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12:02 AM
@Yvette NSW Government has introduced legislation that will allow feral horses to remain in Kosciuszko National Park.
Then National Parks Association sent out an email asking members to lobby against it :/
I can't believe I am paying membership fees to an organization that send out paper letters to lobby against logging then ask members to support killing of animals. I am forking out the money because I want to help protecting the nature environment and animals not doing otherwise. This organization will not see a cent from me next year.
 
they may be worried about overgrazing by the horses which will out compete other native grazers
 
I know they say they are
but the thing is that, money can almost always be used in somewhere else that needs it more?
Trapping horses has been experimented with since 2008, with, on average, 450 horses removed from Kosciuszko each year, at a cost of more than A$1,000 per horse.
 
catch neuter and release may be a strategy though
then they don't have to worry about shipping the animals elsewhere
 
if you can catch all of them, yes
 
all of one gender
 
12:12 AM
like that's easier :p
but it didn't mention killing those horses
just culling, by removing maybe
 
but it will bottleneck the population
but removing means finding somewhere to house them
 
yes, they sell the young ones
 
and there are only so many people that want a wild horse
 
Yvette bought two
I would not mind buying a 3 months old wild horse, but once it's older I need to relocate the brumby to somewhere with a bigger piece of lawn
 
and then the other costs start piling up
 
12:17 AM
better sell them than to kill them
 
but some would be buying to slaughter them (though I'm not sure how much a horse is worth in meat)
probably not a lot given how many shenanigans there are with horse meat ending up where it shouldn't
 
@ratchetfreak This, IMO, is still better than to shoot the feral animals and leave the corpse in the wild because it's expensive to remove the dead body, which they do all the times so I heard.
 
starving the poor scavengers?
 
not many scavengers here ... other than flies, but I would not mind the flies to disappear altogether
 
because no animal corpses are left to be scavenged
 
12:23 AM
Scavenging is both a carnivorous and a herbivorous feeding behavior in which the scavenger feeds on dead animal and plant material present in its habitat. Scavengers play an important role in the ecosystem by consuming the dead animal and plant material. Decomposers and detritivores complete this process, by consuming the remains left by scavengers. == Etymology == Scavenger is an alteration of scavager, from Middle English skawager meaning "customs collector", from skawage meaning "customs", from Old North French escauwage meaning "inspection", from schauwer meaning "to inspect", of Germ...
None of the scavengers listed are from Australia ... other than flies and ants, neither of which I am fond of because they both enter houses and steal food from humans.
 
Australia the country that will kill you doesn't have any animals that will eat your remains?
talk about cold
either way I'm off to bed
 
laters
 
@Mysticial lol
 
 
1 hour later…
1:56 AM
Does the iron in blood align according to polarity on earth?
 
2:54 AM
I wonder how likely a person is likely to slap me if I tell the person: you have good intentions, just slightly retarded ...
 
3:12 AM
# You'd think quantifying with Inf or a never-satisfied Range would make for a pattern that always fails, but it
# doesn't. So we just use an improbably high limit instead to keep things tidy.
my Int $indent-limit = 1_000_000_000;
much later in the program:
my Int $level = $()<level>;
my Str $indent = ' ' x $level;
oops @Ven
you’d think it’d be easy to track but it only blew up in a particular set of circumstances
 
3:41 AM
@TelKitty Yes. The pattern of iron in the blood depends on their political viewpoint, leading to "left leaning" and "right leaning" people.
 
so iron deficient people are less likely affected by pole reversal?
 
 
2 hours later…
5:18 AM
@TelKitty No. Polish people are less likely affected by iron reversal.
 
 
1 hour later…
6:25 AM
For instance, one can additively mix yellow and blue by shining yellow light together with blue light, which will result in not green but a white light.
Every day, I learn something new ... and probably totally useless :x
 
nwp
7:22 AM
@TelKitty You don't have pure iron in your blood, it is chemically bonded to other atoms which makes it not magnetic. That's why even strong magnets don't hold on people at all, unless you do some fancy magnetization first.
 
Hi :)
 
7:39 AM
Sup
I almost did some coding today, instead I spent I spent the better part of the day making power point figures trying to explain what I did.
Also Edward Gibbon is full of shit
 
8:10 AM
Nov 23 '17 at 6:19, by Telkitty
from a site owned by my parents - a neighbour did demolition and excavation but dug all the way to the fence and caused fence to collapse
update on the story: the said neighbour is being sued by the other two neighbours
way to piss ALL of your neighbours off
also legislators need to pass physics
we need less dumb legislations - such as you are allowed to dig up to 1 meter under the fence when foundation is usually 0.6 meters
 
I did some coding yesterday but fell asleep before actually clicking the button to run the code
2
 
Sam
Hey
 
Sam
8:30 AM
Assume I have a class Car which inside do everything which build a car e.g. Engine, Gearbox. If I wanted to abstract these inner components into a their own classes, would I initialise those objects within the Car classes constructor OR initialise them before creating a Car instance and inject them into the Car object instantiation?
 
nwp

C++ Questions and Answers

Solve problems and approach solutions. Just ask and lurkers wi...
 
Sam
Ah thanks
(and sorry)
 
8:55 AM
hi anyone knows enough about how output process pipe are read/buffered
I'm trying to read from a too but the output doesn't get flushed until the program ends and not when I need it.
I was wondering if there was a way to change the buffer size without changing the initial program so I could make it behave like a stream of byte instead
 
 
1 hour later…
Ven
10:03 AM
Hi
 
Hi <3
 
 
2 hours later…
nwp
11:58 AM
-91
Q: Introducing Text Ads! AKA Sponsoring That Fine Manual!

Tim Post tl;dr; — There's a new ad type coming in the form of dynamic text that will lead users to documentation and courses offered by our clients, and ultimately community-curated canonical questions. When it comes to page views on Stack Overflow and the content that we show, you basically have two...

I just saw this.
So much drama.
> If SO considers these to be useful, why is their visibility tied to the Reduce Advertisements setting?
It almost hurt reading ;D
 
Ven
LMAO, link-only answers if you pay money. Perfect.
 
I will only start to worry if they impose ads in chats
 
Ven
We need people to vote: would you rather have ads or Telkitty.
 
you question will be deleted because of close votes
I mean, if they need bring in $ to keep their staff feed, so be it
 
nwp
12:16 PM
> Questions? Please leave an answer and we'll do our best to answer it
They need A&Q for meta so they can post the answer and have people add questions.
 
Ven
@LucDanton Seems like a Failure would be better.
my $foo:bar<2> = 5;
say $foo:bar(1+1) # OUTPUT: «5␤»
Sometimes even I get surprised.
 
 
1 hour later…
1:27 PM
I'm reading stuff about allocators and claims that thanks to rebinding, we could always feed std::allocator<void> as a proto-allocator to std::vector<T> instead of std::allocator<T> and that it would probably instantiate fewer things here and there
If true why wasn't it done from the start? :hum:
 
hindsight
 
It's C++, mistakes are part of the game
 
Would it be legal for current standard library implementations to always rebind the allocator before allocating, making std::vector<int, std::allocator<void>> actually work?
 
@Morwenn but that type would be incompatible with std::vector<int, std::allocator<int>>
 
indeed, but in my use cases I hardly ever have vectors interacting with each other
 
1:41 PM
maybe not where you'd notice, but passing a const ref of a vector (pretty common) requires them to be compatible
 
oh, I mean that I have mostly function-local vectors in algorithms that don't leak out of the function
 
but std::allocator<void> is deprecated from C++17, am I missing something here?
 
@login_not_failed They plan to undeprecate it especially because it is used here and there as a proto-allocator
 
ah I see now, thanks
 
The wording about proto-allocators is in the Networking TS and specifically mentions std::allocator<void> as being one :)
 
 
3 hours later…
5:02 PM
@Borgleader
 
5:15 PM
@Mysticial I'm waiting for the first GDPR case related to something like this
 
"I want all my personal information gone, but I want to keep all my internet points?"
 
@Mysticial lol
 
@Nican pretty sure that's been asked on Tim's meta question
 
 
1 hour later…
6:40 PM
@Borgleader
7
Q: What have I done wrong? Considering rudeness / politeness

Thomas FlinkowI recently came across this question which to me seemed like a Can you please do my job question. Therefore, I added a comment with more or less the standard copy-paste text I use for reviewing. As you can see in the picture, OP was not exactly too happy about my response: Now I'm not trying ...

 
I want to answer my question that was incorrectly closed as a dupe. Looks like CUDA 9.2 can now build boost's small vector, although crashes in other places. But the link now redirects to the dupe instead of my question...
 
@Mysticial Hah I remember that question coming in on metasmoke
 
@ThomasFlinkow The only thing you did wrong here is to let your battery get so low. Go charge it. — Mysticial 25 secs ago
 
6:59 PM
wow people don't understand the difference between lists and sets in set theory
 
nwp
7:17 PM
May 8 at 13:35, by Loïc Faure-Lacroix
@nwp a linked list is a composition of set containing more sets with the deepest containing the empty set
I was told something and I remembered!
 
7:48 PM
@nwp but where is the actual data?
Maybe each set contains two items, the data and the second item is the next node?
 
nwp
Probably.
Although in that case having an empty set doesn't make sense, might as well have only the number.
 
 
3 hours later…
10:26 PM
What if set theory doesn't support pointers :-)
 
11:02 PM
@Mikhail sounds like you like lisp
 
11:24 PM
I fucking hate it but I used a lot of Racket in my undergrad thesis because of MEEP
 

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