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5:22 PM
Must be my longest answer so far stackoverflow.com/questions/44180480/…
 
@iksemyonov +1
@EtiennedeMartel Love the new room title.
 
@Abyx I also see lots of not reading past the headlines. Pretending IS is clear of responsibility in this is not hypocrisy; it's dishonesty.
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Is there a fallacy for expecting perfection out of others?
Is there a name for "if you don't do something about all of X you are a hypocrite"?
 
Ell
@rightfold well, you're not using c++ right
 
I see it when I hear people say the pleas of feminists in the West are invalid because they're not doing anything about the women who get murdered elsewhere in the world.
 
5:34 PM
@EtiennedeMartel Fallacy of relative privation.
Aka "not as bad as".
 
Yeah, sounds about right.
> Men's rights activists frequently try to downplay the Western world's own issues with sexism and misogyny by comparing it to conditions in the Middle East. This can go from lazy and dishonest comparisons to open Islamophobia, white supremacy, and xenophobia very quickly.
 
ugh ffs
the hamachi process kept filling my disk
it was also eating my cpu
 
5:59 PM
@Abyx There can be a difference. Specifically, a difference of intent. There's quite a difference between intentionally chopping off somebody's head, and dropping a bomb on terrorists, and accidentally killing somebody else who's in the area as well. Now, it's certainly true that if (for example) you continue to act on "intelligence", even when it's clearly undependable, you have to help responsible for the results.
Nonetheless, there's at least some possibility of excusing accidents, especially if reasonable precautions were taken to prevent them. Even at best, it's a lot harder to excuse something that was done intentionally. The real question in a case like this is whether there were really reasonable precautions taken, or whether somebody got sloppy, or maybe even knew there was a problem and ignored it (which may or may not be the case here, but certainly has happened).
 
I hate the Game of Thrones trailers. They make me want to watch it already but it still two months away.
 
6:15 PM
basically they're teasers
"ha ha, you want that don't'cha? you want that, do you? you want that? hah! not getting that."
 
Should I be afraid of coming up with original solutions for problems have probably been already solved? This problem has developed in me since comprehensive school where I'd come up with original solutions but the teachers wanted students to find their (the teacher's) way. I've been since then unconsciously afraid of not finding the solution that the majority would find. Now in programming, this is especially well seen in program and class design, where I stumble and think a lot..
Then find a solution but I realize then it's not the solution my fellow students would've come up with, or you might come up with, and that there probably is a standard way of doing things like that. Renders me incapable of programming it further.
 
@JerryCoffin I understand your point, but in case of Mosul and other besieged cities, coalition is deliberately terrorizing civilians, hoping that they would die or flee Mosul. (Assad did the same to Eastern Aleppo). It's a valid approach - no civilians means no workforce for ISIS. However it is what West calls "inhumane".
 
What can I do about that, if it's worth this bother at all?
 
@iksemyonov Just don't worry. Use a library if one exists. If not, programming is a creative discipline. For any problem, there are thousands of solutions. The only way to tell how good a solution is, is to look at how quickly it works, how easy it is to read, and whether it's easy to build on.
Programmers are something in between engineers, artists, and mathematicians.
 
6:32 PM
@JerryCoffin It doesn't really matter that ISIS targets innocents and Coalition kills civilians as a "collateral damage". The big picture is that ISIS kills westerners for internal and external propaganda ("we kill crusaders, be with us" ), and the Coalition kills people for propaganda - external "stay away from ISIS" and internal "we kill evil terrorists".
History remembers only actions, not intentions.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I've never said that IS is clear of responsibility.
ok, a joke time
brb, gotta fetch some food, thanks god I'm not in somalia
 
@Abyx I'm not at all sure that I agree this is a "valid approach". If you simply mean that it's effective, then yeah, I suppose. I don't think that means it's (even close to) reasonable or excusable though.
 
@JerryCoffin yes, I mean "effective"/"working"
 
@Abyx I don't think that's entirely true. Most people would rank Hitler as a worse person than Stalin, because they find his intent worse, despite the fact that Stalin pretty clearly killed more innocent people. And don't get me wrong: I'm not trying to say that this excuses the coalition's actions, just observing that intent does seem to play at least some part in people's views.
 
@rightfold Like I said:
20 hours ago, by sehe
@rightfold That'll be... annoying to adapt. I think. Wouldn't try that in Spirit.
Like I say every 3 months or so, I think Spirit shines for quick PoC, prototyping very in-flux grammars and when you can go-with-the-conventions to maximize the AST propagation automation. Then it really shines.
Anything else, not so nice.
For me, I can mix and match, but that requires you to be on top of the learning curve first. That's not a valid reason to learn it.
@Abyx Stop making sense.
@Abyx Oh good. That was faaaaast. Thanks for listening.
@Ell Well, he's using C++ to implement something better. I guess you could call it an exorcism (getting rid of Spirit) :)
 
6:53 PM
@JerryCoffin The strategic bombing of German cities during WW2 is another good example.
 
user1804599
 
Rightfold, what's the elevator pitch for slakken?
 
user1804599
I should use XML instead of binary file.
 
user1804599
@Aaron3468 "Slakken is a programming language."
 
user image
4
 
7:09 PM
@Mysticial I did it xD
 
nice
Can't say I've done that on any newly posted answer in years.
Damn. Last one was back in 2014.
 
greetings inferior beings
and I also detect the presence of robot
@JerryCoffin Can't be sure about this, but I would have to say it's also a matter of internal vs external. Hitler killed a whole bunch of innocent people, quite a few of which were external- he conquered various bits of Europe and then holocausted the fuck out of them. But as far as I'm aware, Stalin mostly only killed his own people
I've definitely noticed that if you're a dictator and you murder your own people, you get a much less severe reaction compared to murdering some other people
@rightfold I prefer JSON
 
7:29 PM
@Puppy I suppose it depends on how you count: "his own". He basically took over most of eastern Europe after WWII, but I think it's fair to guess that most Germans, Lithuanians, Latvians, Poles, etc., who he killed never considered themselves Russians, nor did they probably feel any great loyalty toward Stalin or the Soviet Union.
@Mysticial I do notice, however, that a 250 point bounty is soon to be awarded on the branch prediction question...
 
@rightfold I'd very much want to make that type-driven. ADT for the win
 
@JerryCoffin wut
 
@Mysticial "This question has an open bounty worth +250 reputation from Baum mit Augen ending in 5 days. One or more of the answers is exemplary and worthy of an additional bounty."
 
lolwtf
 
@JerryCoffin You're not alone
2 days ago, by Walter
There is again a new bounty worth 250 on the top question (the top answer of which has already accumulated 1250 rep from bounties). What is going on there? why these repeated bounties on such a dead-old wood?
 
7:36 PM
Though to be fair, a number of the bounties have went to the other answers.
 
Living with cats sucks if you don't like your food garnished with fur
 
@JerryCoffin That's true, but if memory serves, he mostly started the genocide in the mid-50's, right? I think that time lag is for most people to accept that they are his people, voluntary or otherwise
 
And I do miss the days where there were good questions on SO - as well as the days where I had the time to actually find them.
 
@Puppy "The Great Purge" was in the late 1930s.
 
Did Stalin also do the starve-Ukraine-and-export-then-sell-all-grain-west thing or was that some other red?
 
7:39 PM
yeah, that's him
 
@Puppy In fact, Stalin didn't live to the mid-50s.
 
I see many history experts here
 
I see that you can't operate bloody Wikipedia if you call people who've undergone the public education system "histery experts"
 
@Puppy there was no "genocide" (expect that ukrainian thing which is controversial)
 
user1804599
@sehe Writing tests now so I can change it later.
 
7:51 PM
@Abyx Apart from him using the state to almost-kill a couple peoples but sure ya
 
@rightfold What happened to TDD :)
 
by definition, because the great purge didn't target a specific group of people
 
Inb4 Uncle Bob doesn't believe in that
@Abyx Step away from the mirror
 
@набиячлэвэли lol are you seriously responding to Abyx
8
 
@sehe I'm not drunk!
 
7:52 PM
@milleniumbug Only slightly feeding, so no
 
user1804599
@sehe Would've been a good idea.
 
@набиячлэвэли which peoples?
 
@rightfold Hey, even mine had (some) tests. Although I didn't understand the domain requirements
 
@Abyx A couple of them can't you bloody read
 
@набиячлэвэли try harder
 
7:56 PM
@Abyx yer tryin' yer 'ardest an' not doin' great are yeh
 
@набиячлэвэли go away, you're drunk
 
@Abyx Balance of probability suggests you're more likely to be drunk than me, and you're also probably projecting, so go to sleep now and maybe you'll stop idolising a genociduous fuck by tomorrow mornin'
 
"genociduous", nice
 
@Abyx The definition adopted by the UN, yes. Do note that there are many critics of that definition that say it lacks protection of political groups. This would make it apply to many of Stalin's action (so, controversial).
 
8:04 PM
fucksake, mouse wheel is having a spaz
like cheap lighters: plenty of gas left, but the splint's gone. gotta chuck it. fml
 
(The first definition adopted by the UN did include political groups, for what is worth)
 
@BoundaryImposition Maybe it would be best to stay away from computers for a while :)
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes one can leave a political group, but cannot change their genes.
IMO extending definition of a crime lowers its significance
 
@набиячлэвэли I mean Stalin wasn't committing genocide, but he did a lot of sketchy stuff. Due to the way he managed the country, many people died to famine and less natural causes. He definitely stifled dissent by any means necessary, but he also didn't care about ethnicity so much.
 
it's like calling everything "holocaust"
 
8:09 PM
@Abyx This isn't an argument coherent with the existing definition, because it includes religious groups.
 
user1804599
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes true.
 
@sehe well I still need to use them!
 
Also note that ethnicity isn't entirely determined by genes.
 
@BoundaryImposition Try to improve then! :) SCNR
 
8:16 PM
@R.MartinhoFernandes Almost not at all, in fact
@sehe IDGI
 
Remember the days when we made fun of e.g. Puppy being incapable to coax Linux into submission?
 
those were the days
 
Well. I'm riffing lightheartedly off your string of mishaps with hardware and software recently.
Don't worry, my time will come. (Again)
 
@Aaron3468 Excuse me are you a bloody commie? /s
 
@Aaron3468 "sketchy stuff" is quite the euphemism.
 
8:24 PM
@sehe I have had a string of mishaps?
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Euphemism is quite the euphemism. I prefer blatant lies.
 
@BoundaryImposition Spotify, Photo Viewer, Mouse?
Don't forget to read "lightheartedly" and "just riffing"
 
the first two were one problem, which I resolved by the way
mouse is irritating
hardly a string worthy of giving up my job and hobbies
andddd three answers in comments for no reason.
 
@BoundaryImposition If I got a pound everytime you brought this up, I could buy a poor kid lunch every now and then
 
AND SOMEBODY UPVOTED IT
very funny Columbo
 
8:30 PM
@BoundaryImposition I would add that all those are the same number, which might not be clear as is.
 
@BoundaryImposition Sorry?
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes exercise for the reader
 
There are two upvotes, I can hardly do magic now can I
 
@Columbo now undo your upvote while you still can!
 
8:31 PM
@BoundaryImposition Okay :P
 
@Columbo first one predated my posting the URI but the second was obviously you :P
 
@BoundaryImposition I damn the parent that gave you a 99th percentile IQ
 
@Columbo Me too
the telepathy is also a bit of a curse
 
@набиячлэвэли But seriously Stalin is the generic "I wanna keep my power and spread propaganda" type of dictator taken to 11/10. They're mostly harmless to outsiders, but really bad for their country. Fidel Castro is a 3/10 on the same scale. Kind of benevolent, but really bad at managing his country, and perhaps a bit heavy on the reign.
 
C++ Containers Benchmark: vector/list/deque and plf::colony https://goo.gl/fb/HQvMZN
/cc this might interest @Morwenn @orlp
@BoundaryImposition What was it?
@BoundaryImposition have some extra smileys :):):)
 
8:34 PM
@sehe NFI :( Found an Intel driver update (via Device Manager; WinUpd never offered it) and it seems to have done the trick
funny thing is, the "new" driver is dated 2013
tbh I suspect Windows Update had "updated" me to something random and shit
@sehe moarrrr
 
@BoundaryImposition This very strangely reminds me of an issue that I read about the other day. I wonder why this isn't covered by the OS.
 
@Columbo plz2url
 
@BoundaryImposition I forgot what it was specifically, but it was related to my Archlinux setup
 
wow, that supersized code block breaks the edit review dialog. can't enter rejection reason
or maybe the rejection reason box is broken by the migration to SSL lol
 
@Aaron3468 Mostly harmless to outsiders? Tell that to East Germans, Poles, Hungarians, Bulgarians, the KMT, ... The list goes on. No Cold War leader was harmless to outsiders.
 
8:37 PM
@BoundaryImposition not unlikely. I hate that edit review is not gold-badge hammer material
 
@sehe meh some of the dupehammer wielding I've seen lately, I'm glad it's not
 
Review is not the same thing. It's stupid that I can't copy the source text of this question because an edit is pending, and I can't approve it either.
 
oh that
well
no I stand by what I said
too many peeps would approve shite edits
 
totalnamevalue=name1[0]+name1[1]+name1[2]+name1[3]+name1[4]+name1[5]+name1[6]+name1[7]+name1[8]+name1[9]+name2[0]+name2[1]+name2[2]+name2[3]+name2[4]+name2[5]+name2[6]+name2[7]+name2[8]+name2[9];
//int firstnamesum=name1[0]+name1[1]+name1[2]+name1[3]+name1[4]+name1[5]+name1[6]+name1[7]+name1[8]+name1[9];
//int secondnamesum=name2[0]+name2[1]+name2[2]+name2[3]+name2[4]+name2[5]+name2[6]+name2[7]+name2[8]+name2[9];
//totalnamevalue=firstnamesum+secondnamesum;
Oh lord, how is he coding in C++?
 
user1804599
@Aaron3468 glad they're dead
 
user1804599
8:40 PM
hey rhyme
 
That's just terrifying. Go to python pls, and save yourself some segfaults :(
 
@Aaron3468 I don't want to get into a flamewar of any kind but Stalin was the person who turned a country devastated by the revolution and WW1 intervention into an empire, not to mention his diplomatic achievements that helped forge the military outcome of WWII into certain aspects of the post-war world order, beneficial for our country again. Yes, the methods were terrible. Yes, a lot of people suffered. Was there any other way? No idea, but he was probably one of the very few patriotic leaders
we've ever had, along with Peter the Great and (as funny as it may sound) Ivan IV.
 
@Bjørn-RogerKringsjå: Bah. But I made a nice GIF! :D — BoundaryImposition 7 secs ago
 
@iksemyonov You mean the diplomatic achievement of allying with Hitler?
 
@wilx Sorry, I'm not getting into that, with all due respect. Learn, study, make your own conclusions.
 
8:46 PM
@iksemyonov I did. I did. I did.
 
I mean the achievements of post-war, that's all I'm going to say.
 
@iksemyonov Lots of dictators are excessively patriotic. He modernized the country quickly, but at an incredibly high expense. Even now Russia is recuperating from those expenses, especially with regards to population and birth rates.
But yes, those costs are going away over time.
 
@Aaron3468 I beg to differentiate the 1991 "birth hole" and the WWII "birth hole". That was the hardest one, I think.
 
@wilx Since he was brought up... Hitler was also the person who turned a country devastated by [...] WW1 intervention into an empire.
 
8:48 PM
@Aaron3468 Differentiate those two from the one induced by the cleansings, if there was any, at all.
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes an utterly staggering achievement indeed
it's amazing what you can do when you're a ####
 
Bye.
 
@iksemyonov how ya doin'
 
@sehe you around?
 
8:49 PM
I think I will probably avoid getting suspended for calling Hitler names
 
@BoundaryImposition I doubt 10k+ users or gold badgers ever approve edits. But that's me
 
after all, Abyx is not a moderator :)
 
@JohanLarsson No
 
@sehe I do. So you're immediately proven wrong :)
 
@Aaron3468 Badly. But I think this should help
@BoundaryImposition Statistics
 
8:50 PM
@BoundaryImposition Oh come on.
 
@sehe Only need one counter-example
 
@iksemyonov What I'm saying is that Stalin's rule had a marked impact on people. Russia's nearly recovered, but those events are still after-tremors of his rule. They are different, and more recent ones have other factors at play, increasingly so.
 
@sehe Invited you to the wpf room if you feel like helping out with a git issue
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes ?
 
@BoundaryImposition I disapprove of the self-censorship.
 
8:51 PM
@BoundaryImposition Not if you read my intent. Literalist :)
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes I don't dare avoid it around here
 
I'll kick you if you do it again :P
 
@sehe Yeah, that'll point him in the right direction. But he really needs to learn about toUpper(), functions, and a lot about generalizing control flow to make it more legible.
 
@sehe hmm doesn't look like Data Explorer exposes what we need
oh SuggestedEditVotes I guess
fucksake now what's the syntax
 
@sehe Here you go: pastebin.com/nw2WA737
852 lines of code for a simple switch statement and accumulator :(((
 
8:57 PM
Archer is over, Elementary is over. What do I watch now?
 
@sehe You actually can (pretty much) approve it single-handedly. Do a minor edit to the edit, then when you save it (because you're high enough rep) no more approval is needed for it to be final.
 
@JerryCoffin You can't if you forget to click "IMPROVE"
 
@BoundaryImposition Ah update makes more sense. Those are a lot of anecdotals :)
 
@sehe He's 85.2x more productive. You're fired.
 
9:02 PM
Squirrel Girl is teaching me everything I want to know about the Marvel canon. https://t.co/rhvdhKLsF3
 
don't make me do one for gold badges ;p
 
user1804599
@Puppy I prefer your mom
 
& don't worry you're not on the list :)
hang on have you seriously never accepted a suggested edit? that can't be right
 
@BoundaryImposition I approved edits. I might never have had to accept suggested edits. The ~10 times it happened others may have approved it before I found the suggestion
 
think I meant approved
 
9:07 PM
@BoundaryImposition I won't. I was taking about the percentages anyhoops. It's fine if 3 million edits were approved by gold badgers. The point is if 3 million approvals is less than 0.1% that's insignificant. And it would support my hypothesis that it's unnecessary to annoy those badgers.
(All hypothetical. I don't actually care enough. I would be filing requests on meta if I did. And years ago)
 
user1804599
gah
 
user1804599
__builtin_add_overflow is GCC 5
 
user1804599
I'm on GCC 4.
 
nwp
@rightfold why are you not on gcc 7?
 
user1804599
9:12 PM
debian
 
@nwp I just recently upgraded to GCC 4.8. It was kind of a big moment.
 
user1804599
@BoundaryImposition "Christian school", ugh
 
nwp
@rightfold my debian has gcc 7
 
inb4 flag
 
user1804599
Involving people under 25 in any religious activity should be illegal and very severely punished.
 
nwp
9:13 PM
but that is experimental, the regular testing gcc is gcc 6.3
 
user1804599
@nwp mine doesn't
 
mind you she did agree to that code of conduct, whatever you and I may think about it
 
@iksemyonov Patriotism is a synonym for stupidity
 
user1804599
That would imply that all stupid people are patriotic.
 
user1804599
I think you are stupid.
 
:)
 
@BoundaryImposition Why do you insist on living in the past?
 
user1804599
bad old code
 
@wilx It's the nature of my environment. We're not all hobbyists that can just do a git checkout or whatever it's called and run whatever we like :)
The systems I deploy to are enterprise-grade (typically CentOS 6 or, increasingly 7) that do not receive "cutting edge" packages natively. Could I build with GCC 9999999999 and statically link everything? Sure. Is that a good idea? No.
As it is, I actually am redistributing libstdc++ to our el6 targets because I had decided C++11 was well worth it and el6 is on GCC 4.3 (IIRC).. and going EOL soon enough anyway
So, in context, you'll find that I am remarkably modern ;)
/me works in national infrastructure
they don't use C++17 to program spaceships, either
it's probably stones arranged in a certain pattern on slate, or smth
 
Probably those circles in farmer's fields
 
9:29 PM
TBH, it is not much better elsewhere.
I have only managed to push through use of Java 8 and only in our testing automation code.
 
why not push through the use of a language that's not as shit as Java, like Javascript or assembly or Perl
 
user1804599
javascript or assembly is like apples or fruits
 
both preferable to feces as a food source
 
@wilx it's convenient that I don't really care for C++14, as that would have been a struggle
but my codebase is lovely atm with its lambdas and variadic templates and whatnot
dunno whether I ever demoed it here but my network messaging calls are lovely now
 
user1804599
I'd upgrade to C++17 if only for static_assert without message.
 
9:33 PM
May 11 at 21:36, by BoundaryImposition
sendMessage<control::ping>(networkhost)
   .expect<control::pong>(
     TIMEOUT_SECS,
     []() { /* timeout */ },
     [](const control::pong&) { /* on success */ }
   )
;
May 11 at 21:39, by BoundaryImposition
.expect is also variadic so you can pile on more possible responses if you like
 
@Aaron3468 Looking at it a bit closer, here's what I /think/ might have been intended: paste.ubuntu.com/24659605
 
is it just me, or is that not enough verdicts
 
mixing const lefty/rightyness ew
and "\n" not '\n'?
%9 looks "magic", and ch should be const
 
@sehe Yeah, I'm pretty sure you're correct.
 
accum too, come to think about it
and #include <string>. otherwise alright
 
9:40 PM
@BoundaryImposition where?
 
@sehe string arrays
 
Code looks very clean too. The only change I'd make is tokenizing the fullname and then iterating over the result instead of getting name1 and name2
 
@BoundaryImposition Nothing mixed there
It's just different consts, in consistent locations
 
er, you're right
 
e.g "First Middle Last Last" -> ["First", "Middle", "Last", "Last"]
 
9:41 PM
:)
 
eyefail :D
wow, that was spectacular
 
@Aaron3468 Depends on requirements
@BoundaryImposition No biggie
 
the rest stands
 
@sehe Yep, that's more of an aesthetic choice than anything. Your code is absolutely beautiful
 
missing include is particularly egregious
 
9:42 PM
Oh well. '\n' is tastes for me (I did remove the endl from the OP)
@BoundaryImposition I spotted that after I posted it. cba to fix
 
@sehe my subconscious thinks it's an unnecessary performance drain (my subconscious is wrong in practice (but still))
 
Disclosure: as always every single step was a micro-refactoring. This is how you end up with things like that
 
:)
oh I'm sure I have no idea what you're talking about
 
@BoundaryImposition I used to do that to. Nowadays, I know that having to change '\n' into ")\n" is more work than coming from "\n" etc. I do mind the difference with string appends (like s += '\n';)
 
(awkward pause while I struggle to find URI to complete my previous sentence)
 
9:45 PM
@BoundaryImposition Others might just scrap the original and copy bits over as needed. I never do that
@BoundaryImposition ^ just clarified
@Aaron3468 Actually, I don't think digit_combine is the best name anymore. That was when there was still a separate transformation / accumulation step.
 
ffs where is it
 
Would you believe it. So many people still finding interesting nits to pick from a bad SO question. We should bounty it because it's so educational!
@BoundaryImposition kera.name/articles/2013/10/line-endings-and-bash-red-herrings? Or something about refactoring
 
user1804599
those nonbreaking spaces
 
@sehe Bad code is like a bikeshed to be built. A lot more options than just the colour.
But for the most part I agree with your efforts to avoid flushing cout, especially if it's in a loop. If it's outside of a loop, flushing with std::endl; isn't such a big deal.
 
9:51 PM
(fixed)
12 mins ago, by sehe
Disclosure: as always every single step was a micro-refactoring. This is how you end up with things like that
12 mins ago, by BoundaryImposition
oh I'm sure I have no idea what you're talking about
Why sizeof(std::vector<Vertex>::value_type), why not sizeof(Vertex)? — Andreas Brinck Aug 24 '11 at 10:58
@Andreas: I think I started with vertices::value_type, realised my mistake, and expanded it rather than contracting it. :) — BoundaryImposition Aug 24 '11 at 11:14
(Wow, that was worthwhile)
(Gah Andreas stop comma splicing!)
(It's not even a strictly equivalent example FML)
 
@BoundaryImposition I appreciate the effort. I've spent hours on occasion just to prove to myself I remembered something. These things are auto-nerd-snipes
 
Huh, yeah... Actually it's a great analogy. The worse the code is, the more things people can change. Thus more people can be involved in refactoring it.
 
hmm it's not like I've been actively curating my site but it's currently quite out of date even factually. bah.
 
@Aaron3468 I'm not convinced. It's just - there's a lot to improve and it tickles the "Let's decipher the cryptic requirements" bone that all good developer/analysts necessarily have
 
10:07 PM
@MikeA. No, Mike - not an engineer, a junior engineer straight out of college that has never worked a day in the field in his/her life - yes I am worried if a major concern is vacation time. — SteveJ 2 hours ago
(click for context)
weird
 
How do I get rid of people that I've been too nice to
I wish I could just be an asshole so everyone leaves me alone
 
3
Q: Is it bad to make a joke during a presentation ?

optimal controlI am a PhD student in economics and working on stuff like Hopf bifurcations and limit cycles used often in mathematics. One of the graphics that I will use for my presentation is very similar to one of the photos in album booklet (dark side of the moon) of the legendary progressive rock band Pi...

more social ineptitude from Academia.SE
 
@BoundaryImposition Kind of. I don't think his object is as strong as everybody in the comments makes it out to be. Although I definitely agree that there's some bias.
 
10:25 PM
@sehe You can simplify this a bit, if you care. Right now, you're doing a %9 as you add each character, so you end up with ((a % 9 + b % 9 + ...) + (A % 9 + B % 9 + ...) %9 . Unless overflow is a concern (seems far-fetched here) you can just add the original numbers as-is, then take the remainder once at the very end: ((a + b + ...) + (A + B + ...) ) % 9 and still get the same result.
 
Aware of it.
For some reason the original code did print the total, non-modulo
It took some time to reduce it to this. At this point, yes.
 
@sehe Of course, given the crucial importance of numerology, we have to ensure that we get that answer absolutely perfect, and in the shortest possible time as well. There are billions of people who all need this information...
 
36
Q: Complimented on my clothes, What is the recommended time before wearing them again?

jhbhI recently bought a new outfit for work. The first time I wore it, a coworker complimented me on it. The clothes are nothing special, but are of a style of which I have liked for many years. I would like to wear the outfit again at some point, but I am afraid that if I do, it will be perceived a...

more social ineptitude from Workplace.SE
 
@JerryCoffin Very happy you appreciate the grave nature of the requirements
@BoundaryImposition could be cultural
 
@sehe last line of the question admits it's social ineptitude
 
10:33 PM
o.O
 
@sehe Honesty is apparently sufficiently foreign to him that he finds it noteworthy.
 
which is, in itself, social ineptitude :D
bedtime
 
@BoundaryImposition Nooo wait.
 
you can't come, sehe
 

Nobody Creates "Nobody Creates Testcases Anymore" Link Comments Anymore

14 mins ago, 12 minutes total – 49 messages, 1 user, 0 stars

Bookmarked 34 secs ago by sehe

I haven't tallied how many are yours or mine.Yet (irony)
 
10:37 PM
holy shit
might as well just link to that transcript from now on :D
 
25 out of 46 :)
Gosh. Chat throttling didn't make that very easy. Never mind I needed to resolve a lot of HTTP 302 responses in order to generate usable one-box links.
 
ooh Wakeley cited me; nice
wonder who user1508519 was
huh, I'm seeing evidence that that was their actual username pre-deletion lol
 
@BoundaryImposition Many people cite your other blog posts. This is just the one article
 
I had no idea
 
@rightfold the comments here, some are pretty nifty milfje.blogspot.nl/2017/03/…
@BoundaryImposition Now can I come with?
Srsly, I'm off to bed. Cheers
 
10:47 PM
@sehe no
@sehe cheers back baaaai
 
:sadface: :)
 
user1804599
@sehe tldr
 
@rightfold Just the comment, bro
Zucht
 

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