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Xeo
Xeo
16:00
@R.MartinhoFernandes Wazzat do?
Override operator new[] to always overalign.
Xeo
Xeo
mh
The first time it is called it uses new[], resulting in a recursive invocation to probe for the array overhead.
@DeadMG Playing ironman is the only way to play. No saves!
Then it takes it into account to have properly aligned results.
Xeo
Xeo
16:03
oh boy
user1804599
@LightnessRacesinOrbit it renders everything fine.
user1804599
Including furigana!
furiwhat?
@Xeo It's just a PoC to show how messed up new[] is.
12
Q: Should we force our son to have hobbies?

Paul RichardsI have a 10-year-old son who is slightly autistic - he has an assistant with him at his school, but is intelligent enough. We are struggling to find a hobby that our son will enjoy and stick with. We tried martial arts, but he said he didn't like it. He seemed to like the scout movement for s...

> It is sometimes difficult to know what our son actually wants. I think sometimes he is just agreeing with my wife because it is what she wants to hear.
no shit
16:04
(Remember the Great Placement New Conspiracy?)
user1804599
Is all access to local statics thread-safe?
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes ye
user1804599
Those funny characters above those other funny characters.
Xeo
Xeo
@CatPlusPlus the initialisation is
16:05
Yeah I know about the init, I wonder about the later assignments
Xeo
Xeo
nah
@CatPlusPlus Prolly not, but I'm not caring as it's messy enough as is to carry the point across.
Thread-unsafe code upsets me
I could just make them thread_local and call it a day.
I've been doing a lot of code reviews lately
Xeo
Xeo
16:06
Oh yeah, I wanted to get a proper Japanese font
Anybody got a good one?
user1804599
@Xeo Yeah, lemme check their names.
@Xeo Segoe UI :v
I use Microsoft JhengHei UI.
@melak47 That's horrid.
user1804599
user1804599
@Xeo These proper enough?
16:08
Meh serifs
Xeo
Xeo
I always like the second style, though dunno how good that works for smaller fontsize
user1804599
@Xeo I always confuse あ and お and ち and ら with the second style and small.
I don't know what people see in this overcomplicated mess of an alphabet/language/whatever
Xeo
Xeo
@rightfold I don't have that problem
what's a good variable name for something which "is older than the latest updated version"?
16:09
@CatPlusPlus words
or something
user1804599
They’re called Hiragino Mincho ProN and Hiraguno Kaku Gothic ProN, by the way.
Xeo
Xeo
@CatPlusPlus What, Japanese?
@melak47 Funny, looks more like Windings to me
morneing
user1804599
16:10
Hangul master race.
Xeo
Xeo
I like the culture and I like the language.
I'm fascinated by the language.
It seems to me like people get way overexcited about it
Not enough to try to learn it though.
truth is, hangul is more efficient since it builds words by putting characters together, similar to how we do it
Xeo
Xeo
16:12
@CatPlusPlus Well, I'm 'way overexcited' because I really want to learn it. I wanna read some Japanese literature :(
it doesn't have a bazillion of characters meaning the same thing
I am curious why the japanese don't simplify their writing
their alphabets just scream duplicated everything
Xeo
Xeo
Example, besides Hiragana/Katakana?
kanji?
@CatPlusPlus You mean, like every computer language and natural language in history?
@AlexM. They're really... I dunno... conservative is not really the right thing... about it.
16:14
many kanji characters mean multiple things, if not all of them, depending on context
pair that with the fact that all three alphabets are combined in the real world god knows how
and if you don't know all three well enough, you can't do most things in japan
Xeo
Xeo
Kanji + hiragana are combined for reading hints and inflection
@AlexM. None of them is an alphabet, btw.
Xeo
Xeo
welp, timu for NGNL /cc @Mysticial
@R.MartinhoFernandes I dunno what to call them, it seemed more accurate than "characters used for writing"
or maybe it isn't
hm, so...stackexchange decides which site to serve me based on the hostname I type? so what if I....yup
16:16
@AlexM. Hangul is an alphabet, for this reason.
user1804599
@AlexM. Je moet de Nederlandse taal eens proberen.
Hiragana and Katakana are syllabaries, as the units are syllables.
Kanji are logographs.
user1804599
We split words and rearrange the parts in the weirdest orders.
yes, but in the end, both hangul and the rest achieve the same goal: writing down words
user1804599
16:18
You can use anything as long as it isn’t Cyrillic—I don’t want to have to poke my eyes out.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I was arguing that hangul is a more efficient way to do so
duckoverflow.com? you sure it's a 'd' not a 'f'? :p
I already agreed with you that kanji, hiragana and katakana are not alphabets
@melak47 that's hardly unusual.....
user1804599
@melak47 Do you think they buy a new IP address for each Stack Exchange site?
16:20
ITT virtual hosts do not exist
user1804599
Woo 0–1.
@AlexM. Efficient in what way? A single Kanji logograph can express something that would require some two or three Hangul syllables (or possibly more; I don't possess a Korean vocabulary).
@rightfold :p
user1804599
They select the website based on the Host header, which has been required since HTTP 1.1.
256 ^ 4 ... only 4 billion IPs available ... maybe I should get a couple more just in case ...
16:21
just like every other webhost does
user1804599
Fuck 1–1.
@R.MartinhoFernandes the learning curve is significantly smaller for hangul, which makes it more accessible to anyone wishing to learn writing and reading in korean
this makes it easier for people to be able to communicate natively with koreans than with the japanese
bot korean is not kawaiiii~~~~~~^_^'
user1804599
16:23
Hangul is damn easy to learn.
that, plus the fact that Japanese people won't even listen to you unless you have an octopus on your head or something
it's also efficient because there's little chance to cause confusion which is most of the time caused by interpretations of the context, see some questions on japanese.se
Let's speak in morse code ...
mozzie code ... Zzzz
16:24
kitty kode
but yes, japanese text tends to be shorter than korean text, because of what you said
I doubt the Korean language don't use context.
(Also, that's an unusual definition of "efficient")
@R.MartinhoFernandes they do, but the same character doesn't mean different things depending on context
@AlexM. An Hangul jamo has no meaning on its own. That comparison makes no sense.
16:24
Moss code? :)
Xeo
Xeo
@AlexM. Example of that being the case in Japanese?
@Xeo any kanji with multiple meanings?
It's like saying that in English "k" doesn't mean different things depending on context.
Xeo
Xeo
16:25
@AlexM. Those don't depend on context, that's what the okurigana are for
not "repeat the assertion"
Xeo
Xeo
to determine the reading
@R.MartinhoFernandes to be fair, that's arguably true
user1804599
Wtf, this keyboard layout sucks.
the 'k' in "knight" serves a different purpose than the 'k' in "kit"
(not really)
((lol))
16:26
@LightnessRacesinOrbit But it doesn't have a meaning.
sure it does
it means "hi i'm the letter 'k'"
Words carry the meaning, not the letters.
Same with jamo.
@Xeo is okurigana mandatory or can it be used without? you're going to have to wait a bit for me to dig out examples
knight ... night ... do you reckon knights usually came out at night in ancient times?
not accurse knights of anything of course
@R.MartinhoFernandes you keep on focusing on the difference between our alphabet and whatever the japanese use for writing is called
16:28
@AlexM. You keep making direct comparisons between them.
Xeo
Xeo
@AlexM. For a specific meaning, there is a writing with kanji + okurigana
if it's not written that way, it doesn't have that meaning (AFAIK)
and you all keep talking
when all I'm saying is that the difficulty of learning the japanese writing is what makes it inefficient
both our alphabets and their writing achieve the same purpose
I don't really care about the inside differences
user1804599
Klingon or GTFO.
it's not like hangul is one year of study easier than japanese writing
the number of different things that you need to know by heart to master japanese writing is absurd compared to hangul
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Have you been studying Lisp again?
user1804599
The only character I like is Alex.
@AlexM. It's not like being able to write Hangul provides the same functionality for Korean as being able to write with the Japanese writing system provides for Japanese.
@JerryCoffin (((no)))
@JerryCoffin ahahah
16:31
tomalak will soon become a javascript developer
I can write Hangul. I don't know a single word in Korean.
@chmod711telkitty is that your name?
@chmod711telkitty I develop JavaScript already
nope ... I wish ...
@R.MartinhoFernandes I don't understand what you mean by this
@melak47 suckoverflow.com :P
16:32
Good morning.
@Jefffrey :v
morning
@AlexM. Learning Japanese, the writing system, is almost inseparable from learning Japanese, the language. The same is not true for Hangul and Korean.
to me it still looks like one of those internal differences, about which I never argued
So I've playing with simple dependency injection and smart pointers. I have a simple minded demo program here: http://pastebin.com/vC4SFBcr

The output appears to be correct:

In SecondHandler::HandleEvent() 2
Timer Destructor
TimerEvent being destructed


Any critiques/suggestions to make it better?
16:34
If you master Japanese writing, you master Japanese the language, in the process. The same is not true for Hangul and Korean. Obviously the former will be harder, since it results in more knowledge.
it's not, I agree with that
I'm trying to tell you that you're comparing apples and oranges.
@jalf wut?
@R.MartinhoFernandes I'm comparing apples and oranges if you put it like that
I'm only considering the end results
My point is that you are not!
The end result of learning Japanese writing is learning Japanese as well.
16:36
how am I not
@Chimera where is DI?
The end result of learning Hangul is knowing Hangul.
it's not like there are no people able to speak and understand spoken japanese to some extent without knowing how to write it down
@JohnPoison Timer SecondTimer( ..... ) requires a TimerEvent...
I believe that is simple DI, is it not?
you can learn to speak any language just from hearing alone if you spend enough time in the appropriate environments, even though the japanese writing may be more coupled to the spoken language than in most other languages, it's still not coupled enough to make the both impossible to understand without each other
or rather, speaking without writing
since writing maps onto the spoken words
16:40
@Chimera not really. Can you make a hot replace of a dependency ?
@Chimera I mean runtime replace of one implementation of a dependency to another
@AlexM. Yes, but learning speaking without writing is not relevant for how hard it is to learn writing.
@JohnPoison I don't know... perhaps my understanding of dependency injection is incorrect.
@R.MartinhoFernandes obviously, since that supposes there's no actual writing learning involved
@JohnPoison Is my use of shared_ptr correct?
I'm not really sure what this is all about anymore
16:45
Kids learn to speak a language long before they can read and write
and that honestly has fuck all to do with whatever this is
http://coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/f4c4be20142ec813

shared_ptr used correctly? And is it using dependency injection because Timer() requires a TimerEvent to be passed in?
@AlexM. FWIW, the same is true for learning to read any language just from seeing it alone.
@Chimera yes, if you intended to strictly require dependency
my original point was that I consider hangul to be more efficient than japanese writing because it isn't as much of a mountain to climb if you want to learn korean
(Well, not in the sense of reading aloud, but in the sense of receiving the message)
16:47
@JohnPoison Ok thanks. And my use of std::share_ptr. Does it look correct?
sure, japanese writing is more compressed and in the end this has great advantages, I was just arguing the learning curve seems too steep to make it all worth it for a foreigner
I'm not sure about advantages.
I think shortness is an advantage
Xeo
Xeo
The advantage of Japanese is Kanjipuns.
Is it shorter?
Hangul jamo are quite simple.
Kanji are complex as hell.
16:49
did you not say it was short already?
@Chimera I'd replace std::shared_ptr<TimerEvent>( new SecondHandler( 2 ) ) with std::make_shared
It may use less space, but it only does so by putting more shapes in less space.
when you stated that a single kanji could represent what could be represented with 3 hangul characters?
Xeo
Xeo
the stroke count of some kanjis is just downright demonic :(
@JohnPoison Ok thanks... I will have to look into that.. I appreciate you looking at the code.
16:50
@AlexM. That's about encoding efficiency.
It has more information density.
@Chimera you're welcome
I don't know if that makes it an advantage.
Xeo
Xeo
29 strokes, meaning: depression
user1804599
@Xeo fitting.
that's depressing
16:51
Yeah. Good luck reading that with a small font, or far away.
Xeo
Xeo
yea
As is I can barely distinguish it from a blurry mass of black with a small horizontal line below.
user1804599
It doesn’t look too difficult, though.
Xeo
Xeo
Good luck remembering it
user1804599
But with a small font it looks like ▓.
16:53
@Xeo "black mass with an horizontal line below" is easy to remember :P
you better see a doctor about that black mass...
Xeo
Xeo
The hiragana is much easier: うつ
user1804599
@Xeo lel
16:54
@Xeo And reads systematically, AFAIK.
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes ?
What do you mean with 'systematically'?
That particular pair of syllables isn't pronounced in a special way for being paired like this. It's just the two syllables in sequence.
oooooooh
Xeo
Xeo
oh, ye
ebay saw that I kept looking at stuff w/o buying
again
and gave me another voucher
Xeo
Xeo
16:56
Hiragana / Katakana are basically always pronounced the same
That's why they're syllabaries.
user1804599
Except は. :v
Xeo
Xeo
@rightfold And を
and へ
user1804599
hehe
Xeo
Xeo
those come from old rules and their particles, though
user1804599
16:56
(pun intended dammit)
user1804599
@Xeo I’ll check again tomorrow to see if I can still write it down. :P
Xeo
Xeo
another exception is if you have, say, ざっし
Yes..
Timer SecondTimer( std::make_shared<SecondHandler>( 12) );
Is more readable.
Xeo
Xeo
the 's' sound of the し is prolonged a bit
@Chimera Really, you could contract that down to Timer SecondTimer(12);
oh, SecondHandler and SecondTimer are not coupled
meh

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