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08:03
template <typename Elem, typename Traits>
	void show_balance( std::basic_ostream<Elem, Traits>& os = std::cout ) {
		long double m = static_cast<long double>( balance );
		m /= value_multiplier;
		os << std::put_money( m );
	}
How to make your graders hate themselves 101.
5
Q: How to create a 3D model based on MRI cross-sections?

TetstName123Recently, I stumbled upon the following surreal MRI-scan of broccoli: and ever since the moment that I saw this I've been wondering whether it is possible to recreate the broccoli based on these images. So is it possible to do this efficiently in Mathematica?

@ThePhD :D
@edition "I can't be assed to do research, so please do it for me."
-2
Q: Window in Win32 application won't close normally

editionOriginal Problem: I have a window that cannot be closed immediately after being created despite my window procedure function being able to detect the WM_CLOSE message, and calling PostQuitMessage and letting Windows continue to handle the window messages with DefWindowProc. But, after moving th...

similar context
it is pretty neat though
I'm going to bed before I eat more of these chickpeas though.
night
night
08:11
@jaggedSpire Why stop eating?
They're delicious.
Just have a few more.
@ThePhD :3
@jaggedSpire Just like, 3 more.
At least.
haha, sometimes the data accompanying an event message provided to a Win32 WndProc function may either reside in lParam or wParam.
I suppose Qt has a better event handling system.
08:31
I thought that each message explicitly documented which parameter contained what
hmm... I wonder, what ipv6 having effectively limitless ips... would ISPs and hosts start to offer static IPs as normal...
I think a lot more cool things could be done if static ips were more common
@Puppy your right.
as per usual
I have 0x7F reputation points.
user1804599
08:52
Hi.
@elyse Hello
looks up fag
> a very homosexual piece of wood
wow
@ThePhD use_facet... so there are those mythical people who can and do use streams
09:08
@thecoshman The best part is NAT not getting in the way.
Also another nice part about 128 bits is that ISP can allocate /96 networks to users and they still have a shitload of addresses
(imagine that, everyone can make their own IPv4 internet in their homes :P)
09:25
@Nooble definitely not a telephone one, though
09:42
@R.MartinhoFernandes OK. I am free so far on that weekend.
@R.MartinhoFernandes: What is the occasion?
09:55
@edition cool!
I'm guessing that most people here would prefer to use primarily C++ with ATL, MFC or Qt for developing Windows applications rather than C and the Windows API. Am I correct?
@edition MFC is outdated and quite cumbersome, I've never used ATL but I heard bad things about it.. Qt is cool if you can comply with the license. Raw Windows API require a lot of work and are not platform-portable unless you code your own toolkit (lot of work)
and not sure why you should use C with the Windows API instead of C++
hmm
I might prefer to use the raw Windows API, personally.
it's shit, but you could wrap it into a nice interface, at least in theory.
@MarcoA. well, no, I do use C++ with the Windows API.
with ATL, MFC and Qt, they already wrapped it into a shit interface.
10:04
it really depends on what @edition needs to do
ie: public class ControlCollection : public std::vector<HWND> { /* ... */ };
don't ever inherit from Standard containers :(
hey, I am not as good a programmer as the rest of you people here.
and there's little benefit in exposing the HWNDs publically
if you're gonna wrap the WinAPI at least actually wrap it and hide the internal crap
user1804599
public class isn't a thing.
10:09
oh crap, just class.
I knew it was just class.
user1804599
also don't inherit publicly from std::vector<T>
I was just wondering if that was java but I didn't recognize the rest
user1804599
it's dangerous as it doesn't have a virtual destructor
@R.MartinhoFernandes Do it! Infiltrate the process!
@edition Use protected or private inheritance instead and expose only necessary symbols.
@wilx I know, it just seemed easy to write at the time.
and it worked
anyway, how is everyone?
10:15
user1804599
@wilx lol protected inheritance
@wilx Just don't inherit at all. Just have it as a regular member.
thank you all.
no problem
relearning higher mathematics seems to be enjoyable.
10:22
higher mathematics?
hehe, I mean calculus.
Higher than whom?
@ThePhD good work.
They ought to know they signed up to do education!
They just didn't realize the direction of the education may vary
A declaration must be placed before any tutorial. A new person might get more confused by boost tutorial. Boost tutorial is very poor. — ar2015 11 hours ago
sure
did you stop streaming?
13 hours ago, by sehe
Anyone miss me?
Yeah. The "boost tutorial" is very very poot. Because it doesn't exist. I happen to know that it is not possible to learn the basics of the Spirit from the reference. Anyhow, since you might be an exceptionally fast learner (and the above example is enough tutorial), but you didn't see the "reference" section" next to the "tutorial" section in that same page, here goes: — sehe 1 min ago
muhahah. That's plenty passive aggressive. But what can you do when presented with this level-of-level-headedness:
A declaration must be placed before any tutorial. A new person might get more confused by boost tutorial. Boost tutorial is very poor. — ar2015 11 hours ago
user1804599
10:42
livesehe
sehe.livecoding is a thing. On skype
user1804599
Mars is a mysterious world, tune in to NASA TV on 9/28 as we announce a major science finding http://go.nasa.gov/1LTWsUP http://t.co/ZpbnroSBzh
user1804599
ALIENS
nah. They wouldn't anounce those
user406009
@sehe Current "top" theory is water.
10:46
As always. Seems they're really finding out that water is abundant throughout the most of the galaxy.
@sehe does it mean it was temporary?
I'm not watching every day but have the tab open.
user1804599
permanent livestream
The piano session was the best stream
Testing async stuff gets ugly
The rx way of virtualizing time is so nice
user406009
It's also nice if you can serialize things.
user406009
(Like you have a main thread, that just uses futures)
10:54
"How could this thing happen? Does anyone have some good ideas to prevent this type of mistakes?" - that's the million dollar question! This is a simple off-by-one or boolean inversion and there's no way to guard against it except by avoiding the conditions in the first place and using well-tested existing (library) functionality. — sehe 1 min ago
Ouch. This programmer learns about the frustration of every-day programming problems
@JohanLarsson It was ~2.5 hours yesterday. And yes, I announced it in the lounge as I was nearly done
Ok, pretty sure I refreshed the tab
same url?
user1804599
Has anyone here ever written a non-trivial parser in Python?
user406009
@elyse Are you writing your parser in like three languages?
user1804599
No.
@JohanLarsson Yes. I don't think it comes on automagically. You can arrange to get notifications i.imgur.com/vzGf1DV.png
@elyse lotsopppl
user1804599
10:57
????????
lots of people?
Do you guys ever feel that you write nicer code than the company deserves?
no
user1804599
no
user1804599
worse
user406009
10:59
@JohanLarsson Depends on how drunk I am.
:)
I can feel that maintaining a branch with retarded shit could be worthwhile for consistency :)
@edition lots of python people
@JohanLarsson yes
user1804599
@sehe here
user406009
@sehe Yes, but the question was "has anyone here ..."
@elyse I wrote a messed-up one once
but I didn't really know the language so I'm not sure if that qualifies as "non-trivial" for you
user1804599
11:03
I can't find a good parsing library or parser generator.
eh, don't need em
user406009
@Puppy They are quite useful for O(n) bottom up parsers.
LALR and LR are not really type safe afaik so it's not ideal to use that
user406009
What do you mean by "not really type safe"?
if you generate code from the grammar, the functions do not have definitive return types.
they return unions/variants of the different productions that can lead to those states.
user1804599
11:18
Python has no types anyway so that doesn't matter.
kinda throwing the baby, the house, the husband, and the life savings out with the bathwater there
user406009
You are going to have variants in your parser code no matter what.
user406009
Unless each of your non-terminals have only one production (which would be a very trivial grammar)
user406009
What would you suggest as an alternative?
user406009
Top down LL?
11:25
@Lalaland Alternatively, the branches could just all return the same type.
@Lalaland LL is along the right lines but the algorithm is far too weak.
so I recommend doing it the old-fashioned way in this case.
user406009
Recursive descent?
ye
user406009
That's a slow algorithm though.
eh
I don't think that it's worse than O(n)
user406009
I do like recursive descent though because it's dead simple and easy to understand.
user406009
11:30
@Puppy It is worse that O(n).
user406009
I forget the exact complexity.
user406009
O(n^3) in the worse case IIRC.
well since recursive descent is more-or-less whatever the fuck I want, then you can't really know in advance what the complexity is.
user406009
Yes, but if you could do it in O(n) time, you could technically parse it with LL(k).
yes, but I don't give a shit if I could parse it with LL(k).
besides
isn't it also true that you can write recursive ascent parsers that operate in O(n)?
11:33
ew
wikipedia says that a non-backtracking recursive descent parser (I do not backtrack) runs in O(n).
user406009
How do you avoid backtracking?
well I get all the tokens needed to make a decision before I go down that parse tree
user406009
Is that number of tokens bounded?
yes
user406009
11:42
Ah, then you have a LL(k) parser.
backtracking is cool
user406009
Nice.
@Lalaland You make it sound like that has meaning and it doesn't
I should really write a parser sometimes.. I never wrote one completely by myself and I suppose that would be a rewarding experience
it's really not
user406009
11:48
@MarcoA. nand2tetris.org is fun.
@Puppy depends on how you do it
and how passionate you are about compilers
(frontends, specifically)
@Lalaland this looks good.
parser's a trivially small part of a compiler frontend
if you want to have fun writing a compiler then just shit out a crappy parser from a generator and move on
@Puppy writing a toy frontend is cool
I did collaborate on a large compiler, I kinda like that stuff
and when I say "large", I mean it
@MarcoA. That would be star worthy
11:55
damn ambiguous stars
hmm
Wide keeps shrinking in codebase size.
I'm down to just 20kloc
user406009
That's usually a good sign.
well I have a bit more than that in C# and Python
but in terms of the main body of the project
are you using vigil?
my parser is now up to a whopping 10% of my frontend, that's a lot more than I expected
11:57
that might also explain it
user406009
Loc isn't everything, but there is a correlation between simplicity and loc IMHO.
user1804599
Python is cool.
user1804599
py = translate_module(co)
code = compile(py, "f.co", "exec")

import sys, types
m = types.ModuleType("m")
sys.modules[m.__name__] = m
exec(code, m.__dict__)

import m
print(m.f("A"))
@Lalaland I'm wondering what will I find on the next project.. they said "it's a simple software.. 17Mlocs"
do they integrate binaries in the code or what?
for a comparison Windows 7 had ~ 40Mloc
for comparison, your mother.
12:01
bad puppy, no plastic bone for you today
user406009
Now let's see if I can do this trip without spending 24 hours in the airport. I guess I'll go there 2 and a half hours before the flight as 2 hours clearly weren't enough.
I saw the pope in a Washington street with a lot of Volkswagen cars parked nearby. Does that qualify as terrorism?
user406009
That depends. Did you also see then carrying a clock?
Yo bitches
Hey @Puppy, how hard is it to write a compiler with LLVM?
depends on the source language really
the actual generating LLVM IR part is not difficult.
12:16
By source language you mean the language you are writing the compiler for?
yes
once you have the other parts of the compiler properly in place, generating LLVM IR to make it work is not hard
Did you learn LLVM by using it, by reading a book or just documentation?
@ʎǝɹɟɟɟǝſ if you have to write lexers, parser, semas and then provide a direct translation to LLVM IR, well, it might be hard. Harder if the language is a high-level one.
12:18
using it.
lol LLVM documentation
also some help from #llvm
user406009
@ʎǝɹɟɟɟǝſ Planning on writing The Most Awesome programming language?
but it was just a minor problem
@Lalaland Nah. I've read a blog post few days ago where they said that writing a compiler is the fundamental experience for being a good programmer. Given that I don't have anything better to do, I was thinking of maybe trying.
@ʎǝɹɟɟɟǝſ make a ruby-based language
I'm pretty sure I don't want to maintain any language to be honest.
@ʎǝɹɟɟɟǝſ then make it unusable: start with perl
user406009
@ʎǝɹɟɟɟǝſ nand2tetris.org is pretty darn good.
I was thinking something like a mashup of Haskell and C++. I'm not sure yet how, but it sounds like fun.
user406009
12:22
(For a more guided approach)
hmm
Or maybe not.
just noticed that somebody described the power of a computer as 60 teraflops a second
60Tflop/second squared
optimistic
user1804599
12:26
@ʎǝɹɟɟɟǝſ too complex
user1804599
@ʎǝɹɟɟɟǝſ improve my lambda calculus compiler.
user1804599
it uses LLVM
But I would really love for Haskell for example to have ADL
user1804599
lol why
12:28
That would actually make it much more usable
user1804599
just use a type class
Well, because sometimes you just want to have something like that without the boilerplate of creating a type class.
user406009
I don't think adl would work well with Haskell's type inference.
And it would actually solve the "every container has its own specific functions but they are actually mostly shared with other containers except that nobody created a typeclass for that back then" problem.
user1804599
No, I don't.
user1804599
12:30
@ʎǝɹɟɟɟǝſ There are libraries that provide type classes for many of those.
user1804599
also check out PureScript, it does this right as well
user1804599
because it has no backwards compatibility requirements
12:31
i.e. nobody uses it?
user1804599
no, it's just new
Anyway, there were other similar ideas of mixing features from C++ to Haskell, but now I don't remember them. I'm just desperate to find some interesting project to work on-
user1804599
work with me on my latest project
user1804599
compiler
12:34
Mill?
user1804599
no :p
Ell
Ell
I am writing a language also now
user1804599
No, you're not.
user1804599
You don't write languages.
user1804599
That makes no sense.
user1804599
12:35
You write letters and books and computer programs.
everybody's a language maker now
all trying to get a piece of Puppy glory
> No-one is real, everyone is a language maker
@ʎǝɹɟɟɟǝſ Doesn't really work out all that well afaik
@Puppy including Puppy
user406009
@ʎǝɹɟɟɟǝſ You can help with the C++ "type classes" proposal.
user406009
12:42
I think Andy had a link.
user406009
They are calling them "virtual concepts"
@thecoshman Puppy's got all the Puppy glory.
user1804599
type classes in C++ is easy
@Lalaland interesting, /cc @AndyProwl
I'd be interested into knowing more
@Lalaland Much less misleading than using 'type class'.
12:43
@Puppy everyone else has real glory :D
nope
no glories
only glories for Puppy
Ell
Ell
@elyse We are all writing english now, aren't we?
user406009
user406009
Found it!
user406009
Ah, screw you too SO chat.
user1804599
12:47
user406009
@elyse we want runtime resolution though.
user1804599
lol why
user406009
Because it's useful.
user1804599
12:50
hardly
user3790646
is there, like, a way to create a new object from a string "Atom", that then creates a Atom object?
user3790646
damn, I'm not very good at explaining
use python
user3790646
@milleniumbug no, thank you
12:52
The more dynamic the behaviour you want, the less C++ is adequate.
So you want dynamic typing
user3790646
damn who starred my phrase 14 hours ago?
about six people
user406009
@Andrey you mean being able to type "Foo"_atom?
user1804599
12:53
use Haskell
@Lalaland Name to factory/constructor mapping.
user406009
Oh. Oops. Misread the question.
user3790646
think about that: I'm making a map editor each object derives from a class called Atom, they have an ID, that decides wheter they are a Atom -> Turf -> Grass or that kind of thing
user3790646
is there a way to create an object from a "string" that then creates the object from the class that the string represents?
user406009
12:55
You sorta have to do that manually.
@Lalaland AFAIK they were stuck at implementation. That is, Andy proposed it "officially", but they said that they need implementation to be considered.
user3790646
oh shit.
@Puppy Yeah, maybe not.
user406009
@ʎǝɹɟɟɟǝſ now is your time to shine!
user406009
You can do it!!
12:56
JUST DO IT
user406009
@Andrey its not too bad. Usually you just need a simple switch statement.
user3790646
hmm yes, but that would be unpractical in a game where there are hundreds of object types
5 mins ago, by Luc Danton
The more dynamic the behaviour you want, the less C++ is adequate.
It’s only going to be worse from here.
inheritance all the things!
user406009
The reflection proposal would fix this.
12:59
Next you’ll want to dynamically call something from those dynamically created objects.
@Lalaland Not the static reflection proposals, no.

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