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user142019
17:00
My tooth hurts.
@JerryCoffin Yeah. Newsletter comes out on Tuesdays.
@ThePhD I already maxed out for a couple of days from it (and have ~1700 more rep lost to the cap).
=[
The cap sucks.
I don't know why they instituted it.
Skeet lost like 1.6 million rep from the cap if I recall
Can I just ask, why does Ruby have such an over-whelming presence in web development, whereas Python is just as capable if not more so, and frankly, faster?
Xeo
Xeo
17:01
Ah, now the @PsychoDad has updated the question, it's clear why this is faster. The real code has a side-effect in the comparison, which is why the compiler couldn't optimize the short-circuit away. — Oli Charlesworth Jun 14 at 17:57
Yay for posting wrong code~
@JerryCoffin I didn't "discover" the newsletter until I started to notice the random "Tuesday vote spikes" that I'd occasionally get. Then I searched around and found that newsletter to the source of it.
Xeo
Xeo
@ThePhD Yes. Badly.
Fuck this, imma buy myself a nice fan right now.
@Mysticial Yeah -- I'm pretty sure I wouldn't know about it, except that you've mentioned it before. I couldn't remember the day of week, but when the spike came yesterday, I figured it must be Tuesday.
@GamesBrainiac if you try rails, you should know why
@Xeo He hadn't posted wrong code -- just originally didn't include any code at all. I did a little testing, and even removing the side effect didn't make much difference though.
17:05
@microsoftarmy I never tried Rails, but I tried Ruby. I mean, I really don't get whats so great. Its just a scripting language that is much slower than Python.
Xeo
Xeo
@JerryCoffin I see
If you ever asked a C# question on this site, there's a 3% chance that Jon Skeet had an answer for it.
@microsoftarmy Python > Ruby
4
@Xeo Well, I guess no code at all is a slight exaggeration -- he did include the: x >= start && x <= end part, but I took that as more like pseudo-code than real code.
17:08
@microsoftarmy I'll ask differently, have you ever written in python?
@BartekBanachewicz I don't see anything terribly wrong with either in terms of language design, but RoR certainly gives Ruby a lot of help (within its domain).
@JerryCoffin Let's talk about Ruby...
actually I don't care, but it was a surefire starbait
@BartekBanachewicz No, let's not.
@JerryCoffin I hope you got the reference?
@BartekBanachewicz yes, it reminds me of bad math lecturer
user142019
17:10
@microsoftarmy Rails is the worst shit ever.
heheh zoidberg delivers
@BartekBanachewicz Yes -- I've posted links to it here a couple of times.
user142019
My ass is a better ORM than Rails'.
Ell
Ell
@BartekBanachewicz I used it just yesterday to make my bukkit plugin searcher thing!
@Ell you could write it in Java
user142019
17:11
And my ass as a whole is a lot less magical than Rails so it's much easier to understand.
Ell
Ell
@BartekBanachewicz I'm betting that would take so much longer
and it sure wouldn't be under 100 lines
@BartekBanachewicz Yes he does.
@JerryCoffin I loved that WAT reference.
I am afraid I am going into the pit of "I don't want to ever hear about X", but I don't want to ever hear about Ruby :V
[] + [] = Nan in JS. Made my lmao.
"Search results indicate I'm getting "pointer being freed was not allocated" either because I use delete on objects created by new [] or ... . Is it true, one must use delete [] on new [] ?" stackoverflow.com/questions/17197195/…. That counts as does not show research, right?
17:14
it's probably the similarities to Perl
Well, I have to go for a while. Don't do anything I wouldn't laugh at...
the name, for one.
@MooingDuck Hiya moo, long time no see.
@GamesBrainiac I don't stay here much, got in trouble at work
[] + [] looks like a Kitty
17:15
@MooingDuck For what? What could you possibly get into trouble for?
@GamesBrainiac "doing social media instead of work"
Kitties are definitely not numbers~
The code is at C++.... We are learning C++ that is very similar to C, please bring it back to zero!! — Yoav Fridman 26 mins ago
seriously.
"LOL C++ THAT'S LIKE C BUT WITH CLASSES RIGHT"
@Magtheridon96: hahahahahhaa
17:16
@GamesBrainiac that's not even funny
user142019
else
    return SMALL;
user142019
Eww else-branch without braces.
@MooingDuck I'm offended! We're not social!
Burn it with fire.
lol he has 1 point now
user142019
17:19
Always use braces with if, else, for, while and do-while if they have bodies.
fuck this barkdown
@rightfold else return SMALL; better?
You know, php programmers always tell me how awesome php is. You can embed it into html. And I'm like if you're using a framework, you never do something that stupid.
user142019
if (/+ ā€¦ +/) {
    /+ ā€¦ +/
} else {
    /+ ā€¦ +/
}
@rightfold are you crazy
user142019
17:19
D comments are superior!
@melak47 You realised now?
if (cond)
{
    //stuff
}
else
{
    //other stuff
}
@R.Martinho ping
Xeo
Xeo
@MooingDuck Ow
user142019
Why I got -1?? I just asked a Q... — Yoav Fridman 2 hours ago
user142019
17:20
Haha. As if the fact you ask a question is relevant to the score of that question.
@Rakkun pong
user142019
Also needs one more NARQ vote GO GO GO!
user142019
@melak47 get out.
Ell
Ell
@ThePhD ahh it's okay, I don't care that she gave me it back, it was just super awkward
user142019
@thecoshman tetris
17:21
@Ell Pat pat. There, there.
user142019
/* and */ are fdifficult to type.
-7
Q: Quick Sort doesn't works

Yoav FridmanHere is the code: void qs (void *&arr, int left, int right, void (*swap) (void *p1, void *p2), int (*cmp)(void *p1, void *p2), void * (*get) (void *arr,int i)) { cout<<"-> "; print_p(arr,5,'2'); cout<<endl; int i=left, j=right; void *pivot=get(arr,(i+j)/2); while (i<=j) ...

There we go, closed
@rightfold CTRL+K,CTRL+C
@BartekBanachewicz I was trying to compile that as C and realized it has cout << in it :(
user142019
/+ and +/ are best comment delimiters.
17:22
voting to reopen who's with me
@Rakkun ;____;
@rightfold how are they different from /*
in OpenGL Done Right, 2 mins ago, by Bartek Banachewicz
I mean @Rakkun can't even write a hello world in C++.
user142019
@Rakkun less difficult to type.
Ell
Ell
@rightfold No more than /+
17:23
@MooingDuck probably the only thing
Ell
Ell
they both require shift :3
user142019
No need to move your hand.
don't you have a numblock? / and * are right netx to each toher :3
Ell
Ell
how about #[ ]#?
@BartekBanachewicz o i actually can :3 also i've been considering learning openthingie too
17:23
Oh come on
@rightfold What is your keyboard layout?
> Joey, do you like movies about gladiators?
@Rakkun you should stick to GDI
user142019
@Rakkun openthingie?
@rightfold oh, maybe on your layout then. here it's the same.
user142019
17:23
Open Telecom Platform
like you now
@rightfold failGL
line.
maybe two lines.
Sleeping all day owns.
@CatPlusPlus Pillow will always love me.
17:24
bloody markdown
user142019
@Rakkun You shouldn't have replied to me.
if you advance you could probably change their color
@rightfold misclick. fixed!
@rightfold he thought that your opinion might be beneficial to this amazing discussion
user142019
Don't click.
user142019
17:24
Use a keyboard.
use google glass
user142019
> he
hm.
OpenBartek.
user142019
It's funny how bad questions that get linked here score -8 and other bad questions score -2 or -3.
user142019
17:26
ClosedGL
3
user142019
@BartekBanachewicz I agree for the most part, but I really wish Python had the backtick operator Ruby has.
@rightfold what does it do?
I have to start relying on Sprite Batching in my game
user142019
@bamboon the same as in Z shell.
@rightfold I think it has enough weirdness inside already
17:27
rendering a map tile by tile (even if it's only the visible part) is terrible
Recommend music to coding ITT
@BartekBanachewicz OpenbarTek
@rightfold and what does it do in Z shell?
@Magtheridon96 why?
user142019
irb(main):001:0> `echo Hello, world!`.upcase
=> "HELLO, WORLD!\n"
17:28
that looks like bash
@BartekBanachewicz I mean, I can't really judge the overall speed of it because my GPU is really low-end
Ell
Ell
what
user142019
@BartekBanachewicz Call it Banana Sandwich.
@Magtheridon96 so basically what you are telling us your tiled rendering algo is lame
user142019
Android Banana Sandwich.
Ell
Ell
17:29
I have two tabs open, one is "Lounge<HODOR>" one is "Lounge<DERP>"
BarTrek.
StarTek
@rightfold do you mean...Bananu Sandwich?
inb4 Barket.
@BartekBanachewicz That's already been done.
17:29
@BartekBanachewicz It's just a loop over a vector of Tiles
user142019
Basket.
user142019
Barketball.
Mar 22 at 21:57, by Etienne de Martel
Is it me, or does "Banachewicz" does look like "Banana Sandwich"?
@Magtheridon96 exactly. Can you make a GPU buffer and reduce it to one drawcall?
Lounge<T> where T : Lounge<T>
17:30
For the record.
Which record?
@BartekBanachewicz If I improve myself at OpenGL, maybe
user142019
data For = The { haha :: String }
@Magtheridon96 you look like another one in need of GLDR
17:31
Maybe I should make DXDR.
user142019
OpenGL is PHP.
@ThePhD Step 1. Throw away DX. Step 2. Use GL.
user142019
Oh, got an error? Just let me output nothing at all.
@rightfold because you're not using debug context
@ThePhD Deus Ex: Done right?
17:31
Lern2GL
user142019
It must throw an exception on every error that occurs.
user142019
Otherwise it's a terrible API.
@Bartek Will you teach me
IkantcuzAmrtrd
@Rakkun it's a poor attempt to get me into lenghty explanations and then make fun of me, right?
17:32
@BartekBanachewicz yes
see I am better at this Internet thingy
Programmer who only know one language and learned it in school argues with me making stupid arguments. What would be a clever way to troll him?
Better late than never.
Ell
Ell
DXDR?
@BenjaminGruenbaum Just slap him.
user142019
17:33
@BenjaminGruenbaum Tell him that Java is terrible.
No no
Teach him Java
@BenjaminGruenbaum Ignore him.
@StackedCrooked That would require me to be an adult :( I don't like that answer.
5
You are lowering yourself to his level.
That's embarrassing.
user142019
17:34
Tell him that he is an idiot.
@StackedCrooked and fun!
@StackedCrooked I don't care. I don't mind lowering myself to his level. It's the internet. I want to have fun.
2
heh, my wife once said "It's not petty! It makes me feel better!"
3
@melak47 Very. :D
Old Nanny: I know a story about a crow.
Bran: I hate your stories.
Old Nanny: I know a story about a boy who hated stories.
Xeo
Xeo
17:41
The weather's just killing me...
@Xeo Too hot or too cold?
@KonradRudolph If you have a concrete grammar (or at least representative documents expressed in that grammar) I'd be more than happy to try my hand at it. Basic "semantics" should be clear though (or, the expected AST for specific samples).
Xeo
Xeo
Take a guess
Also, @Berliners, what do you think about Frankfurt?
@MooingDuck When was your anniversary? I'm thinking it should be ~1.5 years now?
17:46
@not-sehe You are seriously too help-happy ;)
@ThePhD Berliner Wurst doesn't quite work, so they're stuck with that...
@not-sehe haha
@not-sehe Sept 29 2012, it's been like 9 months
oh, it doesnā€™t have an expected AST but it has these (very few) test cases:
17:46
@KonradRudolph Hey, everything is relative - you know there's a different league (mainly inhabited by Ducks :))
@Xeo Well, if it's too hot, it's because you're in the room~
@MooingDuck Woah. Time flies. But sometimes not in the directions I expect :/
I remember the first time I was an Intern at a software dev company
It was horrible
@KonradRudolph Will have a look later. Gotta meeting coming up.
@KonradRudolph Hmm I see it's already a Spirit grammar. Any specific questions/challenges?
17:51
@not-sehe Well the only problem I had was the distinction of keywords ā€¦ but actually with the pointers youā€™ve given me earlier that shouldnā€™t be a problem
@DeadMG Looks like LLVM is solid. Going to attempt to build Clang soon.
@not-sehe Ooooh, I finally get it!
Ahaaaaaaaa, clever.
Xeo
Xeo
@KonradRudolph I like how you have a macro for two special rules, but not for the x.name("x") stuff at the end of the ctor ;)
There's no way to automatically do reflection in C++, is there?
Not without macros and manual nightmarish stuff?
@Xeo The macro came about because the compiler didnā€™t support template aliases yet (originally they were just that)
Xeo
Xeo
@KonradRudolph Yeah, I saw the comment.
17:58
I stopped working on the code almost immediately after starting due to lack of time and because Iā€™d found a replacement for the immediate problem it was supposed to solve
Xeo
Xeo
Okay, fuck this, time for an ice.
@Xeo internal compiler error?
Xeo
Xeo
At the moment, that'd rather be an IXE - Internal Xeo Error, due to overheating
@ThePhD right
18:09
I have a bit string that looks like this: "100000". The bit sequence starts at 0. So bit 5 is "1". When you are told to check if bit 5 is set, does that mean that it is equal to 1?
q_q how horrible.
in other words, what is meant by "is set"
I think I'll have to write my own metadata language then.
Xeo
Xeo
@JohnMerlino Well, what would be "is not set" to you?
@Xeo 0
18:09
Which will basically just be c++ that gets parsed into a c++ class and a resulting metadata type. =[
Xeo
Xeo
@JohnMerlino And that answers the question.
oh, so it's set to 0.
:P
welp lost 4 pounds this week
@rightfold Ignore the Boost.Qi line count for my grammar that Iā€™ve given earlier, itā€™s bollocks, that was a simplified proof-of-concept grammar, it doesnā€™t have lambdas and structures
user142019
I did not even notice you gave a line count. :v
18:22
@ThePhD I've built clang with VS no problem. the only problem is then using that clang, since it will try to use the stdlib it was built with :D
meh.
Time to attempt to build soon, then.
... Soon.
if you want a usable clang...build it in a linux VM :S
I'm trying to build it for Wide.
@melak47 No it won't.
@rightfold You reacted to it with disbelief
18:24
I built Clang with VS and use MinGW 4.6
it's sounds weird, built compiler with compiler
yeah
user142019
@KonradRudolph I cannot recall.
@DeadMG mine defaulted to visual studio's crap
I didn't even realize Clang could use Visual Studio's implementation
18:28
@rightfold Ah, turns out I misinterpreted this reply
@DeadMG well..it doesn't look like it can :p
it fails horribly :p
user142019
@KonradRudolph Look at which message I replied to.
user142019
8 hours ago, by Konrad Rudolph
Incidentally, I never finished the parser for my language because Boost.Qi seems to offer no trivial way of parsing if x distinct from ifx ā€¦
user142019
It was a reply to this.
really, if x vs ifx isn't something the parser should be anywhere near
it's a tokenisation issue
user142019
18:31
Yes, because every parser ever works the same way.
@DeadMG Thatā€™s kind of an outdated view on parsing ā€¦
er, they do all have some basics in common, you know
and for good reason
@rightfold parsers parse tokens, don't they?
@melak47 Yuppers.
user142019
Those tokens can be characters and that can work just fine.
18:32
The distinction between parser and lexer is completely arbitrary and was done just for convenienceā€™s sake because it allowed the implementation of more efficient parsers
user142019
Exhibit A: Parsec.
modern PEGs donā€™t usually use it (although they can), and Boost.Qi uses PEG
(ah yes, I forgot that parser combinators also donā€™t use it)
who wants to write a parser that operates on single chars ._.
well, arguably parsing is a superset of lexing so there's no reason why you couldn't implement them together
user142019
I do.
18:35
but I think that parsing and lexing are fundamentally different things and there's no reason to lump them together
@KonradRudolph I think you're overstating things a little. The distinction isn't entirely arbitrary -- it distinguishes between a token and the external representation of a token. It wasn't just for efficiency either, but (for example) to allow different external representations of the same tokens. That said, it's true that you can write perfectly good parsers that don't make that particular distinction.
@JerryCoffin Also, parsers require extra space and recursion and such, and lexers don't.
you could implement a GPGPU lexer, but not a GPGPU parser.
@JerryCoffin Well there are some productions which can be trivially grouped with either category but this isnā€™t generally true; thatā€™s what I mean by ā€œarbitraryā€.
for instance, generally lexers are thought to represent terminals but actually thatā€™s not true, they can represent complex productions as well
@DeadMG Only if you implement a lexer that strictly recognises a regular language ā€“ thatā€™s far from given
@KonradRudolph I think that for almost all lexers, they do recognise strictly (or almost entirely strictly) regular languages.
@DeadMG Simplest counter-example: nested comments ā€“ not many languages support them (for precisely this technical reasons) but in languages which do, itā€™s reasonable (almost required) for the lexer to recognise them, so that the lexer cannot be regular
18:40
C's tokenisation is a symbol table lookup away from being regular, C#'s is a couple of context-sensitive keywords away from regular, Wide's has nested comments but is otherwise strictly regular
and I'm going to bet that lexers for Lua and probably Python are strictly regular.
@KonradRudolph True -- the distinction can be somewhat arbitrary in a few cases, but in the vast majority of cases, the distinction is pretty clear cut. The exceptions tend to be languages (like C++) with contextual lexing (e.g., whether >> is one token or two). For languages with reasonably clean grammars, the distinction is usually pretty obvious.
Another example, Python lexers need to insert INDENT and DEDENT tokens into the token stream depending on the current level of indentation ā€“ this also cannot be handled by a purely regular engine
@DeadMG That.
well
but yeah, Iā€™m not saying that the distinction is unreasonable
18:42
you're talking about a couple of relatively minor parts of the lexer's function
virtually all of it is regular, even for irregularly-lexed languages
@KonradRudolph This surprises me, cause they were dead easy to implement in Wide with O(1) extra space.
@DeadMG They are easy ā€“ just not regular
well
I guess that depends on how you define regular
I can't quite remember
@KonradRudolph That's probably how they work, but it's not strictly necessary either (they could just deliver the leading whitespace as tokens and let the parser keep track of relative indentation). Lexers are usually enough simpler than parsers that you typically prefer to "shove" anything you can into the lexer, even if it's not strictly part of lexing though.
well, here's another thing about lexers
there's basically only one meaningful lexer implementation technique, really
everybody's lexer boils down to an FSM, with maybe a couple special-cases for whatever irregularities they have.
@DeadMG The easy definition is "anything that can be recognized by a classical regular expression."
18:46
whereas parsing
both LL and LR have fairly significant downsides
I haven't used PEG
@JerryCoffin I think that I am going to go with something a bit more meaningful.
@DeadMG It's a well defined computer science concept. Basically anything you can build a DFA (or NFA since they're equivalent in expressive power) for.
@BenjaminGruenbaum Having strictly limited address space permits more things to be DFA than on a theoretical infinite-memory machine
at least, that would be my personal bet.
a lexer maps an input range of characters/codeunits/whatever to an output range of tokens, which is flat- i.e., each token carries fixed information regardless of it's surrounding tokens, whereas a parser effectively has to produce a tree structure
It seems to me future types have become popular in various languages in a very short amount of time. Or is my perception wrong..?
what even are future types?
18:52
future<T>
or do you just mean std::future<T> esque.
ah
Xeo
Xeo
@DeadMG Types from the future.
well, "LOCK ALL THE THINGS" has gone out of fashion and there's not much better to be done about it.
the task-based model offers very good scalability for low cost.
Python, Java, Dart, ..
*What is this room's use?
Xeo
Xeo
18:53
Chatting. D'uh.
first time.
To talk.
@DeadMG But futures and locks are orthogonal I think.
ahh
@StackedCrooked he's aware
18:54
did my ghetto lang annoy you?
Xeo
Xeo
@DeadMG Rather, thread-based parallelism has gone out of style in favor of task-based one, no?
Seems to me that futures are more a replacement for callbacks than locks.
@StackedCrooked they represent a paradigm shift, not a minor change
Xeo
Xeo
@StackedCrooked Error: infinite recursion.
Thanks :)
18:55
@Xeo Yeah. Dealing with your own threads sucks just as surely as freeing all your resources.
@deep Did you read the newbie hints?
no
OMG
Well, neither did I.

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