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12:04 AM
Someone heard about str_to_number ?
 
Google estimate that 3.610 people have reinvented this function
It's said to be elusive. To have an implementation is to be employed for a life time.
Some say it's a no-brainer, some say it could only be done in PHP. All we really know it, it's in your screenshot right now, so it must be pretty important
 
@sehe go and sleep. :)
 
You wish :)
@Stefano Your code, to me, bears all the hallmarks of the Java-afficionado that sees in C++ templates an opportunity to better overengineer things, all the while forgetting about the fact that static polymorphism is fundamentally more restricted than runtime polymorphism. Believe me, all C++ programmers go through this phase.
That said, if my assessment is right - you're learning C++ - then you're really adept and I predict you will master it way ahead of the others.
 
12:20 AM
@sehe Thank you for taking the time to reply to me. I'm still a newbie of C++, so your assessment is right
 
Ok. Looking good there. Perhaps a liiiiiittle over-ambitious :)
 
Do you think it's possible to do what I would like to do? Even if it's over-ambitious :D
 
I'd suggest really getting the hang of compile-time logic before going for the kill.
Why is the interface statically polymorph and not runtime polymorphic? (Your data seems to be runtime polymorphic anyways) Because recursive function invocation is the natural fit for recursive data structures. Perhaps you can reduce the code by half with some constexpr variadics, but you'll have to choose c++14 to get sane syntax. And choose a compiler that groks it. — sehe 1 min ago
 
I'm using MSVC 2015, I'm not sure if constexpr variadics are supported
 
I think it's feasible if you nest fluent calls - this would mean multiple arguments, so, slightly different approach. But this had been the bane of fluent builders ever since I saw widget composition in TurboVision
  MenuBar := new (PMenuBar, Init(R, NewMenu(
                 NewSubMenu('~F~ile', hcNoContext, NewMenu(GetFileMenuItems(nil)),
                 NewSubMenu('~E~dit', hcNoContext, NewMenu(GetEditMenuItems(nil)),
                 NewSubMenu('~O~rders', hcNoContext, NewMenu(GetOrdersMenuItems(nil)),
                 NewSubMenu('O~p~tions', hcNoContext, NewMenu(GetOptionsMenuItems(nil)),
                 NewSubMenu('~W~indow', hcNoContext, NewMenu(GetWindowMenuItems(nil)),
                 NewSubMenu('~H~elp', hcNoContext, NewMenu(GetHelpMenuItems(nil)), nil)))))))));
... right up to XDocument (Linq-To-XML) in .NET 4.0
@Stefano Variadics yes, constexpr partial
 
12:27 AM
If I'm not understanding wrong what you mean, it seems that it's impossible to respect the "syntax" of my builder to do what I want, but it's possible to do it by changing the sintax to accept an object that builds the subtree for each "complex" field
I don't speak English very well, so please excuse me if I'm not clear enough
 
You should be able to actually add some kind of .parent() call to back-up one level, but that would make all the use of templates even more unnecessary. So, assuming you wanted templates for some reason, I'd say you need to change the syntax.
I'm not really motivated to dive in and do all the work to "demonstrate" it. I think you'll do fine on your own, since you seem quite adept at this.
@Stefano At some point you'll see where you hit the compile-time barrier. I'd suggest dropping the templates alltogether, first, and build a fluent interface on your polymorphic nodes -straight-. Then you figure out what part of the code duplication you really want to "fix" (using templates?! maybe) and post that as a question if you must.
Anyways, I'll be in bed.
Night all!
 
If I drop the templates, how could I use methods like "testMethod" that accepts a pointer to a field of an object?
by the way, thank you for helping me, and good night
 
@Stefano by restricting the type - for simplicity. You can probably generalize later. By the way, it looks like I might not understand your sample at all. It seems to me you already have this parent() function I suggested (but you call it end()), so what was it again that you couldn't achieve?
May I suggest creating a more real-life sample? The testMethod and TestInnerInner::fieldC_ is rather overwhelming, and removes all the functional clues we could use to actually understand what the code is trying to achieve — sehe 8 secs ago
8 mins ago, by sehe
Night all!
 
@sehe 'night
 
Thank you, I will edit tomorrow the question to reflect a real example of what I'm trying to achieve
bye
 
1:34 AM
> The application was unable to start correctly (0xc0000005). Click OK to close the application.
Well shit =/ idk why its doing that (weirdly its not 100%, but almost)
 
1:44 AM
Looks like I figured out why my 2-way memory upgrade isn't playing with on my AMD box...
Kinda sucks...
 
And the reason is ?
 
My memory is 4 x 8 GB @ 1866.
The BIOS auto-selects 1333 MHz with that set.
That's because that's the highest "officially supported" speed for 4 dual-rank DIMMs.
 
Right so you just change it in the bios then?
 
When I "forcibly" clocked it up to 1866MHz to match the memory's rated speed, it broke a unit test last night. So I stressed it this morning and it failed after 4 hours. I stressed it again using relaxed memory timings and it failed after 2 hours.
So now I'm leaving everything at stock (1333 MHz) to see if it survives overnight.
The memory timings seemed to have no effect on the stability. Not that I was expecting that since that memory kit worked fine in my Haswell box for 2 years now.
But googling around, it seems like a limitation in the IMC of the AMD chips.
IOW, this thing is not going to run at 1866 MHz without tweaking the IMC.
I guess the most important part now is to make sure it runs at the "officially rated" 1333 MHz overnight.
The fact that I'm running 4 dual-rank DIMMs at maximum density is probably a worst-case scenario in terms of stressing that IMC...
The Haswell box had no problems with that at all.
 
cough intel > amd cough
 
1:52 AM
That memory also defaults to 1333 MHz on the Haswell box. But the BIOS recognizes the XMP settings and if you enable it, it will run fine at 18666 MHz.
I've also had no issues with 2133 MHz ram that I put into it.
 
Yeah I read about that in MaximumPC recently, they tend to be conservative with default settings
 
I'll be happy if the memory is stable at all (at any speed). I'd hate to have to put the 4 x 4GB back into it - which kinda defeats the whole purpose of getting the 2133 MHz memory in the first place.
 
I dont remember exactly what the reason was, but they were essentially mentioning this because often if you buy a good set of ram you have to go in the bios and make sure its actually running at the speed it can run at.
 
Yeah. In most cases, it's just as simple as turning on XMP in the BIOS.
I didn't see that option in my AMD box. I guess I know why now.
The Corsair 4 x 8GB @ 1866 thats in it right now is on the qualified vendor list (the exact model I have is listed in there). But I guess that doesn't necessarily mean it will be able to run at 18666 MHz.
That said, assuming that the memory is stable at 1333 MHz (and it fucking better be since it's on the QVL), I'm probably still gonna try tweaking the voltages to see if I can get it stable at 1866 MHz.
 
@Mysticial is your ui thing all working now?
 
2:01 AM
Yeah. They put up a beta competition last night. And there's already a bunch of submissions.
 
Cool :)
 
My 5960X @ 4 GHz held up for half a day before getting blown away by the phase-change cooling guys.
But my laptop still holds #1 on the 10 billion digit category since nobody has the memory to run it.
 
is it a laptop only category?
 
One of the reasons why HWBOT is interested in y-cruncher is because it will be the first one that can use a lot of memory. And that's the reason why none of the competitive OCers have a lot of memory.
 
or does it have an insane amount of ram period?
 
2:03 AM
Stage 1: 25 million
Stage 2: 1 billion
Stage 3: 10 billion
The 25 million one isn't meant to stay long term. It's way to fast and too small to really utilize anything with a lot of cores. But at least it's quick for testing purposes.
 
3:02 AM
cool setup
 
oooh
 
just move to the country ...
 
 
1 hour later…
user4922773
4:29 AM
does anyone fancy having a look at some c code for me?
 
nobody fancies it, although some would take a look, but depends on the problem, not many are likely do help you out if it's not a problem they do not care about
 
5:28 AM
@R.MartinhoFernandes Looks like someone went and did it: github.com/tahonermann/text_view -- it's also part of the 2016 Jacksonville Mailing List
 
5:39 AM
@ThePhD This is pretty sexy.
 
6:07 AM
you still here @Telkitty?
is anyone here for that matter?
 
 
2 hours later…
8:05 AM
@edition yeap
 
lol I mean really
10
Q: Female uniforms and colored panties in Star Trek TOS

Hack-RIn Star Trek TOS you very frequently get glimpses of the female crew's panties under their short skirt uniforms. In every case I've noticed they are always a matching color. This makes me wonder -- were the matching panties in fact an official part of Starfleet uniform? Also, was there any...

 
8:24 AM
@Ell Blue Laced Red Wyandotte?
 
8:44 AM
I want to convert int to constexpr like this
constexpr size_t paritysize = 32;

int ConstParitySize=32;
constexpr size_t paritysize = ConstParitySize;
 
You can't
 
what i have tried so far is the following
size_t ConstParitySize() {
return 32;
}
constexpr size_t(*paritysize)() = &ConstParitySize;
 
That would require time travel
 
@milleniumbug means?
it return 1 instead of 32
 
This is fundamentally impossible, stop it, don't even think about it
 
8:49 AM
i want to pass command line argument and want to initialize constexpr with that argument.
is it not possible?
 
Not possible
 
:(
 
Hint: read up on what constexpr meana
 
@milleniumbug I think he's confusing constexpr with cosnt
 
8:55 AM
I want to initialize this template arguments from command line ezpwd::RS<511, 500> rs;
this is a template declaration template < size_t PAYLOAD > struct RS< 511, PAYLOAD> : public __RS(RS, uint16_t, 511, PAYLOAD, 0x211, 1, 1);
Isn't it possible to pass command line arguments to templates?
 
No, you can't set compile-time constants at run-time
 
@james no, it is resolved at compile-time.
I think what you need is Polymorphism, which are like run-time templates, go read on it.
-1
A: implement push relabel algorithm s-t min-cut edges for undirected unweighted graph

alimAfter it terminate, find a height on vertexes, let's say x, all vertexes v with heights h(v)>x forms a piece, while all vertexes w with height h(w)

this is funny, he posted a solution to his own too broad question that couldn't be closed because of the bounty, the solution should've been an edit to his question, and marked it as an answer.
 
9:55 AM
@ThePhD He's seen it I'm pretty sure.
 
we're doing QA lounge again? nice
 
10:31 AM
> Both C and C++ are touring complete
 
@Morwenn Did you mean Turing?
 
I'm only quoting.
 
Ven
don't doubt our morwenn god
 
An additional « o » could have been a typo, but I would never have forgotten to capitalize the « T ».
 
for some reason logic has more priority over joy and humor in my mind ATM. :/
 
10:43 AM
Logic should always come last when fun is involved.
 
@Morwenn Learning about C++ features is enjoyable.
 
@edition Except when you have to learn about aliasing and things like that .____.
 
@Morwenn What sort of aliasing are you referring to?
 
Gutten tag
 
@Shoe It's a slice of layered cake. Did you take this picture?
 
10:50 AM
I wish
 
No, because of the watermark.
 
@edition Random link, looks somewhat relevant: dbp-consulting.com/tutorials/StrictAliasing.html
Royal chocolat might be my favourite chocolate-based cake.
 
@Morwenn Pointer aliasing, then
 
Ven
@Shoe omg
 
I have been eating the whole day, now I am offsetting this by jogging a whole hour
 
11:29 AM
@Shoe Glutton tag!
@Borgleader I'd be so distracted. Give me black terminals :)
 
How would you guys model a series of "events" that are currently written as a bunch of ifs/else ifs + condition and inside some action that needs to happen when the event is "detected"?
I thought of creating an object with two methods for each "event", one to the check if the condition happened and the other to execute the action and then loop over a bunch of these objects, but it seems like overkill.
 
11:48 AM
depends I guess. how easy/hard is it to detect the event?
lots of logic like state.this_thing.that & 0x80 || state.that_thing.a.b.c > 0 && state.foo == bar, or something simpler
 
@Shoe (compound) state machine or reactive extensions
 
@melak47 Yeah, like that
 
@sehe wohoo, fancy bear!
 
I fear I'm close to assimilation point, yes
 
@sehe State machine seems more of an overkill. The fact is that the code is run once and the action to be taken whenever one of these events are detected is just to notify some other process and just end their own.
 
12:00 PM
rightfold's fault?
 
@JohanLarsson I wrote maybe_epoch the other week, taking optional<std::string const&> and returning optional<uint32_t>...
 
@sehe Did someone say... asssimilation? :)
 
Ven
@Shoe comonads
: ^)
 
yesh
@Shoe how? why do ask this question if you didn't hit the limits of maintainability?
 
Reactive extensions seem to involve asynchronous processing, which is not the case here. Everything is strictly synchronous. In fact the order in which each event has to be detected influences the message that is sent. Each event is not mutually exclusive and some events are more important than others.
 
12:01 PM
@JohanLarsson Nope. Sooner: Puppy, Robot, You, Bartek. Maybe some people I forgot
 
@sehe Because I hate the way the code is formatted at the moment
It's hard to read it's hard to mantain
 
> seem
Key word
 
@Shoe what language and have you played with rx?
 
@Shoe So you were looking for abstraction. Then you ruled abstraction overkill. Either you're conflicted or you seem to think state machines are very large, complicated things.
 
@JohanLarsson Javascript
 
12:02 PM
What you describe sounds like a perfect fit for rx.
 
It's a script that detects the most important thing that is going on with the current page and sends a message to a server about it
 
My suggestion: play some with rx today.
 
The events are "what is present on this page" or "if this text is present or not" kind of conditions.
 
parsing html with regex again? :p
 
or the other way around
 
12:04 PM
@sehe No, I think that state machines are not particularly useful in this case because there are no state mutations. It's just detect and fire.
 
@Shoe there are.
> In fact the order in which each event has to be detected influences the message that is sent.
This is the if/then/else shit you're trying to tackle
 
Yes?
The main logic is basically as simple as:
for each events as event:
    if event.isDetected():
        event.fire();
I don't know why I would create a state machine for that
What bothers me about my solution is that I'm creating objects just for the sake of grouping the detect function and the fire functions.
 
well you said the sequence of events detected influences the message sent, so I guess the state you're manipulating is the body of the message
 
It sounds like something that doesn't need an object
 
I'm stuck overarchitecting
 
12:09 PM
@melak47 I'm not sure how that would help with the problem at hand
It's not like the message is in some default state and then it's mutated along the way as events are detected
The messages that are sent are created when they need to be sent
And at that point you already know what event triggered
 
hm.
 
Nevermind, I think I got it
 
BTW I am question banned over this question ... damn it came first on the google search results when I googled for 'International Trolls Day'
 
1:00 PM
That's an achievement.
 
~_~
 
Ven
kittychievement
 
Please don't tell kitty.
> [...] introducing the concept of pilfering constructor.
Not sure where this is going.
 
Ven
link
 
@Ven Variant bikeshed level quarante-douze : open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2016/p0308r0.html
 
Ven
1:09 PM
mdr
 
Don't think I know how I feel about all this. I do know how I feel about the language in this tweet. https://twitter.com/seldo/status/714272018976284672
powertripping
@Morwenn it's going down the path to madness
> This semi-destructive move is called pilfering and is accessed by a constructor with the signature T::T(std::pilfered<T>) noexcept, where std::pilfered<T> wraps a reference to T:
So much pillow talk
In short, it's more of a std::rvalue_reference_wrapper, no
 
Pillow is cool.
 
@Telkitty 404 - shuddaputaringonit
@Morwenn assumed musical reference again
 
Nope, I was thinking of the Python library :p
 
// keeping it simple here for now
 
1:19 PM
@JohanLarsson But how soon is now?
 
constantly happening I think
or dunno
 
oh
are those the russian girls?
 
Ven
yes
<3
 
gonna listen to sinead oconnor now i think
 
1:22 PM
@JohanLarsson The original song was by The Smiths though.
 
user1804599
help how to infer let rec.
 
is that ocaml
 
user1804599
sorry I didn't mean to ping you
 
user1804599
but yeah recursive let
 
user1804599
currently my type checker infers non-recursive lets only
 
1:24 PM
you could use object for max flexibility
 
user1804599
Ok, I added something, and now my type checker hits infinite recursion.
 
> I added something
Sounds like a proper commit message :p
 
Ven
pilfering consrtuctors seriously
fuck these guys
 
user1804599
:( :( :(
 
user1804599
1:39 PM
Yay, now it infers the type of let x = x in x!
 
user1804599
:D
 
@Ven What, dont you love the shiny std::is_pilfer_constructible<T>?
 
Ven
noidon't
 
user1804599
Now let fix = fn f { f fn _ { fix f; }; } in fix.
 
user1804599
It infers let fix = fn f { let x = f x in x; } in fix too, cool. Incorrectly, though. It says (a -> b) -> c instead of (a -> a) -> a.
 
1:43 PM
@Ven Better introduce pilfer references and write foobar(foobar&&& other); :D
 
Ven
@Morwenn omg:::
@Morwenn well actually, having a universal-reference symbol wouldn't be that bad
 
Or foobar(foobar~ other); if the tilde reminds you better of the destructive nature of the operation.
I like that the proposal proposes a true valueless std::variant, but lol at what it is needed to achieve it.
 
I need a third bool state.
FILENOTFOUND
dammit
 
@rubenvb boost::tribool
 
@Morwenn I'm doing C#/Xamarin/MvvmCross.
and running into limited coolness of the UWP platform. But I really want a better kodi remote, so I'm going to keep trying to get this thing off the ground.
 
2:03 PM
@Ven wat
 
I have heard similar complaints before.
and whilst I think they're not necessarily unfounded, I also feel that they're missing the point.
 
user406009
@Ven I really wonder how many proposals have been thrown at the std::variant problem.
 
user406009
I think it's in the double digits by now.
 
user406009
People just keep on writing them.
 
2:15 PM
Also there is yet another proposal to remove stuff from fold expressions.
 
user1804599
Remove fold expressions completely.
 
user1804599
Implement a library solution.
 
user1804599
In Boost.
 
@Lalaland Because the situation sucks massively. The problem is that nobody can find any remotely good solutions
 
@Lalaland At least 18 (including the several revisions of similar papers).
Also including the language-based variants.
 
user406009
2:25 PM
@Morwenn Someone should publish a book.
 
@Lalaland Please go on.
 
user406009
"Variants: A History"
 
Arrg. I tried. I'm lost. What are you trying to achieve? I think you're overcomplicating in at least two dimensions. Are you - by any chance - trying to map XML serialization of an object graph? Can you show how the resultant tree is used? Can you justify the "proxy" (this is probably where you went full-template blind)? If you forget about your code, and state the goal (perhaps with pseudo code of how to use it), I might want to give two competing implementations focusing on different elegances. Right now, I honestly have no clue - it's all tangled. — sehe 46 secs ago
The whole notion of "proxy" there seems to be to me
@Lalaland dangerously close to holocaust denial
 
Hum, there might be a proposal to add C99 designated initializers to C++ in the pre-Oulu mailing.
 
user406009
@Morwenn That would be awesome. I love that feature.
 
user406009
2:30 PM
Although keyword arguments would have been better.
 
user406009
But we will probably only get that on the wrong side of never.
 
@Lalaland Except keyword args can't really be made as elegant (unless argument names are somehow going to be mangled into prototypes as well ?!?)
 
user406009
@sehe Yeah. The syntax would probably get really messed up.
 
@Lalaland You can have them now by using a param object struct. Perhaps you can suggest them to allow anonymous struct arguments:
void foo(struct { int wholla = 42; std::string name = "beelzebub"; optional<heavy_class const&> heavy } args);
@Lalaland I think it's the ABI that would get beyond repair in the naive approach. Syntax could actually be fine e.g. python like.
 
.... :<
 
2:34 PM
(wrt to anonymous argument struct + default NSMI I'm not sure how that plays with aggregate rules since c++17; I think it should work)
 
@sehe There's a proposal to allow anonymous structs as return type, but none for parameters IIRC.
 
It's eerily related. The benefits become apparent with designated initializers...
 
user406009
The C++ Abi is already pretty screwed up.
 
user406009
The C ABI is so much more sane
 
That's why. It would probably break compilation of existing code bases, including /just/ standard library on e.g. MSVC
@Lalaland That's like saying your dead relatives have so much less health issues
8
(pardon the rough analogy, in case it's sensitive... :()
I'm going to have to do groceries... Laters
 
2:39 PM
Apparently the proposal to remove more stuff from the standard library got well-received and some of the things that "might be considered for deprecation and removal" are now seriously considered.
 
I never thought I'd despite group work this much.
I'm seething already.
 
Namely std::is_literal_type, the whole temporary buffer API, std::raw_storage_iterator, std::iterator, and some redudant members of std::allocator could be deprecated then removed.
 
I never liked the temporary buffer / raw storage stuff.
It never made sense.
 
I use the temporary buffer thingy.
 
Was it for ensuring that you can grab a chunk of memory that's already been preallocated somewhere?
 
2:45 PM
It's for the adaptative mergesort, which uses memory if available, and uses an inplace algorithm otherwise.
Since the algorithm is recursive, it can take advantage of any amount of memory given to it.
But if it is about to go, I can reimplement an equivalent feature by hand with proper RAII resource management.
 
user1804599
@sehe dat code
 
user1804599
 
Ell
3:13 PM
@Telkitty do you get attached?
 
@rubenvb the UWP platform being the Universal Windows Platform platform? :)
 
@melak47 Yes. That's the platform platform I'm talking about.
hamburger menu yay!
 
does it have a nice selection of hamburgers?
 
try vim or nop for the rest of the day?
I tried atom, was like a sick joke
opened a .md file and there was lag when typing
 
Ell
haha
 
3:24 PM
@Morwenn terrible, we already have this, and this is called "moving". I mean, seriously, "you can call destructor on it" is the only guarantee you get for arbitrary T on normal moves
 
@milleniumbug You can also reassign to them IIRC.
 
Hello @sehe
 
Yes it does, actually (as in: none, you must pick something)
I'm going for a font glyph.
 
@rubenvb :D
 
@melak47 (referred to from here)
I'm stuck on what design to choose for my Kodi remote
I planned on just blatantly copying Kore's
But then, how is that original?
Ah yes, mine'd work on Windows.
And Android
 
3:41 PM
@sehe The goal is to be able to take an XML structure and convert it to a corresponding object graph. The proxy (maybe I should have named the class better) is there because the type of a child node is different from the type of the parent node and the children_ vector expects an instance of a class with the type of the parent.
 
that just tells you that the children_ vector is fucked up.
 
I don't know how I could then store the children nodes without losing the type of the field.
being an object graph, at some point you will have to change the type of the node property, so somehow you have to store it along with all the other nodes
just for reference, I'm talking about this code: cpp.sh/7c3y
 
11
A: templated operator() overload C++

Johannes Schaub - litbThe member template is a dependent name, because its semantics depend on the type of f_type. That means you should put "template" before its name (to disambiguate the use of the "less-than" token), similar to how you should put typename before dependent qualified names: template<size_t i, class ...

Hey @JohannesSchaub-litb -- do you know WHY your answer has to be the case? I understand it for constructors but for plain function objects it seems like that syntax should work, when it's universally rejectedon all platforms. Thoughts?
 
user1804599
3:57 PM
Oil is like liquid fat.
 
that's... exactly what it is.
 
well, it's really not.
depending on which kind of oil you're talking about really
 
Organic oils are just fats (Lipids).
 
he never specified organic.
 
vOv
 
4:05 PM
Exception thrown at 0x0000000076EC07EA (ntdll.dll) in dart_sandbox.exe: 0xC0000005: Access violation writing location 0x000000013FCBEAFC.
and i havent hit the first line in main yet :(
 
user1804599
lol Dart
 
Rekt.
I got my new project, @Borgleader
 
Google has no useful search results for this (there are 2 results total and they look shady as fuck, im not clicking those)
 
This is essentially what we're going to be doing.
An expression library that compiles to GLSL code and then gets run.
 
Oh thats sounds a lot cooler than what I was expecting
 
4:10 PM
@Borgleader Static object constructor.
 
Yeah thats the thing, its not in my code, so its in the library im using, but it doesnt happen 100% of the time (uninitialized variable maybe?) and the callstack is 100% in ntdll so i have no idea where its coming from (but like i said, probably the library i included)
 
4:40 PM
@Borgleader Stick breakpoints in all the static objects in the library
You'll catch one
then you can step-through until it crashes.
 
@ThePhD its the dart sdk, i dont have the source.
theres the dart_api.h file but it has no static objects in it
 
Dart isn't open source?
 
well i used the prebuilt binaries
so i have like 4 header files and a lib
 
RIP you.
 
user1804599
Don't use Dart.
 
5:02 PM
Dart sucks dartballs.
 
5:16 PM
Didn't expect him to be alive.
 
lol what a terrible thing
that guy needs more than just not emitting CRT warnings
 
Hi
it's hot
 
5:33 PM
@ThePhD I'm happy to see you alive :)
 
you get @that
:D
 
@Puppy Yeah, but I have to compile his thing, so. vOv
 
Is @That a threat?
 
your face is a threat @That
 
5:51 PM
ok, @that is getting a bit mean
 
nah I think @that is totally fine
 

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