« first day (2080 days earlier)      last day (2861 days later) » 

6:02 PM
@Bassie How so?
 
6:22 PM
Anyone know a good linux terminal emulator that isn't a default one because konsole cuts off bold text
 
Ell
@exitc0de I like urxvt
but you won't if you need secondary clipboard
 
I'll give that a look, thanks
 
For the func(MyType()), what's the type of the parameter?
rvalue reference?
 
Ell
I think so
 
Yeah, r-value reference.
 
Ell
6:27 PM
I thought I knew this stuff, but cicada made me second guess every time now
 
You gotta explicitly std::move, except in the cases where it's a variable inside of a scope that's being returned.
In which case it allows the C++ implementation to move it out / RVO it out
Otherwise, the compiler can't be sure you don't use that "x" somewhere else, so it has to do the by-value safe thing (copy).
 
@ThePhD That I know, I was trying to write a function that takes an object that it will modify. But the user may pass in an object that is an rvalue.
If I declare it as Type& it won't compile since a reference can't bind to an rvalue.
But if it take it by const-reference, it makes a copy.
 
@Mysticial Type&&.
It's a forwarding reference.
When Type is a template name.
 
@ThePhD it's an rvalue reference arghhhhh
 
@ThePhD Doesn't quite work for what I'm doing. But I think just taking the parameter as Type will work. Let me explain.
 
Ell
6:33 PM
@ThePhD it's not though :3
 
I'm trying to do something like this:
template <typename Plan>
void use_plan(Plan x){
  //  Modify x
}


MyPlan plan(...)

use_plan(plan);     //  Use case 1.
use_plan(MyPlan()); //  Use case 2.
 
Ell
oh, it is a template type :V
 
I want to avoid the copy in both cases.
If the template parameter becomes MyPlan&&, in the second call, it sounds like it will do what I want.
Oh wait, no.
It still copies in the first case.
 
Ell
have func(Type&&) and func(Type&)?
mebbe
 
Plan is a plain value.
 
Ell
6:36 PM
that way it shouldn't copy in either case
 
It will copy.
You can get around this by std::ref( plan )
 
Ell
0h wait
just Type&& shouldn't copy either
 
But then you need to unwrap the type.
Yes, as I was saying.
@Mysticial ^ No move/copy.
 
@ThePhD Wat? Move doesn't get called in the last case?
 
No.
std::move is a conversion from Plan to Plan&&
it's strictly a static_cast
And it just converts to a r-value reference.
It doens't actually DO anything.
The action happens when you take the moved thing and put it into a plain type.
That is
Plan p;
Plan&& rp = std::move(p); // nothing happens here
Plan do_move_here(rp); // move constructor actually called
 
6:41 PM
Oh right...
I'm too used to the move being used in conjunction with the assignment.
 
nwp
@ThePhD how is the move constructor called there? rp is an lvalue
you would need Plan do_move_here(std::move(rp)); // move constructor actually called
 
Oh, right.
These convoluted rules. :B
 
@Mysticial might want to take a look into forwarding references (formerly perfect references/perfect forwarding)
 
@LucDanton That's one of the areas that I sorted treated like magic since it was pretty convoluted. lol
 
6:52 PM
@fredoverflow banana trees are no trees
 
And if any one is curious, my exact use case is this:
template <typename Iterator>
void use_plan(Iterator&& iter){  // What parameter type?
  iter++;
  iter++;
  iter++;
  iter++;
}

MyIterator iter(...)

// Avoid copy in both cases.
touch_4_items(iter);
touch_4_items(MyIterator( ... ));
 
Ell
btw use std::advance(iter, 4)
 
@Mysticial MyIterator& and MyIterator, respectively
have fun with that
 
Parameter type looks fine to me as it is...?
 
@Ell Doesn't work in my case. The iterator isn't an iterator from a C++ standpoint.
 
Ell
6:54 PM
Oh I see
 
It doesn't point to something in a container.
 
What makes you think Iterator&& is the wrong choice?
@LucDanton "Perfect references"? You probably meant "Universal references".
 
@fredoverflow That does seem to be the only thing that works without duplicating the function with overloads.
 
@fredoverflow quiet you dinosaur!
 
Why do you want to pass an rvalue, increment it 4 times, and then forget about the iterator?
In other words, I don't see how touch_4_items(MyIterator( ... )); is useful.
 
nwp
6:57 PM
@fredoverflow because side effects probably
 
Ell
^this
it might be an input iterator for instance
 
nwp
like file pointers that actually advance the file position
 
Ell
but as mysticial said it's not actually a container thing
 
The iterator takes a pointer to some object declared elsewhere. I want to do something to 4 regions of that object.
 
Ell
@fredoverflow "Universal references"? You probably meant "Forwarding reference"
;)
 
6:58 PM
There will be a bunch of different iterators each of which touch the object with different patterns of access. IOW, it's complicated.
 
9 mins ago, by Luc Danton
@Mysticial might want to take a look into forwarding references (formerly perfect references/perfect forwarding)
> formerly
 
Ell
oh watttt
how embarrassing :3
I'm so confused now
my bad :P
I've been away from c++ for far too long
 
Interesting factoid: Depending on your platform, "for far too long" contains either 2 or 3 keywords.
 
Ell
3?
I guess the far?
:P
 
correct
 
Ell
7:00 PM
I can see the for and long
what does far mean though?
 
16 bit systems distinguished between near and far pointers.
 
far pointers, a vestige from 16 bit windows programming
 
near are in the same segment, far are in an arbitrary segment.
 
Ell
@fredoverflow I was thinking "far jump" and "short jump" in my head
but then I remembered it was longjmp
 
@Ell You can read a lot about those in Raymond Chen's book The Old New Thing (or on his blog I think most of the book is on there, but I prefer the book format)
 
7:02 PM
@Borgleader That's a wonderful book!
 
Its a pretty good book tbh, a lot of funny stories and anecdotes.
 
@fredoverflow I finished it 3 weeks ago or so. I liked it quite a bit.
 
"Wtf Lua has a GC" sometimes I feel like writing wrappers is a bad thing, people don't understand even the basics of the language they pick as their scripting interface.
 
7:03 PM
@ThePhD heh, #badlets
 
Do you guys use getters and setters? Why or why not?
 
200
A: Why use getters and setters?

R. Martinho FernandesA public field is not worse than a getter/setter pair that does nothing except returning the field and assigning to it. First, it's clear that (in most languages) there is no functional difference. Any difference must be in other factors, like maintainability or readability. An oft-mentioned adv...

 
you beat me to it
 
if it's not an invariant, don't over-complicate it unnecessarily
 
7:07 PM
My AV scan has been stuck at 47% for 2hrs (despite going through several files per second)
someone sucks at progress bars
 
I'm going to use my incredible deductive prowess to come to the conclusion you're saying someone at the AV company cannot progress bar
 
Thanks for that.
56
A: Why use getters and setters?

Moshe LeviWell, this seems like the right place to quote an amusing post titled "Slutty Types" from Davy Brion's blog. Slutty Types are types which: give you access to their privates without too many difficulties don't really care about your intentions, or if they do, aren't very clear on t...

 
"Slutty Types"
A bad analogy written by a shit programmer who doesn't understand how to meet requirements.
 
rekt
 
His website is also down.
C++: Too much real life.
 
he rebooted the website.
 
not his fault, he didnt get the email
 
Man
Conditionals are so hard to do with unpacking variadics.
(if (cond(Args)) { do_something(Args); })...
How do I even begin.
I can't goto through scopes, so I can't use a lambda and just jump my way out.
 
7:35 PM
@sehe: This is C++, where syntax and semantics are inseparable — Ben Voigt 44 secs ago
 
At Sébastopol again. What's up?
@ThePhD ? Why jump through scopes? As you put it, a lambda would do fine, no?
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Because I gotta stop doing if (cond) { ... }'s after the first one gets satisfied. If I stick it into a lambda, I can return early out of that lambda, but not out of the overall scope that would be unpacking the things one by one.
I'm trying to avoid using recursion functions to expand parameter packs because it's causing a lot of huge instantiations and bloat when someone specifies a BUNCH of things for variadics.
 
I like the way you emphasize stuff bby
 
When I awoke from the car accident in a full bodycast, my wife was right at my bedside to let me know that childbirth is still more painful.
 
@fredoverflow lol
 
7:51 PM
Yay, we're done recording the blockflöte and the accordion /o/
Not the only things left are to record the singer and the lead guitarist.
And maybe a few additional instruments.
And a few folk-only tracks.
And then we need to mix everything.
Then we'll only have to press the albums, pay an illustrator, and sell everything.
So many things left acutally .____.
 
you're in a band? recording an album? so cool
 
@ThePhD you can do a recursive variadic function, or one with an out parameter that is the &&ing of all conds so far.
 
Yeah, I'm in the band since 2011 and it's the first time I'm recording an album.
I only recorded a remix of an old song before.
 
what do you play
 
The recorder.
 
8:04 PM
a flutist eh
is that what they are called idunno lol
do you know what fluteboxing is
 
I do.
 
And the body is sofar = sofar && cond(arg)); if(sofar) perform(arg);
Not super pretty.
 
nwp
unbalanced parens never are :P
 
Recording the blockflöte for the metal tracks took ~12 hours.
 
fluteboxing is 2dope
 
nwp
8:08 PM
blockflöte doesn't sound very metal, do you have a link?
 
@Prismatic Classic one :p
@nwp Only old songs.
But the mastering isn't really good.
We're making sure that the drums and guitars and louder now.
 
nwp
@Morwenn not bad at all
lots of styles for one song
 
Not loud enough though, and the recorder part is not really interesting to play. The banjo + accordion is cool though.
 
nwp
but I know next to nothing about music, so just ignore my music critique
 
Eh, music is mostly about liking stuff. Knowing isn't a prerequisite.
 
nwp
8:16 PM
@Morwenn do you know this? It may be wrong, but sounds right to me.
 
I don't. Reading it whole will take a bit of time.
 
nwp
paul graham is well worth reading, even though he is occasionally wrong
 
imgur.com/gallery/HCjeL @Puppy what about this extremish hypothesis?
 
well
it's not that far from what I said about Parliament overturning the result.
really it's based o ninformation I don't have like Boris's reaction
but maybe he was just tired.
 
8:23 PM
TBH I was pleasantly surprised that Cameron did know what to do after the fact. And he did so in style.
2
 
Ell
Do you not think it is cowardly?
 
He regained a lot of respect points on my scales (where, in fairness, most were only lost due to enduring public criticism that I never bothered to check, so assumed had some level of veritude to them)
@Ell Why? No. He wanted in-EU, he'd be untrustworthy if he would now be happy to lead that march
 
@sehe Probably considered it in detail beforehand
 
This is where someones says gg wp (and hopefully no re)
 
Ell
8:26 PM
Because he held the referendum, so shouldn't he be prepared to lead the UK whichever the outcome?
 
@Puppy Yup. I was pleasantly surprised
@Borgleader He was clearly not angry. He spoke with more respect of the referendum than most during the campaigns
 
Ell
Not to mention the fact he said throughout the campaign that he would not step down
 
That obviously needs citation
 
Ell
Well
 
@Ell Did he want the referendum?
 
Ell
8:27 PM
I'm in bed, I don't mind if you don't believe me I guess
 
@Ell You know when people need time to twist some words when they start with a vacuous "well"
 
Ell
@sehe I don't think so
 
I honestly don't know. He could well have said a thing like that, when prompted. It's not good to influence a campaign by "threatening" with consequences also
@Ell So, you could say he went the extra mile, and respectfully bowed out when his party/camp lost
 
Ell
I just think that stepping down when the country needs him most is a cowardly thing to do
 
@nwp Well, basically he's saying that good art is art that could appeal to every human ever. That what's is good is the part that makes it good for everyone, right (I skipped through some parts a bit)?
 
8:30 PM
@Ell I saw his stepping down as "Wait what. How could they vote to leave? That's so dumb. I'm so done."
 
Ell
@Shoe well let's suppose for a minute that the British public is so dumb
Is it the right thing to do to abandon these people?
 
If you are disappointed by something, it might be a good idea to quit it, yes
I think I would have done the same as well
 
Ell
Well, I disagree I guess
 
Make space for some leader that can guide the negotiations about leaving better than me I guess
Since I'm against leaving, why not leave the place for someone that better represents the population?
 
Ell
I guess
I think its difficult
 
nwp
8:33 PM
@Morwenn Basically. I understood that art is not subjective like everyone says, instead it has objective quality. So while I can categorize music in like and don't like, a successful artist needs to categorize into appeals to a wide enough audience or not. I don't really know about these things.
 
Thing is, he was criticized for the deal he got with the EU initially. It makes sense for him to say "Well, fuck it. Let's see who gets a better deal now."
 
@nwp I'm confused about how you use the term "subjective".
 
Ell
"Fuck it" is not the attitude of a good leade r
 
@nwp I beg to differ. The things I like the most are often things that other people don't like. The audience doesn't make the art great. To me, what makes it great is how much it can impact a single person. And there you fall back in the realm of subjective.
 
@Ell He doesn't want to be a leader anymore
 
Ell
8:35 PM
I know he doesn't want to be one
 
nwp
@HWalters subjective as in "Art lies in the eyes of the beholder", which is being displayed as wrong. Art lies in the art you made.
 
Ell
But I think it is his duty
I can see your point
 
@Ell Why
 
He's basically defining the greatness of a piece by its universality/popularity. Something can be really good to most, but great to none.
 
@nwp Yeah, that usage... that confuses me :)
 
Ell
8:37 PM
I said earlier; he held the referendum so he should be prepared to lead in the even of instability and when the British people need a leader most
 
Something can be entirely a human invention, depend entirely on our perspectives, and yet still almost universally be perceived a particular way
Even if there are things that make "good art", as in art that is universally held aesthetic by humans, why would that make it not subjective?
Why would it make it "not in the eyes of the beholder"?
It seems somewhere along the lines what "subjective" means suddenly flips to something else... like "varies"
 
nwp
@Morwenn there was an argument in there that we don't just like random stuff. All human beings are attracted to faces and hard transitions. I don't know how that translates to music, but there are probably tempos, changes in tempo, repetition, volume and other stuff that can be objectively quantified and some choices appeal more than other.
 
@nwp Many of the things I love are "hated" by most or considered to be mere noise without any appeal.
I like some of the things that appeal to most, but those are almost never the things that I like the most.
 
@Shoe That's because he got jack shit.
@Ell He can simply have a transition period
he's staying on until October
 
nwp
@Morwenn maybe it is like drinking whiskey, you ignore the general taste of whiskey and try to identify the special flavors of that specific brand and that makes it interesting. If it just "tastes like whiskey" you are missing the point and it is just boring. Maybe you are able to hear the special notes whereas others are too distracted by the noise.
 
8:46 PM
@Puppy I hear ya
 
@nwp Hence what really matters is mostly subjective.
 
nwp
I don't think so, the quality is still in the whiskey/music. As an artist I would want to make these more accessible.
 
Mostly a matter of culture. The more « perfect » the music, the narrower the audience that will actually find it perfect, and we fall back to subjectivity.
Some people actually prefer « bad » beer and underproduced tracks.
 
Did you mean: Natty Light and modern pop music?
 
8:51 PM
And you can't really work on underproduction.
@JossieCalderon « Raw » black metal comes to my mind.
 
@nwp Yellow is perceived as brighter than red. That's subjective, it's nearly universal, and it has nothing to do with the physics of "yellow photons" per se (i.e, the quality isn't "in the whiskey"). This is about how humans perceive things.
 
@JossieCalderon Modern pop music appeals to many people :p
@HWalters Have you read the linked article? :o
 
I glanced at it a bit
 
nwp
someone said "Sweet home Alabama" is really bad on paper, unmelodic and most people can't sing along. Still people like it a lot. There may be some things we don't understand about the quality of stuff, but it is clearly there.
 
I find it totally meh .____.
 
nwp
8:54 PM
@HWalters but all humans perceive it like that, therefore it is objective again (color blind, aliens, I know)
 
To me universality does not make it better if it's universally okayish.
And there's no such thing as universally great :p
 
Ell
@Puppy yeah, I guess it's okay
 
The technique can be great since it's the result of experience and desire to reach a goal, but I don't think that the result can universally be great.
 
@nwp But that doesn't make it not subjective
 
nwp
maybe universally great is something to strife for instead of saying "doesn't matter what I do, some people will like it, some people won't, and there is nothing I can do"
 
8:57 PM
@nwp And color perception properties being nearly universal don't make them not up to the eye of the beholder... quite literally the opposite
 
@HWalters He's giving a definition of objective where it means « common to almost all humans ».
Because who cares otherwise?
 
@Morwenn not quite... he's saying the quality is in the whiskey... which is like saying the brightness is in the photons
 
That's an MP replying to a legitimate point made by a journalist, this is the level of British politics right now. https://t.co/ja1xXlT3Ks
I hope this is shopped.
 
@HWalters I don't agree in the conclusion (that it's in the art), but I can agree on the redefined objectivity.
 
@Morwenn We're in sync there... but I think it's more important to emphasize that "subjective" doesn't entail "random"
 
9:00 PM
On the other hand, if it forever escapes our understanding, it might as well be random.
It's random enough :p
 
@Morwenn There was an unrelated discussion just yesterday that touched on subjectivity
 
it's fair to say that the Leave side announced the day after that they could not implement quite a few of their promises
 
(and morality confused with politics and this brexit stuff I'm not touching with a ten foot pole)
 
@Puppy This is the kind of shit that makes me hate politics so fucking much. Its just a game of how much bullshit/lies you can get away with.
 
We should claim Jersey and Guernsey for shit and giggles :D
 
Ell
9:03 PM
@Puppy there is one in particular that I don't understand
The £350 NHS thing
 
the £350 was thoroughly debunked even before the referendum
because thatcher gave us a fucking huge rebate
 
Ell
They claimed that they could spend money on alternatives for example the NHS right?
I don't think it's a lie to say money spent on the EU could now be spent elsewhere
 
nwp
@Ell maybe they have to spend it all on import and export toll :P
 
nwp
hmm, maybe hipsters destroy the possibility of universally great art because they like art that other people don't like. Hipster is not the right word ... individualists?
 
9:18 PM
That too.
 
I'm not sure how "universally great art" is threatened by individualists... unless the individualists are going around burning art
 
If you don't like something because it's popular, then nothing can be universally liked, and thus nothing can be universally great.
 
@Ell Pfft. Empty rhetorics. The country clearly doesn't need him "the most" now
@Ell When did a politician become "saviour" in Ell's universe?
 
+1 for the emphasize : "You break encapsulation when you allow unrestricted access to a data member." — Nawaz Feb 27 '12 at 6:14
 
So what's the opinion on 17?
 
9:30 PM
@Ell In the face of everything I think his words showed good leadership. (Not detracting from the voice of the people, even if it disappointed him). Even better leadership is to allow someone who might do a good job at execution. David can't possibly; all his colleagues from other countries know him, and how could he suddenly break promises and expectations?
Now, I personally love the fact that he embraces the result and even goes to Brussel to actually explain what the people of Britain have decided. Imagine how this makes him feel. He's basically sent over groveling "Ok - you know all the plans we had? Forget about them. I'm actually just a puppet on strings and my substituents won't allow me to do what we planned on doing."
 
Ell
@sehe I dont know why that is clear. Politicians aren't a saviour to me, but I guess all I see on my Facebook feed & most other places are ways in which the UK is going through a tough time right now, and I feel as though people might have more hope if they were confident in their leader
 
@blelbach I still have to read it. Will do tomorrow
 
Ell
@sehe I think that is a fair point
 
> all I see on my Facebook feed & most other places
See. This is the problem. The country is devolving into a competition of drama queens.
 
@sehe :p ALL of it?
 
Ell
9:31 PM
I have already switched once on whether it is a good thing that he stood down, I guess I'm likely to switch again
 
Man. It's just a policy change. Get some new management and steer the ship.
@blelbach The summaries
 
Ell
@sehe I think that the drama does a lot of harm really
 
@sehe if you do, tell me all the bugs and I'll file comments
 
Ell
But maybe I'm part of the problem too
 
@Ell Precisely. Cameron was very intently not participating. That's a +1 for me
 
Ell
9:33 PM
Anyway. I have to be up for my first day of work tomorrow
 
@blelbach hehe. Big nope :) Not out of unwill, but out of incompetence
 
Ell
Good night & good chat :)
 
@Ell Wait. First day of new job? Or just of the week/
 
Ell
@sehe first day of new job :)
Well, its a paid internship really
 
9:34 PM
Good luck then! I didn't know this. That's a good extra stressor for you !
 
@sehe One does not need to be competent to read the standard
 
@Ell Also pretty good. Make the most of things :)
 
Ell
Thank! I'm looking forward to it :D have a good Monday!
 
@blelbach That's not what you asked :0
 
So I came up with the perfect title for my paper on fixing std::terminate()
 
9:35 PM
std::terminator IV?
 
terminate() should always terminate
Or perhaps just terminate() should terminate
 
When does it not... :( (sheepish grin, thinking maybe with signals, longjmp and IB with threads?!)
 
@sehe Try throwing from terminate()
@sehe Or try terminating from terminate()
 
I'd expect that to do abnormal termination
 
Those are both UB, and that's bad. The throwing one is bad because it means you cannot mark terminate() noexcept
If terminate() is not noexcept, your compiler thinks that it might throw an exception and cannot vectorize codepaths that could call terminate() :p
That's just how I discovered it though
 
user1804599
9:38 PM
Hey @sehe what's up
 
user1804599
Have you done anything interesting lately
 
@blelbach My understanding is that throwing from noexcept invokes terminate, so it's Catch-22?
@Bassie Of course not. Can't be raising expectations.
I don't exactly see why UB is bad there. It does seem to violate some reasonable preconditions. Maybe quick_exit could be a graceful fallback (haven't checked on the current specs)
 
user1804599
:'(
 
I've done a bigband gig yesterday, and ~2-3 hours of jazz quartet today
So there's that. And on friday accompanied the kids at my kid's violin pupil's concert
 
@sehe That's right. The problem is that there is no guarantee that terminate() will not throw.
I believe that terminate() should always lead to program termination :p.
@sehe Unfortunately quick_exit can also throw an exception
Also, unrelated note - is anyone aware of a C++ community in stockholm?
 
9:42 PM
@blelbach I'd be happy if the wording made it clear that whatever happens, program termination is guaranteed.
@blelbach inb4 "C++ syndrome"
 
@sehe That's the plan.
@sehe Apparently, I am destined to only write papers about terminate()
8
It is now my favorite C++ function.
 
@blelbach Isn't that basically a DR?
 
user1804599
oh boy somebody wrote a Jade implementation in Fortran
 
@sehe DR?
 
Defect report? Where UB/IB is too wide and needs to include a wording to the effect that termination will proceed
 
9:44 PM
So, GCC considers that a function parameter is unused if the parameter is only used in decltype in the return type.
 
@sehe It's a little too big for a defect report
 
Mmm. Maybe not the part where you want noexcept semantics added (which conflicts with the goal of making more guarantees about what terminate does eventually)
@Morwenn That's because it is. It's a little bit of a special case, but the argument is not used. You can std::declval<>() your way out of this, or just silence the warning
 
@sehe terminate() should only conceptually be noexcept. High-quality implementations will use a custom attribute to mark that it cannot throw.
 
user1804599
This subroutine has 76 parameters. :(
 
@Morwenn Did you mean clang doesn't agree?
 
9:47 PM
@sehe Not sure. I have to check.
 
it cannot be actually noexcept. The language will be "If the execution of the terminate handler exits via uncaught exception, <insert the wording for the effects of abort()"
 
Yeah. That was the conflict I referred to. Good thinking. If only because it can lead to better optimizability for code that could call terminate (which should be more common in high-performance computing)
 
@sehe Defect reports are really intended for, well... defects
A defect is different from a mistake
 
It... doesn't warn with a trivial test case (both g++ and clang++). Not sure why. Whatever.
 
A bad execution of a particular design is a defect. A bad design is a mistake.
 
9:49 PM
@blelbach I was already convinced.
@Morwenn creduce FTW
 
@Bassie You must locate the author of this code.
 
@blelbach I'll subscribe to this - rather abitrary? - taxonomy for today !
 
user1804599
At work we have a subroutine that hit the parameter limit of Python.
 
user1804599
So we had to switch to taking a dict instead.
 
user1804599
You can't declare more than 254 parameters or you'll get a syntax error.
 
9:51 PM
@Bassie Ouch
IIRC, a quality implementation of C++ should accept any number of parameters
@Bassie I now challenge you to figure out if the major C++ compilers run out of memory before they give a hard limit on function arity
 
user1804599
why?
 
user1804599
I don't care
 
user1804599
the only one that would actually crash would be MSVC
 
@blelbach I think, the latter (because it makes so much more sense from an implementation perspective)
Perhaps not around variadics
 
@sehe Well, let's find out :)
 
9:57 PM
Big nope. You seem to think I have more time than I actually do.
 
user1804599
sehe so angry
 
I'm writing the script to generate massive functions right now
:P
 

« first day (2080 days earlier)      last day (2861 days later) »