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08:00
Compared to monolithic kernels it is bad
@Cinch Sure, in practice it's impractical.
Pretty much anyone who's designed a successful kernel has found the sweet spot to be somewhere between those extremes of microkernels and monolithic ones
Kernel is not a web browser. You can't just simply switch to using other kernel
Technically you can!
@MomotapaLimpopo If that means, just replacing the binary in /boot, you can
You can just kexec
08:02
I don't exactly understand what kernels do except maybe provide memory abstractions and other basic for stuff like I/O
And then the OS is built on top of the kernel?
Is this an apt place to ask (noobish) questions about GNU make?
@VibhavPant No. Fire away.
@Cinch Process management, memory management, abstracting the CPU
@khajvah Yeah yeah all that stuff with threads and interrupts and stuff right?
kind of like a hardware driver for the computer itself
08:04
All that stuff means 2 million(if I am not mistaken) lines of code (in linux's case)
@Cinch Depends on the kernel. It can do much more than that too in some cases. There's no single clear-cut definition of what is or isn't the kernel's responsibility
Isn't Linux technically not just a kernel, though?
Like, it has some extra stuff for better abstraction
i.e. TCP/IP, drivers, formatting, etc?
@Cinch so, I have a project consisting of multiple source code files, with one of them containing main(). So, should I build the project by creating object files for all separate files, or just compile them in one single gcc pass?
@VibhavPant Build the object files
You don't want to recompile the entire project if you don't have to.
08:06
ah
it's a bit complicated but w/e
forgot about recompilation, thanks
But there are better build system than make (yet I still use make myself because I am noob)
Ninja is a good one I hear
@Cinch What are those better build systems?
@khajvah Isn't Ninja supposed to be one?
That's the only one I know of so far
And plus there are the IDE projects... but of course, I don't trust them
08:08
"better" depends on a lot of different things though. The complexity and requirements of what you're trying to build is one. The number of tutorials you can easily find on google is another. Or IDE integration, or.... For someone who just wants a simple way to build a handful of .cc files with no complicated dependencies on Linux, make might well be "the best"
@Cinch IDE projects can't be used on serious projects
@jalf Indeed
I think GNU needs to be updated or something
I have no idea what ninja is
Perhaps LLVM should be GNU++
08:09
@khajvah It's used to build Chrome and was specifically designed for large projects and fast compilation
@Cinch never going to happen, given RMS' opposition to it
I thought its name was a bit juvenile but from what I read, it should be a force to be reckoned with.
Perhaps there should be a word for ideatic flatulence
@sehe brainfart
Not intense enough; implies incidentality
08:13
thought + vomit = thomit
thloogie
thlougie
even better
Cinchspawn
Very nice. I'm awed that my crystal ball worked. Again. — sehe 6 secs ago
@sehe Also I'm curious: are you from the UK too?
@Cinch nice one
It seems that most of the people on here are from Europe
During "European" hours, sure :p
it's the middle of the night in the US right now
08:16
"Warning: Your browser is not compatible with this site" it says right before working just fine.
@Cinch I'm not UK: are you not curious too?
@thecoshman More like: our site is not compatible with your browser.
@Cinch That's a good one
@sehe Oh so you must be Puerto Rican; everyone knows RMS is from Puerto Rico
@jalf European hours best hours
08:19
@MomotapaLimpopo no you'r a peon!
<hangs head in shame />
Anyways
Perhaps Lounge<C++> could adopt a project?
What is one area in C++ that is complete lacking?
@райтфолд that's why I really like the Java way of doing the collections. You have a load of interfaces that define certain properties of the collections.
@Cinch quality developers
@thecoshman Then maybe we should make it easier to become a quality developer?
@Cinch quality debuggers
@MartinJames Maybe we could make a github/io for debuggers for better developers?
08:25
@MartinJames I was psychic there :) By the time I posted that comment there was zero mention of Boost Log (or, indeed, logging at all). It's nice to "smell" problem causes from a distance. This stuff makes my day.
it feels like I'm stitching things together to make it work
I should have posted that as an answer
@Rapptz That's what doctors do
@sehe Boost.Log?
@Cinch Hi Padawan (what the hell makes you do these vacuous parrot return questions?)
The best thing about Git is when you do git stash list and find out you have 29 stashes accumulated over time
08:26
@sehe If you had posted as an answer, it would have turned out to be wrong:)
@MartinJames Of course not. It's not Boost Schroedinger Log
@sehe Oh this is how I usually talk IRL
15
A: Why do showers have "hot" and "cold" knobs rather than "temperature" and "quantity" knobs?

ArtOfWarfareI can honestly say I have never seen a shower that has separate hot/cold knobs like you describe, and I've lived everywhere up and down both the east and west US coast. Every shower I've ever seen has two concentric wheels. The inner one controls temperature while the outer one controls pressure...

lol @ picture
@sehe lol
"whoa. whoa. WHOA! whoa. WHOA! what? WHOA!"
"idk what is go-WHAT WHOA"
08:29
How does google search work so fast
@fredoverflow lol 'I've lived everywhere up and down both the east and west US coast' well, that's impressive world experience:)
@fredoverflow I usually turn it all the way to hot when I bathe
@Cinch That actually made it a lot worse
and then turn it to about half cold right after I'm done scalind myself
@Rapptz 4:31 AM ( ͡͡ ° ͜ ʖ ͡ °)
08:31
cool
The only 'good' way is to have a temperature sensor, controller and hot/cold servo-valves in the shower-head itself. Nothing else can work well
I wish it was 4:33 AM
pretty hyped up right now
@Rapptz getting there ( ‾ʖ̫‾)
@Rapptz 4:33 AM! (ง ͠° ͟ل͜ ͡°)ง
pop the champagne
ヽ༼ຈل͜ຈ༽ノ
08:35
A controlled electric heater as part of the shower head would also work well, but would mean heavy cables for 40A at mains volatage running alongside the cold water feed pipe. Maybe there would be a safety issue:)
@MomotapaLimpopo those are some akward tits on a headless torso. I understand the despairing arm gestures
> Survey suggests grilled cheese lovers have more sex, are more generous
Of course. Sex it gross too. It fits the pattern
who conducts these studies
@MomotapaLimpopo Err.. does bacon on the grilled cheese help any?
08:41
hello i'm having some trouble understanding some basic socket programming concepts/ect would anyone here be willing to help?
thanks much
no problem and hope to see you again soon
should i just go ahead and explain what am confused about?
no i prefer having to guess!
08:43
me too
@Alex_Nabu I would suggest to start with the left socket. Most people use their right eye more, so if the socket crashes, you will still be able to see enough to get by in the rest of your career
I'm using a non-blocking socket to recv some data from an ftp server. however it keeps returning -1. the misty part is tho if i add a breakpoint and wait for a sec or two the data comes thru without error
That's how non-blocking sockets are supposed to work
@Alex_Nabu Would you rather it blocked until the data arrived? :)
I think so. How can you build software without blocks
Blocks masterrace
08:52
You can always try in CodeBlocks IDE. It specializes in blocking
I just realized. I have no idea what is was that i was confused about. sorry guys
thanks
Cocaine (Configurable Omnipotent Custom Applications Integrated Network Engine) is an open source PaaS system for creating custom cloud hosting apps that are similar to Google App Engine or Heroku. Any library or service can be implemented as a service in Cocaine using a special API. Several indispensable services have already been implemented this way, including a service for detecting a user's region or language, a service for accessing MongoDB storage, and a URL fetcher. == History == In times when cloud technologies were not yet popular Andrey Sibiryov, the project founder, discovered Heroku...
nice name
@Alex_Nabu Cheers.
General hint: Don't use fork() in socketpair() :) Good luck
@Alex_Nabu You're welcome :)
@sehe You're abnormally punny today
09:11
hmhm
git LFS looks pretty nice
11 hours ago, by Cinch
Well all I have to do is make a Hyper -> C++ parser
> Ruby + Type = Rubype
@BartekBanachewicz hi Bartek. Did you try it out? I barely understood what it is, so I can't ask for lots of details
oh my, libreoffice impress (powerpoint) is REALLY nice for presentations when you have multiple screens.
11 hours ago, by Cinch
@CatPlusPlus But I mean, it's almost literally a C++ wrapper
ohohoho
09:12
One screen can be used for displaying the actual presentation, whilst another is used as a bit of a control panel for it
@MarcoA. we use a similar tech at work called git fat
@BartekBanachewicz Haven't there been lots of similar attempts though? The devil is in the implementation, I guess. It does sound nice on paper
@BartekBanachewicz Oh, was it inspired by your mom
Well git fat works reasonably ok for us
we have a Rsync file server in our VPN
@Cinch maybe I misread the guy's question, but he was talking about vectors, so I'm assuming he's ok with using the standard lib. No need to write your own linked lists then :)
09:13
git pulls file hashes, git fat rsyncs appropriate file copies from the server
@BartekBanachewicz What would be so hard about this if the language is designed for almost complete compatibility with C
@jalf Oh my god
Is is really that bad?
@Cinch everything
@MomotapaLimpopo I'm a pussy
@BartekBanachewicz But it's almost C++ with Pythonic syntax and maybe a smart pointer built in.
That's it.
@Cinch What? :p
@jalf My answer was downvoted 3 times in like 2 minutes because I rolled my own implementation to show him how such a thing might work
09:15
@Cinch don't compile languages to other languages
@BartekBanachewicz C++ -> C initally
Plus I was thinking about walking into LLVM at some point
It's just a project for education
@Cinch you're writing a C++ parser and C transpiler as a project for education?
oh lmao
@BartekBanachewicz Not a C++ parser
@Cinch "So a Cinch walks into an LLVM..."
@MomotapaLimpopo and creates Cinchspawn
09:16
@Cinch how do you think transpiling into C is done
by pony magic?
@BartekBanachewicz I'd guess maybe a bunch of structural decompositions that were designed to make OOP work, like function pointers and stuff in the beginning
Vtables, etc etc
Also mangling of names
Also potatoes
and flux capacitance times other hard words I don't really understand
09:18
@Cinch Well, linked lists are terrible :)
But my features are almost 1:1
@jalf Duh. But they're pretty simple to implement once you know how and its a good example to show how the very basic concept might work
Something like a vector of pointers would probably do better
@Cinch actually, no, they aren't simple to implement
@BartekBanachewicz They're not but the core idea is nice once you understand it
09:19
@Cinch well then why are you saying they are
How are you Bartek
I'm fine
Slept something 12 hours today
so finally getting back from zombie state
@BartekBanachewicz Well I mean I can write up a basic linked list class in maybe under an hour
@Cinch It's kind of a big problem that people learn to think that the core idea is nice. It's pretty awful for nearly all situations. But because it's easy to write a simple linked list, and because everyone is taught to do so, people think they should use linked lists
09:20
@Cinch I can find bugs in it in under 5 minutes
@BartekBanachewicz ooh mini-challenge!
user1804599
Hmm, my I/O design would work very well with C++17's ContiguousIterator concept.
user1804599
Currently it's char-specific.
@Cinch how many years have you been programming again
user1804599
About 10.
09:21
out of curiosity
Doesn't matter, accept the challenge
yeah I certainly accept it
@BartekBanachewicz less than 1
At least seriously
Cinch, I am starting the stopwatch
I'm starting 10 seconds ago
09:22
@Cinch yeah it shows
After "programming is hard" attitude comes "everything is easy attitude"
@BartekBanachewicz It's not
"after all it's just a C++ -> C transpiler"
but I'm doing a linked list implementaiton for class right now
you should do the C++ Grandmaster course
they at least were pretty realistic about how shitty complicated the task is IIRC
Wait. Since when are plain, single threaded linked-lists difficult?
09:24
I don't have this everything is easy attitude, I just have this: you have been programming/being a builder/trade shares or being a investor for 10-20 years and look I am a newb in all these & I did well in comparison to all those people who have been doing those for half of their lifes, i.e. you
@MomotapaLimpopo it's the kind of "quicksort in C++" easy
also, life is still shit from times to times, like now.
@Cinch b
Well sorry to tell you Bartek but my quicksort e-penis is bigger than yours.
09:28
Alrighty...
> This bug can manifest itself for arrays whose length (in elements) is 2^30
lel
@Rapptz I don't get why you're sorry for having a big e-penis
ain't nobody got RAM for that
2
I'm not ( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
@MomotapaLimpopo It's only ~4 GB of RAM if they're 4 bytes each though.
That's two one and a third firefox sessions.
or one chrome tab
ba dum tschh
09:30
ITT Rapptz measures memory usage in firefox sessions
inb4 measuring disk usage in dropboxes
My SSD has the storage capacity of 32 Rapptz dropboxes.
you can get your tabs to eat up lots of ram easily
just scroll down a lot on a facebook feed
@Rapptz But if you're sorting 4 billions elements of 4 bytes then quicksort is a terrible choice
no vacant seats on buses
gotta catch a train then
Can std::vector decide to reallocate before reaching full capacity?
I think no
09:33
@MomotapaLimpopo No. It's not allowed to invalidate pointers and iterators as long as it's within capacity
ugh I forgot how hard it is to make a simple OOP implementation
Argh
now I gotta do copy and move...
user1804599
Ugh.
user1804599
How do you save a draft on Google Groups?
user1804599
He does an HTTP request and a comparison of ten-byte strings is his bottleneck.
09:42
greetings gangstahz
@райтфолд maybe the httpd is extremely fast, yes!
@райтфолд wow
speaking of which.. @райтфолд, did you read the article named something as "can't send email more than 500 miles"? it's a freakin' brilliant piece of lol
user1804599
No.
Oh yes that old "you should not improve anything that is not the bottleneck" chestnut. Good one, panty-na.
user1804599
09:45
TL;DR
@райтфолд it's worth while, it's.. brilliant
I just realized what pantoona meant and why people used it
shit
rightfoldovka's name looks like it
Well my drives in my PC have less space than my skydrive now
I think it's good
I could backup everything to the butt now
user1804599
@райтфолд There are no benchmarking. Basically this being repeatedly called by another page from a loop in JavaScript which draws the image to a canvas to simulate a live video. I can easily see the performance difference by looking at this video rendered on the page. — Bruno Finger 3 mins ago
user1804599
09:52
hahahaha who'd have guessed.
So. I have made this weird experience.
I have connected my SAMSUNG LCD screen to laptops docking station with DVI cable and I got these weird artifacts, parts of screen not redrawing correctly.
Then I have connected the same screen and same docking station with VGA cable and everything works fine.
WTF DVI?
broken cable?
broken DVI slot?
broken pipe
DVI is definitely not broken
atm IIRC it's the only popular way to get full hd at 144+Hz
DVI master race
I heard there was some new HDMI revision that also added this but haven't seen monitors with it
user1804599
I'm happy to work at a company that lacks a dress-code.
user1804599
09:57
It solves the hot summer problem quite well.
user1804599
@BartekBanachewicz clopclopclop
user1804599
@Cinch Don't implement OOP. It's not worth it. OOP is complex and has little value.
@FilipRoséen-refp repost
@FilipRoséen-refp it's ... passingly amusing.
@AlexM. DisplayPort
@райтфолд wot

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