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00:39
@Morwenn good night <3
00:59
@Morwenn nn, bby
@jaggedSpire Hiiyo.
@ThePhD hey, friendo. How's it hanging?
@jaggedSpire Okay, I guess.
I'm taking my hands off my group project in order to solve the workload of all my other classes.
nice, nice
ooooh
I unfortunately have no faith in my group so I think after Friday if nothing gets done I'm going to begin preparing a Semantic Analyzer of my own...
01:06
are your groupmates going to pick up the slack or are they approximately as much use in all this as the average zombie would be?
ah, well that answers that question
I mean.
They do stuff.
like chew furniture?
and assault people that come too close for their brains?
.... But up until now they do it wrong, don't check if it works, write it in a kind of really cop-out manner...
It's not quality, basically.
I want this to be quality.
I want the Professor to be proud of my work.
so basically, they chew furniture
poor PhD
user406009
@jaggedSpire It turns out that I decided to write my own epub generating "code" for stripping stories from wordpress.
user406009
01:16
It's horrible shell script, but you might find gist.github.com/Lalaland/90fc5b442e862c4f0ba40ff41d1cfad9 handy.
user406009
@ThePhD I've had to do that twice this semester.
user406009
It always sucks, but it's worth than getting a failing grade on the assignment.
@Lalaland thanks
since $i$ think that C/C++ is a real thing, the existance of i in the statements means that it's complex and therefore $ C++ \member \mathbb{C}$ Q.E.D.
02:00
of course it's MS
@LucDanton wow that's a new level of bad
02:19
:3
03:19
@GundolfGundelfinger the buff lasts for 8h, too, and it’s the same in sPvP
 
2 hours later…
04:59
@LucDanton amazing
@Telkitty that article says NASA doesn't believe in the results, implying NASA didn't do the experiment
> If you are interested in obtaining all 22.4 trillion digits of pi, please contact [email protected].
do they send them in a hardcover or softcover format
Seagate Enterprise 6TB drives. Those are $250 a piece. 6 grand worth of hard drives.
But the rest of the computer itself is probably on the lines of 40 - 50 grand.
06:13
@Mysticial Disappointing that the guy has the nerve to thank god (rather than good programming and/or hardware) that the computation completed correctly.
@JerryCoffin they said the test passed 'with flying colors', not 'with flying spaghetti monster'
concepts sure are something, I added equal_pos(ctx, pos, to) as a constraint to one overload and now it’s ambiguous with the other
@MooingDuck well, think about it, one way to travel as fast as light is to travel like light, that is propagate like electromagnetic waves
@JerryCoffin The validation file for that computation reports:
> Spot Check: Good through 13,300,000,000,000
So I guess that seemed to work fine at that size.
Or rather, I didn't make any typos for all the spot-check entries that I made above 100 billion digits. Since I never tested it above 100 billion.
The automatic spot-check feature was something I added for the purpose of better automating my tests. I rarely run those above 50 million digits. But that feature was so useful that I added to the public version and extended the tables all the way up to the latest records.
06:32
what is that, go check known digits?
@Mysticial Given that BBP makes it fairly easy, I'd at least consider adding spot checks every, say, trillion digits up to 100 trillion or so. 100 trillion should be enough for anybody. :-)
@LucDanton Recent versions of the program come bundled with a digits folder which contains spot-check digits for all the major constants and a variety of sizes up to the known world record.
@JerryCoffin The spot-check feature is only done for decimal digits. BBP is binary only.
That's not to say I can't do it for hexadecimal as well, but it's more work.
@Mysticial What? You want to check your decimal conversion too? Obvious overkill. What could possibly go wrong?
@JerryCoffin The conversion is checked.
I compute a modulus before and after the conversion. And they need to match.
@Mysticial That's my point. If the spot check was on hex digits, then it wouldn't check the decimal conversion.
06:36
Yeah.
Also, if the decimal digits are correct, chances are the hexadecimal digits are also correct.
Otherwise garbage in, garbage out.
The last place where things can go wrong is if something screws up while writing out the digits.
fortuitously related: I’ve just corrected code that was very obviously wrong (i.e. c/p error), and now a test fails
So the program computes the frequencies and some hashes prior to writing it out. After they are written out, you can use the digit viewer to compute the frequencies and hashes again to make sure they agree with before.
I don't think anyone actually does that last step though.
Writing out the digits isn't a trivial piece of code since there's all the word-sized base conversions and compression shit.
@Mysticial Unless you count yourself as somebody, of course (at least I hope you did it once to verify that it seemed to work...)
I also never parallelized it because doing so would increase the probability of exposing a hardware instability. And for some years there was no mechanism to verify the process.
@Mysticial At this size, I think it's safe to say that almost nothing is trivial any more.
06:43
@JerryCoffin Now that you mention it, my implementation of the BBP won't go up to 100 trillion.
@Mysticial Perhaps 64 trillion would be enough for now...
My implementation is probably the only one that abuses double-precision FP for all the wrong reasons. And it starts running out of precision at around that size.
IOW, the program can larger "full" computations, than it can for BBP.
Well, getting late. I probably need to go sleep. G'night all.
night
@GundolfGundelfinger btw we’ve met Arctic Quaggans
Ven
Ven
06:55
Hi
breaking my head trying to figure out what that does
it replaces a parent with the contents of its first child?
@StackedCrooked I've been bitten a somewhat similar problem in a different domain.
Tasks in a thread pool.
what a strange pattern to use though
I'd avoid it because it makes my head go in circles :<
when trying to step thru and follow what it does
Tasks that were running in the thread pool can spawn more tasks that add themselves to the same pool.
I was bitten by shared_ptr cycles caused by lambda capture once.
07:34
In my case, the result was a deadlock when all the tasks running in the thread pool were waiting for tasks that were queued to finish. But the tasks that were enqueued can't run until the stuff that's in the pool finish.
Ah, sounds fun :)
The work-around was to allow unlimited threads. IOW, don't queue anything. If there aren't any slots for it, spawn a new thread to handle it.
That's a pretty classic problem when dealing with executors and futures.
It wasn't until a couple months later did I finally come up with a solution that guaranteed forward progress (without unlimited threads). But it didn't have optimal scheduling.
How did you wait for task completion? Condition variable?
Or you just spawned threads?
07:38
I recent came across a 3rd solution, but it loses the ability to decentralize the dispatch which limits scalability.
@StackedCrooked Yeah, if you can't run a task because the pool is full, then spawn an extra thread to run it.
That way nothing is queued. If something can run, it will - the OS will eventually get to it.
I didn't realize this whole scheduling bullshit was a pretty hot research topic.
Which probably explains why I couldn't come up with an easy solution that had no drawbacks.
Everyone makes the same mistakes when first encountering the problem :P
Unless if they had a CS class about the topic.
Anyways, night. Got work tomorrow and then a flight.
Good night.
@StackedCrooked Wow. You win.
Ven
Ven
He won!
07:49
is c++ finally over
in c++23 we may have finally
@LucDanton are those endangered
no spoilers
08:07
@StackedCrooked I think ultimately that is just UB though. Not much different from i++ - -- i IYAM.
Aliasing is a bitch and GC rules
tfw double free bug in sol2 q_q
It's fixed but someone prominent on twitter found it first so they spent like 20 tweets trying to debug it with some hopeless other people.
@sehe more like linear types
hey do you know in which language this wouldn’t happen
@LucDanton I'm not sure what that means.
@LucDanton Hust! Rascell :)
I wish Rascell had linear types :(
Now I'm completely unsure what you prefer, and what you meant by "linear types". I guess it's pretty close to what I meant, but it's too cryptic for me
@ThePhD The upshot: you've got free publicity, your user base is large enough that some other people cared enough and your library has one bug down. I'd say: buy them a beer, storify it and share it with a #thankyou!
08:16
@sehe substituting the type theory jargon with the Rust compiler
Loving the rhythmic interpunction of the comment :) Now, what is "Box"?
non-null std::unique_ptr, Option<Box<…>> for a nullable one
That's... impressive
@GundolfGundelfinger get a load of this guy who doesn’t know the Rust memes
@sehe That is really impressive actually.
08:20
@LucDanton Ban asap
@ThePhD or is it
(when I said 'linear types' I really meant 'linear and affine types', as per usual)
Wait until I bring sinusoidal types to the table
@ThePhD >someone prominent on Twitter
I appreciate the ridicule of that sentence
@GundolfGundelfinger So do I
:)
Strictly speaking, prominent is not much more flattering than "loudmouth" or "attention grabbing".
I think all that status is secondary meaning
08:37
@sehe I’m not going into the details because it’s complicated, that was for the sake of pointing out the correct term that I’ve mentioned before. plus what do we need the theory for if we have a compiler to throw our theorems to?
Ooo. "Throwing theorems" much better than "syntax checking" or "transforming bugs"
I need to up my game.
Wasting no time. We don't ly, we just make shit up.
Also, is it lying if you can think you believe it?
08:57
Guise, is their a way to detect if a given identifier is a function template?
white house is so racist! </trololo>
why not, like ... black house?
@Rerito not accurately, no
Ven
Ven
@Rerito throw it to the lions
max
max
@LucDanton you have some experience with affine types?
@max I think he built up a good affinity with them
09:10
@max not really
Ah... Fine
Ven
Ven
Affine types are fun
It's a fine tool
une fine appellation /cc @GundolfGundelfinger
max
max
i'm trying to implement a toy type checker
but the theory is derpy-derp
09:12
@Rerito t’as fini
user1804599
@max For which type system?
user1804599
I have one for the simply-typed lambda calculus in three lines of Erlang: glot.io/snippets/egkcs19x64
@LucDanton J'aurais bien un jdm avec paraffine mais je m'abstiens
max
max
hindley milner (rank-1 types, no structural typing), + some affine stuff for references
@Rerito qu'est ce qu'on rigole
user1804599
@max RIP
09:19
@Mysticial That almost makes sense, since it can compile neither C nor C++... :D
@fredoverflow lol, sums it up well :D
god I need to push for kotlin in our code base
tempted to take a dump into git and start refactoring it with kotlin when ever I can find time
just a quick question if somone know, is a Boolean function always computable?
max
max
@elektronet what do you mean by "function" ?
@max good question max, it's a exam preparation question but I can't find a good answer
user1804599
Read the notes you took during the lectures.
user1804599
09:29
They tell you whether Boolean functions are computable.
@Rerito nice
Also wow @MarkGarcia is alive national holiday has been announced
hi @GundolfGundelfinger
just lurking
Comments in the feedback form are now saved automatically. :)
The. Guy. Is. A. Wizard. /cc @R.MartinhoFernandes
(I'm sorry to vent, but otherwise I'm not sure I'll do it on twitter and that would be less nice)
@sehe lol, online form?
I mean. Feedback, /dev/null; what's the difference, right?!
09:40
lmao
The second one is a regular file on @Ell's install
5
Ven
Ven
@sehe why do I get sad everytime I read a tweet from him
@GundolfGundelfinger lol
Apparently, Jens was talking about physical forms. Here's me hoping he has automated scanning and potentially OCR-ing :)
Ven
Ven
I swear to fucking god I'm fucking going to sue StackOverflow for sending me spam emails I can't unsubscribe from.
It's the 4th or 5th fucking time these retards do that.
@sehetw yes, web forms. I usually avoid js...
Now I'm lost
Ven
Ven
09:55
lol
maybe he just means ajax save
@Ven I never receive any mail. At all.
Ven
Ven
@sehe I'm gonna write an ignore rule
I think in ~5 years I received ~3 mails. 2 of which were about 10k+ swag or so?
Ven
Ven
It's the 4th or 5th email about developer story. I've clicked "unsubscribe" every single time.
@ratchetfreak don't ping me when you're fucking unable to read
So their shit is illegal in france and I'm kinda tired of it
09:57
@Ven That's weird. Is it is sending to some kind of unexpected email alias?
Ven
Ven
No. It's sending it to the very correct one. There was even a post on meta about that.
@Ven Of course it is. This is EU. It's illegal to send unsollicited mail. I'm sure it's a mishap of some kind. Perhaps contact staff
Ven
Ven
They said "it's a new feature on our own website not promotion so we can spam you legally LOL"
and do the headers say they are actually from SO?
@Ven Link?
Ven
Ven
09:58
I'm trying to find it
How would you explain others not receiving it?
Ven
Ven
They said they'd consider adding a feature to opt out and obviously fucking didn't
@sehe you're better than me at creating ignore rules
@Ven it's the settings page where you should be able to disable the emails
@Ven Must be on the ToA.
Ven
Ven
@ratchetfreak they've been disabled for 3 years now
09:59
@ratchetfreak No doubt. People do weird stuff, but targeted spam taking so much effort with a liability to get sued for spamming + blemishing SE nah
@Ven That's unlikely. I moved from personal mail server (HRC, anyone) to fastmail.com and my rules are... ~6.
Ven
Ven
I can't find the meta post anymore
@Ven When was that?
Ven
Ven
I don't remember. early on during developer story introduction
but I can't remember if it was just an answer or a whole post
tfw Selene still has 153 more stars than sol2 :<
Ah. I got it too.
I sorta remembered "developer story" and then it clicked. Yeah. I don't mind if they change the site they drop me a line. I figured it was more of a SO-careers thing and I don't think I blocked them from mailing me.
Ven
Ven
10:07
yeah but that's only a single one
@ThePhD time
@Ven Yup
i.imgur.com/UZVNKXP.png Here's historical cumulatives (2009-now). There might be some deletions (I don't usually delete mail). There will be some duplicates (due the mail transition that copied my mbox)
Ven
Ven
14 emails for careers 2.0 ._.
I have actively used it last year for job search
I forgot about SO careers...
Guise, the rules link has fallen off, and I'm not creative enough to invent a new message for that.
10:12
But my SO profile is very weak since I don't really answer questions.
@Ven Also, this one is in there:
Not careers related at all
@ThePhD I wonder why you don't do that :)
That means you don't either.
nwp
nwp
The Lounge Rules!
14
meh
that's the opposite of creative
nwp
nwp
10:14
:(
Ven
Ven
^
@Griwes Preconceived notions of "creative" stifle creativity. I'll allow it
lemme try I guess?
ugh opportunity missed again
@sehe :|
nwp
nwp
I kinda want to combine it with the Q&A room. Something like "Either read the Rules or go to Q&A" but it is not witty either.
10:17
@nwp It'd be more functional
The lounge Rules! If you can't handle that then go to the C++ Q&A room!
Huh. The question room is not for low-lifes or rejects. It's for people who would noise about their programming questions.
@MarkGarcia How so?
@sehe You already pin-hammered it. :|
So. I've faced harder challenges than unpinning an item
And survived.
Don't wanna strifle @nwp's creative pursuit. :)
10:21
Yeah. That's what I thought.
nwp
nwp
Oh no, my creativity attempt prevents others from being creative! I will forever feel self-conscious about any creative work in the future. Only you can prevent it! @MarkGarcia
@nwp Meh. He's just making excuses not to be arsed. It's ok.
the third message didn't even show up in mine
10:28
My point was merely that just because it's simple for a change doesn't mean it's less creative.
Rejecting some results of creativity because they seem simpler unnecessarily blocks some creative results.
I think "The Loung Rules" is quite punny. +1 for creativity.
@sehe bingo! ;(
10:44
@Ven LOL guess what email just arrived.
user1804599
lol what a fool
user1804599
he gives several examples of interpreters of languages in other languages, but then blindly assumes it's not possible to write a Python 2 interpreter in Python 3
@rightfold Sounds eerily like RMS.
@rightfold or that the python2 to python3 converter won't work for this
max
max
10:49
@rightfold this guy is beyond repair it's frightening
> The fact that you can't run Python 2 and Python 3 at the same time is purely a social and technical decision that the Python project made with no basis in mathematical reality. This means you are working with a purposefully broken platform when you use Python 3, and I personally can't condone teaching people to use something that is fundamentally broken.
> no basis in mathematical reality
user1804599
I do agree with the guy that using Python 3 is an incredible mistake.
user1804599
But that goes for Python 2 as well.
good morning vietnam
Ven
Ven
11:04
@sehe ...
user1804599
instance serializeVoid :: Serialize Void where
  serialize = absurd

instance serializeUnit :: Serialize Unit where
  serialize = const ""
@rightfold Guy likes the word "solidly" a bit too much.
Well he's talking about Python...
user1804599
instance serializeInt :: Serialize Int where
  serialize x = if x < 0
    then String.drop 1 s <> "-"
    else s <> "+"
    where s = Int.toStringAs base36 x
user1804599
11:08
beautiful \o/
user1804599
Need a delimiter; might as well use the sign.
> base36
user1804599
I'd like a higher base.
user1804599
Like base 221; all ASCII non-space non-control non-{-,+} characters.
I think I'd like to code in Haskell
but I'd also like to make embedded stuff
user1804599
11:17
@BartekBanachewicz clash-lang.org
> I mean, if I struggle to use Python's strings then you don't have a chance.
Jesus christ.
This is a satirical article, right?
@rightfold that is used to make hardware
I want to program hardware
oh hey Ada can build on AVR
11:38
@fredoverflow in the following, what happens if `param` is not of type `Password`? does it compiler error, or skip over the block?
params.forEach { param ->
param as Password
println(param.maskedValue)
println(param.maskedValue)
println(param.maskedValue)
}
12:10
also compiler plugins should be a thing
apparently scala has them
ugh fuck dynamic typing
lol is this a list of problems with C++
surprisingly short
Once, my only gripe with std::initializer_list was that its elements are always const, meaning you can't move them and other useful thing.
Now it's like an unwanted child.
Ven
Ven
12:32
@ThePhD written by a retard for retards
user1804599
12:44
@StackedCrooked I still don't get it
ooooooooh, I think I get it
The internal pointers are swapped, now outer is an empty vector, destructor for outer is called, nothing is destroyed
@Ven I agree that's out-of-line. It's hardly the "new launch" announcement by now
Also, lol:
can you check To: fields on the emails you've received? I only see 1 email message sent to your email address in our logs (same is true for your account id, I checked separately). My guess would be you created a sock puppet account for testing. — m0sa ♦ 36 mins ago
The best part is that the second vector is pretty much pointing to itself
@milleniumbug IOW reference loops are possible without shared_ptr
12:55
@ratchetfreak what matters is the self-referentiality, not whether that self-ref is behind an std::shared_ptr or behind an std::vector
@ratchetfreak It's aliases, if you ask me.
self-ref type => self-ref value
I know but ref loops are usually cited in conjunction with shared_ptr, it's just as easy to make one using unique_ptr
@ratchetfreak that’s my point
user1804599
lol not using a tracing GC
12:58
if you’re looking at struct foo { std::shared_ptr<foo> children; }; the thing that should jump to your eyes is that foo appears inside itself—not that it’s std::shared_ptr<foo> specifically
you were looking at the wrong thing
you wouldn’t suspect a loop if you were looking at struct foo { std::shared_ptr<bar> children; }; now would you?
user1804599
> RangeError: Invalid code point: NaN
user1804599
amazing.

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