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06:00
Isn't negative % n always negative in C++?
Fuck, CUDA and Matlab are giving different results for an FFT. Qualitatively similar, but too different to be rounding error. Anybody have this happen?
@Rapptz Which is why I'm using mod.
mod defines it differently?
No idea what it does atm.
> and $ map (uncurry (==) . ((`mod` 7) &&& (`myMod` 7))) [-500, 500]
True
@Mikhail You're in totally the wrong chat.
06:08
Goddammit it's the sizeof... bug again.
@LucDanton sizeof has a bug?
@Mikhail did you use the same formula for both?
Well, auto constexpr N = sizeof...(Ranges); yielded 2 when it should have been 7 above.
How do you break that?
@Telkitty猫咪咪 Yes, I took a 512x512 image and fft it then did a diff on the values, they are different. In the frequency domain they are different by 1/100, when you take them back in the spatial domain they are different by about 1/10000
06:10
Well it is a member template of a variadic class template. A lot of things can go wrong.
fast fourier transform always involves a lot of roundings
they might be implemented differently internally
also is there anywhere you can setup how you want roundings to be handled?
static_assert( SizeofWorkaround == 7, "" );
static_assert( mod(-1, 7) == 6, "" );
static_assert( mod(-1, SizeofWorkaround) == (SizeofWorkaround - 1), "" )
@Telkitty猫咪咪 Certainly, but the difference asks the important question of 'Which is right?' . The difference in the frequency domain is a serious one... This guy had a similiar issue... mathworks.com/matlabcentral/newsreader/view_thread/276282
Only the third assertion is triggered. Help.
@Rapptz Yes, at least in current C++. Prior to C++11, it could be either negative or positive.
06:15
If I fill in 7 instead of SizeofWorkaround in the actual code it works, too.
(Well as long as you don't round_robin anything else than 7 ranges but you get the point.)
mind==blown
Let's try getting rid of mod and using %.
da fuck, it does something else
Oh right forgot a - 1 in there.
egad the stupid thing still loops around
Well I guess that means constexpr expansion is not to blame.
Dude, my university has Japanese courses.
Is it a Japanese university?
Wah Tomalak, your other room is so freezing, you can perserve an elephant in it!
@Mikhail try some known values?
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Not quite.
06:30
If anyone can help me narrow down the bug, this is what I have so far.
I think I can confidently link the bug to %.
that's weird..
Okay, I'm filing.
That's a strange bug
Meh, that's the bleeding edge.
sizeof... has been wonky for a long time.
(-1) % N evaluates to 0..
06:36
You can try adding template arguments.
lol
In my actual encounter for N == 7 I had (-1) % N == 2.
N == 5 fails for 5 arguments
Ooo, interesting.
..and 4.
06:38
Doesn't on my end. Are you really changing the hardcoded 3?
Oops. I changed my code but kept your old 3 argument one.
Thanks. N == 6 evaluates to 3, N == 7 evaluates to 1.
That's pretty weird.
Anyone has GCC 4.8 to test it? I'd like to know if this is specific to 4.9.
Xeo
Xeo
Coliru is on 4.8.1
Also, mornin
I was on 4.8.1
@LucDanton But I can't reproduce your (-1) % N == 2 result for N == 7.
I got 1 instead of 2.
@MarkGarcia It still isn't closed lol.
06:49
Oh you're right. That's what I had.
Xeo
Xeo
ugh, modulo with negative numbers
I can never remember how that works
it takes the dividend's sign.
Filed!
@Xeo "rem is what the machine uses, mod is what you would use"
My personal rule of thumb.
That's all well and done but I don't even know how to workaround this.
In Haskell, mod takes the divisor's sign, rem takes the dividend.
I find "what I expect, why machines suck" easier to remember.
06:53
iunno, I expect -1 % 2 to return -1.
Z/nZ is [[0..n) >:(
Xeo
Xeo
what
I should stop asking, it's too early in the morning anyways.
aw man, someone broke the build. I wonder if it was me
Would you believe it? Passing int N = SizeofWorkaround via the template parameter list works.
@jalf It was like that when I got here!
06:57
Actually I'm going to name that parameter MoreStupidWorkarounds.
hah, it wasn't me!
yay
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton template<class... Ranges, int N = sizeof...(Ranges)>?
27 mins ago, by Luc Danton
If anyone can help me narrow down the bug, this is what I have so far.
Xeo
Xeo
That doesn't tell me where SizeofWorkaround came from :s
Yes it does, it's N which is already a workaround.
Xeo
Xeo
06:59
oh lol
Then, you meant the template parameter list on ´bar`?
E.g. if you declare something like static constexpr int foo[sizeof...(whatevs)]; then the definition will not match the declaration.
Honestly that's a pretty weird bug
@Xeo Yes, which is a function template in my code.
weird enough to keep me entertained for 5 minutes
Xeo
Xeo
@Rapptz Yeah, you'd think counting types wouldn't be so hard.
07:00
-3
Q: Can I publish a paid app that provide a password crack to excel?

MasterJMy question is, Can I publish a paid app that provide a password crack to excel(Eg. MS Excel)? I am trying to make an application that would help user to crack the passwords of password protected excel sheets. Is it fine to provide such solutions on any app Market? Or Can there be some legal iss...

@Rapptz I can keep you updated if/when I find others :p
haha sure
I'll keep a tab of things to avoid
1 min ago, by Luc Danton
E.g. if you declare something like static constexpr int foo[sizeof...(whatevs)]; then the definition will not match the declaration.
Xeo
Xeo
@Rapptz Only needs one entry: Bleeding edge (aka snapshots). ;)
4.8.1 has ref-qualifiers, right? I think that's also the one where you can't specialize on e.g. struct foo<T() &> {};
Xeo
Xeo
07:02
I think so?
yes it has ref qualifiers
There was another ref-qualifier bug but I forgot what it entailed.
Oh, possibly pointers/references to functions.
lately I've been writing things that just return a new value rather than modify an existing one
Oh I mentioned that earlier tonight but pack expansion and lambda expressions have a well-known history of making GCC blow up.
@Rapptz My quick and dirty tuple search is a fold that threads an std::pair<int, int> state through.
shit I'm retarded
How did I confuse anagram with palindrome
07:09
@Rapptz Don't worry, I do worse every day.
I left a comment and quickly deleted it
I guess it's getting late
I've managed to make the reverse round robin iterate over all the elements, starting from the end, but still not in the right order. Puzzling.
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton find on a tuple?
@Xeo Yes, gives the runtime index.
Xeo
Xeo
mh
what's the second int for, then?
07:13
compile time find isn't possible?
Oh, I guess it's not that puzzling that I iterate over all the elements as long as pop_back removes the just visited element.
@Rapptz Sure, but over a constant value.
@Xeo One to keep track of which index we're at, one to be the tentative result.
Xeo
Xeo
mh
Wait, "tentative result" - you don't short-circuit but keep going even if you found it?
Can't short circuit a fold in a strict language.
@chris I decided I'm too nice with bugs, so I just killed 3 on sight.
@Rapptz Heh.
Xeo
Xeo
07:19
@LucDanton Right.
why do you have so many bugs in your code in the first place? do you suck?
Sanity check: if you have [1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11], [0, 2, 4, 8], [0, 3, 6, 9] in that order, what do you expect the round robin range of all three to be?
I tried 4 different FFT libraries, Matlab CPU and FFTW give same result. All others differ with Matlab's GPU being the worst... This is 2013, why can we have an fft that works (on a gpu)?
Xeo
Xeo
[1, 0, 0, 3, 2, 3, 5, 4, 6, 7, 8, 9, 9, 11], I think
Thanks. It works in the one direction but not the other.
Xeo
Xeo
07:23
what exactly do you mean with the "other" direction? Reverse-iteration?
@LucDanton I expect a "reverse round robin" to do back instead of front, no?
Sorry?
rather than 1, 0, 0... it'd be 11, 8, 9... ?
Right.
Wait.
Xeo
Xeo
07:25
Iterate over the reverse of each range :D
You say it calls range.front, so I expect a reversed to do range.back?
Okay I see what's happening, thanks.
@Xeo That's in fact what it amounts to doing.
(If you have some pen & paper, I know it helps me.)
Eh fairly sure I'm going to scrap bidi then.
Xeo
Xeo
bidirectional round_robin sounds... not very easy.
Maybe if you only have ranges that have a size.
but still complicated, I think
Meh, you can maintain as (additional) state a tuple of the size mismatches. Then when you pop_back you decrement the mismatch, when going over or actually pop_back. Or something like that, that sounds prone to off-by-lots and similar :D
@Xeo I already require that to find from which range to start backwards from.
Xeo
Xeo
... huh?
07:30
Suppose I have a very, very long range right in the middle. The first time back() is called, I have to be there.
Xeo
Xeo
Why? I thought the order was [11, 8, 9, 9, 4, 6, ...] and not [11, 9, 7, 8, 9, ...]?
Ye that works for that one. Suppose the longest range is not in the first position.
Xeo
Xeo
reverse_robin [1, 4, 7] [2, 5, 8, 11] [3, 6, 9] = [7, 11, 9, 4, 8, 6, 1, 5, 3, 2] is what I have in mind right now.
That's round_robin(reverse(r)...).
It's however not reverse(materialize(round_robin(r...))).
Xeo
Xeo
Oh, so you were talking about reverse(round_robin(r...)) :o
07:36
11 mins ago, by Rapptz
You say it calls range.front, so I expect a reversed to do range.back?
I still think it makes sense :s
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton Wait, if you iterate down the longest range first, the result would be [11, 9, 7, 8, 9, ...] ...
And not [11, 8, 9, 9, 4, 6, ...]. I'm a little confused.
* * * *
* * * *
  * * *
  *   *
wtf how is this 'fixed font'
how
ASCII art time? :)
lol
Okay suppose those are the ranges laid side by side, each one top down. So the first range has two elements, the stars on the left.
Xeo
Xeo
mh
07:40
Then round-robin means visiting every element in 'reading order': left to right, top to bottom.
Xeo
Xeo
ya
Imagine an arrow going through each element like so.
Then reverse the arrow: right to left, bottom to top.
Notice how you don't visit the final element of the first range until much later.
Xeo
Xeo
Yes, sure.
That's about it.
To picture round_robin(reverse(r)...) you let the ranges 'fall' to the bottom, then read right to left, bottom to top.
Xeo
Xeo
But going back to your original ranges
 1 2 3
 3 2 3
 5 4 6
 7 8 9
 9
11
07:42
grrr stupid people leaving whiny comments are stupid
Let me guess, the Java comments?
@Rapptz umm, a Java comment at least. Dunno if it's the same one
The ones starting here:
Object instantiation and object-oriented features are blazing fast to use (faster than C++ in many cases) because they're designed in from the beginning. and Collections are fast. Standard Java beats standard C/C++ in this area, even for most optimized C code. are wild claims unsupported by any evidence linked here. — Sjoerd Aug 20 '11 at 12:15
some idiot demanding I provide a reference backing up the claim that "the JVM GCjust updates pointers to an object when it moves the object, instead of implementing every pointer in the language as a pointer to a pointer so it can instead update the in-between pointer"
Xeo
Xeo
Actually, nvm. I'm fairly sure we just talked past each other at one point.
07:45
@Xeo :(
If this is about starting at 11 (bottom left) rather than 9 (bottom right) it has to do with me computing the end of the forward iteration.
Xeo
Xeo
13 mins ago, by Xeo
Why? I thought the order was [11, 8, 9, 9, 4, 6, ...] and not [11, 9, 7, 8, 9, ...]?
It was about this question, to which you said "yes".
And [11, 8, 9, 9, 4, 6, ...] would be round_robin(reverse(r)...)
Not reverse(round_robin(r...))
I said 'yes' because there is a coincidence that the first range is the longest.
Xeo
Xeo
(FWIW, the second range I mentioned was left-to-right, bottom-to-top, aka mirrored aka wrong for our purposes.)
@LucDanton Oh, I see.
@jalf I'm pretty sure you're right. What he's talking about was called an object table. It was fairly popular for a short time around the early to mid-1980's, but it was become obsolete almost as it was invented. As CPU speeds rose compared to main memory speed, it started to add quite a bit of overhead, and fairly quickly died out.
FUCK CMAKE WHY ARE YOU SO FUCKING BROKEN
Xeo
Xeo
07:50
@JerryCoffin ... isn't going through every pointer that references the moved object pretty slow, compared to updating one entry in a table?
Also, damn, work time.
sbi
sbi
Feb 21 '12 at 13:57, by sbi
@jalf See, this is what all CMake talk ultimately will arrive at, sooner or later: "fuck you, CMake!
@Xeo That was the idea, but it turns out that the number of pointers to any one object is typically low enough that you don't really save all that much time, and the pointer updating is a fairly small percentage of the overall time anyway.
I.e. you plan for few GCC pauses, but lots of object accesses.
lol GCC pause
@LucDanton For that new version of GCC that's written in Java, apparently. :-)
Well there's already boehm-gc in there!
07:56
@Rapptz I only see one decent answer there, starting with: "You seem to be asking two rather different questions:"... :-)
@LucDanton Good point.
I don't know of a good cross-platform build system...
@ThePhD I'm not entirely convinced there's even a really good single-platform build system!
Scons is okay.. I guess.
The sheer number of different build systems around seems to indicate a lot of dissatisfaction from quite a few other people too.
08:00
Morning!
make is terrible, CMake is beyond terrible, SCons is... strange? I dunno, Ninja is supposed to work okay, MSBuild is Microsoft-Only, but wordy as fuck and hard to figure out (plus XML, yech) (and not cross-platform, so meh),
@TonyTheLion Are you sure you want to enter the room right now? We haven't really be discussing women or titties. D:
I don't know many other build systems.
MacPorts is Mac-Only package manager, and does some build rules and stuff on its own I guess.
sbi
sbi
@ThePhD Well, you just did. So The Lion's Charm seems to be still working.
room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: The Lion's Charm. It still works! [c++] [c++11] [c++-faq] [no-questions]
@sbi :) Hehe
@sbi aye...
actually, let me follow this up with... "FUCK YOU XMLRPC WHY ARE YOU SO FUCKING BROKEN"
@ThePhD none exists
Morning all
08:08
I think it's fairly telling that cmake is literally the best we've been able to find for our cross-platform builds
=/
That's really lame.
Also BHERAWDAJWHDJWHDKW I HATE BEING SICK
BEING SICK SUCKS SO MUCH DIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIICK.
sbi
sbi
@ThePhD It's sickening, innit?
@sbi o.0 What is that for, the Computer of the Gods?
@ThePhD Well, computers have gotten much, much smaller lately.
Hm.
sbi
sbi
08:16
@ThePhD If you insert this into the right hole of the Cheops pyramid, the huge tomb boots into PharaoOS™.
Hehe.
@sbi I hear their burial interface sucks.
Xeo
Xeo
@sbi Wouldn't "PharaOS" be a better fit?
sbi
sbi
@Xeo No. (It's an object-oriented OS, hence the two consecutive Os.)
Xeo
Xeo
lol
sbi
sbi
08:20
No, really. PharaOS™ is certainly much better. Only I didn't think of it... :-/
@sbi Yet you thought of the OOOS joke on the spot.
sbi
sbi
@chris Having been around for a while and having seen a thing or two helps with that. Unlike most of you, I was around when OO was the latest and hippest thing, and OS/2 was celebrated as an object-oriented OS.
(In reality it's just that IO had a coffee this morning. I usually don't do this, so it boosts me beyond reasonable thinking.)
I changed my display language to Japanese.
I kind of expected to learn faster, but it's all katakana.
Does DeadMG's message still need to be pinned?
08:27
@chris lol
I translated this page. That should actually help a lot tbh.
sbi
sbi
I will have a hell of a day today. May I do some whining here?
I'll leave work shortly after lunch, because at 2pm we have an appointment at Berlin's Senator for City Development's secretary, where four of us are expected to explain why the contract between the senate and the state-owned housing companies, devised to protect renters, is a paper tiger, looking ferocious on the outside, while being a weak and puny little thing.
At 7pm some local politician will visit one of my neighbors to talk about the progress in our fight. They all think I should show up there, too.
I'll leave at 7:30pm, though, because at 8pm I am expected to speak to the inhabitants of a house owned by the housing company we're all up and in arms against, in order to convince them to join us.
:(
sbi
sbi
If there's some life left in me after that, I'll join the other active ones who are discussing our next steps, presumably until well after midnight.
Woah, I didn't know you were still in this battle.
sbi
sbi
08:39
I have to keep fighting it. With the rent prices exploding around here, there's nowhere I could run to.
sbi
sbi
The appointment at the senator's secretary is the farthest up on the political ladder we have come so far. That guy is considered the mind behind the contract that was meant to protect us, and so utterly failed. We must make a very good impression today. (I'm not sure why they want me to go then, and I am very nervous about it.)
morning chaps
@sbi good luck man monkey ape
@sbi Yes, good luck.
@sbi self confidence is a good thing, don't look so nervous that people start thinking you are a criminal ...
08:46
@sbi Good luck and godspeeds. Keep your energy up, and stay in the fight!
@TonyTheLion what's this in relation to? Your charm still works?
sbi
sbi
45 mins ago, by sbi
@ThePhD Well, you just did. So The Lion's Charm seems to be still working.
@sbi so, perhaps convince him that by failing to help enforce it, it shows how it, thus him, is weak...
obviously some chick responded to Tony's advance in a positive way.
@sbi ah
08:48
@Telkitty猫咪咪 lol
@sbi probably because you're a rational person who can actually argue meaningfully for a cause? :)
sbi
sbi
@Telkitty猫咪咪 @jalf I am not that nervous. In the last half a year, I have given several speeches to politicians, this secretary among them (this is one of the reasons we got today's invitation in the first place), and have met way more for private talking. I have been interviewed for newspapers, radio, and TV channels. I'm not shy at all, but this today goes beyond the common "we better make a good impression".
@thecoshman That's the problem. We have to explain to him that what he created is worth nothing, without him getting the feeling we think what he created is worth nothing. Sigh.
Word + Mind Games.
Blech, an area I don't want to be in ever. :c
@sbi That's not your usual way of doing things. It would probably be easier if you could just tell him in his face as it is.
sbi
sbi
@ThePhD Nor did we.
But when you stand in front of the cave your children are sleeping in, an ax in your hand, facing a horde of predators, you don't get to pick your allies. You have to make do with whoever announces they'll fight on your side.
6
08:55
@sbi <3 Protect me forever, Daddy~
sbi
sbi
@TonyTheLion Yeah, I am much better saying straight out what I think. I might have to keep my mouth shut and merely nod to what the others are saying.
@sbi I sense desperation :p
@sbi That does suck.
sbi
sbi
@Telkitty猫咪咪 That's because I am desperate. If I lose this apartment (and with the announced rent increase I would lose it), the only places I could pay for are way out, requiring a 45mins public transport trip to where my kids live with their mothers, go to school, have their friends. Should that happen, there's no need to struggle for me anymore. The level of contact to my kids (which now I care for half the time) I could maintain from there I can have while living on social welfare.
@sbi "We are not saying you're shit.... but you are kind of shit" :P
09:01
@sbi sorry I was joking, I thought you needed to talk to the enator's secretary because some national security contract. You know how well I read this chat :p
sbi
sbi
@thecoshman I'm afraid we'll have to do this on a somewhat higher level than this. :)
@Telkitty猫咪咪 No, that image with the cave where your kids are sleeping in fits my situation quite well.
user1804599
Morning.
@not-rightfold Nighting.
user1804599
Morninging?
@sbi "Good sir, we are not proclaiming your work to be oh low standard. We are, with all due respect informing you that the fecal matter has substantially more merit than what you have thus far managed to produce." more like it?
09:03
good morning
Burninig Morninig.
@sbi I always thought Germany's renters heaven - nobody buys property there, everybody rents
@Telkitty猫咪咪 supply:demand, populations increase, people wish to travel less distance, increases demand at an alarming rate for central locations.
because laws there is so pro renters
Let's face it, getting @Sbi and his fellow tenants out of that building could result in a huge amount more money being earned from the property.
sbi
sbi
09:05
@thecoshman Yeah, except the "good sir" is a cool and nonchalant guy in his mid-30s, wearing khaki colored jeans an a beige shirt, and trying to come across as a friend so close he barely manages to address you by your last name. Those are the worst among politicians.
@Telkitty猫咪咪 All the big cities have seen a tremendous increase in rent prices in the last half a decade. Especially Berlin has seen hundreds of thousands people moving to the city, creating incredible pressure on the housing market. And while some of you, hearing what we have to pay, might laugh at the figures, you have to see this in the light of the wages not having had any time to catch up with this development.
Would I work in Munich or Frankfurt, I could easily pay the rent they want and I'd still have more left than I have now.
@thecoshman Basically, that's what they wanted to do. Half the apartments in this house (19 of 40) are already empty. There's no pensioners living in the house anymore, and beside me there's only one single parent left. All the others are either singles without kids or couples where both have jobs. All the others have been driven out.
are they trying to rebuild the place?
doesn't make sense to leave apartments empty
there is no rental return for an empty place
7806 messages on lounge
lol wat
hi folks
sbi
sbi
@Telkitty猫咪咪 The house has been neglected for decades, and is in bad need of repair. Instead of just repairing it, though, they do what's called "modernization" in German landlording law. You can add 11% of your modernization costs to your renter's monthly pay, so the modernization pays off after 9 years (while the renters will have to pay those 11% forever).
But those "modernizations" consists in giving us new windows, instead of repairing the existing ones, replacing the well-working per-apartment gas heating systems by a central heating (which has no advantage for us), and having us pay for thermo-insulating the old plumbing, rather than just fix it at their own expense.
What is so enraging about this is that we're talking a state-owned company. Those were created to remove the pressure from the housing market. Instead they behave like housing locusts, adding to that pressure, driving the very people from their homes they were charged with protecting.
Ugh, its all for profit, and that's the only reason.
or you can just live in a place with everything new and move out when you find something more suitable? you know you don't have to live there forever right? :p
09:19
There goes the comma operator again, messing with people's heads.
They don't really care about people, they care about money.
WOOO
I CAN WALK AN ENTIRE NAMESPACE
sbi
sbi
@Telkitty猫咪咪 There's limits to what you can take from renters already living in your apartments. There's no limits what you can take from new renters.
Megafunzors. :3c
Namespaces in your structs in your namespaces, oh my~
@ThePhD I'm very happy for you.
Xeo
Xeo
09:21
@ThePhD err no
Okay, structs in your namespaces in your namespaces.
There, happy Mr. Pedant? :c
Xeo
Xeo
ya
@Xeo oh, you're arguing with him? take this
sbi
sbi
@TonyTheLion The thing is that every cent they earn goes to the state treasure — where it is mainly used to subside the costs of living of the poor. (Berlin is a city of poor people, pouring incredible amounts of money into social welfare.) So basically it's one big machinery to keep employed the state's employees who decide of who gets welfare...
Clue Stick™ v2.0
09:22
@sbi Yea.
sbi
sbi
Anyway. This was my morning at work. Damn, I didn't write a single line of code. I'm way too excited to think about C++.
I'll have some lunch now, and I'm on my way in 50mins. Have a great day, everyone, and spare me a good wish in 3.5hrs. If this goes well, the rest of the day is a walk in the park. A long walk in a huge and dangerously wild park. But this first thing on my list is putting my head right into the (paper) tiger's mouth.
void doit () {
		struct ふふ {

		};
	}
^ Is there any way to address that struct outside of the function?
Xeo
Xeo
no
no
and there shouldn't be ever
09:27
Oh, then my thing works I think.
Xeo
Xeo
For that particular function, that is.
Voldemort Types in D
inb4 GCC UB
next up: cowboy_cast
Xeo
Xeo
auto doit(){ struct X{}; return X(); }
using doit_X = decltype(doit());
:)
09:28
...
i don't even y u do dis
Xeo
Xeo
@Xeo shudder
will that even compile?
Do you even link, bro?
Xeo
Xeo
C++1y, yes.
@TonyTheLion not in C++11
09:29
Fuck that
Xeo
Xeo
:D
I'm talking stuffs now
Xeo
Xeo
It's awesome
Haha
Well, I like it. :D
@ThePhD You're strange :)
Xeo
Xeo
09:29
auto fun(){ return [&](...){ ... }; }
Strange is good. <3
I'd like struct { int x; } foo() { return { 5 }; } more
Xeo
Xeo
ill-formed
@ThePhD try bestiality or child porn
@Xeo notice how I didn't say this had a chance of working ever
Xeo
Xeo
Oh wait, I overlooked the 'd
09:31
@Xeo fun = \x -> ... look ma, no fugliness.
oh wait what did I write
<slaps head>
too much haskell break :/
gotta get back to learning on weekend
Xeo
Xeo
@BartekBanachewicz fun x = ... is what you wrote ;)
Xeo
Xeo
graah, how the fuck do I skip a line from the Flash debugger :<
@Xeo Start by opening your hands and letting the butterfly's delicate wings flap once.
I almost wrote butterflie's. I don't know what the Internet has done to me, but I don't like it.
09:53
Is it just me, or is firewall in Japanese faiauooru? Enough vowels in a row?

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