d etc and run it, see what letter doesnt appear
between the lines
user1804599
@ÓlafurWaage breakpoints are easier to add and remove IMO.
user1804599
16:02
Given a decent editor.
printf debugging is shit.
@TonyTheLion Doesn't it show you the exact line?
even C++ debugger can do that.
@rightfold if you can add conditional breakpoints also
if anyone is interested, there's a broadcast starting in less than two hours here: aigamedev.com/broadcasts/session-hive Applying, Optimizing & Tuning Minimax for HIVE
@DeadMG not the stacktrace printed in the log file
> Despite every possible care, it is possible that damage to your goods may occur during transportation.
16:07
and because the bug occurs on a server, and not my local machine, I have to use log files
Not so great, really.
man, code that indexes into an array without checking array bounds
eeek
also fuck raw arrays
@TonyTheLion You need better logging then
Probably need to catch the right exceptions
but meh, I don't want to write 50 different catch handlers
You only catch exceptions when you can handle them
Also is that C++?
16:16
No
C#
your mother's C++
c#################################################
fiddledeedee I'm free like a bee
Then seriously what's the problem with logging the whole stack
logg ALL THE STACKS
STACK THEM ON HIGH BROTHERS
Go home DrugMG you're high
8
stack them over the walls of oppression
user1804599
16:17
StackedCrooked.
and to the plains of freedom
when I log exception.StackTrace it only writes the function in which the exception occurred
but I want the line number
Every C# logging framework has exception rendering
that's astonishingly incompetent.
even for Microsoft.
I'm not that advanced
I just use catch (System.Exception ex) { WriteLog(ex.StackTrace); } type of thing
user1804599
Even PHP adds line numbers to stack traces when casting an exception to a string.
the stack trace object seems to contain the line number.
it must be WriteLog that's not writing it.
Use NLog or something
Ehe, Exception.StackTrace is a string of some kind, do new StackTrace(ex) and log that
user1804599
I started an Erlang shell today and the network went down for half an hour.
user3010322
16:27
@Rapptz Have you thought of the situation where a person does lua.get<userdata<Foo>>( "foo" ) yet?
user3010322
I just realized it's somewhat wonky to extract something that's supposed to be a userdata.
@JohannesSchaub-litb For next time: meta.stackexchange.com/questions/229913/…
@Shog9 ohh do you have that software running on your box?
no, because I honestly don't care
the only thing more sad than someone entertained by twiddling stars is a room full of people with nothing better to do than get annoyed by it
16:40
oh - also a puppy when you take their favorite chew-toy away and then leave them alone. That's pretty sad.
and orphans. With diseases. Those are really sad.
ok, there are lots of things more sad than starring nonsense. It's still sad though.
user1804599
C++ programmers are really sad too, because they are C++ programmers.
10
@Shog9 What if you take their drugs away?
yeah, C++ programmers are sad when you take their drugs away
16:50
Hey we need those to get things done
user1804599
I should learn about gen_fsm.
@Shog9 woof woof
@R.MartinhoFernandes ARGH CRIPPLING STOMACH PAIN OW OW OW

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