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22:00
Yes.
@Xeo Skype is the only voice software that I can use without PTT and not annoy everyone in the call.
(removed)
I've used voice activation in Mumble and it worked okay.
So I'm guessing their noise cancelling is better than TS.
Hell, I could even leave it on voice activation back when I was gaming on a laptop with no headset.
Xeo
Xeo
@EtiennedeMartel Eh?
22:02
I tried doing that with both Mumble and TeamSpeak and oh boy did everyone got annoyed.
user142019
Fucking stack overflow.
anybody still playing candies?
@EtiennedeMartel Get a better mic.
@TonyTheLion I have the tab open and eat them from time to time
@CatPlusPlus I now have a better mic.
22:02
cool
How does your mantra go, "blame the tools when you're bad"? :v
But what I'm saying is Skype worked well without a good mic.
user142019
Skype worked well before Microsoft bought it and since then it only went downhill and it's a terrible and buggy program right now.
@rightfold Never had any issue, even after Microsoft's purchase.
I think you might be affected by cognitive bias.
user142019
Screen sharing randomly doesn't work.
22:06
@rightfold Again, never had any issue.
user142019
Screen sharing doesn't work with two people at the same time, back in the days it did.
Of course, I'm not a very good sample because it has a size of 1.
JBL
JBL
What the hell ? Left Lounge<C++> when there was philosophical debate, join Lounge<Philosophy> and see technical discussions.
13
user142019
Skype eats all RAM it can.
user142019
Google Hangouts is far superior.
22:07
@rightfold And now we're getting to it.
user142019
It actually works.
You know, @rightfold, I think I know what's the issue.
You're a hipster.
@JBL Good thing you left.
You dislike popular stuff in favour of unpopular stuff.
JBL
JBL
@Rapptz Was it that bad ?
22:08
room topic changed to Lounge<Drama>: Because fun is overrated. [c++] [c++11] [c++-faq] [no-helpdesk]
What!?
I look away for a moment and you...
@JBL I would never take psychological advice or any philosophical meaning from anyone here.
@Rapptz I would -- but only from myself. :-)
@JerryCoffin Seriously though, I still see you as one of the wisest persons here.
Ell
Ell
Etienne is a hipster level of liberalness
22:12
@Ell I'm a social democrat.
@EtiennedeMartel Hmm...is there an "antisocial democrat" party I could join?
@JerryCoffin I'm talking about that.
Ell
Ell
I think a benevolent dictatorship works better than a democracy
But rare find in the real world
@Ell Democracy is a pragmatic system.
In a perfect world, an anarchy would be the best.
JBL
JBL
Drama, mmmmh.
22:17
Reminds me. Years ago, somebody trying to get their petition signed, asked me if I was a registered member of some party or other. Somehow instantly came up with: "No. Are you a registered member of the anarchists party?" He obviously said "No", to which I immediately came up with something like: "Great -- no proper anarchist would ever register. Thanks for supporting us!"...and walked away while he was shaking his head in confusion.
Is there any way I can restrict passing an argument with automatic storage?
@Magtheridon96 No.
Well, redesigning this class it is :v
@Ell The problem, of course, is that anybody who disagrees with the "benevolent" part is pretty much just screwed.
or I can just a put a warning for now and redo it later
there are much better things I could be doing
22:19
@Magtheridon96 Why do you think you want to?
goddamn
some prick is doing something that sounds like they're blowing up buildings in the next town over
driving poor Daisy nuts
@JerryCoffin Well, I just realized I can enforce moving, but before that, I wanted to restrict myself from passing in a stack-allocated object to a function because that function was pushing it to a vector
(in a unique_ptr)
void addButton(const GUIEditorButton&& button);
There we go
Ell
Ell
Why would you want that?
What is wrong with pushing a heap allocated object to vector?
std::move(*make_unique<T>())
22:24
@Magtheridon96 The origin shouldn't matter.
It shouldn't matter, but it did at first because I was using a raw pointer (I'm going over old code)
Ell
Ell
Even still
@Magtheridon96 Accept T&, store T*. If T is const U then delete overload taking U&& or T&&, your pick.
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton I think you're confusing him.
Why? He's almost there.
22:28
I just realized how stupid I am for trying to hide errors
Oh, is this for getting rid of an owning raw pointer?
This is what I was doing pretty much:
What do you intend the replacement use to be?
`void addButton(Button* button);`
`menu.addButton(new Button(...));`
Oh God
@LucDanton Well, I was being stupid and I wanted to protect myself from dangling pointers by moving the button instead
user142019
It works I'm so fucking håppy!
22:31
Make a copy.
I mean, it's not stupid to use the move,
it's stupid to hide the error,
which would be creating a button on the stack
@Magtheridon96 If you move a Button, what pointer is left to be dangling?
@Magtheridon96 And why is that an error?
Once Skype proclaimed that it was "improving user experience" and then broke itself.
So, did it?
Yes.
I had to reinstall it though, because we use it at work. :(
22:33
@CatPlusPlus I'd describe my code, but it's embarrassing at this point. I noticed UB-code left undetected
user142019
I should make all of these functions pure.
Lounge, have some love <3 <3
@rightfold Is "pure" on your Word of the Day calendar?
user142019
I don't have such a calendar.
So what's up with the ` sometimes not putting text in that fixed-width font.
22:37
you have to put them in the right place, else morkdawn fails
It's in the newbie hints. tl;dr no markdown for multiline messages
Hallo
Your avatar looks like a flag
I constantly want to click "invalid" on you
user142019
Your avatar looks like a fag
@LucDanton: Your library is beautiful
22:38
@rightfold I was so expecting that...
user142019
Me too.
My Your avatar looks like a fag lion -FTFY
Thanks.
user142019
I can now write my parser. :3
to parse what?
user142019
D's type inference for delegate types is not powerful enough. Hope they'll fix it.
@Magtheridon96 That's so Lounge
Do I have to be nice? No.
@LucDanton Tomorrow I will find some time to dive more into the implementation, but the example is really brilliant
22:40
I like befriending assholes
I like the way any and all are defined in terms of folds
@Magtheridon96 I'm an asshole, ohai?
user142019
sex sex sex fap fap fap sex sex sex fap fap fap sex sex sex fap fap fap sex sex sex fap fap fap sex sex sex fap fap fap sex sex sex fap fap fap sex sex sex fap fap fap sex sex sex fap fap fap sex sex sex fap fap fap sex sex sex fap fap fap
3
@TonyTheLion >o<
@rightfold expected ';'
@Magtheridon96 lol
@rightfold inb4 bin
user142019
22:42
@Magtheridon96 automatically inserted; Go.
user142019
@TonyTheLion inb4 idiot joins room and flags.
@rightfold not unlikely
@Magtheridon96 LOL
rightfold is currently conducting an experiment to test the responsiveness of Etienne
user142019
Parser!dstring items(dstring cs) {
    return cs == ""d ? unit(""d)
                     : item(cs[0]).bind!dchar(
                           _ => items(cs[1..$]).bind!dstring(
                               _ => unit(cs)));
}
user142019
22:45
^ D clearly lacks do-notation.
I don't get why more managed languages don't do implicit returns.
Me, or rightfold?
user142019
You.
Hmmm... a bunch of language do do that. Like Scala for example.
Ell
Ell
As in, return value of last statement? Or everything is an expression or whatever
I haven't really thought this through, everything is an expression is nice in my opinion. Last statement is a nice start.
//this should return 5; <- a nice start
int a(){
   5;
}
user142019
22:50
Gear has only explicit return except for nil.
user142019
If you don't return it returns nil.
Yeah, JavaScript does that too, that's fucking stupid.
user142019
Except when you specify a return type, in which case it will raise a ContractError if you don't return explicitly.
Implicitly returns undefined. CoffeeScript fixes that.
user142019
foo = ->
assert(foo() is undefined)
user142019
22:51
@BenjaminGruenbaum not in all cases ^^
@ScottW I don't know what rightfold's language does, but if it implicitly returns only nil that's stupid.
Ell
Ell
Why?
user142019
2 mins ago, by rightfold
If you don't return it returns nil.
Ell
Ell
Explicit nil return is worse than implicit
Why would a function implicitly return nil anyway?
Why would that be useful?
user142019
22:55
nil indicates lack of a value.
user142019
If you don't explicitly return a value from a function, that function doesn't return a value.
user142019
Hence return nil. :v
You're returning a value though, that value is nil... There is a difference between not returning a value and returning a value that represents nothing.
yes, the difference is that one of them sucks and the other one does not.
I agree that not returning anything is fucking stupid, but implicit returns sound like a much better solution.
JBL
JBL
22:59
@BenjaminGruenbaum How so ? If it's not supposed to return anything, how returning nil anyway could be good ? What use could you have for this ?
So today I was particularly bored. So I drew this. @TonyTheLion
@JBL First of all, that's what he does now anyway. Second of all, I'm not sure how his language works, but in dynamic languages or at least languages that let nil to be assigned to all types it could be cleaner in some situations.
Ell
Ell
So without implicit nil return, what would myval = func do if func doesn't explicitly return anything?
user142019
nil is not something that can be assigned to all types.
user142019
fun foo(bar String) { … }
fun baz(bar) { … }
foo(nil); # exception — nil isn't a String
baz(nil); # fine — duck typing
user142019
23:07
nil is of its own type.
Ell
Ell
Postfix type declaration?
user142019
You can do fun foo(x Nil) { … } foo(nil); but that's kind of useless.
user142019
@Ell Congratulations. You can read.
Ell
Ell
Kinda like explicit void
Oh wiat no
user142019
No, more like std::tuple<>.
Ell
Ell
23:08
anyway I'm gonna sleep now
Nighty night
Hah, the notification for Bartek disappeared.
Master plan success.
user142019
void is a sum type with zero data constructors. std::tuple<> is a sum type with one data constructor with no parameters.
user142019
Hence void has zero possible values, and std::tuple<> has one possible value.
user142019
Nil is like std::tuple<>, and nil is like std::tuple<>{}.
Xeo
Xeo
using Nil = std::tuple<>;
static constexpr Nil nil{};
Although std::tuple probably doesn't have a constexpr default ctor in C++11.
23:14
That's unit btw
Xeo
Xeo
Yeah, I know
user142019
I could call it unit, yes.
user142019
Maybe I'll actually do that instead of nil.
@rightfold Calling it unit is a lot clearer than calling it nil
Not the same things.
user142019
23:17
In my case they are.
Oh, Zoidberg is just bad at names.
user142019
I have a type called Nil with only one possible value.
user142019
I should call it Unit instead.
Xeo
Xeo
s/at.*//
user142019
~/gear [ git commit                                          master * ] 1:19 am
[master 55a9292] Rename Nil to Unit
 2 files changed, 2 insertions(+), 21 deletions(-)
user142019
23:19
:3
I like you better now.
user142019
I should also have an Option type.
It's called Maybe. :colbert:
user142019
I was thinking of Perhaps.
Kinda Sorta.
user142019
23:44
!is-some?() this looks funny.
Alright guys.
Here we go.
Creating world maps and shit.
when would you use a something like
int foo(int) {
return 1;
}
user142019
foo :: a -> Int
foo = const 1
Johnny Drama?
user142019
Stupid monomorphism restriction.
23:47
it seems pretty useless to have a function that takes a perimeter but can't use it
@rightfold You look funny, but no one complains =p
Fuck, instead of writing all those testcases by hand I could have written one testcase per range concept and instantiated them where I needed to.
@rightfold, is .d the file extension for gear code files?
Apparently I can do generic programming or write unit tests but not both at the same time ;_;
user142019
@Jeffrey No, .d is for D source files.
user142019
23:50
.gear is for Gear source files.
that make sense
user142019
The Gear files I've written so-far are in lib/std/.
user142019
I'll use them to have something to test the parser with.
user142019
They're definitely not final.
@rightfold You should've protected them.
user142019
23:53
What do you mean?
It is an STD joke, you ruined it.
user142019
It's not funny.
you're not funny
It's a bad joke okay.
user142019
It's horrible.
23:54
:(
I know.
user142019
:)
user142019
Me too.
What's postcondition?
user142019
It's checked if you enable contracts to check whether your code sucks or not.
A postcondition?
user142019
23:54
Because my type system isn't advanced enough to do that for you. :v
I never really used AOP.
Should try sometime.
user142019
postconditions are only run in contract mode.
user142019
If you don't enable contracts in the interpreter it will omit them.
I mean is that a function with a block attached or a keyword?
user142019
Or maybe I'll do the reverse, that's better.
user142019
23:55
Explicitly disable them.
user142019
@Jeffrey Keyword.
user142019
There's also precondition and invariant.
user142019
And I'm going to add test for unit tests.
Yeah, I figured :)
user142019
All stolen from D.
user142019
23:56
Well, the invariant one I came up with before I knew D had them.
user142019
So that's a coincidence.
user142019
They're run before and after every method call except before calls to construct.
Does gear compile to native code?
user142019
Bytecode interpreter.
user142019
I'm not competent enough to write JIT-compilers.
23:57
...like ...Java?
Java Java Java
user142019
More like YARV or CPython.
JVM has a quite powerful JIT.
user142019
Parser produces AST, AST is compiled to Gear bytecode, VM interprets bytecode.
user142019
It doesn't compile the bytecode to machine code first. That's what Java and .NET do.
23:59
'Tis how it's done.
I'm very ignorant in this. But why would you need bytecode when compiling to native code? Don't you just need to know Assembly?

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