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09:00
> Flickr is down for panda planned maintenance. We'll be back with the usual photo goodness at about 2 PM . Follow us
user1804599
I reduced two subqueries into one.
@Rapptz viagra?
user1804599
My tooth hurts.
Still got some decades before I have a chance of getting ED.
@Abyx ah, makes oodles of it. I wondered when the last time was that Russian gratuitously died in a war zone :/
@not-rightfold Split the subqueries back? Maybe optimization is the root of all evil, after all?
user1804599
09:02
lol
hmmm
user1804599
Maybe two extra indices make it faster.
TRUNCATE usually makes it a lot faster
It just happens there is a site called tellkitty.com too
someone mistyped my sites spelling & went in there
ll instead of l
when writing tests for my semantic analyzer
in order to prove that it outputs the correct code generation tree
I'd have to codegen and execute the result as well, right?
09:06
I have analysed your semantics and found them to be lacking.
user1804599
Hmm.
user1804599
IN y u no consider index.
wait
how did this sample even compile?
@not-rightfold Your candidate set is too large for indexes to help; subqueries are to be avoided or heavily optimised, for this reason.
@not-rightfold It's Programmer's Day.
09:09
anyway to prepend the contents to a new file? — vysakh 1 min ago
^ God. Another OP without a clue
@DeadMG no. You can supply the expected code and compare? Perhaps you need a comparison facility that ignores base addresses and stuff
@ScottW The best one.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I don't, actually (I'm keeping that one myself)
@sehe For any non-trivial code, the only way to gain the expected code would be to check the output of the analyzer. There's no other useful source, realistically.
@DeadMG Erm. Wut? You can hardcode the expected instructions. This is what a unit test frequently does, otherwise it's circle-jerking for bits anyways
(I'm aware of the fact that you can build on other unit tests, but you'd probably tell me if that was viable)
well, sure, I could do that, except for the part where the expected is going to be unfeasibly large.
09:14
> org.jinterop.dcom.common.JIException: Message not found for errorCode: 0x00000005
Sweeet
@DeadMG Well, think of a cunning solution :/ You can always unit test code if you know the expected outcome. Even random gens can be unit tested, using statistical methods. Find your sweet spot (balance low/highlevel).
@R.MartinhoFernandes access denied
@sehe Oh, I can recognise that on sight too :)
@sehe Use a theorem prover!
whoops
I accidentally coded the analyzer to never actually call any functions, ever.
I'm hungry.. but it's late... decisions decisions..
Flip a coin.
09:23
@ScottW Scotty! :D Long time no see man! :D
>>> random.randint(0, 1)
1
I didn't have a coin
Mmm food.
Soup
@sehe @CatPlusPlus Woke up, installed some packages, and now I'm starting my day with man zpool. Fun!
Who the heck reads the manpages?
Kids these days.
Oh wait.
Colophon? More like colofun.
That was bad.
Colopuns are terrible.
09:29
@DeadMG I think top-down testing would be the easiest. Make set of test programs (Wide source files) which you compile, run and check output.
I shouldn't have signed up for google voice
Since I have zero experience with writing compilers this is the only thing I can think of.
I think that will have to be in addition to, as opposed to instead of
I'm getting creepy/weird voicemail now
hmmm
09:33
@LucDanton OS? zfsonlinux, guessing?
You already have a file. So you can't "prepend to a new file". You want to append to this file. So you don't want to ask for a way to prepend :D You really should take more care about formulating what you need. Google "streamwriter append" immediately gave me this answer: "C# Append lines to a file using a StreamWriter"sehe 45 secs ago
^ gosh. we need downloadmorebrain.com
I accidentally changed my parser to parse all lookups as looking up a member named ".".
@sehe Yup. Debian.
^Do I get more uncool points?
@LucDanton good choice. My fileserver is Debian + zfsonlinux (moved from OpenSolaris after Sun basically killed it)
Oops! Google Chrome could not find downloadmorebrain.com :-(
@LucDanton I honestly don't know what should be more cool. Perhaps BSD with root-on-zfs
09:35
@sehe I still remember when you were in shock after learning I had never used rsync :p This new box may or may not result in me becoming a better admin.
(root-on-zfs is another thing I'd recommend against, except for virtual machines on ZVols, maybe)
@LucDanton Woot!
And speaking of, are there protips for better screen use?
better compared to what?
Stock settings. Sorry the GNU screen kind of screen.
@StackedCrooked No! You compile them and use a theorem prover to prove their equivalence!
(We did that in our toy compiler in Haskell in class; our own theorem prover too)
@stefan That's just an opinion. I avoid overload messes. One day, you'll find yourself finding the index of an element in a container of comparable functor objects. "Magic" semantic choices are... not necessary :) — sehe 3 secs ago
@Rapptz bullying!
@Rapptz That's it, Roar Jr. get in the bath.
Is there a way to break or assert on suspiciously large allocations (e.g. > 1 GB)?
run on a 32-bit machine and wait for it to crash? :p
@LucDanton none. Maybe, the convenience of always doing screen -DR (reattaches your session, if any)
09:39
that's quite pragmatic @jalf :P
@jalf A crash would be useful because GDB can break on that.
@StackedCrooked Override op new?
@StackedCrooked ulimit? otherwise, tcmalloc croaks on large allocs, I'm not sure whether you can make it fail
@LucDanton Yes, switch to tmux.
Do you guys know of a dead code analysis tool for Visual Studio?
09:40
@R.MartinhoFernandes Thanks, I couldn't remember the name.
@sehe tcmalloc is reporting large allocs, and I want to track them down
tcmalloc: large alloc 1073741824 bytes == 0x41b41000 @
tcmalloc: large alloc 2147483648 bytes == 0x81d41000 @
Are you doing the allocation directly?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Interesting.
@Rapptz It's probably a constructor of string or vector with two pointers.
It doesn't throw std::bad_alloc?
Edited in the mandatory reference to Sean Parent's talk: "Avoid raw loops" — sehe 14 secs ago
09:43
@Rapptz No I got 16 GB so 1 or 2 GB allocations are succeeding.
^ come on, nobody agrees? needs more votes (not fishing, objective observation!)
@StackedCrooked oh, you're on linux? Then I guess it wouldn't crash.
@StackedCrooked Do valgrind --tool=massif and ms_print on the output. It will report the culprits
@Mikhail Visual Studio!
Mmmh I completely forgot to ask the room what they thought of GN.
@StackedCrooked do a conditional breakpoint inside malloc?
09:44
eh.. "avoid raw loops"?
(rationale: all code in Visual Studio is (prospective) dead code)
note: I can't remember how to do those in gdb
@LucDanton I like individual talks. A lot of ... less than generally useful things. Too much hype about cinder (allthough I'm glad I heard about it). Too much evangelism :/
Does your last snippet even compile? lol
09:46
That's unfortunate. Last one didn't suffer from that.
@Rapptz Which of those three words are unclear?
@sehe TIL about massif, nifty !
@LucDanton It's my opinion only
Not unclear, just a bit of meh advice IMO.
@StackedCrooked It is
20
A: Does multithreading emphasize memory fragmentation?

seheOk, picked up the bait. This is on a system with Intel(R) Core(TM)2 Quad CPU Q9550 @ 2.83GHz 4x5666.59 bogomips Linux meerkat 2.6.35-28-generic-pae #50-Ubuntu SMP Fri Mar 18 20:43:15 UTC 2011 i686 GNU/Linux gcc version 4.4.5 total used free shared buffer...

09:47
Can I assume those were the kind of talks that are helpful to take the pulse of the C++ community and keep track of what's going on where, rather than the mind expanding kind?
@Rapptz not in this case (and many many stereotypical uses of loops like that)
I'm perplexed how const auto f(begin(c), end(c)) compiles
@LucDanton I only watched the keynote so far.
Oh mismatched parentheses in my head
Must be late.
@LucDanton The hypings, maybe.
09:48
@Rapptz I've given this advice to (relative) beginners before and I would do it again (to anyone).
Depends. I guess.
I'm not saying rewrite std::find_if or anything
@sehe OMG he said that?
@LucDanton my real gripes would be Andrei's second optimization talk... It's completely irrelevant to 99% of the population and also re-establishes the culture of overcomplicating which C++ sorely doesn't need. To a lesser extent: "Don't help the compiler" (STL) - boring, redundant;
Gotta watch that one.
@R.MartinhoFernandes A number of times
09:49
@LucDanton Disappointing.
The most useful talk IMO was STL's talk about not helping the compiler.
@R.MartinhoFernandes FFS! You didn't listen to me?
Sep 4 at 19:07, by sehe
@FredOverflow You mean, he's too modest? I have a feeling the Robot would like this style. Very much.
@jalf cond <breakpoint number> <condition> /cc @Stacked
Sep 4 at 19:35, by sehe
You should very much consider watching Sean Parent's talk. Just saying
:) I even kept it on my server for a day (no need anymore now)
Sean's second short talk was also interesting.
09:52
@Rapptz Keep in mind the prevalence of fencepost errors. Part of the appeal to programming for me is fixing a problem 'for good' and moving on to another (because you can refactor a solution away and possibly reuse it). I don't want to debug loops over and over.
2 days ago, by sehe
The second was a bit of a let down (it was basically 20 minutes more of the same as the 3rd part of Talk 1. Supposedly at lightspeed, but that's just 196 slide of which 30% were just animation steps to do ... scrolling of the code sample :D)
196 animation slides.
Yeah. It's more like... 25-20 slides, really
It was a nice example of the benefit of value semantics over classic inheritance-based OOP designs.
That's what the first talk also said in the last section
09:55
@LucDanton I don't know, I might be misunderstanding the premise. I'm saying that loops have their place and you don't have to try to avoid the typical for(auto&& i : t) loop (that's a kind of raw loop right?) when you're doing something. (inb4 std::for_each )
Andrei's talk about the exploding tuple was kinda embarrassing.
@StackedCrooked there's a lot more information in the reports than I show in the linked answer, though fyi
@StackedCrooked Haven't watched it
I think loops are a crutch that has been abused for decades on end.
I like loops.
They solve problems.
Not a convincing argument :S
09:58
Loops are prone to human errors.
@Rapptz Depends. for(auto&& x: xs) foo(x); can't be reduced to another algorithm (although you make the assumption that it's an lvalue range), but you can easily do things like for(auto&& x: xs) { if(x == 42) break; ..., which do overlap with algorithms (or ranges).
@R.MartinhoFernandes Why should I not use a loop?
in Discussion between sehe and stefan, 42 secs ago, by sehe
Oh, and returning an out-of-range index is fine, I just make it a deterministic one - this removes the burden on the client to check for dependent conditions. Make your algorithms general, and design for a pit-of-success
^ look I referenced the robot
@Rapptz Loops don't solve problems. Cars don't solve problems. Guns don't solve problems. They are all just means to an end
@Rapptz Cf. fencepost errors being something like the second most common programming error.
@LucDanton Hey you repeated what I said with more words.
10:00
@Rapptz No, I did not.
12 mins ago, by Rapptz
Depends. I guess.
You asked: "that's a kind of raw loop right?" and I answered.
Don't guess
Go to bed :v
12 mins ago, by Rapptz
I'm not saying rewrite std::find_if or anything
:v
10:01
?!?!
I'm not that tired. :(
My 'depends' refer to your parenthetical only.
I don't address the rest because it's weaselly.
:)
I don't like the people makes mistakes argument anyway.
There's a surgeon that considered using checklists, much like pilots do before take off, to avoid errors in life-critical scenarios. When he suggested the idea to colleagues many scoffed at the idea. I really don't want to discount the idea that I make mistakes (in the face of evidence), and if see a way to prevent them, well...
@LucDanton Those are now mandated by WHO.
10:05
Did pilots take that well?
WHO is the World Health Organization. It speaks for doctors, not pilots.
Yes. Hence the question!
If you like writing loops and fencepost errors btw you can write ranges all day ;_;
I was going to write a paragraph but the surgical post made me lose track of it
10:08
7 mins ago, by Luc Danton
Go to bed :v
I haven't made an off-by-one error in a long time
:s
How long are you okay with your pilot not crashing before you feel it's okay for him or her not to use a checklist?
I should use a checklist when I'm using a for loop.
I guess I kinda do since I check this page before-hand.
If you double check an algorithm's implementation before inlining it yourself I'm going to silently shake my head at you.
Cue quote about doing it like a machine.
10:14
Huh?
What loop can the algo reference help you with?
Helps me find if I'm rewriting something
When are you not? :s There are only so many loops to write.
When I was writing a bunch of list algorithms about 3 months ago I rewrote a lot of things on purpose so you can shake your head at that.
'Resilver' in the context of storage mirrors? Funny terminology.
10:22
^ Someone just called this bird one of the ugliest creature on earth ^
ah
guess when my appointment with the consultant is
2 hours go.
13th November
Ah, so enough time. :(
Holy fuck that's two months from now and only to decide if you should schedule surgery?
Are they serious? Kakapos are so cute!
10:25
yep
can't you like switch hospitals?
nope.
-2
Q: automatic type deduction in Visual C++ 2013 RC does not work

RadeonI just upgraded from Visual Studio 2013 Professional Preview to Visual Studio 2013 Professional RC. But there is one simple thing, that does not work since the upgrade: automatic type deduction (auto) from C++11. Take this code: int a = 1; int b = 2; auto c = a / b; As you know, c should be de...

@R.MartinhoFernandes I’d write an answer but I suspect this is a troll, thus wasting my time
in other health-related news
I went for a blood test
they stuck a needle in my arm, bruised it, and then told me to go away and come back when the more skilled nurse was available to deal with my deep veins
thanks NHS
user1804599
10:37
Wonderfül.
@DeadMG wtf
I hope the surgeons are better than that.
@DeadMG A blood test? Isn't that like a really basic thing?
it is for most people, but some people actually have veins that are very difficult to find and reach because they're a lot further from the surface
e.g., me
@DeadMG lol fail
@StackedCrooked it requires minimal training by law, but actually requires some experience
10:54
Wow, I found a solution and it's quite a surprise - problem was in a lack electrical resistance in data cable. Due to galvanic isolation of newly received transmitters, there is a standing wave were forming in a data cable when network was operating, which cased a strong interference. And when the message from server tried to pass a transmitter it were always blocked by transmitter's firmware as rubbish. With non-isolated transmitters data-cables wer grounded to an actual devices bodies. Morale: never underestimate importance of a physical level. — Andrey Izmaylov 2 hours ago
3
Hi
in Compile time I face with this error:
C:\Users\Mohsen\AppData\Local\Temp\mex_FL6h5Y\matlabInterface.obj:matlabInterface.cpp:(.text+0x2b): undefined reference to `shogun::CSGInterface::reset()'
@sashoalm dafuq ?
101
Q: What is an undefined reference/unresolved external symbol error and how do I fix it?

Luchian GrigoreWhat are undefined reference/unresolved external symbol errors? What are common causes and how to fix them? Feel free to edit/add your own.

@A.H. Well, the question was does my app not receive data from the server, it was just an unexpected answer for me, after spending 3-4 minutes reviewing his code, is all :)
@sashoalm what the...
11:01
@R.MartinhoFernandes handy link to have
@A.H. too bad people keep asking the same thing over and over
uh wait what my comment under it disappeared
FFS
0
Q: QTcpSocket readyRead() signal issue

Andrey Izmaylovhope you can help me with my problem. I'm connecting to the server. Connection successful ( connected() signal is emitted). I'm sending the message to the server Server translates the message to every connected client readyRead() on client's side does not emitted. Why? Here's the code: Can_T...

@sashoalm you don't have to link to the question if you use comment link
am I the only one who doesn't understand why people use Qsocket ?
@sashoalm yeah we know how to scroll :P
user1804599
11:04
@A.H. No; my grandmother doesn't either.
here's me facing the inevitable question once again
do I eat something and be sick, or do I eat nothing and go hungry?
user1804599
Eat something and do not be sick.
@not-rightfold sounds like a smart lady
user1804599
> ERROR: more than one row returned by a subquery used as an expression
@not-rightfold Function not defined.
user1804599
11:04
Fuuuuck.
@DeadMG do drinks make you sick as well ?
user1804599
Forgot sum. :V
@A.H. Don't think so
@DeadMG can you eat something light? Like, well cooked rice?
@DeadMG you could avoid getting sick a lot , by drinking more I guess
just fill her up
11:06
@BartekBanachewicz Nope.
@A.H. Drinking isn't gonna provide nutrients.
@DeadMG eh, poor sod.
@DeadMG coctails? :P (no I don't mean with %)
@DeadMG no but will make you less hungry
@A.H. Yeah, it was really nice that Luchian took the time to write that.
no, it doesn't
@DeadMG Unless you drink nutrients!
Not many nutrients are hydrophobic.
11:08
protein shakes? juice
yeah, but I doubt they would be any less difficult than solid nutrients
user1804599
Yay.
user1804599
Query took 266ms, now takes 0.9ms.
solid meal + 1 liter of water => mix with electrical mixer => drinkable nutrients
11:21
@R.MartinhoFernandes -> tnx @R.MartinhoFernandes but I can't solve problem
I've this in matlabInterface.cpp file:
void CMatlabInterface::reset(
	int nlhs, mxArray *plhs[], int nrhs, const mxArray *prhs[])
{
	CSGInterface::reset(); // Error occurs in here.

	m_nlhs=nlhs;
	m_nrhs=nrhs;
	m_lhs=plhs;
	m_rhs=prhs;
}
CSGInterface::reset(); refers to the following in the SGInterface.h:
class CSGInterface : public CSGObject
{
	public:
		/// reset to clean state
		virtual void reset();
}
user1804599
Wall o code.
I'm confused. I thought creating a ZFS pool by uuid was best practices but now that I've unmounted and prepared the disks I can't find their uuid.
Could be related to the fact that I was using those disks as a RAID array before that.
Eh might have confused by-uuid with by-id.
11:42
I used to really want to work at google at one point
But man, they're one fucked up company
every time I think of Google, I can't help but think of the Google Style Guide.
@DeadMG lol. I'm not talking about that, but its how much data they just take a way from you. Even if you want to delete it, you have no privacy
@DeadMG But just out of curiosity, why? I mean, for Python I just use PEP8, why use google's coding style?
user1804599
Because you're clueless.
@GamesBrainiac Because it gives me nightmares.
@DeadMG Are they that bad?
11:55
the GSG for C++ is
in fact, I think I remember reading it for the first time just before I got sick
@DeadMG hahahahaha Who wrote it?
dunno
Oh well, its a good thing you don't need to follow it anymore
I never did
@DeadMG Thats awesome. I just mostly write Python, so I just follow PEP8
11:59
I don't Python and I hae no idea what PEP8 is

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