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16:00
@Ell What is the difference between having it written in my brain cells and having it written on a bit of paper or stored on a hard drive?
and secondly
how can it be cheating to take pre-written notes into the exam if memorizing the data isn't all that's required to pass the exam?
Ell
Ell
@DeadMG there is a great difference - it shows you have understanding. Otherwise, can't anyone who can use google be a mathematician?
I've molten into a lump
@Ell You don't need to understand a formula to memorize it. Anyone who can use Google can google the relevant formulas and memorize them, just as easily as they can Google them and write them down.
there is the exact same understanding shown in both cases- none.
@DeadMG apply stokes thm without understanding it please
@BartekBanachewicz I could see that. Still, right now, I basically have a bunch of [0][x][y] read/writes. I was thinking, setting a current layer might be better.
16:01
lol or write any real analysis proof without understanding it
@Pawnguy7 maybe. depends on the usage
My valid answer got downvoted w/out comment, fucking great
@EiyrioüvonKauyf How can taking in notes cheat on such an activity?
what do you mean
@BartekBanachewicz Ok. Also, I was thinking, perhaps I can pass the world instead (to the generation), and have a friended setColor(x, y) method. So when I segfault, I can handle it better.
16:03
well, if you take notes into your exam, how can that give you an advantage, if the examination topic is to write a proof of a problem you haven't previously encountered?
I'm very mean
.@Scott__Meyers gave a nice talk on universal references last night at @nwcpp. His hair does make me question his advice, though.
lol
@sehe Yes you are
@Pawnguy7 NO segfaults. you have to verify it somehow. use exceptions
@TonyTheLion seconded
@TonyTheLion I'm a mean square root
16:04
nah i was just asking if you were allowed notes on your exam
Ell
Ell
@DeadMG but they can google how to use them
da. you don't know me.
Well enough anyway :)
Ell
Ell
just like you can write down how to use them
how to use them = understand them
the point of formulas isn't words it's applications
@sehe pfftt you're a horrible person ;D
@sehe You're a root (rotten?) mean square. Oh wait. No, calling you RMS would be too much of an insult.
16:06
RMS .. which means you're useful in thermodynamics lol
@sehe Dat pun
@BartekBanachewicz That was the plan, yes. setColor(x, y) can bounds check, and throw if it isn't good. Should be considerably better than what it currently is, especially because, for whatever reason, segfaultins on the other thread still let it generate, and only cause heap corruption after, meaning it could be anywhere in the generation. THis would let me get the trace easily with breakpoint.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit What's wrong with #pragma once?
@Ell If they understand how to use them well enough to do it in the exam, then congratulations, they obviously taught themselves.
Good article (though stupid remark towards C++): The controler pattern is awful (and other OO heresy)
16:10
@DeadMG i have done this before.
makes sense to me imho; if you can use it to do problems you're good
this is the point of math / chem handbooks...
. euh so much to learn....
@ThePhD Abstraction leak
Oh. That it's a non-standard kind of dealio?
I thought #pragma once was being standardized.
I heard that too. Hate it
the C++ standard has no business caring about header files
though I can accept that the logic may belong in the preprocessor specification
okay never mind
16:16
IMO it solves a preprocessor problem, not a header file problem?
Shrug. I dunno. I don't worry too much about this stuff.
Except when it comes to reflection.
STL WILL NOTICE ME, I SWEAR HE WILL!
@KonradRudolph i like the article :3. i agree passing functions around in C++ is awkward. though auto helps
@EiyrioüvonKauyf auto, lambdas and std::function help, yes
mhmm. at the moment i'm using an old version of gcc though; so none of those :(
16:24
Does friendship get passed on to children?
@ThePhD Nope.
@Pawnguy7 nope
someshit about how the Standard would specify which files are the same and which files are not.
@Pawnguy7 it does get passed to derived members in a class though
16:28
@EiyrioüvonKauyf derived of? If I have two classes, A and B. B is friends with A. Is B's derived, C, also friends with A?
If you have A,B derived from A. B friends C. C can access B's members that were passed on from A
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friend_class page down to the bottom
@Pawnguy7 No.
Ell
Ell
You don't let your friends play with your children's privates is the old saying
friendship does not, ever, transfer between any kind of relationship- inheritance, or more friendship, or anything like that.
@Ell Depends on how old they are.
Your class has no friends
16:31
Ok. Here is my situation. I have a world - basically, a container of data - and several generation classes, which I want to have access to a private setColor(x, y). I was wondering if that was possible without making them all friends individually, but I guess not.
it is
Via a form of friendship, or passing something other than the world?
even though friendship is not officially inherited or transitive, there are techniques to work around this
do I assume that your generator classes all inherit from a common base?
That is correct.
you could use a protected
16:36
@EiyrioüvonKauyf Right.
Protected what?
.... oh god dammit
crow is lurking on python now;
he's asking how to make a list. this takes <1 min on google; that is one of the easiest things in python ....
16:40
aww fuck
Yeah
@Crowz is there a limit to your laziness and stupidity? because atm it's increasing asymptotically without bound
Crowvakiin
@EiyrioüvonKauyf not really, but I'm still testing to make sure
@DeadMG That could work, although the reason I have setColor in the first place was to have less parameters. This is basically replacing one parameter that is rarely needed with another, though I have learned how it can be done for other purposes, so thanks.
@Pawnguy7 There are other choices (although they all basically boil down to the same trick).
16:41
.. it's a one line change that only derived classes can use ....
Actually.
Perhaps I could have an overloaded setColor that calls GeneratorBase::setColor?
Both with just x, y?
sure, if they already know the World object you intend to call it upon.
I think I can add it, anyway.
although IMO
it's worth questioning why this function is private in the first place if you're giving out access to it in this fashion
16:44
Well.
-1
Q: Creating my own sorting algorithm to sort a large amount of random numbers

Zachary AlfakirI have a function that will randomly generate a user specified amount of numbers. I need to sort these numbers without using the built in C++ sorting algorithm, but making my own quicksort algorithm instead. How can I compare the integers, and how do I make a quicksort?

Not really his own
In theory, only the generators ever need to set colors.
But others - such as that which draws the world - should only have getColor.
that's not really a reason to restrict the function to only them.
is there anyway to forceably take attributes from a class instance?
e.g. forceably access a class's private?
@LightnessRacesinOrbit is there any mod on lounge. can there be a meta page that says [no-homework]
@EiyrioüvonKauyf that's rape
16:45
@DeadMG How do you think it should be done?
@Pawnguy7 Just make the function public.
@EiyrioüvonKauyf Meta long ago decided to stop differentiating between homework and non-homework; the same quality and research requirements apply to all questions, regardless of the circumstance of their posting.
the simple fact is, you give out access to this function to anyone who asks for it by deriving from GeneratorBase.
how do you put tags here
anyone writing any other class could gain access to it.
16:46
@LightnessRacesinOrbit you know what i mean
it's public, you've just asked people to arse around a bit.
@EiyrioüvonKauyf Yes, and I answered!
True.
16:46
Homework itself is not banned. Questions that show no research are.
yay :3
@LightnessRacesinOrbit no i mean about ... forceably accessing a private... so like accessing a helper method in a library's class
Was it [tag]?
Nope.
@EiyrioüvonKauyf It absolutely is, if you know how.
@EiyrioüvonKauyf why are you so eager to break encapsulation? The whole point of a private is that outside code can't modify or break the state of that object.
interesting fact: Wide currently probably doesn't respect C++ access modifiers.
16:49
@Mgetz helpful helper methods that do internal things for a class are very nice to use sometimes
@EiyrioüvonKauyf tag:nameoftag with []
@DeadMG Sounds like a good idea.
not really
@EiyrioüvonKauyf Inheritance works nicely, as do templates!
yay 10 comment points
@EiyrioüvonKauyf that's rape
16:51
..... that is not rape -____-. and inheriting a library's class just to use it's private methods on a different class is bad design.... i mean BESIDES pointer abuse
@EiyrioüvonKauyf There are use cases for this, most notably Hibernate uses it to restore classes to actual state without having to have a bean interface public
xD without spaces?
._.
@evilmonstah that was an awkward moment
16:52
Did they ever fix that flat tag issue?
xD research next time :b
@Pawnguy7 which was....?
0
Q: Need help C++ calculator with word input

Shaun1810Hi again I am attempting a Bjarne Stroustrup exercise from his PPP book. I have managed to do most of the exercises, however I am having problem with one. In this program the basic idea is to have a calculator which can take both integer and string input. The actual calculator part works fine a...

It buuuuurns
@Mgetz stupid is stupid
16:54
Something about a curse and it spread somehow haha.
jobs: 0> $RAILS_ENV
development
jobs: 0> bundle exec rails s -e development
=> Booting WEBrick
=> Rails 3.0.19 application starting in production on 0.0.0.0:3000
It is a double negative.
Go fuck yourselves, Rails developers.
But it is opensource! You can go debug it yourself.
My diagnosis is "die in fire".
It works when ran from cmd. At least that much.
16:57
@Pawnguy7 Gosh!
Looks like normal tags have styles applied to them individually - and his don't
strange
shrug
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Found the meta: here
@LightnessRacesinOrbit I deleted my comment on that question
@JerryCoffin brilliant
17:06
@sehe Thank you, kind (rotten) sir! :-)
When did I become rotten. :(
Well, bye everyone, going to start a meeting.
For bounds checking, or conditions where you break if they are invalid.
Is it preferable to break, then have the code after, or have it in the if block for a valid condition?
@evilmonstah Yay for the wild life!
17:11
One second. Forgotten something. Be right back.
lol at that tension builder
Tomalak, Puppy, they are Brits, right? What else do they have in common with Rowan Atkinson?
@sehe Well, Tomalak is quite handsome, unlike Mr. Atkinson.
17:15
The only time I talk to myself is when I need expert advice.
@Borgleader Because I was hungry at the time. D'oh
What is ReSharper?
@Pawnguy7 Something that makes writing C# in VS enjoyable.
@EtiennedeMartel Looks interesting, but I don't C# enough to buy it... that might change in the near future though.
> Is [classes which are not value types being error-prone] the only reason why most programs benefit from cutting down on non-value classes?
how is that not a sufficient reason?
17:21
he didn't say anything about it not being sufficient, he only talked about it not being the only reason
which it isn't
value types are also more efficient and easier to reason about, for example
Complete bullshit, value types are not inherently less error-prone than reference types.
dam $50. not bad :3
for all that it gives
@CatPlusPlus We’re talking C++ here, not C#
if i C#'ed as a job I would buy this on the spot
I know what you're talking about.
17:25
@DeadMG No, in the context he said that this is insufficient for him
@CatPlusPlus Then what are “reference types”?
@EiyrioüvonKauyf If you used C# commercially you wouldn't qualify for academic license which is 50$.
Well, I just paid 90$ for a license upgrade.
@CatPlusPlus nah buy it as a student and take it around on a usb. you can be a student and still have a job lol
17:27
I'm talking type systems in general. Pointers in C++ are reference types too, if you really need to be C++.
If you design a large system based on value types with copy ctors, what happens when, at some late stage, you find that one base class needs a new member var that cannot be copied?
@KonradRudolph Then definitely WTF.
@EiyrioüvonKauyf You're not very good at legal stuff, are you.
@CatPlusPlus ... ok technically no
but yes i know academic licenses are not good for commercial dev for obvious reasons as in you shouldn't do it
wat dafuq
Steam sale today: Euro Truck Simulator 2.
17:32
Who the fuck buy this game?
More people than you think.
Also fuck dynamic typing.
it amazes me that not only is Euro Truck Simulator a game, but that it was successful enough that the developer made a sequel.
It doesnt even look remotely interesting
It's a series.
They also did this series:
18 Wheels of Steel (sometimes abbreviated as 18 WoS) is a series of trucking simulators published by ValuSoft and developed by SCS Software. The series currently has 8 installments. Despite being released as budget games, the series has surprisingly high production values. Versions There are several versions of 18 Wheels of Steel from 2002 to 2011. Hard Truck: 18 Wheels of Steel [Aug 22, 2002] Hard Truck: 18 Wheels Of Steel is a game developed by SoftLab and SCS Software in 2002. Hard Truck 18 Wheels Of Steel is the sequel to Hard Truck 2: King of the Road. Hard Truck also has three ma...
So yeah, it sells.
17:35
well why do people buy airplane sims.
you could at least argue that flying is fun.
as long as you get to do loop da loops and barrel rolls
@EiyrioüvonKauyf To fly an airplane, duh.
there is a farming simulator and the train simulator + all dlcs is upwards of $1k last time I checked
Why do people do pilot licenses.
Train sims are hardcore collector shit.
@Borgleader Europeans.
17:43
Would anybody like to assist me with a design question?
Everyone saw this right?
-12
Q: in the network given in ur website stackoverflow.com

user2596637i have already tried it so far but i am in doubt where did you bring that 192 from. in the network 192.115.103.64/27 the subnet mask is 255.255.255.224 sir you said that i have to subtract the subnet mask from 192 where or how did you bring this 192 from which is 224-192=32 which is t he last ...

So I've got here an automatically generated file, that's generated every time development server starts, but never when production server starts.
How do you version this shit.
Why do I have to maintain code written by incompetent people whyyyy
user142019
@CatPlusPlus Because you are a programmer. It's a programmer's job to maintain code written by the incompetent.
17:47
@CatPlusPlus how did anyone that was a good idea ... and yes a good programmer is worth 10 or more shitty ones as the saying goes
@MooingDuck 8/100 impressive
With a rating like that, it is a must have.
youtube.com/embed/Xt-xjNVbio0 Why would I want to play something I do everyday?
The driving part, not the truck driving.
17:54
Zing.
@MooingDuck Amazon gave ET 3.2/5
Hm.
I need a Mercurial plugin for VS2013.
I guess I'll update that guy's source.
hey fellas
Ruben is alive!
17:58
of course I am.
I've been juggling with another crazy idea
0
Q: Is a moved-from vector always empty?

Billy ONealI know that generally the standard places few requirements on the values which have been moved from: N3485 17.6.5.15 [lib.types.movedfrom]/1: Objects of types defined in the C++ standard library may be moved from (12.8). Move operations may be explicitly specified or implicitly generated. ...


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