« first day (3735 days earlier)      last day (1439 days later) » 

00:29
` warning: ‘nodiscard’ attribute applied to ‘void` and other things that shouldn't compile
Hello
 
4 hours later…
04:40
Has anyone see this icon on phone before?
05:06
What's the best way to backup sms from phone to PC?
06:02
Looks like I need a new phone :x
 
2 hours later…
07:48
@Mikhail ```cpp
Newlines aren't allowed on mobile? (bruh)
Maybe this would compile? :v ```cpp
⁣[[nodiscard]] void get() {}
void put() { return get(); }
```
What's even more funnier is that if you do void put() { get(); return get(); } gcc won't warn you about discarding void :-)
clang says "warning: attribute 'nodiscard' cannot be applied to functions without return value", when it really attempts to communicate a slightly different position. Should say "is ignored to functions without return value"
08:03
Hey Peter. How's it going?
 
1 hour later…
09:30
I am going to dissect my galaxy S8 phone.
It has become unusable anyways
I have dissected my iphone before, it's only fair that I dissect my Samsung galaxy too!
 
1 hour later…
10:50
Good morning
 
1 hour later…
nwp
nwp
11:51
I ran into this issue.
No <stdatomic.h> in C++. Very unfortunate.
But hey, there is always using atomic_bool = char;. What could possibly go wrong?
12:36
This <stdatomic.h> proposal has been accepted into C++23
In the meantime you can just #include <atomic> and use using std::atomic_bool
@Morwenn did they ever fix the incompat issues?
Which compat issues specifically?
I don't remember the exact change, I remember that C changed something that broke compat at the last moment before they ratified C11
I know that there are some issues with initialization not being atomic, but I don't think it's a compatibility issue
There were issues with ATOMIC_VAR_INIT too, but it was deprecated in C17 and C++20
12:53
dunno, I never kept up with it because I didn't use C atomics or threads
I seldom use atomics, and even less C
13:14
Honestly the only reason I've considered using C recently was to write a UEFI DOS
which is still a project in the ideation phase for me
 
2 hours later…
14:49
"If you don't do your homework you get punished." The word "punished" seems a bit weird here. Anyone know the term that is more likely to be used by teachers or in a school setting?
nwp
nwp
It doesn't sound weird to me. "Disciplined" is an alternative, though arguably more weird.
Dunno, punishment sounds a bit kinky to me.
But then, I'm not a native English speaker :)
"If you don't do your homework there will be consequences"
nwp
nwp
I'm pretty sure that's just you knowing that term from elsewhere. Punishment in a school setting doesn't have a kinky connotation I'm pretty sure.
Then again I'm not a native speaker either.
@nwp obviously you've never had a hot teacher
15:01
@CupOfJava Damn, that one sounds scary. It seems realistic.
"there are consequences for not doing your homework"
nwp
nwp
"Teacher, can I be punished for something I didn't do?"
"Yes. Come see me after class."
I think overly hormonal teens/young adults kinda see NSFR connotations from totally benign interactions. Plus it's always best to air on the side of caution while interacting in a teacher-student relationship.
nwp
nwp
Not Safe For Reality? Relationships?
15:13
that's embarrassing
*NSFW
nwp
nwp
Time to live out that humiliation kink.
I program apps for a living, trust me I'm already there
> overly hormonal teens/young adults
lol
nwp
nwp
That's masochism. Not the same thing.
It's contextual: even with nuked hormones I would still see NSFW connotations everywhere if I was in the mood
It's funnier to react to them when you feel confident and sexy
nwp
nwp
15:17
It's also funnier when you're sexy, otherwise it comes across as creepy.
Which, again, is contextual
@nwp I think if you understood my background then you'd get the humiliation part of app development (take my word for it).
@Morwenn Are you saying context matters?
What a crazy thought
That's the only way you'll be able to parse C++
C++ is super easy. All you have to do is go to Morwenn's blog, copy, paste, and your done. I mean you're basically an expert at that point.
nwp
nwp
Good workflow.
15:26
The first step might be a bit difficult
nwp
nwp
Also get an IDE that has a button that copy/pastes the code with red squigglies together with the compiler error messages into a stackoverflow question and shows you answers as they appear.
Maybe even doing automatic replacements and selecting the one that compiles.
Don't you still have the blog on git.......
I've got an empty repository
I've got a bunch of things to do in my personal projects, and fighting with Jekyll isn't among my top priorities
On the plus side I finally finished to migrate my CI to GitHub Actions
I mean the old one
Oh, it's really specific to a project
It's as much documentation as it is a blog
15:32
copy, paste, done
C++ expert
my invoice will be in the mail
15:57
@CupOfJava There is a bit of a derogatory term for the people most likely to have that issue. Unfortunately I've seen both sides of it, where the noise of the people taking things wrong has drowned out the people that were actually harmed. :(
nwp
nwp
"Teenager"
No it's rather worse than that
16:31
I think the lesson here is don't talk to people
 
3 hours later…
19:06
Anybody remember if boost::process splits up piped data into chunks to avoid blowing max piping limits? 4k or 64k, or something like that?
More of a lament/requiem than a question, but thanks Mgetz.
Just post all the code :-)
@CaptainGiraffe it was going to turn into a question ;p
 
2 hours later…
22:09

« first day (3735 days earlier)      last day (1439 days later) »