« first day (1024 days earlier)      last day (4154 days later) » 

00:01
Hmm, who do you guys recommend if I want to buy a domain name?
I bought with Dreamhost, worked fine with me
I would avoid Godaddy because they have lots of questionable ties to the US government and other such things and are generally extremely unscrupulous
@DeadMG pinning that!
@DeadMG Dreamhost are only less dubious with regards to known direct ties to US government. However, they're notoriously unscrupulous. Whatever "violates" fair-use (i.e. your server is actually getting load) is reason for one-sided service cut-off
Ell
Ell
I bought with 123reg
@sehe Then I should consider myself fortunate that I don't host with them.
00:10
@DeadMG Ah, you bought the domain only
@Borgleader Many times.
@sehe Yeppers.
@DeadMG it's answered by the OP too
@Borgleader Nothing wrong with that, unless the question is a dupe, in which case he's just repwhoring.
Oh sure, but it is a dupe in this case. I'm looking for one now (i may have an appropriate candidate)
nah
his posted question is very definitely "Why is iostream slow?"
00:13
That's not wrong, because it wasn't a requirement in the first place? — sehe 1 min ago
^ sigh again
@DeadMG maybe but, one of the answers in there has benchmarks and all
@Borgleader That doesn't make it a dupe. But I also know that it's far from the first time I've seen that question posted.
i'll keep looking, i found a stdin vs python which echos the same sync_with_stdio as he does
I already closed to vote as a dupe of that one 3 minutes ago because it was basically the same thing.
0
A: Why is scanf/printf faster than cin/cout?

Jason CYou say "clear the time limit on online compilers" which makes me think what you're really asking is why do programs that use cin/cout compile slower than programs that use scanf/printf. The reason is because <iostream>, the header that declares cin/cout, makes heavy use of template classes, whi...

@BenVoigt Why are we using crystal balls? I'm responding to the question. — sehe 15 secs ago
Ell
Ell
00:29
Hi guys
why are nirvana songs so easy to play
They make me feel like a master singer and guitar player
Ell
Ell
I'm angry grrr
Must listen to mellow jazz on sky FM!
fuuuuuuck, want to buy recursive lambdas! :(
Ell
Ell
Buy? O.o
@Crowz Because Nirvana had so little talent that if it had been difficult, they couldn't have performed it?
00:42
@Ra1nWarden I was afraid you'd say that :) I already simplified this way beyond usable minimum. My main concern here is that you're asking an XY-question. The most useful bit of my answer will probably be the first line: you're looking for "parsing text". Take your time to experiment and learn about the real requirements further down the road. It'll become clearer. As of now, I don't think I can help you further (without a much clearer goal) — sehe 18 secs ago
@JerryCoffin I like Kurt Cobain ._. reading his journal I can totally identify with him way too much
^ poor boy. In waaaaay over his head and doesn't even realize. I'm gon' let him drown for a while. There's no helping people that don't see the end of a task.
00:56
hmm
x && x = x.
hey guys, sup ?
Ell
Ell
Aiiight
Whatever happened to "the sky"?
@Crowz I think I'm a pretty decent guy, and if I'd ever written a journal, some people would probably identify with it. I'm pretty sure I'm not what would ever pass for a particularly talented musician though.
people these days tend to live under stuff like "roofs"
01:06
@DeadMG nah, i live under a rock
damn
both roofs and rooves sounds dumb.
@JerryCoffin yeah, but it's mostly identifying with weird or unusual thoughts that makes it interesting, you know? He seemed to have a few of those
Anyways. The roof of your mom's basement is still, technically, a floor
lol
@Crowz well maybe because they did not go for making their tracks hard to play, they made their tracks sound good, i am a huge fan of rock and rock related music and i can say by far that nirvana was great for the environment at the time.
01:08
"rock and related music"
s/related music/a hard place/
@sehe what ?
i said "rock and rock related music" rock is really a broad aspect of genre's
... "what?" ...
hmmmm
I really want to have O(1) access into my data structure, but I also really need the access to go in the same order every time.
I'm sure you know what you mean. Maybe spelling, grammar, interpunction and word choice would help. Or perhaps I need more sleep
well english is not my mother tongue, and considering i know 5 languages i would say my english is more than sufficient.
01:12
@DeadMG Define "everytime". When would it be okay for the order to be "invalidated"? Across program runs? Upon insertion? Upon reallocation?
@sehe It's immutable. But I may be repeatedly reconstructing it from the same source data.
@Paze That's awesome logic. I'll have what you're having!
I realized that I made a stupid, though, and now I don't require that.
@DeadMG So, you could do with a deterministic hash and a repeatable construction process?
guys someone said I remind them of Luna Lovegood ._. I'm a guy
01:15
@sehe it is logical, it takes way more time to learn 5 languages than learning english and nothing more. and my english grades are the best in class so im not embarrassed of my english :) so maybe you should stop picking at other people language skills and focus on some of the problems you obviously have.
peoples*
what problems does he obviously have?
@Crowz you are so 'special' :')
@Paze I wasn't trying to pick at your language skills. I was letting you know I couldn't make out what you're trying to say. I don't care about how good your English is, if you don't use it effectively.
@Telkitty猫咪咪 I know aren't I?
well when the first thing you do when u talk to a stranger is starting to pick on his english skills, you probably have some kind of a problem.
01:17
@Paze Wait. Do you own a mirror?
@Telkitty猫咪咪 why do you have 2 accounts logged into the chat?
@sehe so you are saying you do not know the meaning of "what ?"
@Paze No. I meant that as "now it's my time to say 'what?'". Or: "I can play flummoxed too". That was not... very clear.
> I said "rock and rock-related music". Rock is a really generic aspect of genres.
^ interpunction, capitalization, grammar. It really does help. I hope I ended up close to what you wanted to say. But that took me some while to decipher
@Borgleader I usually do not use the other account, but sometimes when I am logged into that account through gmail, Stackoverflow will automatically log me in with that account. I have logged out the other account through, your screen is cached probably
OIC, i thought we were so fun to talk to you needed to accounts to circumvent the chat message cooldown :P
01:20
@Paze Now about my injoke: s/pattern/replacement/ is geek talk for substitution. (grep, sed, vim, awk, perl, ed; they all have it)
LOL, thanks for your concern :p
goddamnit, I hate the lax unordered_map iterator invalidation rules.
ah screw it, I'll use map instead.
well i have wasted enough time on this conversation, guess well just have to agree to disagree then.
@DeadMG Perhaps you can use flat_map or some incantation of Boost Intrusive (they tend to have fantastic stability of reference, simply because you can keep your items in storage you control)
@Paze Wokay
@sehe I have somewhere a hash map that offers linked-list iterator invalidation guarantees.
I'll dig it up if I need the better performance compared to an ordered map
01:24
@DeadMG (inb4 it used to be great but it doesn't have move semantics, wasn't exception safe/wasn't truly generic/...; it rarely happens to me that I dig up something and find it still current unless it's part of an actively maintained body-of-work)
@sehe Eh, actually, I only wrote it a couple months ago, I think.
exception safe, maybe not, but this code doesn't have any exceptional situations right now.
Ah. That increases the odds. Somewhat :)
@DeadMG What are you working on?
I decided to resume work on solving sha-2, mostly because when nothing comes of it I don't have to feel bad
01:28
lol:
This program will finish before a photon from the window can cross a room, so it probably won't get any samples. — Mike Dunlavey 2 days ago
true dat, so true
01:40
So, after the new* operator (memory-leak operator) we have this:
/*missing calleable-expr*/(expr..., exprn) -- behold, the "coma-operator"
Xeo
Xeo
lol
7
A: Strtok usage, code not working

Grijesh ChauhanInteresting bug! you forgot function name in while-loop: tokens = (NULL, ",'"); ^ strtok missing should be: tokens = strtok(NULL, ",'"); Interesting is, this is not a compilation error instead: tokens = (NULL, ",'"); is a valid expression which is equals to: ...

^ that really happened
Xeo
Xeo
...
/*missing calleable-expr*/(expr..., exprn) -- behold, the "coma-operator". Note that the result may not evaluate to exprn in the presence of overloaded operator,sehe 46 secs ago
Xeo
Xeo
If I'd facepalm everytime such a question came up, I'd have neither face nor palm left by now.
01:43
@sehe The terrible thing is that I can almost imagine doing exactly the same thing -- staring at the code so much I'd overlook even something that ridiculously obvious.
I'm sure it's happened to me before at least once..
Yeah. This is code-blindness in action. It's the same mechanism that makes us abhor badly formatted code, but inverse: as long as code looks familiar/sane/pretty/clean, it's hard to find the "obvious" bug
As long as the egregious WTF-ness is embedded in a sea of iso-morphic obviousness... it'll blend in
Xeo
Xeo
01:55
So, 4am and I can finally go to sleep. Tomorrow's to be a bad day for my brain.
Greetings
@Xeo 'night
@Xeo G'night.
Xeo
Xeo
Ugh, and I even have to get up earlier for a shower. :s
g'night
@DeadMG hey, I was accused of being you in disguise yesterday (forgot exactly who, but some people who were online then are online now, too)
@DeadMG do you want to disabuse them of that notion?
(i'm a former somewhat regular on a new account)
01:57
not especially
oh, so maybe i'm/you're on two computers at the same time?
ok
Xeo
Xeo
I'm sure that was just meant jokingly since you said something about having been a puppy
well, as long as you don't mind
Evening guys
yeah, i just want to make sure deadmg doesn't care if anyone still suspects it :)
01:58
I'd like you to listen to this 911 call and tell me what do you make of that. Seriously.
Xeo
Xeo
I doubt anyone actually suspected it.
What @Xeo said
(go to bed btw :P)
okay
hmmm
I do seem to have written my solver so that it uses over 2GB of RAM.
whoopsie daisy.
02:10
you're trying to break sha-2 encryption? for fun?
it's not encryption, it's a hash
and yes, for fun
perhaps it will be necessary to devise a more specialist hash set class.
a hash can not be broken like encryption can, hashes are not revertable
that's the theory
I say theory because nobody ever proved that it can't be done
@Paze It's clearly not (deterministically) reversible for sufficiently long strings. In most cases you're looking for a way to produce collisions rather than reversing it.
besides, the real objective of the exercise is to distract me from my stomach
02:22
There are really two major classes of collisions to consider: 1) two arbitrary inputs that produce the same output, and 2) an input that produces some specified output. The latter is a more severe break, but generally moredifficult.
@JerryCoffin isn't that just plain bruteforcing ? :P and yea you could supposedly bruteforce a hash to find the unhashes string, but that could take years. if u could reverse a hash(which you can't) you would have received the "unhashes" password in seconds
unhashed*
@Paze For SHA-2, a brute force attack isn't practical (it's too large of a hash for that). And no, you can't even in theory use a brute-force attack to guarantee recovery of the original input. The hash is fixed size, so an essentially infinite number of inputs can produce the same output.
thats what i said, i told u bruteforcing isn't practical "it could take years"
rofl years
try "Several million times the age of the known universe"
true, but you get my point... A LONG ASS TIME
02:31
@Paze Something that could be done in mere years would be completely practical, especially for somebody like the NSA, who could (if necessary) afford to throw hundreds of millions of dollars at doing it faster. That's still grossly inadequate to attack SHA-2 (short of some weakness being found in the algorithm).
@JerryCoffin Arguably, of course, a QM could do it in the square root of that time, which I believe is still unbelievably impractically large.
well everything has its own way of being "practical" if i take a shit on the moon it could be "practical" for aliens... but yea bruteforcing is not a good way to attack SHA-2 but you can't reverse it.
@DeadMG Yes -- by the time SHA-2 was being designed, enough theory of quantum computing was known that they pretty much planned for it. It's nearly the only justification for a 256-bit hash.
@Paze There's no proof that you can't reverse it. There are simply no known techniques for effectively reversing it.
@DeadMG As I already said, you can't determinstically recover the original input. The best you can hope for is creating another input that produces the same output. Of course, there's a chance that might also match the original input, but chances of it are extremely low.
02:35
well, you're right.
just as there is not proof that i took a shit on the moon ? you simply cannot reverse a hash.
I meant to say, that you could not pick your own input guaranteed to collide with a specific hash, or something like that.
@Paze lolwot.
Qix
Qix
Quick question; is the command line syntax for the cygwin/mingw/GCC compilers the same?
those two things are not at all equivalent.
surprising results come out of computer science and mathematics in general all the time.
well im not a cryptography expert but i have some knowledge at the area and hashes are said to be unbreakable because it is a one way encrpytion.
02:37
tell that to MD5.
Qix
Qix
Rainbow tables.
@DeadMG Right -- there's no known attack on SHA-2 that will give you a collision in less than ~2^(N/2) work, or a preimage in less than ~2^(N) work (where N = number of bits).
@DeadMG MD5 has not been broken
MD5 is, cryptographically, utterly worthless.
it's so incredibly broken that it's not even funny anymore.
Qix
Qix
@Paze Again, rainbow tables.
02:39
@Qix Yes.
Qix
Qix
@Rapptz Thank you :)
@DeadMG Yes and no. There's a collision attack on MD-5. At least to my knowledge, no preimage attack is known. The collision attack indicates enough weakness that I certainly wouldn't trust it even for cases where a collision attack was ineffective, but I don't believe there's a way currently known to take advantage of its weakness when a preimage attack is needed.
yea MD5 has been compromised, it is vulnerable to collision, but it is still not "decrypted" which in hashing terms = not broken, but yes it is useless for cryptography
it's useless for cryptography -> it's broken.
Qix
Qix
@Paze You're getting "encryption" and "hashing" mixed up. Remember that hashing usually results in data loss, whereas encryption does not.
02:43
@JerryCoffin actually there is a known exploit against the preimage
@JerryCoffin Yeah, the preimage is only theoretical at 2^135 or somesuch, AFAIK.
Qix
Qix
Hashing isn't meant to be symmetrical.
Qix no im not... he was talking about reversing the algortihm used to hash, something that is being called "decryption"
Qix
Qix
Which is pointless.
@DeadMG 2^125 perhaps. At least if memory serves, MD-5 is only a 128-bit hash, so the worst possible case to find a preimage is 2^128+1.
02:44
thats what we all have been saying :P
Qix
Qix
Oh
Came into this conversation a bit late methinks lol
@Paze No -- decryption is un-doing encryption.
yea but if u could "undo" a hash then it would be encryption.
thats the difference, encryption = 2 ways, hash = 1 way
@Paze No, it wouldn't. It would be a successful preimage attack.
evening
02:46
@nightcracker Hello.
(night)
Qix
Qix
Or a collision, depending on how you see it.
/ how it's done / the result
@Qix A collision attack isn't "undoing" encryption. It's finding two inputs that produce the same output.
Qix
Qix
I know that.
yea it would
but why not just say decrypted
Qix
Qix
02:47
Because you're not decrypting that
a collision doesn't mean the exact same input
there are (theoretically) many inputs that can result in the same hash
^true
oh cryptography is the subject
Qix
Qix
If you have a collision, the source data isn't guaranteed
yea
that floats my boat, bring it on
02:48
@Paze The same reason you don't use "walking" to refer to "swimming" -- because they're not the same thing, and using the same word for them would be confusing.
but if there was a way to undo a hash it would be 2 way ?
Consider the hash function f(x) = x*x -1 and 1 form a collision, but that does not mean -1 == 1
Qix
Qix
So a collision attack on a server, for instance, would be a basic attack to sign into an account using the same hash but providing different input that produces a hash in the database
Usually through the use of rainbow tables
(which is an old school technique; not sure if they're used all that much anymore)
@Qix Once again: NO!
Qix
Qix
@JerryCoffin why not?
02:49
dictionary attacks are pretty much standard
and easily defeated with salts
@Qix If you're starting from a specified hash and finding another input that produces the same hash, that's a preimage.
well this subject is actually not worth talking about xD not even cryptologists can agree on this lol
@Qix That would have to be a preimage.
@Paze what?
Qix
Qix
Oh
terminology fail I guess
02:50
wait let me find that answer
hmm maybe i should have taken that security class last semester, sounds like interesting stuff
5
A: Has it become easier to pre-compute tables after MD5 collisions?

nightcrackerNot really. Finding distinct $m_1, m_2$ such that $H(m_1) = H(m_2)$ is a different problem than finding $m_1, d$ such that $H(m_1) = d$. If the first problem is hard it's called collision resistance, if the second problem is hard it's called preimage resistance. MD5's collision resistance is pr...

we are originally talking about whether or not a hash can be reversed
A collision attack is finding two completely arbitrary inputs that produce the same output. You don't know what either one is/will be ahead of time.
@Paze what do you consider reversed?
Qix
Qix
02:51
Ah
@Paze finding the original input from a digest?
Qix
Qix
til
when you have an actually algorithm that reverses a said algorithm
Qix
Qix
...
@Paze such algorithm can not arbitrarily exist, only under certain requirements (and even then we don't really know such algorithms unless the hash is very very very weak)
for example, a hash function can turn a 32 byte value into a 16 byte one
02:52
@Paze Cryptologists (who know what they're talking about) have no disagreement on this subject. There' s a difference between "cryptologists can't agree" and "most of the people in the conversation don't know the subject matter".
yea, that is what i have been saying all the time :P
@DeadMG is the one who wanted to try and break SHA-2
@Paze so what's the problem?
@nightcracker That his current technique requires more memory than he has handy (I think).
Anyway, I need to go find myself some supper. I'll talk to you all later.
technique?
please tell me this technique that can represent 32 byte values in 16 bytes
see ya jerry
fuck this winpcap shit is killing me O.o
Qix
Qix
02:56
ahh winpcap
How I don't miss it.
haha true :p its such a bitch
like i made a struct for the ethernet header but i can't fucking make winpcap send my struct neither am i able to assign values to the members of the struct for some reason
neither am i able to assign values to the members of the struct for some reason you're doing something very very wrong
Qix
Qix
^
yea trust me, i know
arp_header.ProtocolSize = htonl(4); i mean that should be pretty straightforward
and it ain't setting the member
I have a pretty strong gut feeling that either arp_header isn't properly allocated or you're debugging/printing method is bugged
03:02
wait fuck...
omg im so stupid.. i forgot to freakin malloc it
Qix
Qix
._.
That'd do-er
how to solve problems over a chat in under a second
right here ladies and gentlemen
haha ever had a problem for hours but others see it in a second ? :P
sorry I'm european so I don't get the reference
Qix
Qix
03:04
Alex Trebek
or whatever his name is
host of Jeopardy
It's a q/a trivia gameshow
Jeopardy! is an American television quiz show created by Merv Griffin. The quiz material covers a wide variety of topics (including traditional academic information, popular culture, lifestyle, and wordplay); contestants are presented with clues in the form of answers, and must phrase their responses in question form.
Qix
Qix
You ask for questions on a grid of prize money amounts by saying "I'll take 'category' for $xx amount"
wait so I get money from Paze now? sweet
Qix
Qix
"how to solve problems over a chat in under a second" sounded like a jeopardy category title haha
I guess you need to watch one jeopardy show to get it
03:07
@nightcracker haha yea have my 1k$ thats all i have lol
I'll take it
I'm a poor jobless student
what about my stomach then ? :O it has got sick fuel expenses
Qix
Qix
@nightcracker Yes probably :| I'm so American it hurts.
ur not the only jobless student xD
@nightcracker where ya from ?
I really need a programming job but I just can't seem to find it =/
The Netherlands
Qix
Qix
03:08
@nightcracker Are you a native?
ahh cool
what do you mean with native?
im a native from norway haha
Qix
Qix
@nightcracker Born/raised there?
Raised there, I was born in america (double nationality)
(parents are dutch)
Qix
Qix
03:09
@nightcracker Oh cool, makes sense
nice, im a sami :P
well I have to be honest though
if I were looking for a PHP programming job for websites I would've had a job ages ago
dude don't it a nightmare, been there done taht
that*
PHP is the worst language ever to debug... and then they pay u shit rates
I've had a programming job for a backend website in ASP
yea but thats ASP its way better than PHP
03:14
no no no
error messages were without line numbers
you'd literally had to add unique identifiers to statements in order to be able to find the culprit
mee idk i really find PHP a pain in the ass, allthought asp is not to far away
weak typing is the bane of my existence
my current project im getting paid 1000$ for is like 30% php and it SUCKS
Qix
Qix
Shit, just corrupted a submodule :|
git submodule*
git nuke --source=orbit
03:18
anyone know how to convert my struct into a byte/char array ?
i think my current way is corrupt
Qix
Qix
@nightcracker Is that a real command? :O
I wish
unlikely - just made it up
@Paze what exactly are you trying to do with the byte/char array?
Qix
Qix
$ git nuke
git: 'nuke' is not a git command. See 'git --help'.

Did you mean this?
bundle
send it lol over winpcap
and winpcap only accepts byte or char arrays
Qix
Qix
Could have been awesome.
03:20
@Paze so both machines on each end are Windows (and thus little-endian)?
yea
i have taken care of taht
that*
@Paze is your compiler always the same?
(and if yes, which one is it)
i just need to convert a struct to a char array, so that the pcap_sendpacket accepts it, and yea im just running VC
@Paze ok, put this in front of your struct declaration: #pragma pack
then make sure that every member in the struct truly is inside that struct (so strings must be buffers, not pointers to strings on the heap or something)
then you can just interpret the struct pointer as a char* pointer and it should work fine
what does pack really do ? never used it before
03:24
note that this solution is only portable over a network if everything uses the same environment (compiler, endianess, struct definition, etc)
@Paze it makes that the struct has no alignment inside of it
@Paze processors often can read values faster out of memory if they are on a certain byte boundary, like 2, 4, 8 or 16 bytes
@Paze so compilers add empty spaces in structs to get faster reads out of structs - this is something that is dependent on the CPU however, so this empty space changes from compile to compile meaning that the communication gets fucked up
@Paze if you want a truly portable solution between different platforms/environments to transfer data over the network then you need to go member by member and copy it into your buffer, making sure that endianness is correct
ahh thats gay :L
then i could of just assigned it to the buffer from the start :P
anyways its late, see ya im going to get some sleep :)
Qix
Qix
03:42
Yey, reconstructed my repository using an old version stored on a remote server. Got most of the old history back, only lost a few files.
> only lost a few files.
> > > > only lost a few files.
bro do you even use revision control
:P
Qix
Qix
@nightcracker Lost history for a few files*
real men store their git repos in git
Qix
Qix
@nightcracker wat
@nightcracker since when
;)
Qix
Qix
03:53
@nightcracker Next level
sorry I'm incredibly corny at the moment - combining especially well with my terribly awful humor only I seem to understand
also I just found this out - try pinging c4.com
Qix
Qix
@nightcracker I won't get the CIA at my door, will I?
depends
I don't know everything you do in your house
Qix
Qix
WHAT
how
what
you pinged?
Qix
Qix
03:57
ohhh
You trickster.
Non-authoritative answer:
Name: c4.com
Address: 127.0.0.1
:P
I don't really know what to think of this question (username of asker related): stackoverflow.com/questions/18050416/…
Qix
Qix
@nightcracker wut
lolol
Priests sure are technological these days
Crawling Tor websites and such
Qix
Qix
lolol
LOL
his example for crawling is XXX.onion
04:12
Is there some easy way to find the largest tuple using the first element as a comparison?
@Mikhail C++?
@nightcracker Lambdas?
@Mikhail I'd use like en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/algorithm/max_element with a little helper comparison function
is std::pair faster than using a vector of two items or an int array of two items etc?
@user2597879 most definitely yes
@user2597879 but probably not very significant in most cases
04:20
i have a major bottleneck in my code and i cant find where
how do i profile it?
@user2597879 how large is your codebase?
how many lines of code are we talking about here, and in how many files
about 300 lines, one file
at such small scale I would try taking time measurements by pasting them in the code itself and commenting out code to see time impact
04:23
@user2597879 Check your vectorization and possibly compile flags? Is this some floating point stuff?
some stuff with maps, vectors, pairs, and modular exponentiation
@user2597879 could I perhaps see the code?
hold on trying your earlier suggestion
you're right about the pairs, they are negligible timewise
@user2597879 please give me a quick look at the code - I'll be able to give much better performance tips (I actually quite specialize in that area)
04:58
guys, anyone know how to log into irc channel with differnt IP,
guess who got banned again
Scott?
He is a very naughty dog~

« first day (1024 days earlier)      last day (4154 days later) »