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7:00 AM
But that's because evolution
 
The scary part is the first few thousand dollars, which I have already.
 
Xeo
@khajvah Sorry, but I'd rather not take the risk.
 
@khajvah That doesn’t account for reinsurance.
 
Imagine questions like: "I just raped and killed some girl in the park, what should I do to get not get caught?"
 
7:04 AM
 
@MarcoA. TIL in the US "no person is required to give aid of any sort to a victim"
 
> I know it sounds like a disgusting question but it popped up in my mind.
yeah right
 
what a retarded country
European superiority appreciation moment
 
lol
 
Xeo
24
Q: Is it a scam if the person only wants to deposit into my account, not make a withdrawal?

donnaA man in west coast Austria wants to deposit money into my account. I'm in Alabama I had to get a online account. I did that but he says his bank manger needs all this information: DOB SSN online access username online access password security question and answer bank name...

lolz
 
7:06 AM
> west coast Austria
 
> online access password
security question and answer
lel
 
@MaiLongdong wtf?
 
@MarcoA. Don’t you East Coast Austrians be dissing the West Coast.
 
@MarcoA. USAUSAUSA
 
Either that, or he is a time-traveler from 1860, when Austria did have a coast. — vsz yesterday
aaahhahhahahhahaha
 
user1804599
7:10 AM
@orlp 3:
 
user1804599
Apr 6 '14 at 22:14, by rightfold
I’m not sure of my gender.
 
> Sumant Tambe will be presenting “Reactive Stream Processing in Industrial IoT using DDS and Rx.cpp,” which includes a live demo of a distributed complex event processing system for Internet of Things.
Could there be possibly more buzzwords in that title?
 
@elyse all right, I don't intend to meddle in your private life, just didn't want to make an insensitive joke later down the line :P
 
@elyse Did you get a surgery or something?
 
that has happened before, where I was unaware that a developer was actually in the process of becoming trans, and I thought it was a joke
 
user1804599
7:13 AM
@khajvah no :P
 
@Xeo Common sense, not common at all
 
Xeo
So rare, it's a superpower.
 
3
Q: Kidnapping if two children run away, and one turns 18?

Tim0thySo let us say that if there were two minors that ran away together. If one of them turns 18 after they have run away, could the 18 year old be arrested for kidnapping?

 
They missed the point of <>
 
7:15 AM
> let us say
where's that buttiful buttefly? Ƹ̵̡Ӝ̵̨̄Ʒ Ƹ̵̡Ӝ̵̨̄Ʒ Ƹ̵̡Ӝ̵̨̄Ʒ
ITT also sad chinese ideograms 囧
 
user1804599
@khajvah WHAT
 
Xeo
@MarcoA. But.. it stands for "bright" and "clear"!
 
I am gonna test the JavaScript<Lounge> quickly.
 
starred it for ya
 
7:24 AM
thank you :)
Actually nice. I did the same in Java room and got flagged.
 
Flags are a great way to share an opinion across all rooms
Example:
Java developers are morons.
^ flag this
 
i pushed 5 ints in a vecctor and did a sizeof(myvector); it shows 24, but y not 20 i.e 5ints*4bytes each = 20
 
@user1977867 myvector.size()
 
lol
 
vector is just a triplet of pointars (3 * 8 = 24 btw, congrats on using a 64b system)
 
7:28 AM
i read this on stackoverflow: that vector just uses a hidden form of array, and vectors capacity is the size of the array it is using
 
interesting
 
@MaiLongdong sorry im new to cpp, what do these pointers point to? and y 3 pinters?
 
begin size and capacity
 
Under the hood, a vector just uses an array. The capacity of the vector is the size of that array. This is always equal to or larger than the size. The difference between them is the number of elements that you can add to the vector before the array under the hood needs to be reallocated. Source(cpoid from stackoverflow) but I dont know the 3 pointer thing here
 
lol
 
7:33 AM
@Columbo smooth as well lube butter fucking
 
I hate you
 
Xeo
9 messages moved to bin
y'all need to chill
 
hey!
talk about over kill
 
Xeo trying to save face
 
tempted to move two of them back...
 
7:35 AM
Puppy got fired for Lounge<rightfold's vagina>, right?
 
iirc everyone did, then some scrub put in place
mods are very good
 
I'm glad I'm not on twitter
 
@Columbo aahahahahahha that final reply xD
 
yep lmao'd
@Xeo "Ernesto, be chill."
 
don't advertise shit bro
 
@thecoshman, be chill.
 
@thecoshman It's not shit.
It is supposed to be P2P with good encryption
 
shit be shit bro
 
user1804599
 
user1804599
7:48 AM
finally cleaned up that mess
 
everything is shit
so... vOv
 
man valgrind's killing me right now. I have an uninitialized value somewhere... but the place it points to has no uninit stuff. So annoying
 
:\ why does this process keep falling over when I leave for home at night :\
 
I guess I get that its probably pretty hard for valgrind to push out the information it does in the first place, but its still pretty frustrating
 
:\:\:\:\:
 
user1804599
7:53 AM
Don't use Valgrind.
 
user1804599
Use Haskell.
 
Don't use Haskell.
Use Java.
o_o
 
Don't use Java.
Use Rust.
 
Don't use Rust.
Use C++.
 
isrustdeadyet.com
 
7:56 AM
@MaiLongdong oh that domain exists actually
 
Xeo
@thecoshman It just wants your attention!
 
@LucDanton lol
 
Rust dying a slow but certain death.
rip all hipsters
I used to like rust :(
it had a bright future
 
Dude, the stable release was 2 months ago
what do you expect?
 
7:58 AM
I expect all web hipsters to therefore become uninterested because it is tagged as STABLE
 
oh
 
@Xeo really?
 
Xeo
ye
 
but it looks sad : (
I guess that's because bright people are often sad
 
@MaiLongdong yeah, it looked nice back then... not sure what happened
 
8:02 AM
Web happened
 
(•_•)

( •_•)>⌐■-■

(⌐■_■)
 
> under active development
> last commit 2 months ago
yes
 
@MaiLongdong Which one?
 
crappy question of the day
-3
Q: New[ ] operator with integer array in C++

RizviI am dynamically allocating memory using new[ ] operator. But the array is not accessing the members. Why? The program output is giving the error : subscript requires array or pointer type. #include <iostream> using namespace std; void main(){ int arr; ...

if you please, leave a down/close/delete vote
any of them is welcome
 
8:08 AM
I like your indentation style. +1 — Mai Longdong 18 secs ago
 
user1804599
@MarcoA. top kek
 
does valgrind give false positives?
 
Sometimes
 
@khajvah "Getting there"? To use a car analogy, if 'web yet' was a drive, they have a car, that is all.
 
@thecoshman Web sucks in any ways.
 
8:17 AM
@Prismatic valgrind (memcheck) has never given me a false positive yet
 
user1804599
lol
 
user1804599
so you have this horrible platform web
 
user1804599
and then you're gonna develop for it in this horrible language Rust
 
user1804599
why does the page mention ORMs
 
user1804599
ORMs don't have anything to do with the web
 
8:19 AM
ORMs are waste of time
It's not worth investing time on something like that.
Can I politely say to my coworker that her perfume is terrible?
 
just mention its kind of strong
 
user1804599
@khajvah Uh, you can, why couldn't you?
 
Ell
You can't politely mention that its terrible, no
 
user1804599
You can also say it impolitely.
 
@khajvah Playfully say: "wow, is there a bog of corpses around? ah ah!" the laugh away and wink. She'll understand and will smile back at you.
Results guaranteed
 
8:29 AM
if youre not the only one she works with and you're a coward you could send her an anonymous email
 
x86_64 has many registers. do they remain mostly unused?
 
Can you reword?
 
most code seems to use only a few registers
at least that's what I see when looking at asm generated by gcc
 
@MaiLongdong just not good ones
 
Well if your function doesn't need to use many registers then it won't.
That doesn't mean the others are unused, as the compiler can use them for other things
 
8:35 AM
 
user1804599
@StackedCrooked that's because most code only uses few verbibols.
 
so much violence
 
paperone
 
"hit the road or I'll hafta get tough"
lol
 
paperino
 
user1804599
8:38 AM
@StackedCrooked RDI, RSI, RDX, RCX, R8, R9, XMM0, XMM1, XMM2, XMM3, XMM4, XMM5, XMM6 and XMM7 are used for passing arguments, which is already quite a lot.
 
user1804599
In one ABI at least.
 
ah, so you can pass 6 integers and 8 floats?
it tested yesterday with up to 6 integers and 6 floats
didn't know i could increase the floats up to 8 (before the compiler will resort to stack)
not that I have a use case for it..
 
user1804599
System V AMD64 ABI does that.
 
user1804599
GHC uses a weird calling convention.
 
user1804599
It doesn't use a call stack.
 
user1804599
8:51 AM
And (hence) all calls are tail calls.
 
Hahahahaha
> Sehr geehrte Leserinnen und Leser,

wir bedauern sehr, aber wir müssen diesen Beitrag mit einer Richtigstellung beginnen. In der vergangenen Berichterstattung über die Sendung "Adam sucht Eva" haben wir gemutmaßt, RTL sei in Wirklichkeit ein geheimer Verein hochbegabter Fernsehmacher, der mit dieser Sendung ein Experiment am Zuschauer macht, wie viel Schwachsinn dieser wohl erträgt. Als Strafe für dessen Dummheit, so unsere Vermutung, würde bei jeder neuen Niveau-Unterbietung im Rahmen von "Adam sucht Eva" eine Eule ihr Leben lassen müssen. Das war natürlich Unfug. Wir sehen uns daher an
 
user1804599
Too bad to be true.
 
/cc @Xeo, because you're the only German speaking guy in here I know of
> Das mit den Nackten haben wir verstanden, war ja ganz witzig, dass man sich mal ohne Klamotten trifft.
 
user1804599
I think I'm going to implement a mutlithreaded dialect of Lua.
 
user1804599
Where data races are UB.
 
8:55 AM
How on fucks earth can Clang produce code that runs more than twice as fast as GCCs
Or ICCs
I mean, how
 
user1804599
Eh, why shouldn't it?
 
They implemented an optimization that GCC just missed?
 
user1804599
Show the fucking code.
 
user1804599
And all the optimizations you enabled on clang and on GCC.
 
Xeo
@Columbo *LLVM
 
8:57 AM
@Columbo in a microbenchmark this is not unusual
 
user1804599
@Xeo clang does optimisations that LLVM can't do.
 
It's a mulmod for 128-bit integers
 
From my little experiments it seems Clang optimizes better than GCC.
 
<3 valgrind was right <3
 
user1804599
Such as RVO and EBO.
 
8:58 AM
@Prismatic it always is :)
 
user1804599
LLVM can't know they're allowed.
 
user1804599
So clang has to do them first.
 
> unsigned ___int128
 
8:59 AM
valgrindr
 
@elyse those are special
 
I get 1670618 vs 3767073 when compiling with GCC and Clang, respectively
That's a ratio of 2.2 or sth.
 
user1804599
Also LLVM is written in C++ and GCC was written in C for a long time so the LLVM guys could get stuff done more quickly and with fewer bugs.
 
@elyse lol
 
Imagine if it had been Haskell!
 
9:00 AM
gcc is c++ now right
 
EBO is independent of optimization level. RVO too (at least on GCC).
 
@StackedCrooked *copy elision
 
user1804599
@StackedCrooked Yes, but LLVM won't do them.
 
user1804599
LLVM won't do RVO since it potentially changes semantics.
 
@elyse Lol what
It's allowed by standard
 
user1804599
9:02 AM
So? LLVM doesn't know about the standard.
 
guys, what is the easiest job in the world?
 
user1804599
It only knows about LLVM IR.
 
NSA spokesman
 
@elyse And you don't know about LLVM
 
"I decline to comment."
 
Ell
9:02 AM
What is EBO?
 
user1804599
@Columbo I apparently know more about LLVM than you do.
 
someone reads reddit
 
user1804599
@Ell empty base optimization.
 
@Ell EBOLA
 
EBOMI
 
9:02 AM
@elyse Yeah, especially that part where LLVM doesn't do copy elision, which is too ludicrous to be true
 
Ell
Thanks @elyse
 
user1804599
@Columbo It doesn't. It can't.
 
user1804599
clang does it before generating LLVM IR.
 
@elyse -.-
You're talking about LLVM. Not Clang.
 
Ell
I didnt think LLVM IR had a concept of copies
 
user1804599
9:03 AM
Yes, that's why I said "LLVM" and not "clang".
 
@elyse I thought Clang is a subpart of LLVM.
 
Ell
@Columbo you numpty, pay attention ;)
 
user1804599
No, LLVM is a code generation and optimisation library. clang is a program that turns C++ code into LLVM IR.
 
Ell
Clang generates llvm ir
 
@Columbo LLVM only knows bytecode. RVO must happen during compilation phase.
 
9:04 AM
@elyse Ahhh, that makes sense now.
 
user1804599
And then tells LLVM to turn that into machine code.
 
@StackedCrooked I meant Clang. Of course LLVM doesn't do copy elision.
@elyse I did know that Clang turns code into some intermediate form of assembly language.
 
user1804599
Yes, that's called LLVM IR.
 
@elyse Yeah.
 
user1804599
It's a control flow graph of high-level instruction sequences.
 
9:05 AM
Alright. But surely it's possible to have GCC produce the same machine code that runs that fast
Somehow
 
Ell
I will use llvm when I (don't) write my language
 
user1804599
@Columbo Use dragonegg. :P
 
Ell
Sometimes GCC makes faster code
 
user1804599
It's an LLVM backend for GCC.
 
@elyse Hey, that's a marvelous idea.
I'll try that.
> -.-
> Works best with gcc-4.6.
 
user1804599
9:06 AM
Look at my glorious code generator. :3
 
Ell
I was about to say I thought dragonegg is not developed
 
@elyse it's glorious
 
@elyse Unfortunately dragonegg is totally fucking not an option
 
user1804599
gLRiOus
2
 
user1804599
9:08 AM
XD
 
@elyse lol
 
@elyse nice
 
Oh, wait. the L doesn't fit.
 
@Columbo file bug, wait for gcc devs to fix it
 
user1804599
Neither does the D.
 
9:09 AM
@elyse Penis jokes are so 2014
 
user1804599
I should implement the tail call instruction in the VM.
 
I wonder if that image ticked gcc devs off
 
Even LLVM optimizer can be disappointing sometimes
 
user1804599
It's really easy. Just call, then remove the caller stack frame.
 
9:21 AM
-2
Q: Send a large number of mail whit any sender using C++

Vincy6At first I apologize for my english. I would know if is possible to send a large number of mail (10k or more), chosing the sender. Example: I want to send a simple mail to 10k emails with this sender: example@anything.it I'm not the owner of the mail example@anything.it but I'd like that it is t...

 
0
Q: opencv much slower in multithreading

José Luis GiralIm writting a console application that uses multithreading. Each thread process a set of images using opencv functions. If the function that uses opencv functions is executed in a single thread I get a reference computational time. If I execute this function from multiple threads the function (...

> ¿Does opencv parallelizes, serializes or blocks itself the execution?
I think I can guess his nationality
 
Korean
 
your longdong is broken
 
user1804599
-1 wall of text
 
@MarcoA. yea bby
should I put class A definition, to_json(A const&) and to_A(json const&) in the same file? :w or split them
There are potentially B, C, D, etc, with the same pattern
sigh
 
user1804599
9:33 AM
Nobody cares where you put them.
 
user1804599
but probably not
 
I do because I want things to be more or less packaged
but then again I am terrible at these computar things
 
Calculators FTW
Why are most programmers weird?
Is it the computer?
 
@MaiLongdong yes.
 
@MaiLongdong Sure, why not.
 
9:37 AM
@LucDanton To which
 
First one.
 
So far I've been doing that. But I've doubting whether it should be a separate component or not
Thank you for your light, master
 
:bows:
 
It’s not an entirely unthinkable alternative.
 
9:38 AM
> By Brian Fagioli
enough said
@LucDanton Maybe I'm just overthinking it
 
I didn't know who that is.
 
> Fagioli
> Fag
OP is literally a faggot
5
need I say more?
 
Nope, nuff said
 
It’s what I do if e.g. that special functionality needs additional includes that can easily make compile times balloon. E.g. I have optional/optional.hpp and optional/io.hpp.
The <ostream> stuff is annoying to force on the user. And of course we can’t hide that because it’s a class template.
 
The entire program is single header because I'm a baddie so I'm not sure it changes much
 
9:40 AM
There is so much hype in Winshit 10 that almost makes me try it.
 
@khajvah 6 month old clickbait article
I wonder if he gets paid to write that shit
Some of these clowns put tabloids to shame with their articles
 
4chan should DDOS the shit out of those website.
 
look at his edito
 
I want win10 for VS and for DX12 games. But I'm not putting down $200 for it
 
Isn't it free ?
 
9:43 AM
I don't have Windows 7 or 8 on a PC thats worth upgrading
 
@Prismatic Then pirate bay is the answer.
 
Nah, pirating an OS that has as much external control as MS does over windows 10 seems like a bad idea
 
Buying an OS that has as much external control as MS does over windows 10 seems like a bad idea too
This OP is really faggy
 
Even ignoring the insane amount of information collection they do, I'm not down with them suddenly detecting my install isn't legit and doing the nagging stuff they do (lock your computer, shut it down, etc)
 
It is the biggest spyware ever.
Well, maybe after ChromeOS
 
9:48 AM
If you're downloading images from TPB then yes it's a huge spyware
 
if only linux were a thing
 
It's GNU/Linux you heretic
 
linux is fine
 
GNU/C/C++
 
oh yeah, by the same company who made GNU/JavaScript
 
9:52 AM
Let's migrate to Debian/Hurd
 
place the blame where it belongs, KDE and Gnome and other DEs need way more polish
(To be competitive with Windows and OSX anyway)
 
@Prismatic i3wm doesn't need anything. It is god-tier.
 
gnome is cool
 
@khajvah i3 isn't a DE
 
i3wm is good once you stop accidentally closing every fucking window because of the default bindings
 
9:53 AM
Doesn't matter. It has a status bar and an application launcher.
and a glorious window manager
 
but I like my compositing WM too much anyway
rip i3
 
@khajvah It doesn't matter to you, but it does to most people that use a modern computer. WMs aren't DEs
 
Who cares
Tiling WMs are the only usable things in X space
 
hahahaha the comments
> Hall9000
> Please delete.
 
@Prismatic People also want their whole lives synced in Microsoft's cloud.
 
9:57 AM
somebody is deflating star value
 
Don't do this shit
 
Is cloud sync popular? I stopped using Windows/OSX before it became common
 
Why are these things anonymous
 
does lounge use cloud sync
 

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