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user1804599
11:05
This is why I love structural interfaces.
user1804599
No need to provide all fields of a large struct when unit testing a function that only needs a few.
What languages do that
Damn, took a train to Spindlersfeld
@DmitriBudnikov javascript
I said languages
11:18
> You save time when you don't need to have an awards ceremony every time a C statement does what it's supposed to.
@R.MartinhoFernandes on porpoise?
@sehe yeah :D
Under the assumption that human intelligence is just emergent behaviour from neurons firing and so on, that means we can be simulated in a computer, right?
That would me we are describable by a formal system.
user1804599
user1804599
So many buttons.
@R.MartinhoFernandes sure. Just a matter of how accurate. I suppose it's most accurate if you just grab a brain and run it
11:21
Gödel would say we're incomplete then.
user1804599
@DmitriBudnikov TypeScript.
user1804599
@BartekBanachewicz JavaScript has no types.
@R.MartinhoFernandes :) That doesn't mean we're undeterministic at the same time
user1804599
function greet(person: {name: string}): string {
    return "hello " + person.name;
}
@Zoidberg wrong. It has types Object, Number, String and Function at the very least
user1804599
11:22
Now you can test the function without having to construct a whole person, which is nice since that'd cost 9 months.
What's a theorem that cannot be proved in our formal system?
user1804599
@BartekBanachewicz No, it has at most one type, which is the type of all expressions.
No, your mom.
user1804599
Object, Number, String, and Function are functions.
hmm right
OTOH
user1804599
11:24
TypeScript and Flow treat them as types.
> (5).x = 4
4
> (5).x
undefined
meh
user1804599
> (5).constructor.prototype.x = 4
4
> (5).x
4
user1804599
:3
hey everybody
does anyone familiar with the desktop duplication api service?
@Zoidberg You can do it in one if you parallelise with nine women.
user1804599
11:28
But I won't, since that's impossible.
alright i'll just put here my question
what about no
i'm working on a screen sharing project in c++,when one side sends frames and the second side recieve &process then dispaly it in a picturebox
@Slashy that's amazingly boring
@Slashy have fun
11:31
no sarcasm please.@BartekBanachewicz @milleniumbug
That's no sarcasm
now,the intresting part comes.
wait
user1804599
So in Germany it's illegal to say dictators are goat fuckers.
11:32
26
Q: how to make screen screenshot with win32 in c++?

user63898how can i make screen-shots of the local pc screen with win32 c++?

Don't post it
just listen :)
user1804599
Reminds me of some past period.
OMG ROBOT HAS A NEW AVATAR
11:32
@BartekBanachewicz no.. so no..
do you really think im stuck on this stage? on screenshot taking?lol
im actually looking for ideas for the screen process protocol
user1804599
ZeroMQ, JPEG, next.
@Slashy for the what
@Slashy if you're roaming around the internet asking in random chatrooms? yeah, that's what I thought.
in the desktop duplicaion api,apart from the frames i get also rectangles of "Dirty regions" and "moved regions"
which actually notifies me whenever a portion of the screen changed,and where it actually changed.
alright?
well okay
so what's the problem?
now,first i send the intial full screenshot(compressed of course).
user1804599
11:34
and then send diffs
user1804599
so
then,i only send a areas,that changed,i mean i send the bounds of each area,and the bytes of it
user1804599
ZeroMQ, JPEG, four integers encoding changed rectangle, next.
i loop (in the sender side) throught each changed area,i perform a xor to the whole bytes(cause dirty regions does not mean the whole regions changed)
@Zoidberg what what what hat
what's four integers encdoing change rectangles?
what's four integers encdoing change rectangles?
3 mins ago, by Bartek Banachewicz
so what's the problem?
seriously you've said so many words
11:37
@BartekBanachewicz less "DANGER WILL ROBINSON" and more "mmhm?"
and we're no closer to knowing what the fuck are you on about
@BartekBanachewicz there's no actual problem.. the screen sharing works fine.. but the fps is quite low.. when there's no massive change on the screen it can get to 15~20fps
@Slashy laffo. Of course it'll suck in perf, why do you think screen sharing is done in hardware
but when opening a google windows for example,the data sent is huge
even after compression
and the fps is really low
it's almost like no one else encountered this problem before
11:39
@BartekBanachewicz what's "perf"?
> Look I made a car and it rides
> Except I can't quite get it to ride fast and not consume too much fuel
my english is not perfect as you can see haha
@Slashy performance
@BartekBanachewicz alright. that's a completley saracsm.
i just want to get some ideas
and the protocol
user1804599
do you compress the data?
11:40
@Slashy You're trying to do a project much too big for your skills.
user1804599
use JPEG
user1804599
it compresses the data
i use lz4
user1804599
use something optimised for images
11:40
what do you think the response will be
@BartekBanachewicz how do you know what my skills are?
by seeing the kind of questions you're asking
for improving the efficiency
user1804599
also get a decent internet connection
user1804599
YouTube can stream 1080p 60 FPS just fine.
11:41
@Slashy let me get visual with you
@Zoidberg youtube has their own processing protocol.. it's prettty awesome yeah
@BartekBanachewicz ?
@BartekBanachewicz very funny.
very.
@BartekBanachewicz "FPS" could be "performance" in general
@slaphappy yea
user1804599
11:44
Or "floating point shizzle."
This is actually an interesting and IMO true diagram
user1804599
Schnizzle.
@Zoidberg do you know extremly fast jpeg compressing libraries?
what about turbojpeg?
@Slashy jpeg's are concerned with static images. What you need is a stream
@Slashy if you're streaming, you need mpeg
11:46
you can use the information you've previously sent and take deltas from that, as a rough oversimplification
@BartekBanachewicz i use deltas, i xor the previous and current changed regions.
I know a guy who owns a company that's basically a netflix of nvidia shields
@BartekBanachewicz @slaphappy mpeg for compressing jpeg blocks?sure?
mpeg for compressing mpeg blocks
@slaphappy but i dont need to generate the difernce between frames,the desktop duplicaion api already does it for me
11:49
@Slashy Good job, one optimization out of 3535057 which MPEG (any of them) does for you
Anyway, about that shield thing, those things are usually done in hardware. AFAIK you have a specialized chip in your video card that does that. That's pretty much the only way to get decent performance.
@slaphappy also a different workload
if it's supposed to be desktop sharing, you can save shitton by doing it per-window
as an additional perk, you can then move the windows around in the receiving client as if they were on your PC
Yeah, I didn't read the transcript lol
I'm not aware of any sharing thing that does that, and it would actually be cool
But the shield thing is more interesting so I'll keep talking about that
@BartekBanachewicz what dafuq does that mean?
@milleniumbug yay prime number of optimizations, @sehe will be cheering
@Slashy arrows, man. Use them.
So, he has a server that hosts the games themselves, and he bought specialized hardware to encode the streams. It runs pretty fast.
11:52
@sehe I'm not sure what you mean. Deterministic can be ambiguous, especially in this context.
The issue is that there is no decent 4k encoding hardware in the market, so he has to implement something himself (I mean the company has to)
Anyway, it's a pretty cool problem to solve, and it's actually for a purpose (not reinventing the wheel)
@milleniumbug what are slashy arrows sir
> sir
Spoken like true Indian
you racist
@BartekBanachewicz Like X11 forwarding, except not shitty
nwp
nwp
12:04
@Zoidberg really?
@AndyProwl that wild luck
Can I call .clear on a moved-from container?
And then append new items to it?
Yes.
.clear has no prerequisites.
12:23
Shouldnt you be able to call anything? I mean, the state of the container is supposed to be valid right?
Ven
Ven
@StackedCrooked since a moved-from container is still valid, of course
@Borgleader yes
@JerryCoffin Congrats on 300k!
@Ven Uh...thanks, but I'm still about 5K short of that...
Ven
Ven
@JerryCoffin uuuh?
@BartekBanachewicz you can't store stuff on a primitive (but the language will convert whatever you got to an Object whenever you need it)
@Slashy The first part of MPEG compression is similar to JPEG (i.e., break the frame down into blocks, and do DCT, etc., on each. From there, it takes macroblocks, and does motion compensation on them. So no, you wouldn't try to do JPEG, then MPEG.
Ven
Ven
This kind of things is why non-const references are not allowed to prolonge temporary object lifetimes in C++ (well, except for MSVC)
12:38
@Ven A quick check on the calculator says that 300K = 307200.
Ven
Ven
@JerryCoffin you should fix your calculator.
clearly it needs to learn the difference between units and imaginary units :)
@Ven I see nothing wrong with it.
nwp
nwp
@Ven what kind of thing?
the video?
@Borgleader <3 <3 <3
@Ven Despite claiming to have a "scientific" mode, it seems to lack any knowledge of imaginary numbers (e.g., attempting sqrt(-1) yields "Invalid input", neither "i" nor "j"). OTOH, that seems to have little relevance to the simple act of multiplying 1024 by 300.
nwp
nwp
12:41
@TonyTheLion that probably evaluates to true
I should give myself an animal name and portrait
yes it does, @Borgleader is the greatest :D
nwp
nwp
It'll probably be a turtle
@TonyTheLion recently assimilated?
a long time ago I was assimilated
@BartekBanachewicz It's Wall-E finding a Rubik's cube
Ven
Ven
@nwp allowing non-const references to prolonge temporary object lifetimes
@JerryCoffin K = 1000. Ki=1024.
12:45
@Ven Sorry, not buying this latter-day redefinition (and I can't imagine a real programmer who would!)
Ven
Ven
vOv
if you believe "K" was invented for that purpose.
also please don't "no true scotsman" me :).
@Ven But you forget--I was there when it was invented (although we originally called it "Kappa").
Ven
Ven
@JerryCoffin when kilo was invented?
also, one more use of "Kappa" in my book, thanks :)
@LucDanton I'm not a fan of 1, 2, 3, and 8, but the other ones look nice.
@Ven No, when Kappa was invented. "Kilo" came thousands of years later.
12:50
I'm a fan of 4 and 5.
Ven
Ven
there are a lot of different "Kappa"s, though!
And I often get in debates over them.
@Ven There is one true kappa, and many false imitations.
@R.MartinhoFernandes much less scary
nwp
nwp
12:55
IDGI
also physics should have trademarked the word singularity to essentially mean black hole to prevent people from re-branding it as AI improving itself
I expected more from mister munroe
The laptop become self-aware (and able to fly for comic effect), and it left his human owner to do his work for himself. The phone didn't buy the singularity thing, so it didn't get to fly, I guess.
@nwp Singularity has the same essential meaning in both cases.
@TonyTheLion <3 <3 <3
Also, physics stole it from mathematics.
Ell
Ell
singularity has many uses
one kinda same meaning right
And worse, physics itself uses it for meanings other than black hole.
13:04
Singularity is a concept that no one has really seen, let alone going through
Ven
Ven
didn't you?
That'd explain so much, yet so little.
Singularity makes perfect sense to me. I've been single for about 4 months now
4
So there was a thing stolen. And the monitoring shows two women doing that.
And a facebook comment underneath is like "omg and they were women", so naturally I've responded with "what that has to do with anything"
Apparently it does.
> Males comprised 81.7% of those arrested for stolen property
Males comprised 98.0% of those arrested for forcible rape
2 percent were carried out by women?
13:17
Sure why not? Raping other women or children...
nwp
nwp
6/74 rape victims were men, so there is a chance for everyone to not stay a virgin forever
right, I forgot about all those statutory rapes by hot female teachers ...
@nwp mostly would be by men too
so don't be so excited
@Mikhail explain the 81.7% for thievery then
bigger hands
@BartekBanachewicz Dunno, those seem like what I would call bland statistics.
You can't draw interesting conclusions from them.
@BartekBanachewicz Yeah, but that's given in a vacuum. You are given the gender distribution of stolen property arrests without the gender distribution of stolen property perpetrators.
@R.MartinhoFernandes are you suggesting that women simply get caught less
nwp
nwp
QVariant v;
v = "42hello";
assert(v.canConvert<int>());
why does that assert not fail?
@BartekBanachewicz No, I'm suggesting you cannot draw any such conclusions from there.
nwp
nwp
hate QT
Ell
Ell
13:23
yeah you only have the prior but you need the posterior
The only thing you can say about those numbers is the numbers themselves.
And that's pretty boring.
nwp
nwp
@BartekBanachewicz :( Thanks
@nwp Should it say 42 or something?
nwp
nwp
no, it should return false making the assert fail
pushing different types through a string is a bad idea in the first place
especially without a proper serialization library
13:31
> Qt
Ven
Ven
you're the qt.
nwp
nwp
for me it is still Q-T, that thing doesn't deserve to be called cutie
an abomination, and yet pretty much the best one can get
I avoid using Qt because I want to avoid pronouncing it.
nwp
nwp
now I write dumb code like bool is_an_int = qvariant.toString().size() > 3;, hoping no int will have more than 3 digits and no string will be smaller than 4 characters
3
bad software requires more bad software as a workaround for the original bad software, that's why software is so shitty
turns out "hello" and "" are also valid ints...
nwp
nwp
13:45
@BartekBanachewicz Programming is hard and blaming other people's libraries is easy
it also makes you come out as an incompetent badlet
nwp
nwp
also, thanks again, you saved software today
@nwp I'm beaming with joy because of that.
I kinda wish my code could be fixed as easily as that.
nwp
nwp
maybe it can with some fresh eyes
nwp
nwp
13:50
looks like haskell, I thought functional programming solves all problems and makes the code pretty as well
+1 for raising issues in your own project and tagging it as a question
@Mikhail It just means I'm not sure about that yet.
@nwp It's the design problem, not the language problem.
> We didn't have the color Blue until modern times,
speaks of a recent cured colour blind
Ven
Ven
@BartekBanachewicz do you even idiom brackets?
nwp
nwp
14:00
maybe we all can see more colors some day
maybe we can see if we get a new racism-like thing with "enhanced people" like books and movies predict or things stay civilized
@nwp I'm not convinced.
Removing the lens doesn't matter if the receptors don't react to UV light.
And the occurrence of photokeratitis runs counter to the idea that the lens absorbs the UV light.
nwp
nwp
but they do react, according to this
@nwp Er.
Read again.
nwp
nwp
maybe that was the wrong link
there was something about a drug that changed the red receptors to react to infrared light and the UV light sensitivity was supposed to be natural
I don't know, can't find it anymore
Being able to detect light isn't the same thing as 'see-ing' that color. For example, a B&W camera detects at the visible spectrum but we wouldn't call it a color camera.
I think you're using a wrong definition of "detect".
@R.MartinhoFernandes No I'm not
Well, define it.
Did you want me to say "sensitive to"?
nwp
nwp
14:16
Give that camera a scene that differs only in hue, and not in saturation nor lightness.
Can it detect that they're different?
Ven
Ven
what's a "pmf" type in C++?
pointer to member function, I assume
@nwp The source used is The Guardian, which uses self-reports as their own source.
> In Update 2, as measured on my machine, “stream >> dbl” is 19.5x faster, and “stream >> flt” is 17.0x faster. Yes, that’s TIMES, not percent.
awesome
Ven
Ven
14:19
do you often pipe streams to doubles or floats?
For all I know, those reports come from the visual equivalent of audiophiles.
@Ven Not really, but I did
@R.MartinhoFernandes luminophiles :P
@Mikhail Or maybe the two clauses in the last sentence have different subjects and you didn't realise that. I.e. the first clause refers to the camera's sensor, and the second refers to the camera itself.
hmmm, the next table suggests it's not that impressive
14:21
I am not my liver.
A more important problem is that being sensitive won't really effect your perception - very much. For example, people who are more sensitive to UV, will simply see something UV as a bit brighter.
I am talentless at writing blogs - current entry has 120 words and 28 pictures ... and it took me forever to come up with those 120 words!
I am going to bed instead ...
@Ven do I what
Ven
Ven
@BartekBanachewicz idiom brackets
14:24
There's also a mention of this in wikipedia, but it uses the same self-reported sources.
@Ven what the
Ven
Ven
hahahhahahaah
Teaching obscure Haskell stuff to Bartek is fun :P.
I don't know of any A/B study of this.
lol
1
Q: maximum pointer/array size in linux kernel module

Gika KentHow do I know before allocating, how big of an array can I create? Or how to position my array so it does not conflict with something in the memory map? I have this configuration VM running on Virtualbox with Operating system: Centos 7 Memory: 2GB Processor: E7500@2,9Ghz Host OS: Suse Leap 41 ...

"I'm writing a kernel module and I've overflowed the stack, now what"
Ven
Ven
RIP.
15:05
Where can I read about the latest range designs?
hasn't it been stuck on Nieblers v3 for a year now?
Dunno. I am not familiar with that anyway.
I've deliberately stayed away from anything ranges.
15:18
@milleniumbug "I'm about to be yelled at by Linus" ftfy ;)
@R.MartinhoFernandes What changed your mind?
I gave up and decided upon deference to others.
I haven't seen a design that makes me happy.
15:43
@R.MartinhoFernandes I wouldn't say that Eric's design makes me entirely happy, but I would say it does a lot less to make me unhappy than any of the others I've seen.
15:54
@JerryCoffin also - he has a working implementation, muy important
@ScarletAmaranth I've seen others with at least partial implementations--but yes, having a working (and complete) implementation is clearly a big help.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah, Eric has a Ranges v3 lib on github.
My understanding is that it will be STL2.
But it is not "finished" yet.
I think it is promising though.
Although I haven't looked at the v3 code beyond keeping an eye on the issues page via my email.
Did you see his talk on ranges at CPPCon?
Assume I saw nothing. Links welcome :D
@R.MartinhoFernandes ill be interested to see what you think of it
so please share :)
@Telkitty Of course women are capable of rape.
16:07
@caps Well, it's certainly the basis of the leading contender. It (especially the parts related to Concepts) might change substantially before making it into the standard though.
@JerryCoffin I want the Ranges TS to reach a point where compilers will start offering it in an experimental include folder.
#include <experimental/ranges> > #include <boost/ranges/...>
Also, boost/ranges is oblivious to rvalues, which has been obnoxious to me in a real-world way in several instances.
I'm betting I probably won't get to use the Ranges TS until C++17 has been officially released for a while, though.
...and MSVC will delay its use in production code to 2027 :D
@milleniumbug MSVC's been on the ball in recent years, relatively.
Their implementation for std::async, for instance, is better than what you'll get on Linux.
By Update 3, the rangesV3 lib might even work on MSVC :p
16:23
@caps When is that due? never?
@Borgleader IDK. See the github link.
Update 2 was just released.
@milleniumbug fabulous! /cc @AndyProwl
@Borgleader There were about 4 months between Update 1 and Update 2.
Nov. 30 and Mar. 30
hi guyz
i try to fill uint32_t array with uint32_t values but it always empty
any idea
I do: you have a bug in your code
16:31
agree the value is converted but not fill-out with array i am doing it in objective c
There's an idea: fuck right off, mate
what
@Anjan In that case, the bug in in your brain (though that does nothing to rule out bugs in your code as well).
16:36
oh
@набиячлэвэлиь delete this, not very nice
@набиячлэвэлиь Do we really need another copy when it's linked just above and already on the starboard?
guyz i m stuck at one point so i ask sorry if any issue
You better be
@JerryCoffin I don't know, do we?
@набиячлэвэлиь No.
@Anjan probably better to ask in a room about objectve c
16:37
@JerryCoffin Well then that's your question answered
@JohanLarsson really. That seems unrelated (albeit very similar)?
i know better abt objective c but at point where pure c is needed and i am stuck
@Anjan Reduce the code to a minimal, complete, verifiable example, then post a question on Stack Overflow.
thanks guyz
@набиячлэвэлиь Some day when you're bored, look up "rhetorical question".
16:40
@JerryCoffin Some day when you're bored, look up "sarcasm" and related terms.
@набиячлэвэлиь Why? Has something about it changed since I invented it?

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