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10:00
everything breaks if a smallest little thing changes
@BartekBanachewicz hello software
lol this is a fucking joke. I was living my life pretending that pearl doesn't exist for so long
hahahahah
Other things gain visibility slowly over time as people starting looking more in-depth.
@TonyTheLion hello crappy POS software used for no reason other than brainwashed idiocy
10:01
ah, btw recently Poland's Minister of Foreign Affairs said that "Ukrainians liberated the Auschwitz"
good work, Poland
@BartekBanachewicz ... less fat?
@thecoshman what
i just need to rotate the fucking lever that's all
FTR Rust passes &T in all sorts of places—&'a T even, which is a bit more inconvenient. But you have the peace of mind of the compiler checking your work.
10:03
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah. Propaganda can get slightly removed. However, I think that the gradual removal of detail/subtleties is an inevitable pattern. So, while the picture may be changed, it will not get more and more detailed (not talking about research, talking about public opinion)
My point being that 'by-value semantics but without too much programmer intervention when it comes to optimization' doesn’t seem to be a high priority concern.
@R.MartinhoFernandes so, ^ that indeed we agree on
> cowworker: using [Perl] is a matter of taste
> Bartek: and a number of work hours of developers you want to waste trying to set up the build
@LucDanton I've been writing by-value params more and more (at least for trivially copyables), and finding that the compiler almost always optimizes it away due to inlining anyway. So, I only "worry" when inlining is not likely to happen.
The radiance of a culture might also have an influence over public opinion
10:05
I admit that this is a false argument for the case, because it shows I'm still making all the tradeoffs mentally. I'm just trusting the compiler more in the end
hmpfh I should collect those failure stories in some closet
that way when anyone suggest "let's use perl/ruby/php/mysql/wordpress" I'll just point him to the appropriate shelf, when I'll have the decisive power
Do you keep track of inlineness mentally, or do you have a habit of checking after compilation?
@Abyx You sound way too involved here. Is it not likely that a lot of Ukranians were involved there? (Aside from the part where it doesn't make sense to distinguish nations that didn't exist independently at the time)
@sehe Likely? Sounds like an understatement.
It was meant as such
@LucDanton Both, actually. I did track inlining, but found myself writing T const& nonetheless just "to be safe". Only recently I've become quite fond of e.g. gcc.godbolt.org and checking it explicitly gives me the confidence to just "up and write by-value params" without too many worries
10:12
@sehe it's just a fresh example of a pure lie. of course there were some Ukrainians, like 10% of them, but Mr. Minister of Foreign Affairs definitely wanted to say that it was "Ukrainians" and not "Russians"
but actually it's not the most funny part. the joke is "If it's Ukrainians who liberated Auschwitz, then who was raping German female officers?"
lolwut
A pure lie is a bit extreme.
because it's widely known in Europe that evil Russians (oh now it's Ukrainians) made a lot of awful deeds when they made it to Auschwitz
It was the First Ukrainian Front that liberated Auschwitz.
It's not a long stretch from there to consider Ukrainians.
So you didn't read the manpage all the way through. — Lightness Races in Orbit 23 hours ago
@LightnessRacesinOrbit, when at busy work, normally you'll scan the man-page, or search with particular key-words. — Zen 7 hours ago
for fuck's sake, honestly
hi
10:17
> If your system date does not support that, you can use perl:
cringes
@R.MartinhoFernandes yeah, and it's where the lie is - that "Ukrainian Front" was named after the territory it was located. It was renamed from the "Voronezh Front" when it was in Russia.
2 mins ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
See also https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hanlon%27s_razor
@Abyx Some cities will claim "the Canadians liberated us". I think that is rarely true, but hardly outrageous. Of course allied forces are much more complicated and were always assisted by a plethora of (local) groups etc.
@R.MartinhoFernandes so you say that the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Poland is stupid? that he doesn't know the history?
@Abyx Well, you're saying that he is a liar.
10:21
@Abyx Interesting
I'm saying you should consider the fact that it could be a mistake (And it's really not hard to make that mistake)
It's vastly more likely that he's misunderstood or miscommunicated something than that he's set out to enforce some radical anti-Russian agenda on the world stage
although, granted, that seems to be in vogue these days...
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Exactly.
yeah you can say a lie by a mistake.
it doesn't turn a lie into truth
That's constructed. A lie implies intent
10:22
@Abyx No, you can't because that doesn't make sense.
Lies and false statements are not the same thing.
you can say something "incorrect" by mistake
that's not the same as lying
A "lie by mistake" is simply "not a lie".
@R.MartinhoFernandes A bad one, but still a mistake. Not nearly as bad as en.wikipedia.org/wiki/… /cc @Abyx
> In response to these comments, British Prime Minister David Cameron said that he "choked on his porridge" when he heard them and observed that Emerson was "clearly a complete idiot".
ahahahhaha
@sehe not really. this particular mistake had no political (or propagandist) effect.
10:25
Neither did our MoFA's one. I mean, who really cares?
@Abyx I wouldn't say that
however a Minister saying that "Russia has nothing to do with Auschwitz because it was Ukrainians who liberated it, not Russians" - it is very different
The Red Army isn't really praised here. And the "liberation" thing didn't end up too well either.
Frankly Poland would most probably be much better now if Red Army did not "liberate" it and instead waited in the east (just like they waited east of Warsaw in '44).
@Abyx WHAT. THE. ACTUAL. FUCK.??!
Hanlon's razor completely fails to "disarm" the #foxnewsfacts "errors" and I bet you didn't watch that particular Foxnews report.
@Griwes oh, we have a military expert!
10:28
@Abyx I don't think he's talking about the military side of things.
No, we have someone who knows how the time from '45 to circa '89 looked like in here.
@Abyx Oh come on. You would diss Griwes for any other reason, or without one :)
Well, not first-hand...
...but we still can see the effects.
Anyhoops. Here's a crash course in not-giving-too-many-fucks and some stress relief at the same time
Love Letters to Richard Dawkins: http://youtu.be/gW7607YiBso #hilarious dry readings
I think I finally woke up
Only took three hours
10:33
@sehe just accepted an answer to this question: stackoverflow.com/questions/3100311/…
Xeo
Xeo
@Puppy You write your own answer, and accept the other one?
Might as well make it a comment then
Hi folks, new at the chat and so I don't know if I may link to a question at the SO. Not to attrack people to the question but - well - to ask why it isn't read be anyone. Seeying a link above, I'll just dump it and see what happens.
Think people don't read it as it seems lesson #1 but it ain't, it is intermediate level although at a pitch I don't know (yet). Anyone has ideas what I should change so people will read it? stackoverflow.com/questions/28085721/…
> asked 42 mins ago
Grow some patience, mate.
good point
am just seeying people read all others.
10:39
> asked 43 mins ago
will wait anyway ;)
You have just asked it.
@brainoverflow What happens is I downvote you.
@Puppy that's a given
why Puppy?
10:39
I'm not sure if I've ever downvoted you tony
cause he's Puppy
also hai tony, you coming to Unconference given that you live in the same city?
@Puppy yes I'm coming to the Unconference
Xeo
Xeo
@brainoverflow If you're new, you'd do well to check out the rules of the place you're entering.
be dumb if I didn't attend while its in the city I live in
Xeo
Xeo
10:41
And given that you're hosting me
that's why I thought I'd check
You're in charge of leading us to the places with good monads.
Xeo
Xeo
all hail the Lion King?
oh shoot
I better prepare then
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes Shit, @Bartek could surely show us some good monad places in Poland!
A typo is the writer's best fiend.
Punny.
10:43
Monad?
@sehe Just to explain that failed verification: I hadn’t understood how the verification worked, and had deleted my HN profile text again. I’ll re-prove that.
@Xeo Would be cooler if it was "friend".
Xeo
Xeo
I just thought that.
But then, how many people would get that?
Isn't it the point of the joke?
I don't see any other typo so I don't know what the joke would actually be without that.
10:45
@Xeo nothing wrong with that
@Xeo nah he did the right thing I think
@Elvisjames monads are burritos
there is never any point in writing a comment for any purpose other than to ask for clarification or to berate someone. if you're leaving information for record-keeping purposes, it should be in answer form. if an existing answer was not necessarily strictly on the nose for your use case but was nonetheless correct as it turns out, it makes sense to accept that one rather than your followup conclusion
lol berate someone.
@R.MartinhoFernandes good monads?
what joke am I missing?
@brainoverflow It looks okay, fundamentally, but it's hard to answer IDE questions without actually being able to poke around on your computer. Therefore it's not much fun to answer and that's probably why you didn't get much reaction. The -1 doesn't help: not entirely sure why you got that except that I don't see concrete reproduction steps.
10:48
2 mins ago, by Bartek Banachewicz
@Elvisjames monads are burritos
@Griwes Pfft, if a question was posted 42 minutes ago and had no activity at all (like this one) then it's long ago fallen off the front page and into oblivion.
oh oh oh, Victoria coach station had the most amazing Burrito place
Oh, Puppy downvoted you for posting it here? Big sigh.
@Puppy good dog!
@LightnessRacesinOrbit And that surely means no-one will ever see it again, right? :P
10:49
Not supposed to downvote people -.-
@Griwes More or less, yes. Until it hits the "unanswered questions" review in a few months' time :P
why dafuq does Vagrant need to restart Windows to install?
even the I-fuck-with-network-adapters virtualbox doesn't need to reboot Windows.
user1804599
Monads are not like burritos, because unlike monads burritos don't have many stupid analogies.
@KonradRudolph I did the same with my first verification tweet :) It's not a one-time thing. "Verification" is more like a "Verification station". I think many things can be improved in wording/UX but generally keybase looks really well-done
user1804599
> About 11,200 results
user1804599
10:51
That's not many.
> google.de
"I google.de your name and here's what I found.."
@brainoverflow I, personally, don't read "header not found" type questions anymore because they're boring, and mostly all the same
@R.MartinhoFernandes You're searching for an English phrase on a German google
@Puppy Doesn't matter.
Results are not dependent on the domain.
10:51
@sehe Too localized really, it's impossible to know for sure what's wrong with some other dude's environment.
@Lightness races in Orbit: Thanks, the downvote is due to I dared to ask in here or something.
@brainoverflow Yeah there are some silly people in here who do that :( Sorry about that!! :(
@brainoverflow Asking here was okay
@R.MartinhoFernandes Really? Because I got About 14,600,000 results (0.42 seconds) on google.co.uk
@Puppy Doesn't make it unwarranted for someone to request assistance. Also, doesn't make it unwarranted for people to leave it
@brainoverflow I have written a comment on your question about how it could be improved.
10:52
@brainoverflow People tend to file a new question because "Yeah, but I'm not missing a different header" or "Yeah, but I'm using UNC paths". It's really all the same...
@Puppy I didn't. You probably forgot the quotes.
@Lighness races in Orbit: Well that's okay. If they whish to be silly who am I?
@sehe I think that "Too localized" is a valid reason for something to be off-topic here. Don't know why that was removed :(
@Puppy You omitted the quotes.
(confirmed by removing the quotes and counting results)
ITT Puppy doesn't know how to use Google
10:53
@R.MartinhoFernandes Fair enough.
@brainoverflow That, plus you only waited 50 minutes before moaning. You could at least have waited 24 hrs so that the whole world got a chance to look at your question.
@brainoverflow engrishoverflow
The results do indeed have some localisation bias, but the defining factor is not the domain.
> They reserve their fucks for what truly fucking matters. Friends. Family. Purpose. Burritos.
burritos = monads?
what is it with you dudes and burritos
it's nearly as bad as that bacon thing
10:54
lol
"bad" and "bacon" so close together? that doesn't compute
oh gawd
@Martin: I wasn't moaning, just asking because I saw all other questions being red.
Questions were red?
Makes no sense.
@brainoverflow That's because you have a terrible question that nobody could possibly help you with.
(Disclaimer: I do, in fact, know what he meant.)
10:55
And therefore I thought there must be something wrong with my question/title.
But I'll edit it as know I know why
Thanks for the feedback
@Puppy: when nobody has read it, they won't know it is terrible.
4
@sehe I agree, they really seem to have thought this through. I’m waiting for a thorough audit of their code base by security experts. And I’m hoping for them to weigh in on the ideas and technologies. Has Bruce Schneier mentioned Keybase yet?
> Not finding #include files after setting active solution platform to x64
@brainoverflow Your title quite efficiently conveys the total unsuitability of your question.
If they've seen this, they know it's terrible.
@brainoverflow also public service announcement
@brainoverflow There is. It's about VS file paths. That alone is sufficient to turn most developers off. We don't have your environment, so we can't investigate it.
10:59
@KonradRudolph no. Matthew green, Geoffry Couprie, many others have though (I think I've seen some buffs do their verification in my twitter timeline before, but I'm too lazy to find who it was)
Did you delete that so nobody knows it is terrible?
@brainoverflow Like I said, the title is a turn off for me. But that's ok, because, indeed I have no intention of answering that type of question anymore (I have, plentiful; and I still answer enough questions, so I'll leave it to others who do have the motivation).
Remember Q&A is a market. You're not entitled to "selling" your question.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Funny in context
@Jefffrey (weggejorist)
Why are you guys chatting in removed messages?
11:02
Lol "Did you try searching?" TIL the apple.com 404 page would get comment-flagged on SE. — Lightness Races in Orbit 15 secs ago
@sehe: selling (marketing) my question?
just asked what's wrong. Am now going to edit the bugger. Thanks all.
4 mins ago, by Griwes
@brainoverflow also public service announcement
I don't think his brain is overflowing.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit I can read that.
Hmm.
@brainoverflow That's not what I meant. I mean, if Q&A is a market, you might not find a buyer for the questioni (i.e. it remains unanswered). Sorry if I was confusing. I'm not angry if that's what you thought :)
11:07
@sehe: didn't thought you were angree. But you're true on the market thing.
@brainoverflow You have been asked to use the reply-to arrows when replying to messages here. Please acquiesce!
lol, trying to picture a high-street shop trying to sell off questions re. VS paths. I imagine it would get less business than the shop next door trying to sell monads.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit okay, my apologies. red over that.
¬_¬ there are too many stack exhcnages
soon you'll need one where you can ask which one you need to use.
@Jefffrey Drop the bass!
11:09
10000 minor page faults per second, that's probably excessive, not?
@StackedCrooked is that 10, or 10k?
@StackedCrooked Wots a 'minor page fault'?
11:10
@MartinJames Minor page fault
Happy reading.
@MartinJames "Loading" pages that are already in memory.
@MartinJames page fault that does not involve disk access
@MartinJames it's when the sheet of music you just played falls of the stand.
OK, OK, I read the wiki :)
> A page fault (sometimes #pf or pf) is a trap to the software raised by the hardware
gg
11:12
I read that in Admiral Ackbar's voice.
@R.MartinhoFernandes he really is more popular than he should be ¬_¬
Who is Admi... never mind, I'll Google it.
@thecoshman Nonsense.
@thecoshman Jar Jar is more popular than it should be.
hm, perhaps something template<typename T> using value_ref = T const& is enough to document that a function takes a reference only as an optimization (e.g. void foo(value_ref<std::string> s)), and uses the argument with value semantics
11:14
Oh, him.
@R.MartinhoFernandes sorry, I don't really register those as anything more than bad fan fic'
@AndyProwl What you should really do is change the language rules so that the compiler performs that optimization for you.
Damn I lost a question I would like to find back... It's in the transcript but I can't find it
@thecoshman What I said still stands.
@Puppy I agree, but that's out of my reach
(also I don't even know if it's feasible)
11:15
@AndyProwl What does it mean to "use the argument with value semantics"?
it is
@R.MartinhoFernandes as does what I said
okay
@R.MartinhoFernandes it means the function cares about the value, not the address of the object
I don't find that an important distinction.
why not?
if the client of a function knows the function uses only the value of an object, never it address, it does not need to be concerned with lifetime issues and such
@AndyProwl Dunno, maybe I don't write functions that stow away references often enough to care.
I very rarely have a need to store references to random things.
in fact I don't believe I've done it in years.
Constructors, sometimes.
@AndyProwl well that should be the default case, and maybe you would want a type that explicitly says "hey, this ref is going to be stored, so beware of lifetime issues". Not the other way round
11:22
the problem is that you can't express both that and constness in the same ref because some moron decided that const T& should be able to reference rvalues as well.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I have a doubt
I don't.
I win.
you could try f(const T&); f(T&&) = delete;.
@R.MartinhoFernandes great. Help me with mine then
@ArneMertz I don't know. I think as a basic hint, the "it's a & -> address matters; it's a plain T -> value matters" rule makes more sense.
11:23
also I have yet to find a situation where not copying a string yielded a critical performance boost.
foo :: MonadState a m => m a
bar :: MonadState a m => m a

fn :: MonadState a m => m a
fn = do
    foo
    bar
@R.MartinhoFernandes Is foo guaranteed to modify the state before bar and if yes, why?
It desugars to foo >>= \_ -> bar, or alternatively foo >> bar
Because State threads.
Bartek now: "I have two doubts"
:P
I mean, there are some monads that don't guarantee that, right?
11:24
A needle threader is a small device for helping put the thread through the eye of small needles. Still popular today is the needle threader of Victorian design, consisting of a small tinned plate stamped with a profile image (usually a female figure) with a diamond-shaped steel wire attached. == See also == Sewing needle Thimble Treen...
In this sense.
I had a doubt, then I spoke to robot, and now I have two doubts.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I am afraid I can't apply this analogy.
if we desugar further...
@BartekBanachewicz State just feeds the old state into new functions to get the new state.
And so on.
The sequencing is guaranteed because of the dependency established by that.
@R.MartinhoFernandes oh, right. Simple.
Thanks.
If you write f(g(x)) you implicitly establish order between the g and f calls. Same idea.
11:27
STM doesn't guarantee that between two atomic actions, right?
foo :: STM ...
foo = do
    atomically $ a
    atomically $ b
welp, now that I think about it it would kinda make sense if it did
I wonder what monads don't
They showed how you can 3D print a car in detroit, now you can print a house in china
@BartekBanachewicz The ordering? It does. If b uses the old state, it needs the old state to have been computed first.
Is it technically possible to write a reordering monad?
(not thinking about laws right now)
consider
Does Cont count, cunt?
SCNR.
@R.MartinhoFernandes has conversation finally got stuck in a loop?
11:31
foo :: Bartek
foo = do
    priority 2 . liftIO . print $ "less important"
    priority 1 . liftIO . print $ "more important"
> more important
> less important
@R.MartinhoFernandes not sure. I probably should read about Cont at this point
@Puppy you mean opposed to duplicating the string?
@thecoshman memory copies are pretty damn cheap
especially with <1kB blocks and smaller. Depends of course.
yeah, I guess ram is so cheap and plentyful these days
friend just posted photos that appear to be from last night's filming of this week's episode of Top Gear. fucking bastard.
in HTML / CSS / WebDesign, 1 min ago, by KeyboardWarrior
@Sippy u wot m8? Ill rek ya face
ahaha
u fookin cheeky burger
3
11:41
Umm
well I dunno about you but the strings I usually employ are usually quite short.
SSO is a winner here.
plus of course it's simply not a hot path so who gives a shit how long it is.
actually that article is fucking harrowing
just to warn you
I mean you go into hospital with the strep... and come out with no lips or nose or legs and only one arm because the infection was that bad... then one night you roll over and snap your remaining arm off..... jesus
lol
> the tortures you will suffer from our loving god
super loving ain't he
actually no spoilers
this is pure gold
11:52
yes, we've all seen it, you don't need to keep posting quotes
lol "biatch"
@LightnessRacesinOrbit That's horrible.
It's scary, even.

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