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1:00 PM
nah everything is grid-based for simplicity's sake
 
You can't. You could do tricks with statically linked (standalone) applications. E.g.: (see edit coming in a minute) — sehe 6 mins ago
 
if something like a pole is on a cell
 
sehe-so-leet
 
the whole cell is occupied
and cannot be walked on
 
@AlexM. Bartek is on the phone?
 
1:00 PM
here, let me show you
@sehe lol
 
Nice one lol
Speaking of pole dance, that lady here is awesome (NSFW)
 
@BartekBanachewicz (a) 's what I mean (b) awesome dissonance there
You really are a good match for the Puppy. Complains about "real" problems in just about everything you didn't make yourself, and happily accepts the self-chosen cage.
 
@Rerito like this
 
I get it
Did you make your own engine (for physics and sound stuff)?
 
I'm using Unity here
at the moment I don't use anything physics-related
since there's no need
movement is grid-based so it can only happen in smooth transitions from coordinate A to coordinate B
I don't want physics to mess up my snap to cell approach
the ground is also mostly flat to facilitate this
it's not a bad thing if you decorate the level enough to not make it feel raw and empty
 
1:07 PM
Doesn't it limit the level design?
 
nope, it fits my ideas well
it's an oldschool first person party-based RPG after all
they work like this
Might and Magic X added higher stuff like climbing stairs to get somewhere
but it's still one "flat" level based on a 2D grid
an exception might be dungeons but I don't remember this too well
@Rerito I figure it would eventually
but this is just a single-level demo :P
 
Eventually, but after that BS comment of mine
 
I can get away with stuff
 
I remembered how much I enjoyed Crash Bandicoot games on my old PS1
 
@sehe a) it wasn't self-chosen. b) I've just said I'm not doing anything that would break VS, so it doesn't break for me.
 
1:10 PM
And there wasn't so much slopes in it (or relief stuff)
And the level design was kinda good
 
@BartekBanachewicz it's always self-chosen, and apparently very self-embraced :)
And everybody who uses MSVC knows how to treat it.
Or otherwise, life is hell
 
@BartekBanachewicz Hey Bartek, what technologies are you using for that web game of yours?
 
15 hours ago, by Puppy
FUCK YOU MSVC MY CODE IS PERFECTLY GOOD COMPILE IT RIGHT NOW FAILCOMPILER GAAAAAAARGH
 
@sehe my company uses VS-based toolchain. It would be silly to go against it
 
1:12 PM
@Jefffrey Scotty, STM, Lens, dunno what else
 
@BartekBanachewicz What point are you trying to make?
 
@sehe that VS is perfectly acceptable in my use case.
It's not acceptable for my different use cases.
 
Nobody questioned that
 
@BartekBanachewicz Do you use a database?
 
1:13 PM
@Jefffrey No.
 
Didn't you recommend a database library once?
 
@Jefffrey I did.
 
31 mins ago, by Bartek Banachewicz
@Pris the point is that once you upgrade you can work more efficiently
 
Can you... remind me which one was it?
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes That's the awesome dissonance
 
1:14 PM
@Mgetz "We are the std committee. Your biological and technological distinctiveness will be added to our own. Resistance is futile."
 
I'm still in awe
 
@sehe there's no fucking dissonance, really
 
So, why the cuss words?
 
Some features of C++11 are less useful in practice/everyday non-library programming
if upgrading from say vs2008 to 2013 brings you those, it's a huge productivity boost
 
Indeed. (And a nice source of wtf-y debug sessions, but let's focus on "painting inside the cage lines)
 
1:15 PM
the fact that VS is broken when it comes to some C++11 features might be entirely irrelevant in some cases
That's what I was saying and that's what Microsoft noticed
 
@BartekBanachewicz I know this. I /use/ MSVC. With the same code base for Linux/Mac
 
@BartekBanachewicz lol
 
that's why they are bringing C++14 functionality before full C++11
 
1:16 PM
They're doing that mostly because they're easier.
 
Nevermind that MSVC compatibility is a large part of Boost bloat
 
Sure it would be better if MSVC was a better compiler
 
Just going by the fact that they don't have some five or so of the advertised C++11 features actually working.
 
@sehe Still better than gdb.
inb4 "no GDB is working perfectly fine"
 
Nah, just lol
 
1:18 PM
inb4 yawn; same old shitty dirt arguments. You were arguing about Boost needing to shed the bloat. Not so long ago
 
yawn
 
but somehow my "cage" is automatically worse than your oh-so-great open vim-based GDB garden
 
43 mins ago, by Bartek Banachewicz
One might argue that Boost dropping C++03 support could be a strong argument for people to migrate to C++11 or C++14 already
6 mins ago, by Bartek Banachewicz
@sehe that VS is perfectly acceptable in my use case.
Sorry, I just had to juxtapose those.
 
@Pris you know the sad part about that demo code they posted? They didn't even bother rewriting the cairo backend to not suck.
 
ahahaha
@BartekBanachewicz It was never about that.
 
1:20 PM
@R.MartinhoFernandes Boost supports as far as VC6 IIRC
it's still better to base the support on half-broken VS2012 than on vs2005
 
@Mgetz the code itself is pretty ugly. I didnt read the proposal but im more interested in the structure than their implementation.
 
less cruft is less cruft
 
where "structure" == API
 
@BartekBanachewicz that is correct
 
@Pris there isn't one yet, more than likely they won't bother writing a new cairo backend until the proposal is adopted
 
1:21 PM
@jalf Even a broken clock is right twice a day.
 
Seriously, every consecutive MSVC was better than previous one when it comes to C++11 support
 
Who cares?
 
@BartekBanachewicz What are you doing. I was just noticing that you love criticizing things you're not working with (Puppy-ing).
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes so technically every release of boost could've cut the previous versions or at least deprecate the support
 
@Mgetz I meant the api for std:: which shouldnt' have anything to do with cairo
 
1:22 PM
You're advocating for this huge codebase to drop support for C++03 and go full on C++11 when one of the mainstream compilers can't really C++11.
It's beyond stupid.
 
@BartekBanachewicz Finally a baseline that both makes sense and is relevant
 
holy shit I think I've written some code that works
 
Nah. You'll see it in a moment.
 
@jalf what does it do
 
@Pris it's basically just a C++ cairo wrapper, that IS the proposal at least to my understanding
 
1:23 PM
@BartekBanachewicz tautologies are tautologies
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes I haven't said they should drop C++03 support all and at once, breaking on every MSVC version up to 15
look how I said "one might argue"
 
That's the stupid. The funny is that you're oh-so-let's-drop-support-for-old-stuff and yet are comfortable with one of the tools that might slow down adoption the most because it works for you.
 
@milleniumbug But at least "less cruft" is less contentious than "boost isn't really following standard proposals anymore, no" or "boost is just one big ball of mud"
 
but no, it's better to automatically assume I meant the dumbest possible meaning you can associate with what I said
@R.MartinhoFernandes There's still shitload of people behind what we use.
 
Orrrrr. You can dispell this notion of by simply clarifying.
 
1:24 PM
@BartekBanachewicz Look how you proceeded to actually argue it.
Please don't make me remind you of what you've been saying all along.
 
It's ridiculous.
 
I'm dropping this. I've a delicious Spirit question that I can focus on instead
 
@Pris maximize and minimize and assign focus between a bunch of windows running in separate processes according to a set of rules so only one of the windows is non-minimized at a time
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes We're on 2013 right now, and when newer community version comes out I'm sure we'll upgrade. We use newest clang and newest GCC possible. So no, I don't think we're really slowing down adoption
 
1:26 PM
k, now give each others a hug, you two :p
 
If the tools we needed suddenly deprecated 2013, I'm sure there would be no reluctance to updating toolchains if that option was present
 
@BartekBanachewicz I didn't say you. I said VS, the tool you're happy with because you are at the right level of hipsterness.
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes so I should be unhappy with my tools because a robot online said so?
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes ... you did say "you" in the message he just responded to. Twice if you count "you're" :p
 
1:28 PM
Sure, you can argue that VS development strategy might indeed hinder the C++11 adoption a bit
 
@LightnessRacesinOrbit this guy is not deep anymore
he's dip
 
That's completely irrelevant to whether the tool actually does its job for me at the particular moment
 
@BartekBanachewicz No. But you could lower the volume on black-painting the things you happen to not-use
 
The whole "black-painting" is what I remember from the last time I used Boost.
 
1:29 PM
Throwing dirt and FUD on Boost because you feel grumpy is cheap.
 
Seriously, have a look at Python.
 
It's not fucking FUD.
It's my personal experience.
 
You wanna start over? Scroll up 14 pages.
 
Sure, you can argue I'm dumb and that I can't use Boost and compilers for shit.
 
They're still supporting Python 2, almost seven years later.
 
1:30 PM
But that was my personal experience with Boost.
 
59 mins ago, by sehe
@BartekBanachewicz How the hell can asking a question about the supposed-hopeless-state-of-affairs be defended as "describing my own experience"? #grandiosity
@BartekBanachewicz Now that's irrelevant
 
@sehe my experience was that for quite some time when I was using it, BUT was using move semantics, boost did nothing visible to bring them in.
 
1 hour ago, by Bartek Banachewicz
@sehe is Boost even trying to keep up with what's going on with C++?
 
Perhaps I was impatient.
 
^ zero experience. Loads of FUD
 
1:31 PM
ughfuck
I vaguely remember that at this time achieving C++11 support wasn't really a top priority for anyone at Boost
 
At what time?
 
@BartekBanachewicz haha. if you don't look nothing is visible. By there have been ~4 releases of boost featuring Boost Move, which - surprise - is used throughout the libraries to make support for move semantics available on all supported platforms.
 
Dunno, that'd be around 4.7? I'm not sure
 
What time is 4.7 in this context? (hint: it's not a boost version)
 
@sehe See and that should've been the answer to the question from one hour ago you happily quoted
 
1:32 PM
@BartekBanachewicz CONGRATU-fucking-LATIONS. Next time you vaguely remember things, don't make such a drama ;)
 
This chatroom is the fucking shiiitttttt
 
quit bickering and high five me instead cos I made something that worked!
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes He thinks boost is versioned in GCC versions?
@jalf You didn't. High five.
 
@DonLarynx please do not associate this chatroom with feces
faeces
fecii
 
1:33 PM
Jul 3 '14 at 18:32, by Puppy
I'm not being a dick, it's people coming in here shitting on the carpet for the sake of 30 seconds that's being a dick.
 
@jalf hi5. what platform was your window management thing on
 
@sehe instead of going full rant on how I'm terrible for saying bad things about Boost, just cut it with "you remember wrong, it's changed a lot" next time
 
@Hacketo: Links never answer the question. What do you think this is, the World Wide Web or something?! — Lightness Races in Orbit 5 secs ago
 
@Pris this is for some cross platform stuff that runs on Windows and Linux
 
1:34 PM
@BartekBanachewicz If you mean 1.47, then hahahahahahah. Boost.Move first showed up in 1.48. Clearly no one was caring at the time of Boost 1.47.
 
what lib are you using?
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes reminds me of
Apr 14 '14 at 13:26, by Lightness Races in Orbit
arghagrahrghargharghargharghargharga futures/promises added in Boost 1.41
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes No, I actually meant the year of 4.7 release
 
@Pris It's a Qt app
 
@BartekBanachewicz You didn't say you remembered it! I asked. (And immediately. It was literally the first thing I said in response) Twice:
1 hour ago, by sehe
7 mins ago, by sehe
Cough. Why do you pose these loaded rhetoricals
 
1:35 PM
Apr 14 '14 at 13:26, by Lightness Races in Orbit
guess what version I'm stuck on
 
@jalf nice. i like working in qt
 
Apr 14 '14 at 13:26, by Lightness Races in Orbit
fuck me sideways, basically
 
@BartekBanachewicz 4.7 release of WHAT?
 
@BartekBanachewicz GCC 4.7, I assume? To avoid any additional misunderstandings :p
 
yes of GCC uhhj
gosh let's end this idiotic topic already
 
1:35 PM
@Pris Some of it is decent. Lots of broken shit in it too
Don't ever attempt to use QNetwork. That way lies misery
 
Where "this idiotic topic" = "me not bothering to provide crucial details then getting flustered when asked for them"
3
 
@BartekBanachewicz May I suggest that next time you check what changed in several years before you claim that something is stuck in the past?
 
I haven't said anything that made sense in the last hour and I'm tired nevertheless
6
 
s/hour/year/
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes that's actually a good idea.
 
1:37 PM
@BartekBanachewicz That's what happens
Tilting at windmills is an English idiom which means attacking imaginary enemies. The word "tilt", in this context, comes from jousting. The phrase is sometimes used to describe confrontations where adversaries are incorrectly perceived, or courses of action that are based on misinterpreted or misapplied heroic, romantic, or idealistic justifications. It may also connote an importune, unfounded, and vain effort against confabulated adversaries for a vain goal. == Etymology == The phrase derives from an episode in the novel Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes, wherein protagonist Don Quixote fights...
 
Quixotism (/kwɪkˈsɒtɪzəm/ or /kiːˈhoʊtɪzəm/) (adj. quixotic) is impracticality in pursuit of ideals, especially those ideals manifested by rash, lofty and romantic ideas or extravagantly chivalrous action. It also serves to describe an idealism without regard to practicality. An impulsive person or act might be regarded as quixotic. Quixotism is usually related to "over-idealism", meaning an idealism that doesn't take consequence or absurdity into account. It is also related to naïve romanticism and to utopianism. == Origin == Quixotism as a term or a quality appeared after the publication of El...
where does quixotism intersect with perfectionism
do they intersect
I always found a bit of impractiblahblah in perfectionism
 
so, with that out of the way
I think I'll sit down to Hate on the weekend
 
Let's say you have constructors Fraction() //set numerator = 0, denominator = 1 and Fraction(int num = 0, int den = 1). My TA said that you should include the first constructor with no params, but he didn't give a good reason why...
 
@AlexM. Perfectionism is just the pursuit of perfection. Quixotism implies some kind of blatant disregard for reality.
 
@BartekBanachewicz disregard averages, acquire c++
 
1:42 PM
@DonLarynx what
@R.MartinhoFernandes "blatant disregard for reality." I like that one
 
disregard women acquire money meme @BartekBanachewicz
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes and isn't the idea of perfection disregarding reality?
 
@DonLarynx "default constructor". types that are not default constructible are harder to work with
 
I mean is it not an unattainable ideal
 
@AlexM. Not necessarily?
 
1:43 PM
@DonLarynx yes it's a terrible meme and why have you made a reference to it?
 
(And not relevant)
@AlexM. I can make many perfect things.
 
that's subjective though
 
@sehe that's my question, how are types that are not default constructible harder to work with? In my example we have default parameters should the user choose not to include them.
 
@DonLarynx oh wait, I see the default values now. Well - default values are frequently a code smell (I wouldn't use them in public interfaces myself)
 
@AlexM. Does it matter?
 
1:44 PM
does it not?
 
@BartekBanachewicz because people tend to "lose the weekend", i.e. party for 2 days.
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yes, but you're a robot
 
@DonLarynx Then it's really optional. But yeah, coding standards might be against the default arguments "implicitly" definining the default constructor
 
@AlexM. No, because one doesn't pursue someone else's idea of perfection.
 
@DonLarynx for example any type that wants to compose from the non-default constructible must provide a constructor with default values or also become non-default-constructible
@DonLarynx what? How is this relevant to anything.
 
1:44 PM
@AlexM. Unattainable ideals can still be pursued as far as it is feasible. That's the primary difference with quixotism.
 
59
Q: Default parameters with C++ constructors

RobIs it good practice to have a class constructor that uses default parameters, or should I use separate overloaded constructors? For example: // Use this... class foo { private: std::string name_; unsigned int age_; public: foo(const std::string& name = "", const unsigned int age =...

@BartekBanachewicz Just let people learn.
 
:21261244
@sehe he's talking about the meme I used , not my Q
 
Sorry
Still, just let people learn :)
 
@AlexM. i.e. you can be a reasonable perfectionist. You don't settle for "good enough", but you won't ignore practicality. You settle for realistic goals.
 
I get it
you maximize quality
 
1:55 PM
Does anyone here know anything about Orleans?
 
@BartekBanachewicz It's a great city
 
That's Orléans.
 
var orleans = new Orleans();
ba dum tschh
 
auto orleans = set::vector<Orlean> { 10 };
 
2:05 PM
@Borgleader how fitting: exception class name too long
 
lol @ people at work
> GUI use of Git is so better
> Can we get some help because our GUI for Git broke/isn't working
it's hilarious
 
whats hilarious about it
 
@Pris that they keep defending their stance that GUI is easier to use
when in fact they spend more time fixing it than using it
 
For basic use, a GUI is much simpler I guess
 
@Rerito I used to think that too.
Have gone through pretty much every git tool out there.
 
2:12 PM
Still in command line for me
 
Finally started to use the shell and never looked back
 
@Rerito Only UI I find bearable is Vim Fugitive (and perhaps TortoiseGit for browsey stuff)
 
uWSGI status: still shit
 
@CatPlusPlus heh
worked p okay for me last time
as in, I actually achieved my goal after a lot of crying
 
Suddenly started shitting itself due to header buffer being too small, but at the same time doesn't honour the setting that's supposed to increase the size of said buffer
 
2:15 PM
ow
aren't those settings some weird strings that change from version to version
 
@sehe Since I began work I turned to Vim with some plugin, quite the learning curve but I'm planning to give fugitive a go as it will enable me to perform git stuff w/o exiting my working tab :)
 
Pro tip: use terminal vim, never leave the "working tab" again (jk)
 
why is source forge so terrible
 
It's from the 60s
 
user1804599
I want to learn Fortran.
 
2:18 PM
when you say "terminal vim", you mean pure vim not some fancy gvim?
 
Again? Oh no that was COBOL
@Rerito Dunno. I mean, terminal vim
 
I guess that's the one I'm using right now
 
@sehe woah, really
 
user1804599
> When you say <something not vague at all>, you mean <something vague>?
 
@BartekBanachewicz No.
@рытфолд Terminal vim is not vague. It's vim in a terminal.
Terminal may refer to: == Travel and transport == Airport terminal, a building at an airport Bus terminal, a bus station Container terminal, a facility which handles shipping containers and cargo Ferry terminal, a docking facility for passenger, train and/or auto ferries Freight terminal, a freight station Shipping terminal, a sea port or a dock or a berth Marine terminal, a sea port or a dock (maritime) or a berth Railway terminal, generally the end of a railway line Terminal station, a station at the end of a route (typically tramway or railway) == Electronics, telecommunication, and ...
 
user1804599
2:20 PM
@sehe That's what I said. Try again.
 
Oh well
 
user1804599
dunst is nice.
 
A parcel arrived. Before I could call the bomb squad, the driver delivered it next door. I might live through this.
 
@рытфолд I can't help the OB doesn't respect my #anchor
@MartinJames Unlikely. But.... Jalf wrote working code today. Perhaps there's a singularity
 
@sehe He did? Oh shit...
 
2:22 PM
i hate when maintainers dont respond to bug requests
 
maintainers hate bug requests. I mean, they can only create so many bugs a day
4
 
user1804599
@sehe What is the OB?
 
One-Box (or tampons)
 
@Pris I'M DOING IT NOW! DON'T SHOOT!
 
even if you wanna say 'wont fix, lol', im okay with that
but letting your project decay is evil
 
2:25 PM
> getTime :: IO (Maybe Double)
guys
5
 
Maybe double maybe not
 
@Pris is it open source ... ?
 
can anyone tell me how could getting the time fail? :/
 
yeah but its boost so i aint touching it lol
 
@BartekBanachewicz maybe arithmetic underflow?
 
2:25 PM
why is the time Double
 
id rather saw my eyes out with a cookie cutter than look through boost code
 
(Who te hell exposes time as Double)
@Pris link to the issue?
 
People who want resolution bigger than a second?
 
> Double
 
@CatPlusPlus That makes no sense.
 
2:26 PM
Nothing about resolution
 
there's a work around, but its just the general observation that lots of boost::asio issues are ignored
 
@BartekBanachewicz What time is this?
 
Floating point timestamps are not uncommon
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes seconds since the start of the application
 
2:27 PM
Python does that too
 
> The time source used is the most accurate on each platform and generally has micro- or nanosecond resolution.
 
There are gaps. double is prolly decimal number of days since robot's power up.
 
I think the number of seconds you can store in a double is fairly reasonable
 
 
Esp with HPT in the mix
 
2:28 PM
@milleniumbug why not?
 
@BartekBanachewicz If this is "seconds from app start", then double is appropriate, but it's the name that sucks now
 
@milleniumbug in this context (a particular library) I doubt you can really mistake with anything else
 
Could be seconds, but mantissa then has too much precision, (?).
 
bah "too much"
 
>>> time.time()
1422628249.62558
 
2:30 PM
Dunno really. I do know FP dateTime representations are far from uncommon.
 
wow... I got 17 stars for that retirement fund joke
 
It's an extension of a UNIX timestamp for higher resolution
 
if say you don't predict the app to be running more than 100 years, that's around 3 billion seconds
still leaves plenty of bits for proper resolution
 
Eg: 'The System::TDateTime class inherits a val data member declared as a double that holds the date-time value. The integral part of a System::TDateTime value is the number of days that have passed since 12/30/1899. The fractional part of a System::TDateTime value is the time of day.'
 
also it's convenient to simply work in seconds
 
2:33 PM
@BartekBanachewicz doubles are not seconds nor time.
 
I shouldn't be able to add seconds to metres
 
Then don't.
 
@BartekBanachewicz How much work is required to calculate wall time/date from some integer number of seconds?
 
2:34 PM
typesafe interfaces ftw
 
@milleniumbug that's beyond typesafe
 
It's an interface for getting a timestamp, i.e. a number
 
@milleniumbug That sort of bug sounds like the kind that gets found on the very first run.
 
@CatPlusPlus I know. But he's the Haskeller. Haskellers don't fuck around
 
@sehe Yeah, that's why they're dying out.
 
2:36 PM
So I'm thinking about doing some more cooking as a hobby because fuck programming
 
@milleniumbug sometimes typed mathematical units make sense. But a lot of times what you really want is numbers
IOW, your logic is generic over Num a => a
 
I think the tinnitus is fading again. Phew.
 
@CatPlusPlus Yeah! Bake that global lighting!
 
@BartekBanachewicz What's getTime used here for? If it's for measuring time between one event and another, then the fact it's a number it's irrelevant
 
I think sometimes people worry too much about units and miss the forest for the trees.
 
2:40 PM
@milleniumbug actually it's very relevant
 
But then, I'm that guy that likes the imperial system.
 
BUT WHAT IF YOU FUCK UP SUBTRACTING TWO NUMBERS
 
It's some magical token a and b that when passed to difftime a b returns a time difference in a time unit
 
@milleniumbug Isn't it always?
 
And then you can proudly say that 80% of your code is unwrapping units
 
2:41 PM
look time's something you can add or subtract
almost like the other thing, how was it called, a number!
@milleniumbug this is important when you're doing date calculations, but when you're measuring frame times, it's really moot to wrap and unwrap it
 
@BartekBanachewicz A difficult concept for some.
 
Wow I actually despise writing code now
I need to finish up server config and docs for work, someone do it for me plx
 
If we do, what are you going to cook for us?
 
> Is it a bad idea to replace POD C-style array with std::valarray?
wut isn't valarray kicked out
 
std::valarray is a bad idea
 
2:46 PM
std::valarray is/was sort of meant for LAPACKish applications; it's rarely used and probably not a good fit here. std::vector is the usual container for dynamic arrays, and you can get a pointer to its data with &vec[0] pre-C++11 (when .data() was not yet available). — Wintermute 19 mins ago
wuuut
 
...they removed valarray? Need to fact check
 
ah wait
I thought dynarray
I derped
 
yeah I got confused too
 
Badlets
 
indeed
 
2:53 PM
> sample2.exe: src\Hate\Common.hs:125:29-120: Missing field in record construction Hate.Common.Types.lastUpdateTime
owwww
so much suck
 
I just turned my clock off in the taskbar.
 
We are enabling CloudFlare as a test on Server Fault. If you see any issues, please let us know! We’ll be monitoring the results.
 
Congratulations.
As one door closes, another one opens...
 
@sehe I saw you just answered this: stackoverflow.com/questions/17211263/…
 
@BartekBanachewicz what's wrong with that?
 
2:59 PM
I wonder if there's a guarantee that asio will only invoke a handler once, then you can just use raw pointers
 
Shall we add sehe's account to Feeds, so that you do not need to inform us whenever he writes a new post?
Save you a job
 

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