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13:00
@sehe thx :D
I did not even know this existed before
it looks really cool
tho like the comments on HN said
if you end up using it everywhere you just throw a black box at everything
and don't really know how you solve problems
... I have to answer the question of how I'm going to mangle names, don't I?
Not for me
Shit. Namespaces make everything worse.
I wonder what character I can input into LLVM that's not a valid character in my program...
gonna walk thru the article now, it caught me at 4AM on my phone yesterday
not the best times to code
Well. It's illegal for a any identifier in a lepix program to contain two underscores anywhere.
So what I can do is append a double undercore to every namespace name for the generated code.
That... works, I think?
13:08
if you compile error on double underscore in identifier then it's fine
nwp
nwp
and again I need continue(2);
time to move stuff into a function and manually pass required arguments
or maybe use a lambda?
clang-refactor when?
> Variant 3 (good in my opinion)
Like 2: “const x” means “const auto x”. But special rule for range-based for loops, where “for ( const x :” will mean “for ( const auto& x :”.
Benefits: In that case we will have all benefits from Variant 1.
Problem: two sets of rules is bad… or not?
std-asylum, ladies and gentlemen
Usual one.
wheeee
It is done. I love you, @Renegade0x6. You're a brother for me. Rest of y'all can donate at http://fundraising.stjude.org/site/TR?fr_id=59427&px=4309628&pg=personal… https://twitter.com/i/web/status/799425370449739777
That's a remarkable change-over. And a nice way to raise $1337
13:16
no santa this year?!??!
I don't know how to break it to you...
I know!
let's use the way I was told!
o it's cancer stuff disregard my bad joke
I thought it was about the no shave november meme
@Griwes I haven't visited the pools in a year
Santa doesn't exist and the Easter Bunny was a lie
13:18
@AlexM. No probs mate. I didn't post it for drama. I think it's rather smart he uses humor to raise awareness btw
@jaggedSpire And they've been adopted
@sehe heh
actually it was my sister who told me the whole easter bunny thing
She was trying to comfort me because I was crying from learning Santa didn't exist
she's gotten better at being comforting in the intervening years
.... Welp.
This is way harder than I thought it would be. =/
kinky!
jagged pls
nwp
nwp
maybe try again after some sleep?
13:22
what are you trying to do?
No, it's not that. It's like.
So I have a locals_list That's a list of [ (string, StringMap), (string, StringMap )]
The head of the list is the current scope
The back of the list is the globals
@ThePhD He's right
I want to get easy access to the back of the list, without like... trying to copy the thing around.
God fucking damnit.
embrace the fp phd
sometimes FP is the wrong paradigm
13:24
Everything has to be copied. Everything has to be explicitly updated. And I have to write 20 little functions to do it.
It's really annoying.
or your mindset just doesn't fit FP
wut
at any rate it is time for me to go drop off my car at the mechanic's and then go on a Wondrous Public Transportation Adventure
if you are copying "everything" in fp, you're doing something wrong.
toodle-too
13:26
I probably am doing something wrong.
You should have your data structures structured in a way that allows you to do trivial changes to the values.
But you know what? I'm being given little guidance and little time to figure this all out.
(So that the bulk of the data can be reused.)
@Griwes he's practicing making copies of the universe
for when he shoots himself in the foot
@AlexM. On each choice he makes a new universe in the multiverse, and at the very end he's going to shoot himself in the foot in all of the multiverse at the same time.
@ThePhD Also remember that foo = bar in FP doesn't usually mean "copy". :D
13:29
I failed to draw a line :(
It can be handy to think of every field in a structure in FP as a shared_ptr or a primitive
@ThePhD yeah, that's basics of FP
if you're a complete haskell nooblet that's how your programs are gonna look
and you'll wonder "why do people even bother with that"
@ThePhD but those functions are very easy to simply argue are correct
that's, surprise surprise, until you actually improve
and thus it's easier to argue that what they do together are correct
and thus easier to that this great big monster of a program is correct
13:33
@Griwes there we go
@ThePhD ... tail?
hnnngh I can't decide on how big a package of the soldering thing I need
how's it called
so... pupppy can't linux, and phd can't functional
the bigger ones are obviously cheaper but using 1kg of that will take me like 5 years
and the spool is much bigger and less comfy
:F
If you aren't using huge amounts, then economies of scale have to factor in the storage
It might be worth paying more per unit if it means you can easily store a given amount
13:37
you can cut off chunks to use at a time
or create a dispenser to hold the spool as you are using it
TIL module = StringMap.Make(String) is not a valid type.
There's type StringMap.key
And type StringMap.'a
Yes, but if you need a forklift to move your spool of solder around, the fact it's a quarter the price of a small pack (per unit) starts to become moot
But I don't know how to name the type of StringMap.
> 'a t
How do I name that type.
StringMap.'a t?
@thecoshman well 1kg isn't like too big to store
@ratchetfreak I was thinking about that
'a StringMap.t?
13:40
Just StringMap.t did the trick, apparently.
(Random guess, dunno about the exact OCaml syntaxes.)
So modules types are named by .t.
but the 1kg spools are actually so wide that they take quite a lot of space on the table
@BartekBanachewicz I have no idea how much that is... not too big I'd think
or use a smaller empty spool to hold usable chunks of solder
13:41
also @thecoshman I got approval from my SO for a brand new semi-pro station (I suggested buying a cheaper one or exposure one but she said to just get one with a full warranty vOv)
@BartekBanachewicz so put it on the floor next to the table...
scale brah
about 4cm in diameter
which one?
either way, that's tiny
I bought the 0.1kg recently and it's actually too big to be held in hand comfortably anyway
unless your work surface is tiny as well
just stick it on a spiny holder thing
like you can do with the vial
@ratchetfreak it's cluttered more than tiny
13:42
what? 4cm diameter is too big to hold?
how fucking tiny are your hands?
@thecoshman too heavy
you need to be precise with those things :V
the small vials are just ok for that, but they are ridiculously expensive
the 1kg spools are the biggest reasonable package you can buy, but yeah I guess a stand is in order then
@BartekBanachewicz get one and then refill from the big one
@ratchetfreak mm I guess I could do that, I kept my empty vials around
though for solder you can just cut off half-meter-length chunks at a time and coil them
@BartekBanachewicz I guess...
13:45
welp, then I guess I should order the thing online, it goes much cheaper than locally
@BartekBanachewicz well, 1kg would be a huge length of solder, so you could happily have it coming up from the floor
@thecoshman maybe I'll 3d print a spool stand
lol
may as well
I was gonna head to the store today to get some parts and I was thinking about buying some additional 0.7mm solder
do you have a 3d printer?
13:46
@thecoshman we have one at work
I just need to buy some filament
what you do?
work wise?
it's not related to our work directly, it's just for fun
the printer? cool
@thecoshman yeah. it's just BringYourOwnFilament
user6845426
Hi all
13:55
@BartekBanachewicz byof :D
ye
I am gonna print an arduino case
user6845426
Anyone have experience with OpenCV by any chance?
user6845426
Mind if I pick your brains? :p
well, sure
but that was a while ago
user6845426
14:04
I've created a small program which takes an image, applies various filters and then draws bounding boxes around any text... I'm using thresholding CV_THRESH_BINARY which works well on darker images. Though, when I input an image with a white background, I need to use inverted thresholding to achieve the same result. Wondering if you know how I could make a check to determined the background of the said image before applying thresholding?
mm, there's plenty of ways you could do that
but depending on the content this could work weirdly
Okay
So StringMap.t is not the right way to name the type.
@F.Bar how would your program react to say that?
user6845426
The only way I can think of is maybe doing a check to get the most dominant colour in the image, then having a threshold between light and dark?
And neither is 'a StringMap.t
user6845426
14:09
At the moment I just read the image and call the following thresholding:
threshold( newsrc, dst, threshold_value, max_BINARY_value, CV_THRESH_BINARY);
@F.Bar I think it really depends on what's in the image
are you working on photos? Diagrams? screenshots? drawings?
user6845426
I'm hoping it will work on multiple different scenes
user6845426
Slowely loosing that hope though xD
max
max
does any of you know about affine type systems?
0/30 ¬_¬ I'm starting to think this is just a big troll
14:18
maybe you just can't draw shit (assuming it's about the google thing)
maybe people have started teaching the AI that everything looks like a penis
6
except it shows you what things it's recognised as that word...
14:35
IT BUILT
KREYGASM
IT DOES NOT RUN
NOT KREYGASM.
user1804599
badlet
:<
It almost worked...
don't worry
most software almost works
I'm gonna go eat breakfast and then pass the fuck out.
speaking of software that almost works
my calendar is almost working yay
gotta go thru the pain of testing and writing down the meat of the logic now :(
14:42
@BartekBanachewicz This is quite cool
@AlexM. so... Google Calendar?
no that's fullcalendar.io
it can be bound to a google calendar source if needed
but it's not
user1804599
@ThePhD stack overflow maybe
Ven
Ven
@ThePhD OpieOP
user1804599
@ThePhD s/out/away/
user1804599
14:45
RIP
@rightfold :(
15:06
@ThePhD It lied, because you didn't have the equivalent of -Werror turned on.
@Griwes I purpose left those cases out.
Because I don't know codegen for them and I'm not going to be locked into a state of no-compile, no-run until I do codegen for EVERYTHING.
That's just plain unreasonable.
there must be something akin to assert(0) in OCaml
(newsflash: almost all legitimate uses of assert are "I didn't have time and/or need to implement this yet)
BUT ASSERT ISN'T PPPUUUURREERERERER.
I don't know what I'm saying anymore.
'm cold. And tired. And sleepy.
then you should sleep
under blanket
15:15
you won't solve any problems if you're not lucid enough to think
user1804599
> A segmentation fault can have many causes, the best thing to do when you have a segmentation fault is debug it to find out what's causing it.
14
user1804599
Thank you for this pearl of wisdom.
Sleep is for the weak and being lucid is for squares.
@Griwes I use it for compiled comments
It has been estimated that over 20% of adults suffer from some form of sleep deprivation. Insomnia and sleep deprivation are common symptoms of depression and can be an indication of other mental disorders. The consequences of not getting enough sleep could have dire results; not only to the health of the individual, but those around them as sleep deprivation increases the risk of human-error related accidents, especially with vigilance-based tasks involving technology. == Attention == === Neural substrates === The parietal lobes of the brain are largely involved in attention. Lesions ...
you'll be a strong rectangle only so much
15:21
@Griwes We use asserts for "a game programmer didn't bother to read the documentation before calling this"
Lol.
OCaml's print function is retarded.
It's caching my print outs
So when the program segfaults,
I can't printf debug my shit.
I wonder if there's an ASCII control code that can force stdout to flush.
Nope, there isn't.
Thanks, OCaml.
You piece of shit.
Ven
Ven
@ThePhD isn't it just stdout buffering as ever
Thankfully, there's print_endline.
Ven
Ven
because you probably want \n in that case.
Which is supposed to flush.
There we go. Now things are printing.
NOW WE'RE COOKING WITH GAS.
Ven
Ven
15:25
;-)
@AlexM. ¬_¬ no animated gifs
I wonder what @ThePhD will discover.
@thecoshman lmao
are you annoyed by its movingness?
yes
@ThePhD that's normally a good thing, you don't want to constantly flush to the terminal as that nurfs performance
... Lmao.
The function doesn't even start.
Wtf.
NOTHING gets printed out from the codegen.
Not a single line.
The AST gets printed just fine.
15:29
ITT @ThePhD is more shit than normal :D
Ven
Ven
:P
@thecoshman it's off the screen now
Okay time to touch the theory of dataflow analysis and do this analysis of when to move a variable not backwards, which is backwards, akin to live variable analysis, though that won't be "full" live variable analysis yet.
Are there too many let in ... ?
@AlexM. I still know it's there
15:33
Is that even fucking possible??
@thecoshman go to a psychologist
and I can still shrink the page enough to see it
already having enough problems to solve as is
can't also solve yours
user6845426
Hi all, using OpenCV, anyone know how to write the data contained within a bounding box to an image file?
ergh...
15:36
And there's just... no fucking information.
It just segfaults and that's it.
That's the end.
good stuff :D
max
max
codegen ftw
Ven
Ven
du calme mr tournier
What's cicada's name today?
@GundolfGundelfinger I'm waiting :)
Ven
Ven
15:52
lol
Web programming is wonderful
Oct 7 '15 at 15:45, by milleniumbug
@ʎǝɹɟɟɟǝſ Cicada detector
> What we have got here is failure to communicate. Some men, you just can't reach. So you get what we had here last week. Which is the way he wants. Well... he gets. I don't like it anymore than you mate.
user1804599
Q: Why didn’t Newton discover group theory? A: Because he wasn’t Abel.
15:57
I'm guessing Abel is the name of the guy who discovered group theory?
... At least Abelian groups I wager
#iknownothingaboutthisstuffsorryforruiningyourjoke
#iknatss4ryj
user1804599
Lol, attempting an implicit conversion to array is UB in PHP.
user1804599
@Shoe He wrote it down on the night before the day he knew he was gonna die
user1804599
Or was that the other guy who discovered group theory?
16:01
How did he know he was gonna die? Did he kill himself?
user1804599
Quickdraw duel or something
user1804599
dunno
user1804599
ah it was the other guy
user1804599
Abel died from tuberculosis.
max
max
@rightfold galois?
user1804599
16:02
> His work laid the foundations for Galois theory and group theory, two major branches of abstract algebra, and the subfield of Galois connections. He died at age 20 from wounds suffered in a duel.
user1804599
RIP
Good old days. Many Americans would love those back, no doubt
@rightfold oh now really
@rightfold ... yes, that is a thing that is needed
user1804599
Group theory is amazing.
Cue (in two-six weeks): "Group theory sucks"
16:15
I wonder how @rightfold feels about the uncertainty principle...
user1804599
@sehe kekno
Jun 10 at 11:30, by rightfold
Docker is so nice
2 days ago, by rightfold
Docker is shit
Lobster is so nice
user1804599
Group theory is cool.
Wait
25 secs ago, by rightfold
Group theory is cool.
16:19
@sehe in his defence
that was more than 6 weeks
:P
Oh yeah. It depends on the intensity of attention. More attention, faster decay of interest
Ahahahah
Thank you though :D
context?
You're very welcome :)
16:28
Belated relevant
I do FP whenever I deal with data processing
it's hard now to think of data processing as anything other than f : InputData -> OutputData
That's just a deterministic data processing function
I feel like FP is overhyped these days
Ven
Ven
yawn
it's a function that can be composed with others
Ven
Ven
Are we ready to start a jefffscussion?
16:33
to create a pipeline that forms a InputData->FinalInputDAta
@Ven :C
I'll stop now, sorry
@Shoe Do you do undeterministic data processing?
@Shoe Oh, disregard then
I like to do undeterministic data processing when I'm drunk
that was supposed to be InputData -> FinalOutputData
w/e
can't edit now
There are certain things about FP which are great
And others which are impractical
Like full fledged immutability and the "no side effects" religion
in-place modification is very handy sometimes
I'm all up for giving more power to functions, but let the functions have side effect
@Shoe in practice, all FP [languages] allow[s] expressing effects in various convenient paradigms
yup
functions as values, () in place of void, composable functions, partial applications, etc... are all great things
When you go to the extreme for a while, you simply find yourself craving mutability a lot less. This strictly makes your programs more reliable, (re)usable and testable. For the rest of the times: enjoy impurity which exist in all viable FP languages
16:39
> enjoy impurity which exist in all viable FP languages
It does.
That's extremely awkward to use though
Ya think?
is it really though
So, Haskells text/string libs are "extremely awkward"
@Shoe ADTs, H/M overload resolution, pattern matching.
16:41
H/M overload resolution? You mean type deduction?
sbi
sbi
16:57
@ArneMertz Any plans for tonight/tomorrow night?
Hi, BTW.
Lounge<Dating>
2
@Shoe I've just signed you up to a couple mailing lists you might just enjoy
@GundolfGundelfinger laces anonymous
@GundolfGundelfinger Let's hope Google's spam detection system is smart enough :P
17:20
> ETL - STL-like library for embedded
~~embedded~~
user1804599
You can't enjoy impurity
user1804599
It's a pain.
17
Q: How to politely decline my salary due to feeling I don't currently deserve it?

khrit344I am a software engineer at a startup. I'm feeling burned out from my job and am not performing up to what I would consider par. Therefore, I do not believe it is ethical for me to accept my salary, at least the full amount. How can I politely ask my employer not to give it to me until I feel tha...

^^ wtf
user1804599
He can give the extra money to a charity like Hamas.
OP hasn't commented on anything. Typical case of not being able to tell if the OP is a troll or insane.
17:32
@sbi speakers dinner today. No plans for tomorrow evening yet :)
sbi
sbi
@ArneMertz Well, as I said, most attendees do not qualify for speaker's dinner. I understand that you do, though. :)
17:43
> Let's say we'd like to add a category query parameter that will filter out all the articles that haven't been categorized as popular. To do this, we specify 'category' as one of ArticlesController's queryParams:
App.ArticlesController = Ember.ArrayController.extend({
queryParams: ['category'],
category: null
});
This sets up a binding between the category query param in the URL, and the category property on ArticlesController.
I so don't like these magical behind the scenes bindings
ember is full of them
unless you go through the docs about everything chances are you misinterpret many things
@sbi Pretty sure I have some antique rom in my basement...
@rightfold I read the story in one of my many "math for dummies" books.
there was another weird thing where the app computed the thing to request by adding an "s" to what was the singular form of the model
cause you have a model and you request modelS
and it does all these without me deciding to or saying it should it just does all of it
18:20
use react noob
Ven
Ven
n00b
@AlexM. It's a dynamically typed language; you weren't expecting any quality were you?
I was expecting a bit more explicitness
I can see this being easy when you know all of its inner workings OR when you start a new project
but if you jump into already written code so much stuff is hidden and implicit
it's dynamically typed.
C++ would be a better choice
these are design decisions of the framework I argue against, not the design decisions of the language
"for each element of this array try to see if there's a field with the same name in the class if there is bind them"
i'd rather do bind(array[0], field) myself
18:33
yes, but only idiots would use such a bad langauge
so terrible design decisions are to be expected

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