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22:12
Awesome, my little DNF is starting to work.
Before DNF: (A or B or C) and (D or E or F)
Pass : ((A or B) and (D or E or F)) or (C and (D or E or F))
Pass : (C and (D or E)) or (C and F)
Pass : (A and (D or E or F)) or (B and (D or E or F))
Pass : (B and (D or E)) or (B and F)
Pass : (A and (D or E)) or (A and F)
After DNF : (A and D) or (A and E) or (A and F) or (B and D) or (B and E) or (B and F) or (C and D) or (C and E) or (C and F)
So satisfying.
What about nots?
not (A or B or C) for example?
Ugh, I spent a semester teaching kids to do that. Most did not find it satisfying.
The nots are easy actually, I have them in my Java code.
But I just wrote it at home in C++, without the nots.
Fun fact: exponentiation of binary numbers expresses syllogism. a^b <-> b -> a
@Potatoswatter what is syllogism again?
22:17
@StackedCrooked implication. b -> a = "b implies a"
That's a curious fact.
@Potatoswatter I don't understand.
I guess he means that both operations have identical truth tables.
i'm sorry, syllogism is something else. the correct term is simply "implication"
Oh, you mean with a and b being either 0 or 1, those are equivalent?
22:20
Do you guys adhere to the "non-virtual interface" idiom?
@StackedCrooked Yep, pretty much. I've been playing with lambda calculus, and Church 0 and 1 are very simple terms, and exponentiation is expressed by juxtaposing Church numbers.
So it would seem that the most efficient way to implement binary logic is to essentially use integer pow :vP
@StackedCrooked I don't think anybody follows it much. While the arguments in favor of it seem perfectly reasonable, it still strikes me as a solution in search of a problem.
According to Google it is: google.com/search?q=0^0
22:22
@MartinhoFernandes Usually in discrete math it is.
Stupid link I posted is broken.
@JerryCoffin That's what I'm thinking also. I've started to use it extensively and it just seems to add more code. The only advantage is that the extra indirection provides an opportunity for doing something before or after the call.
@StackedCrooked Well, pretty much any time you have A call C via B, it gives you a chance to insert extra "stuff", with or without virtual being involved.
@Potatoswatter Hmm, seems like this is a diverging point in mathematics.
I learned from calculus that 0^0 is indeterminate.
Heh, true.
irb(main):001:0> 0**0
=> 1
^ Ruby says it's 1 too.
22:26
True, 1 is a convenient value in some scenarios.
It's not so convenient in others.
Like zero faculty.
True is not a good anchor for chaining OR statements.
Or you could say it's too good. Depending on your viewpoint.
@MartinhoFernandes Indeterminate doesn't mean undefined. If you get 0^0 from l'Hopital's rule, then you need to keep following the algorithm…
In that case, you're taking the limit of an exponential as it approaches 0^0, but exponentiation is discontinuous in that neighborhood.
So that's a problem with limit-taking, not the exponential function itself.
That's why it's not "1, period". It's 1 when the context makes it the most useful value.
@MartinhoFernandes I'm too rusty to remember the relevant details right now, but if it's ever logically inconsistent to accept that f(x) = 0^x is discontinuous, that's not the problem.
If find myself unable to type "identity", I always tend to type "identify" instead.
My most common subversion command is: svn revert --depth infinity .
I think that is telling, but I don't know exactly what it is telling.
@hexa actually debugging with print statements is a practice that has never failed me yet.
COMEFROM is considered even worse than GOTO. But I've been thinking that it may be a nice way to implement decorators.
23:10
0
Q: Volatile and CreateThread

sigvardsenI just asked a question involving volatile: volatile array c++ However my question spawned a discussion on what volatile does. Some claim that when using the CreateThread(), you don't have to worry about volatiles. Microsoft on the other hand gives an example of volatile when using two threads ...

sbi
sbi
6 hours ago, by Als
I head @CatPlusPlus is a female
@Als You mean, you head @CatPlusPlus as a female, right?
23:30
@jweyrich Can you provide a link to the Microsoft example you are referring to?
Fact: Hall and Oates is one of the most underrated acts in music history.
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Fact: The moon is the only natural satellite of the earth that can be seen from the Great Wall of China.
@sbi Hmm. That is true.
sbi
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@Josh Good. Here's another one:
Fact: Marmite was developed as a grease for steam locomotives in 1919. Many unemployed Britons survived the General Strike by licking trains
Also true?
@sbi Which part?
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@Josh Everything, of course.
23:46
I don't know. We yanks keep to ourselves...
:D
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@Josh A yank? Then I have one for you to chew on:
Fact: Thomas Edison's first DVD was the size of a dustbin lid and contained 6.3 seconds of playtime
:)
nice.
It's funny, as I grew up it seemed that Edison was a great inventor and someone to be venerated. The more I learn about him, though, makes him sound like a cut-throat asshole who did everything he could to steal credit and demonize Tesla.
Include electrocuting live animals, like donkeys, monkeys, even an elephant.
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@Josh Thus is science. :)
Fact: In the Southern hemisphere, microwave turntables rotate in the opposite direction.
Haha. On a related note, I have heard that the coriolis effect isn't nearly strong enough to influence the water in a flushing toilet.
sbi
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@Josh And microwave turntables?
Anyway, science is fun:
Fact: New scientific study reveal that not even goats like goat's milk.
23:57
@sbi Pfft. The ingrateful bastards. I'm interested to know how the scientists framed the question when they presented it to the test goats. I'll bet they used all kinds of trickery with those poor animals to brainwash them.
sbi
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@Josh Are you making fun of that?
Fact: The first inappropriate joke about the Titanic is known to have been circulated only twenty-three minutes after the sinking
Oh yeah, I want to tell @JohannesSchaublitb I've figured out his question about the opaque predicate; however, I won't tell him so as not to deprive him the joy of figuring it out himself.
@sbi Probably on twitter, no doubt.
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@Josh Ah, good you kept your moth shut then and didn't alert him! :D
Of course! I'm glad you understand my intent :)
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@Josh LOL!

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