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15:01
getsebool <-- I read getschool
@ScottW Last time I used SQL Server was because I was working a company with enough Microsoft Certified Professionals to get free licenses.
@Telkitty猫咪咪 You can school me anytime, snookerdoodles~
lol we are the lounges wuv wuv club
Postgres forever.
$6,874 is close to the high-end for monthly salaries in this country
15:07
@ScottW Also, it's not horrible at all. Building with SQLServer after being used to Postgres was not a pain at all and I did not want to kill myself several times. It comes with SQLDeveloper which is an amazing, useful well though out tool too, just like most microsoft tools.
SQL Server is good. It's just fucking expensive.
@BenjaminGruenbaum this smells of sarcasm a bit too much :(
@thecoshman No no, I really do like SQL Server, it's just so fun to work with.
At least you can install it without hiring a trained engineer.
I've heard installing Oracle on your own makes you instantly rich, but nobody managed to do that yet.
Xeo
Xeo
lol
15:10
I have no idea why, but SQL Server always installs on the third attempt. It's the sort of voodoo that just works -_-
@EtiennedeMartel Depends on your standard of comparison. Based on number of installations vs. money, an average installation of SQL Server is about half the cost of an average installation of Oracle.
Xeo
Xeo
Wokay, httpd network access... workses
(Uninstalling SQL Server still requires a goat sacrifice and moon being in the right phase, though.)
3
@JerryCoffin SQL Server is also much less painful to use than Oracle.
The more I read about it, the more I got the feeling to not understand a thing about all this. I read most of this stuff a couple months ago and still feel like I'm discovering the whole thing all over again... To keep it simple for my poor brain that now hurts a bit, all these advices on utf8everywhere are still valid, right? If I "just" want my users to be able to open and write files no matter their system settings I can ask them the file name, store it in a std::string and everything should work properly, even on Windows? Sorry to ask that (again)... — Uflex 28 mins ago
15:11
@R.MartinhoFernandes You can almost smell the despair from here.
@CatPlusPlus Or a next-next-next-finish sequence. Both are adequate.
Xeo
Xeo
(replicate 3 next) ++ finish
@EtiennedeMartel For smaller installations, yes. Oracle does have some nice features for high-end stuff (e.g., rolling upgrades, so you can do version upgrades in a cluster without ever taking down the whole cluster at once).
Xeo
Xeo
Wait, ++ was for two lists, right?
sequence_ 3 next >> finish
Xeo
Xeo
heh
15:13
sequence_ probably takes different arguments, I DON'T CARE.
@JerryCoffin In the end, though, I wonder how good that is compared to your average startup's hand-made MySQL cluster.
@etienne seems like success. If people get a feeling they don't have a clue, it may get them to seek one out.
Xeo
Xeo
Takes a list of monads
user142019
How would I match any word that is not all-caps using a regex in Vim?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Indeed.
To keep it simple for my poor brain that now hurts a bit, all these advices on utf8everywhere are still valid, right?
The use of the word "right" is so fucking telling.
15:14
Clear case of cargo culting
The way I see it, it's people latching on to a source of authority when dealing with something they don't really understand.
Unicode is hard, and that UTF-8 Anywhere guy kinda looks like he knows what he's talking about, so let's do what he says.
@EtiennedeMartel Oracle is a PITA to manage well, but if you have a large enough army of people who know enough, it can work pretty well. MySQL is badly enough designed that I doubt there's any circumstance in which that claim can be made.
@JerryCoffin MySQL is a PITA to manage well, but if you have a large enough army of people who know enough, it can work pretty well
Ell
Ell
Jeesus Christ I just had an extremely awkward moment
We should make unicodeeverwhere dot org.
@EtiennedeMartel No, it can't.
Oracle is pain to manage, but MySQL is just a crappy database.
15:20
@CatPlusPlus We run our stuff on MySQL.
@Ell Tell us about it in detail. Make sure to seperate any incriminating words and phrases into their own sentences so we can star them and publicly shame you.
Works reasonably well.
What would you put there?
@EtiennedeMartel I suppose that may be true in a way, but the circumstances in which it is/can be true is/are much narrower and more limited, and much of what you end up doing is ignoring what the database itself provides, and duplicating those features on your own.
15:21
@R.MartinhoFernandes utf8everywhere.com sucks [Bananas]
robor, how about holding a cat in that avatar of yours?
robor? :p
Robotor.
@EtiennedeMartel Us too. It sucks.
Ell
Ell
@Thephd my ex just gave me back my present to her in front of my friends
I had no idea how to react and just said "okay"
15:23
@R.MartinhoFernandes I don't know, you're the Unicode expert.
2
@ScottW I've done that on Windows too. Well, okay, it was just one key that was marked "Mail", not a combination though.
Something about focusing on Unicode rather than representation of it.
@EtiennedeMartel Why? Legacy support?
@JerryCoffin uninstall drivers -> rip out key. problem solved
15:25
@BenjaminGruenbaum Because it works and we know how to make it work.
There's a bunch of stuff I'd like to write about but I don't know how to structure it.
@Aboutblank I don't particularly object -- those extra keys are far enough away from the normal keys I've never hit them by accident.
@R.MartinhoFernandes just format it with <rant> ... </rant>
@EtiennedeMartel One can't overestimate the value of working software. Still, I'd do my best to switch form a bad technology to a better one.
@BenjaminGruenbaum That is not always your choice to make.
@CatPlusPlus I know.
(Also, lulz at the .ca TLD).
@EtiennedeMartel just lulz at Canada in general, frankly
SO questions provide a nice framing for some things but the good ones are rare
@R.MartinhoFernandes You may find them listed on my profile page. :)
@LightnessRacesinOrbit The Queen will be here in two weeks! I can't wait to not give a shit.
15:29
@EtiennedeMartel Excellent! I spoke to her just yesterday and she said the same, so it is clear that you already have plenty in common to enjoy together.
@melak I don't want to write a rant. I want to write something didactic like Joel's article but without the errors and focusing on stuff that matters and not crap like serialisation formats aka encodings
well, uh.
Also I realised that my blog is crap on mobile
do that :D
@R.MartinhoFernandes Everything is crap on mobile.
What you need is an app.
15:34
Responsive design (a.k.a. funny word for taking resolution into account dynamically).
I just grabbed one of GitHub's premade designs.
the land of ponies
@R.MartinhoFernandes It's called "Equestria".
^that
Is this valid syntax: namespace B = Bushman;?
15:36
Yes.
@EtiennedeMartel It doesn't exist.
Interesting....never seen that before
And what about this:
It's probably an identifier in zoidberg's language
@CatPlusPlus stackoverflow.com/a/17171180/1520907 There you go, now I'm not using push_back with std::move
15:38
int main()
    try {
        // ...
    } catch (exception) {
    }
@LightnessRacesinOrbit So?
You still have that unique_ptr<T>(&x).
A try...catch in main() without the surrounding {}s?
@EtiennedeMartel Just reminding you ;)
@CatPlusPlus Say what
15:38
Also the real solution is probably moving/emplacing that Graph object into the vector.
// With smart pointer (C++11)
vec.emplace_back(std::unique_ptr<Graph>(&graph));
Bad code, UB, never do this.
@CatPlusPlus Bleh, I'm going to restructure the entire answer. It's currently acting like 2
0
A: Why do I get a linker error?

Code-Guru MyClass::MyClass(){ void func(); // declaration func(); // call } //-------------------------------------------- void func(){ // definition cout << "Ping..." << endl; } You declare of func() inside the MyClass constructor, but define another function with...

upboat!
@Code-Guru fix your formatting first
@Code-Guru Uh those two snippets are equivalent.
Oh, okay, no.
But not for the reason you gave.
Argh people please stop throwing smart pointers at problems like tgat
15:42
@R.MartinhoFernandes What throwing smart pointers at problems?
Agreed! I prefer to use dumb pointers.
You cannot create a vector of a class that is not copyable. You can try to use smart pointers (like unique_ptr) and use a vector of smart pointers of Graph. — Gonmator 2 hours ago
This is the best comment.
smart pointer can only be as smart as the person using it, dumb people will turn the pointer into a dumb pointer
You cannot create a vector of noncopyable type, you should create a vector of noncopyable type instead.
lol
15:44
@Telkitty猫咪咪 We are screwed then.
JBL
JBL
@R.MartinhoFernandes Makes me think of something I wondered about not that long ago : is it bad to typedef smart pointers, e.g. typedef std::shared_ptr<MyType> SPtrMyType ?
Lol that comment is genius
@CatPlusPlus I have restructured it now to make it clearer, are there still problems? (Do note that I'm still a novice at this)
If you're mentioning pointers, mention only unique_ptr since this is exclusive ownership situation.
@JBL ask your coding convention document
JBL
JBL
15:45
@CatPlusPlus This is glorious
@Telkitty猫咪咪 I know, I suck. :-)
That said, vector.emplace_back(std::move(proc)); is probably going to work and doesn't need pointers at all.
With vector being a vector of that noncopyable type.
@CatPlusPlus What if the capacity is exceeded?
And proc being instance of that.
@Chimera I suck too, rep whoring not going well, I am calling it off for the night :p
15:46
@FredOverflow What what? Nothing.
You're right actually
What if Graph has no move constructor?
@JBL Yes, it's terrible.
@FredOverflow Then indirection. Still worth mentioning simpler solution first rather than workarounds for broken types.
Considering the fact that the author made the copy constructor private rather than using delete, I'd say he didn't declare a move constructor because he doesn't seem to be using C++11 features
15:47
And again, don't mention raw owning pointer.
It's not a solution, it's a bug.
@Telkitty猫咪咪 LOL. I haven't answered a question in six months. I've been giving away rep to get questions of mine answered.
@CatPlusPlus If the capacity is exceeded, std::vector will try to copy the Graphs (unless the move assignment operator is nothrow).
JBL
JBL
@DeadMG I was right being very careful about this then. What could be the issues ? Something comparable to typedef'ing arrays ?
@JBL No, it's just pointless and opaque. There aren't any technical issues with it- you won't get any unpleasant surprises w.r.t. what some code means.
All this talk of serious C++ stuff. I must be in the wrong room. :-)
15:49
but the simple fact is that when you say SPtrMyType, I have no idea what the fuck that is, and you've saved a grand total of like, 7 characters.
@CatPlusPlus Well shit, C++11 has been around for at least 3 years now, I might as well just remove that shitty raw pointer answer, you're right
typedefs have two uses- naming types to be passed back, like the results of metacomputations, and shortening really, really long typenames.
template<typename T> using shrd = std::shared_ptr<T>;   // :-D
std::shared_ptr<T> to SPtrT is not a significant shortening.
JBL
JBL
@DeadMG Yeah, well I might not have chosen the best name. And following my usual coding conventions wouldn't shorten that much indeed.
15:50
@CatPlusPlus Hrmm...what does declaring a function inside another function (or ctor) do exactly? I've never even tried to do this before...
@Magtheridon96 It's not the solution for 03 either. :P
@Code-Guru it declares a function, silly :p
@Uflex maybe. I don't know if following advice you don't understand is a good idea. — R. Martinho Fernandes 25 secs ago
JBL
JBL
@Code-Guru It declares it.
I think that's the politically correct reply
15:51
@CatPlusPlus I was practically in kindergarten when 03 became official :P
user142019
Holy infinite cumshot.
user142019
It's over 30 degrees centigrade outside.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Okay...formatting fixed...
@Code-Guru Declares a function from root ns, when you want to declare it in non-root ns.
user142019
@DeadMG @T :3
15:53
@rightfold Currently 27 here, and it'll be 33 tomorrow ;-; (33 high, 23 low)
@melak47 Okay...in the case of declaring inside a ctor or member func, is the declared func a class member? Oh wait...it only has scope within the ctor/func where it's declared...
right?
@Code-Guru declaring what inside them?
You cannot declare functions inside functions in C++.
@Code-Guru It's not declared as member.
@FredOverflow You can.
@CatPlusPlus not without lambdas
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Sadness and despair.
15:55
unless they're lambdas of course, but that's just being a dick to yourself
@rightfold You disgust me.
@FredOverflow You're confusing declarations and definitions.
user142019
Good.
1
A: Why do I get a linker error?

Code-GuruMyClass::MyClass(){ void func(); // declaration func(); // call } //-------------------------------------------- void func(){ // definition cout << "Ping..." << endl; } You declare of func() inside the MyClass constructor, but you don't define a local function named func() inside th...

user142019
That's my goal in life.
15:55
@CatPlusPlus Oh, of course. I seem to have been programming in too many sane languages where there is no such distinction lately :)
I didn't compile the OP's code...
but he's only getting a linker error, not a compiler error.
His code is equivalent to void f(); namespace x { void g() { f(); } void f() { ... } }
@CatPlusPlus So if you declare a func inside a ctor/func, where do you have to define it in order to satisfy the linker? (Not that I would do this...)
While he needs namespace x { void f(); void g() { f(); } void f() { ... } }
In std::vector<T>, T may be movable but non-copyable, right?
15:57
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Yes, but the move assignment operator must be nothrow.
That's not class member, silly.
@FredOverflow nods
@Gonmator: Please don't just throw smart pointers at every problem. Also, you may create a vector of objects of a type that is not copyable (as long as it is moveable, and the move assignment operator is marked nothrow). — Lightness Races in Orbit 8 secs ago
@CatPlusPlus So declaring a func f() inside another func g() makes f() a global func, not a member of the namespace containing g()?
In his code void namespace::foo(); might work. Or might not, I don't remember the rules for that.
What sane person declares functions inside other functions, anyway?

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