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05:02
@Lalaland why
user406009
@HubertApplebaum Because it's nice to have a single standard.
user406009
And our options are UTF8, UTF16 and UTF32.
user406009
UTF8 is best because backwards compatibility with ascii.
why choose compatibility with ASCII
and why is that "best"
I have also mentioned it before, but I might as well rehash it since it’s related
user406009
05:06
Because ASCII is everywhere.
foo_type generic(foo_type arg) noexcept( ??? ) { return arg; }
UTF8 is the only sane character encoding.
oh no vacuous truths being flung at my face!
The lack of consistency is the only thing that make things insane.
05:08
how many of you guys can write an UTF-8 decoder from the top of your head?
Robot?
I can certainly write a non-working one
user406009
@orlp Working with unicode text in any encoding is a pain.
since you all seem convinced that UTF-8 is the only sane thing (while UTF-16 is smaller for asian languages, and UTF-32 is much faster to do string processing with)
> you all
lol
05:10
well maybe not all..
"The lack of consistency is the only thing that make things insane."
user406009
@orlp If you care about space, you can use compression.
oh no more vacuous facts being flown in every direction!
UTF-8 is backwards-compatible to existing ASCII
that's consistency
and that is an argument why
05:10
Because 16/32 are not
The only thing ugly about UTF16 is the surrogate pair bullshit.
you realise you're brandishing the same "backwards compatibility is important!!!" you trash in other occasions right
@ocket8888 but why is that consistent
because it can read arbitrary text files
user406009
@HubertApplebaum Everything is a tradeoff.
05:12
with consistent correct interpretation of their contents
No it can't, EBCDIC exists
user406009
In some cases, the gains are worth the cost of backwards compatibility.
user406009
In this case, I think UTF8 is the best option.
@HubertApplebaum I don't know what this sentence means
@ocket8888 no, it can read ASCII text files
05:12
and UTF-8
@ocket8888 It means you lack reading comprehension skills
well, obviously
which should be the only encoding that exists
user406009
@HubertApplebaum What's your argument for UTF16 or UTF32?
@ocket8888 I just gave you 2 other encodings that have other advantages
05:13
@ocket8888 try to switch to Latin-9
@Lalaland I don't have an argument for any, you are the one with an argument against
user406009
@orlp People have done studies about the size argument.
> People have done studies.
New favourite argument
@HubertApplebaum what other occasions? It means you don't know how to write English.
user406009
UTF16 is 20% smaller than UTF8 for asian text, but that goes away after compression.
05:13
@Lalaland And I have masturbated, I don't see the relevance of either.
But people have done studies!
STUDIES HAVE BEEN DONE BY PEOPLE
check mate
Compression is not always viable.
See: webpage load/display time.
@ocket8888 My reproductive appendice in your buccal orifice
Don't get me wrong, I also prefer UTF-8, but you guys are not showing particular strong discussion tactics.
@HubertApplebaum *appendage retard
user406009
05:15
@orlp In what manner? My argument is that UTF-8 is the better choice due to backwards compatibility with ASCII and ASCII-oriented APIs. I counter the size argument by saying that with compression it doesn't really matter. In any case, 20% for asian text isn't that high of a price.
another lively night in the Lounge
@ocket8888 dictionary.reference.com/browse/appendices learn english mr know-it-not-so-much
Well, I guess this is the stack overflow chat. Well worth checking out.
sucket8888
@ocket8888 this is the lounge
user406009
05:16
I counter the "hard to encode/decode" argument by implying that performing work on unicode text usually requires lots of processing regardless, even if in UTF32 because you have to worry about stuff like graphemes, normalization, etc,
there are many different chat rooms
I don't expect them to be any different
@Lalaland not with UTF-32
4 bytes = one codepoint
They'll just be arguing about different things
@orlp Not exactly correct.
05:16
@HubertApplebaum fair enough
Haven't you learned all generalizations are bad
4
Remember, you can havecodepoints that modify the following letters with accent marks.
p sure you're also a racist mysoginistic neckbeard IRL
user406009
@orlp One codepoint != one letter.
@Lalaland when did I ever mention a letter?
05:17
I'm not a racist mysoginist, women and negroes are just gay.
So even with UTF32 you need to put the text in a certain canonicalized format if you want those guarantees.
user406009
@orlp My question to you is what sort of processing would you be able to do with UTF32 without other knowledge of unicode?
also you forgot fat
I don't discriminate on calorie content
So when Unicode runs out of its 1 million code points:
- UTF32 is fine.
- UTF8 can re-add the 5 and 6 byte codepoints.
- UTF16 is fucked unless it does some nested surrgate bullshit again.
user406009
05:17
Or I guess without excess knowledge of unicode.
You're a kind soul
@Lalaland Arbitrary indexing of strings, splitting strings in arbitrary spots, etc...
@Mysticial I hope UTF-16 just diesoff at that point.
UTF-32 can also do SIMD
and similar techniques
user406009
05:19
@orlp For the splitting, you can run into trouble with UTF-32 if you split a single grapheme cluster.
@Lalaland no you don't, as long as you understand you're splitting code points
clearly what we really need is an encoding which can support completely arbitrary numbers of symbols
You know what is the correct way to represent any glyph regardless of unicode? ASCII art the fucking glyph.
@jaggedSpire I propose 'IPv6 as unicode'
since those addressess are so fucking big
@Mysticial makes sense
05:21
@orlp wheeeee
and another encoding that says "fuck you assholes, I'm supporting x symbols, and no more."
I think that UTF-8 is best for storing files
but to circlejerk around UTF-8 and act as if the other encodings are never better is just dumb
but think of the compression!
UTF-32 certainly is valid for in-memory processing
UTF-16 less so, but it's not strictly outclassed as of now
user406009
@orlp Yes, but in the vast majority of cases, you need to work with grapheme clusters.
like UTF32
05:22
@Lalaland Actually, in the vast majority of cases you don't.
@Lalaland How many times did you?
user406009
@orlp When you want to implement a GUI.
user406009
Backspace, arrow movement, etc are all in grapheme clusters.
in the vast majority of cases you don't directly manipulate the string and just pass them around instead
at least that's what I've heard and experienced
@Lalaland Which is a niche market already filled by industry-standard libraries?
user406009
What is a useful case when you would care about code points? Or want to split on them?
05:24
wow they really are fighting about encodings
@Lalaland how often do you split a string on newlines, or spaces, or whatever?
utf-8 vs my father is stronger than your encoding
user406009
@orlp You can do that safely in UTF8 rather easily.
or access the last codepoint, to see if it equals "
user406009
@orlp You can do that safely as well.
05:25
or do string pattern matching, which really wants random access
user406009
UTF8 is designed so you don't have bad overlap between the ASCII and other UTF8 stuff.
make documents, not encodings <3
user406009
@orlp Yep, also easy in UTF8. Just match the bytes.
@Lalaland nope
@Lalaland cmon man
just you suggesting that shows how broken your understanding is of UTF-8
@jaggedSpire LaTeX 4lyfe?
05:27
@ThePhD <3 LaTeX
I do too.
I didn't choose the LaTeX life, the LaTeX life chose me
What I don't <3 is Sublime Text.
@jaggedSpire Amen.
or maybe I'm screwed up
I dno
user406009
@orlp Um, you can just do a normal byte string comparison to do searches in UTF8.
05:27
@orlp UTF8 encoding is defined in such a way that it's unique. So if you're searching for a substring, I don't see why it would be any more complicated any other multi-byte search.
You don't need to decode it.
no, I messed up
user406009
@orlp You are correct that if you want to fiddle with code points, UTF32 is your man.
I forgot about the leading bit(s) distinction
user406009
But the counter is that code points are useless.
user406009
Which is a debatable point.
user406009
05:28
And people have different opinions about that.
@Lalaland I beg to differ
@LucDanton dies
jfc I love kahlua + chocolate
user406009
There is also a good point that it is possible to completely screw up UTF8 strings and get invalid UTF8 strings.
Here's the thing
in 200 years UTF-8 will be useless
user406009
Meanwhile in UTF32, while you can screw up and get funny looking strings, you can't break the encoding.
05:30
and everything is UTF-32
warning prediction outside of credible range
if we still have unicode
probably people will say "fuck it" to one or more of the features of unicode long before then
"why the hell are we supporting a goddamn hovering guy"
"it seemed like a great idea at the time"
I mean, CPU speeds aren't really increasing anymore (for the time being)
but storage is still going strong
05:32
Unicode needs to be defragged. Codepoints scattered all over the place. :)
in the last 3 years you can buy a 10x faster SSD twice the size for the same price
what did a 1tb hard disk cost 10 years ago?
what will it cost in 10 years?
actually probably cheaper than now
because of the floodings
I bought my 2 TB around 50 euros before the Thailand floodings
it jumped to over 200 after
Most of my drives are pre-flood drives.
I grabbed over a dozen 2TB drives for about $100 each.
user406009
@Mysticial I doubt that would be possible. Too much politics.
user406009
We will hit UTF64 way before that.
user406009
05:35
64 bits of emoji goodness.
we really need to go the IPv6 way
UTF128
all your bytes are belong to me
UTF<int>
@Mysticial eww
fuckers
UTF<-INT_MAX>
(I know, INT_MIN is one lower...)
user406009
05:36
@HubertApplebaum It's really crazy how that one event screwed the prices for so long.
-INT_MIN is demon spawn though, or at least so would the C standard like you to believe, still ignorant of 2's complement in 2016
user406009
@orlp There is something you can static_assert on that nowadays though.
user406009
It's in one of the headers.
@Lalaland still makes it UB?
you can static assert all you want
standard still doesn't define it
compiler can still insert format_hard_disk() functions
user406009
Nah, once you static assert it would technically be defined.
05:37
that makes absolutely no sense
isn't the treatment implementation-defined?
I can static_assert(5 == *reinterpret_cast<int*>(1)), that still doesn't make that defined behavior?
@jaggedSpire AFAIK overflowing integers is UB
Not if it's unsigned.
> If during the evaluation of an expression, the result is not mathematically defined or not in the range of representable values for its type, the behavior is undefined.
@Mysticial yeah, but I'm talking 2s complement and signed integers here
this API has 3 different error codes for "your password has expired"
user406009
Found it.
@HubertApplebaum smells like bad maintenance spirit
user406009
Just got to assert on that and you are golden.
user406009
Well, or it will fail to compile.
user406009
But still.
05:41
cool
guess I'll insert that into everything ever
and just be done with it
user406009
@orlp Watch out though. It's false in a lot of places.
user406009
Gotta love our "optimizing" compilers.
I have a personal preference for making a dedicated header, putting that assert on a single line in the header, and then just making a huge rant in comment blocks for another hundred or so lines. Or I would if I ever did that.
user406009
Where by optimize, I mean "break all your code".
ssssh I can fantasize
05:43
@jaggedSpire I have a 50+ line comment rant somewhere in my Pi program.
> error: cannot convert 'std::is_nothrow_constructible<X, X>' to 'const bool' in initialization
really?
well
that was useful..
fkin garbage
why can I not use 2s complement in C(++) in this day and age?
user406009
Yeah, but now your code no longer has UB behavior!
it's fucking 2016, every CPU is 2s complement since the day I was born
user406009
A fail to compile is defined!
user406009
05:44
@orlp In all seriousness, they use it for optimization.
user406009
A decent example is loop bounds.
user406009
int x= 3; while ( x > 0) { x++;} will loop forever.
@Lalaland no?
it'll loop till wrap around
user406009
Yeah, but wrap around is undefined.
user406009
So the compiler assumes you never wrap around.
05:46
and this is an optimization... how?
94
Q: Why does integer overflow on x86 with GCC cause an infinite loop?

MysticialThe following code goes into an infinite loop on GCC: #include <iostream> using namespace std; int main(){ int i = 0x10000000; int c = 0; do{ c++; i += i; cout << i << endl; }while (i > 0); cout << c << endl; return 0; } So here's the deal: Si...

user406009
Optimization achieved!
this is a bug that just got worse
because then you would be hitting ~undefined behavior~
user406009
@orlp Because of templates and inlining, you can run into funny cases like that in real code.
05:46
@Mysticial -fwrapv still doesn't give is_modulo :(
user406009
And an infinite loop takes less instructions than actually checking the loop condition.
that's why everyone's so extremely vicious for questions about "why does UB do this?"
but I know that all that shit gives UB
user406009
@orlp There is a whole "debate" about this.
I'm just saying that in 2016 it's fucking dumb
yeah I'm not too interested in reading that
time to go hunt through Jerry's answers for that fun one on signed integers -> unsigned integer conversion
or
I already read djbs post
is that who posted the question?
user406009
@orlp Feel free to comment on the bug report: gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=22200
05:50
why?
it's not a bug
it's on the standard designers
user406009
@orlp The bug is talking about -fwrapv and is_modulo not being synchronized.
@Lalaland not mentioned at all until like 4 pages down
@Lalaland the C(++) community just isn't ready for these complicated issues
instead, they have to upvote 3 sentences explaining how + works 112 times
112
A: How does the + operator work in C?

orlpTo be pedantic, the C specification does not specify how addition is implemented. But to be realistic, the + operator on integer types smaller than or equal to the word size of your CPU get translated directly into an addition instruction for the CPU, and larger integer types get translated into...

user406009
Well, that's why we have djb's boring c movement.
user406009
I mean, a lot of us laugh at it a little in here, but he has a point.
user406009
C++'s UB is insane.
05:56
@orlp I was gonna say that it's been a while since I've seen anything new on SO that gets a lot of upvotes.
But when I looked at the 10k tools, I found this:
1028
A: Xcode 7 error: "Missing iOS Distribution signing identity for ..."

Rajat TalwarFrom Apple - Thanks for bringing this to the attention of the community and apologies for the issues you’ve been having. This issue stems from having a copy of the expired WWDR Intermediate certificate in both your System and Login keychains. To resolve the issue, you should first do...

@Mysticial I hate that in SO upvotes are largely unrelated to quality, barring a really extreme exception.
You just have to have the fastest ok quality answer on a popular question.
with a BIG emphasis on those last 2 words
user406009
@orlp Well, isn't that sorta just like the rest of life?
and sometimes it's just terrible
184
A: Why is this code vulnerable to buffer overflow attacks?

orlpOn most compilers the maximum value of an unsigned short is 65535. Any value above that gets wrapped around, so 65536 becomes 0, and 65600 becomes 65. This means that long strings of the right length (e.g. 65600) will pass the check, and overflow the buffer. Use size_t to store the result of...

this answer of mine got 130+ upvotes
before I myself spotted (not any other voters), that it had a critical bug in the example code, never terminating the string
@orlp Yeah I know what you mean. Barring corner cases of platform bugs like that Xcode one (there have been others as well), it's been a longass time since I've seen an "interesting" question go 500+ in under a month.
I got 8 upboats for telling the OP how he was bad at 2d c-style arrays once
06:00
I got 101 votes for telling someone how to write not in
a decent portion of my rep, from "you're iterating over the past-the-end array"
101
A: Check if something is not in a list in Python

orlpThe bug is probably somewhere else in your code, because it should work fine: >>> 3 not in [2, 3, 4] False >>> 3 not in [4, 5, 6] True Or with tuples: >>> (2, 3) not in [(2, 3), (5, 6), (9, 1)] False >>> (2, 3) not in [(2, 7), (7, 3), "hi"] True

amazing
I got 91 upvotes for something completely stupid: stackoverflow.com/questions/7632926/…
The only 'interesting' 100+ answer I have is this one
119
A: Why is it impossible to build a compiler that can determine if a C++ function will change the value of a particular variable?

orlpImagine such compiler exists. Let's also assume that for convenience it provides a library function that returns 1 if the passed function modifies a given variable and 0 when the function doesn't. Then what should this program print? int variable = 0; void f() { if (modifies_variable(f, var...

06:01
I'm a bit sad that it got deleted before it reached 100... oh well. :(
@Mysticial why is that closed?
it's obviously a real question
fucking elitists..
Only 1 month until Jimmy Carr show in Prague!
Morning.
'it's obvious to me, so it must not be a real question'
I think it was "sufficiently stupid", that people just wanted to nuke it.
who cares
people start stupid
06:02
There might've been some jealousy involved too.
user406009
Can one of you guys take a screen shot?
user406009
Us low rep plebs can't see deleted stuff.
@Lalaland no, it's a high-rep privilege
you need to get more repz
oh, I was misremembering that Jerry Coffin wrote the neat int -> unsigned int conversion thing
39
A: Efficient unsigned-to-signed cast avoiding implementation-defined behavior

hvdExpanding on user71404's answer: int f(unsigned x) { if (x <= INT_MAX) return static_cast<int>(x); if (x >= INT_MIN) return static_cast<int>(x - INT_MIN) + INT_MIN; throw x; // Or whatever else you like } If x >= INT_MIN (keep the promotion rules in mind, INT_MIN ...

user406009
06:03
But I have to stay just below 5K. To keep nick happy.
^^ That was my very first "Good Answer" badge.
this question got closed
194
Q: How to calculate the angle between a line and the horizontal axis?

orlpIn a programming language (Python, C#, etc) I need to determine how to calculate the angle between a line and the horizontal axis? I think an image describes best what I want: Given (P1x,P1y) and (P2x,P2y) what is the best way to calculate this angle? The origin is in the topleft and only the...

it has 166k (!) views
user406009
@Mysticial Thanks.
clearly 166 thousand people found it useful enough to click on it in google
@Lalaland I actually had the accept on that answer.
user406009
06:04
Well, it is a common task.
user406009
All worship atan2.
@Lalaland but you need to know the words atan2
just math won't get you atan2 without many corner cases
@orlp Here's my notoriously "basic but useful" answer: stackoverflow.com/questions/8960087/…
307k views.
@Mysticial guilty
231
A: std::string to char*

orlpIt won't automatically convert (thank god). You'll have to use the method c_str() to get the C string version. std::string str = "string"; const char *cstr = str.c_str(); Note that it returns a const char *; you aren't allowed to change the C-style string returned by c_str(). If you want to pr...

^^
user406009
@orlp Yeah, lots of corner cases with floating point math.
06:07
@orlp Fuck... You win.
user406009
I still think infinity * 0 = nan is silly. But I guess it sorta makes sense.
@Mysticial thank you
@Mysticial I still love all these people hating on manual allocation in that answer.
@Mysticial congrats on passing 100k unclicked rep, by the way
@Mysticial you're still crazy for not clicking that rep :P
how do you resist?
how do you read replies?
06:09
I have no idea what you're talking about. :)
ah, denial
a worthy tactic
user406009
@orlp My guess is email.
user406009
I'll bet all my rep on that.
@Mysticial you actually answered my most voted question
which basically turned out to be 'move along people, I'm retarded, a simple bug'
159
Q: Why does GCC generate such radically different assembly for nearly the same C code?

orlpWhile writing an optimized ftol function I found some very odd behaviour in GCC 4.6.1. Let me show you the code first (for clarity I marked the differences): fast_trunc_one, C: int fast_trunc_one(int i) { int mantissa, exponent, sign, r; mantissa = (i & 0x07fffff) | 0x800000; expon...

@Mysticial did you ever mess around with prime sieves?
for any of your bignum code
I remember that. I was at the Anime convention at the time.
user406009
06:12
@Mysticial Which one do you go to? The LA one in July?
on codegolf an interesting sieve implementation was posted
I think I answered it just before I left for the convention. And came back a couple days later wondering at where the upvotes came from.
haven't seen this technique before
13
A: Calculate the number of primes up to n

arjan de lumensC99/C++, 8.9208s (28 Feb 2016) #include <stdint.h> #include <stdio.h> #include <stdlib.h> #include <math.h> #include <string.h> uint64_t popcount( uint64_t v ) { v = (v & 0x5555555555555555ULL) + ((v>>1) & 0x5555555555555555ULL); v = (v & 0x3333333333333333ULL) + ((v>>2) & 0x3333333...

@orlp Yes, but not to any serious degree.
@Lalaland ACEN
in Chicago.
user406009
Oh, that makes sense.
user406009
06:13
I've been to the LA one before but no other ones.
I want to go to AX at some point. But I can't justify flying just for a con.
Not to mention that I'm usually busy on July 4th.
user406009
@orlp Ah, glorious bitsets are wonderful.
I, on the other side, am hardly ever busy. But looking back, I have done quite a lot of things ...
Nothing perplex me more than a busy person who don't accomplish much ... I mean, why are they so busy all the times??
user406009
Ok, I should probably go to bed before I make an even bigger fool of myself.
user406009
I am sure I am going to look back at this chat log tomorrow and regret, but whatever.
user406009
06:22
Good night folks.
Night
06:42
> using biridectional = preferred_fallback<1>;
> error: expected unqualified-id before 'requires'
cos that’s a function called requires
I’m wondering if at the rate we’re going concepts-lite will drop the concept bool pretence and stick to constexpr bool
blatant self-promotion
> { x.foo() } -> ConvertibleFrom<int>;
I have a problem right here lol
the meaning of the constraint is actually ConvertibleFrom<_, int>
posted on March 01, 2016 by Gabriel Ha

*as of this video's release date =P Join us (including our new libs PM, Eric Mittelette) as we get an in-depth look at what cool new C++17 features are available for you in yet another round of STL updates! [pun intended] Timeline [00:25] Interviewees' Intro [01:28] Major Milestone!     [02:15] The * next to the word "is" STL breakdown ("in order

does the overall constraining read right?
which part
06:56
@HubertApplebaum of the things being constrained, can you figure out which type is being checked for what kind of conversion?
resultof(x.foo()) must be convertible from int
alright I guess it’s fine and choosing 'infix' trait/concept names was a good idea all that time back
kudos whoever came up with is_blabla
I wanna comment on HN that one guy is a retard but effort
I'll just light a candle and pray that he finds out on his own
I need a type-level equivalent of as_const (which can’t just be result_of::as_const because I want as_const(0) to remain an error) ._.
fuck it, meta::as_const it is
Luc
You know what we really need
More than a type-level equivalent of as_const even
07:09
I don’t think I do
We need world peace, Luc
well you say that
Technically I type it but I'll allow you the figure of style
Ven
Ven
Wow.
Nice gravatar
07:19
world peace is overrated. Give me a .cstring that returns char* not const char*
it's called &str[0]
hi noobs
javascript patients not allowed in this room please seek treatment elsewhere
ok grandfather
Bwuh.
Oh, right.
I was very upset at Sublime Text.
07:27
why do you always have unreasonable stances towards actually good tools
user784668
07:46
wtf
user784668
I actually used std::list.
k I’m starting to convert more code to concepts, it looks like this. thoughts? never mind the actual concepts, is this readable at all? do you think it looks useful at all?
@Fanael you’ll have to pay for it sevenfold
gotta run bbl

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