« first day (1065 days earlier)      last day (4112 days later) » 

14:00
just like how in an ideal world, I'd re-write everything from scratch
user1804599
I use tabs in Go because I'm too lazy to configure gofmt.
hmmm
now I have a challenge: defining overload resolution that works for resolving both C++ functions and Wide functions.
Ohohoh
Have fun.
I could try declaring the Wide function in C++ and then ask Clang to perform overload resolution.
Otherkin Problems: That uncomfortable feeling inside when called human or when reading a text that refers to all readers as humans.
user1804599
14:15
Time to add punctuation to lexer and then I can begin on the parser.
user1804599
But first: time to fill the toilet.
> Otherkin (aka Fairth, Metahuman, and sometimes overlapping with Vampires and Furries)
wtf am I reading
Welcome to tumblr dot com
So, furries don't consider themselves human? I'm ok with that..
hmmm
14:17
Furries is a whole different kind of weird.
I could suggest that if there is a valid operator found by Clang, then that takes precedence.
@DeadMG you wanna have the c++ OR rules in wide?
@JohannesSchaub-litb The question is to what extent C++ interfaces depend on those details.
C++ OR is relatively easy and cheap (O(n))
for example, I remember Xeo showing a rank<N> thing, where you could order the overloads arbitrarily according to N.
Wide's OR certainly would not support anything like that
14:20
@DeadMG correct. the "n" above refers to the number of functions. ordering two conversion sequences can be arbitrary complicated
yes, I know that.
the question is, if I have a C++ OR set and I apply Wide's OR rules, is shit going to hit the fan.
i pretty much think that all existing code use up to all OR rules
yep.
so when push comes to shove, I cannot drop having Clang perform OR for C++ OR sets.
Is there a way of giving Git tags human-readable names? I.e. including spaces etc.
and there are several contexts, too, like operator overloads vs free functions found by, say, ADL.
14:24
ah, -m message
ugh. we have to write a report in a group of like...3 to 9 people
how do we collaborate on this crap :E
what I suggest is that for operator overloads, if Clang OR succeeds, then that function is chosen in preference- i.e., all C++ functions are implicitly ranked above all Wide functions.
after all, all contexts are unified to the same thing. so at the end OR is just a single thing
you just have to keep in mind that at some places the spec description is defective and the actual rules are a bit more complicated
I don't have to keep that in mind at all.
I don't know or care what the spec says.
as far as I'm concerned, C++ OR is what Clang says it is.
Anyway, I recently found out that there's a subreddit of people who draw eyebrows on their dogs.
14:29
I could just make it an error to attempt to unify Clang and Wide overload sets.
Well, the git documentation is just lying to me. :/
GITs code quality seems bad. lots of strcat, strlen and such
Ell
Ell
@KonradRudolph which bit?
@Ell git tag -m
they claim that if I don’t specify a message I will be prompted for one … lies!
Ell
Ell
My doc doesn't say that o.O
14:33
> -m <msg>, --message=<msg>
Use the given tag message (instead of prompting).
(git help tag)
Ell
Ell
Right. So then you shouldn't do -m and it will prompt?
(maybe?)
it doesn’t prompt
@KonradRudolph I think that it might be for git tag, and git tag -m implies an empty message?
user1804599
Hmm.
user1804599
I'm thinking of async foo() # calls foo in new thread, discarding the return value.
user1804599
14:35
But I don't like the word “async”.
It's like a sales pitch for really good sinks.
vat are you syncing about?
user1804599
@KonradRudolph In my previous message, does the period belong inside or outside of the quotes? I'm always confused.
It's a A-sink. Much better than the cheaper B types.
@not-rightfold Depends how ‘murican you feel today.
user1804599
14:38
Oh, I see.
British English: inside. But I always put it outside because it’s more logical, even though I consequently use British English.
user1804599
I never feel very American; I prefer British English spelling, grammar and punctuation.
user1804599
Except when programming. I use American English names in code.
user1804599
(Fuck you Erlang with your behaviour instead of behavior.)
Hehe, exactly the same as me then
user1804599
14:40
Ok. Time to add punctuation to lexer.
That actually makes some of my SO answers weird because the example code uses one spelling and the explanation another :p
quiz: I have a list of files whose filenames is essentially a collection of tags. How would I concatenate these tags? Keeping in mind that there is no natural order for the tags, so I want to avoid making them look like they’re hierarchical or sorted.
Ell
Ell
@KonradRudolph you mean, get a list of all the tags from the list of filenames?
user1804599
@KonradRudolph What's the format of the filenames?
user1804599
Because the obvious solution is just echo *.
@Ell No, I mean I have to create files, each file based off some properties for a list of tags. That list of tags should be reflected in the files’ names. How do I name them?
Ell
Ell
14:48
Ohh I see
For instance, I have one file which contains properties pertaining to the combination of tags “het” and “wt”, in any order. How do I call the associated file?
with a file naming function
user1804599
@KonradRudolph "het,wt"
at the moment I use prefix-het-mt.ext or prefix-mt-het.ext … any better alternative?
@not-rightfold Is that legal?
user1804599
I'd do it in alphabetical order.
Ell
Ell
14:49
Can't think of anything better
user1804599
@KonradRudolph Why not?
Ell
Ell
alphabetical order would be good I think
user1804599
Any character but the null character and slashes are allowed in filenames in any sane filesystem and OS.
because , is also a meta-character in Bash
for instance in ls {foo,bar}.txt
user1804599
14:50
Or just do it as JSON.
But I like it, I think that’s what I’ll take
user1804599
@KonradRudolph Beware when the tags contain commas.
user1804599
: is also nice.
@not-rightfold Yes – but they don’t so that’s fine
14:51
thanks a lot
Ell
Ell
I wish you could just tag files though
@Ell I’ve been toying with the idea of a wholly tag-based file system (no paths, just tags) for several years
user1804599
Hmm.
the problem is that it would be completely incompatible to existing systems and thus hard to interface with.
user1804599
stmts               : stmt stmts
                    | stmt
                    | ??? // how do I do optionality in Bison?
                    ;
14:54
@not-rightfold there is no optionally
you have to do a "stmt_opt: stmt | ;"
user1804599
Ah, thanks.
@not-rightfold | ; is usually how it's done.
user1804599
program             : stmts                     { kr_outer_node = $1; }
                    |                           { kr_outer_node = mklist(NULL); }
                    ;
user1804599
Like this?
@not-rightfold yes
user1804599
14:56
Ok, dankeschön. :3
user1804599
You'll receive your reward within five workdays.
grmpf, the amount of monkeypatching I do on R’s base functions is unholy
the core API is completely broken, but at least it’s fixable via overriding
user1804599
macbook :: ~/kreeft ‹master*› % ./build.zsh && ./a.out                    130 ↵
if foo {
    bar
}
error: syntax error
user1804599
lol fail
15:05
Wow, git allows highlighting ranges rather than just lines in the file viewer:
er, that looks to me exactly like just highlighting some lines
@DeadMG My point is, so far I thought you could only highlight one individual line by appending #Lnnn to the URI
I settled on this this command line to build my project (which uses CMake):
([ -d Build ] && cd Build && make) || (rm -rf build && cd build && cmake .. && make)
Not sure if minimal and complete.
user1804599
Yay.
user1804599
I can parse if-statements.
15:09
my screen sucks, I didn't even see anything was highlighted D:
with paren highlighting I find that it's hard to spot the cursor if it sits on a bracket
user1804599
@StackedCrooked Use rainbow parentheses.
In what way would that solve the problem apart from cheering me up with more colors.
:D
Rainbow parentheses means that corresponding parens have the same color. This is what causes the problem to begin with.
These are the challenges I'm facing in life.
But I'm hanging on.
user1804599
LLDB is cool.
@StackedCrooked That was deep.
Pity he didn't use cstdio, the we could have blamed him for not using the std:: prefix.
Oh, he using namespace std already.
Dammit. He must have thought this through.
user1804599
> clang: warning: argument unused during compilation: '-fsanitize=address'
user1804599
Shit. What version do I need?
@GamesBrainiac But not as deep as this.
isn't it -fsanitize-address?
15:31
@StackedCrooked Hmmm. Much to think about truly. And we thought dinos were stupid.
This will cost me some sleep.
user1804599
@DeadMG Nein!
@not-rightfold You're Dutch, not German.
Let's reach a compromise the.
user1804599
@GamesBrainiac So?
user1804599
15:33
Oh, uninitialized variable. Hence the segfault.
15:50
wooot! That random moment, when you get rep from a question you answered way back
how random is that?
Dunno, ask Shroedinger.
he is dead
@ÓlafurWaage Thats what they said about Elvis.
16:03
@GamesBrainiac I got about my last 10k rep that wy
@DeadMG holy crap. The rich get richer. Its time to screw over the SO admins. We're the 99%!!!!!
lol
Who's wid me!!!!
Oh shit, this place is full of 1%ers.
Dammit. I need a better strategy.
user1804599
My parser workz!1
@not-rightfold Does it have the all important sperm operator?
user1804599
16:06
There are no operators yet.
@not-rightfold What a stupid language.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit and this is why "size()" functions always should return a value of type int, long or long long
remember never to use unsigned for it
user1804599
Only expression statements and if statements and reference expressions.
@JohannesSchaub-litb No, this is why we should ban mixing signed and unsigned.
@TheGuyWhoCouldn'tTalkToTheGirl This ain't a tech support forum, bro
@DeadMG i don't see "unsigned" anywhere in "0 > v.size() - 1"
all i see is v.size(), -1 and 0
16:08
@JohannesSchaub-litb The RHS is signed, the LHS is signed.
@DeadMG i agree with banning them. but in this case they were not mixed by the OP
Glad we got that cleared up.
@DeadMG i don't see that in his code. and I don't like looking up what functions returns all ever again. things should "Just Work"
a better way to phrase it is "If there is chance that arithmetic might be involved that might go below 0, ban unsigned"
16:09
@JohannesSchaub-litb Mixing signed and unsigned doesn't "Just Work". So there's no advantage to permitting it.
@DeadMG "0 > v.size() - 1" does not "mix signed and unsigned"
it mixes 0, v.size() and -1
if v.size() would return a signed value, that would be all fine.
which do not have a uniform signedness/unsignedness.
therefore, signed and unsigned is mixed.
it is std::vector's fault. not the code's fault
Holy shit.
I found a nickel.
@GamesBrainiac You lucky bastard.
16:11
@StackedCrooked Thats Gentleman Bastard you rubbery bafoon!
user1804599
Are branch instructions needed?
yep
user1804599
Why?
because how the fuck else are you going to implement branches if not with a branch instruction?
user1804599
fptr[2] fs;
fs[0] = branch1;
fs[1] = branch2;
fs[foo()]();
user1804599
16:14
Or jump instead of call w/e.
ok, so it's a branch instruction but more obfuscated.
@not-rightfold i am sorry, every function call is an unconditional branch instruction
congratulations on your advancement
user1804599
@JohannesSchaub-litb Oh, right.
user1804599
@DeadMG What advancement?
16:15
i prefer
@not-rightfold That being my point. That there is no advancement at all.
user1804599
@DeadMG And how is that relevant?
all you've done is make a branch instruction that's worse than having a proper branch instruction.
hence my sarcasm about the utter shit involved in the proposed approach.
alias<void(*[])()>{[]{cout<<"branch1";},[]{cout<<"branch2";}}[foo()]()
user1804599
It's not like I'm saying it's better or anything, if that's what you're thinking.
16:17
no, it's clearly much, much worse.
user1804599
I don't care.
then why are you even asking?
just go and make some shit and be happy with how shit it is
user1804599
Whether it's better or worse or whatever is something I don't give a shit about.
user1804599
I care about whether it's possible at all.
user1804599
1 min ago, by not-rightfold
It's not like I'm saying it's better or anything, if that's what you're thinking.
16:18
here is how you can do without a branch
goto *ptrs[foo()];
ah
you want to know about some irrelevant shit
I shall bow out then
do { if(foo()) continue; branch1(); } while(branch2(), false);
lulz
user1804599
lol
wait. that won't work haha
switch(foo()) { case false: branch1(); break; default: branch2(); }
@DeadMG can Wide's switch do Duffs device?
remind me what Duff's Device is?
16:26
isn't it a partial unwrapping of loops?
where you are working on more than one item at once in the loop, reducing the number of possible branches made
Ell
Ell
2 hours ago, by Konrad Rudolph
@Ell I’ve been toying with the idea of a wholly tag-based file system (no paths, just tags) for several years
^I think a hybrid system would work well
system can use directories, users can use tags
I doubt very much that Wide's switch will be able to handle Duff's Device
@DeadMG It's a snippit of geek culture, nothing more :)
It will be DeadMG's device.
the entire language is DeadMG's device.
I haven't paid my iCloud premium for a year but Apple keeps extending it because the FBI has an active warrant on my account. #ThankYouFBI
@ÓlafurWaage lol Thats commedy gold man! :D
user1804599
inb4 irrelevant register-related remark.
wasn't going to make one.
if case is just a label, then it should work
frankly, I'd expect that LLVM can handle such things
16:37
In that case it will work.
13
A: Convert boolean to int in Java

Thorbjørn Ravn Andersenboolean b = ....; int i = -("false".indexOf("" + b));

6
lol
@FredOverflow That was awesome.
@FredOverflow I saw this weeks lectures and I was like "Yay compiler stuff! Oh... Symbol Table === std::map, damnit."
5 - b.toString().length
hahaha
@FredOverflow Almost as hilarious as the question itself.
16:39
ffs debian can't detect disk drivers :<
@Borgleader unordered_map, fool
user784668
Meh std::unordered_map. std::forward_list<std::pair<K, V>> FTW.
So this guy kidnapped his ex-girlfriend and when the police came after him he threw a grenade at them.
only if you want to handle your own hashing
user784668
What kind of grenade?
16:41
@Fanael One that kills people
int i = alias<int[]>{0, 1}[b];
The article doesn't even say if it exploded or not.
It's in Dutch though.
Template metaprogramming version of that thing would be funny though
user784668
@Borgleader Frag? Concussion?
match on true and false
16:43
@StackedCrooked google translate, or get zoid to read it to us.
You have to be really stupid to think you can fend of the police with one grenade and some fireweapons.
@Fanael Plasma
user784668
@Borgleader TVs are too big to be good grenades, though.
@Fanael Hai!
@Borgleader Sexy.
16:49
@DeadMG The course hasn't covered hashing yet ;)
@GamesBrainiac ikr :)
I wonder what next gen Halo games will look like... Oh wait ... Destiny
@Ell No.
@Borgleader The programming assignment (8 puzzle) is fun, but Java's lacking support of FP really shows here.
user784668
What puzzle?
The 15-puzzle (also called Gem Puzzle, Boss Puzzle, Game of Fifteen, Mystic Square and many others) is a sliding puzzle that consists of a frame of numbered square tiles in random order with one tile missing. The puzzle also exists in other sizes, particularly the smaller 8-puzzle. If the size is 3×3 tiles, the puzzle is called the 8-puzzle or 9-puzzle, and if 4×4 tiles, the puzzle is called the 15-puzzle or 16-puzzle named, respectively, for the number of tiles and the number of spaces. The object of the puzzle is to place the tiles in order (see diagram) by making sliding moves that us...
17:04
@StackedCrooked oh well, I guess she was not ready for commitment then. He was showing old fashioned chivalry of the rare kind!
@FredOverflow was the assignment to solve it with an algorithm?
If all else fails kidnap her. You never know how it will work out:P
user1804599
Time to implement a hash table!
@not-rightfold i implemented one. wanna see code?
user1804599
17:07
NooO!
user1804599
I'll first just use an array of pairs. :P
user784668
@not-rightfold Use an array of penis.
@Fanael it's going to be difficult to compute the load factor at a constant time rate then
17:13
@JohannesSchaub-litb Yes, with the A* algorithm.
oh
@FredOverflow all i remember is that it's an improvement over the MinMax algorithm
@StackedCrooked He'd know. ;)
@not-rightfold it's faster than std::unordered_map
trollol
-1
Q: How long would it take the fastest super computer today to run 30^500,000 operations?

RaminAssuming you have a task that takes 30^500,000 (4.23994117491710471730679669067422446766922040417127354... × 10^738560) operations to run. If you take the fastest computer today, how long in human hours would it take complete this task approximately? This is not a homework question, I am just cu...

^^ lol
@Mysticial Hey! :D
17:21
@GamesBrainiac hey
@Mysticial Do you have a link to ep 11? for TWGOKs?
0
A: How long would it take the fastest super computer today to run 30^500,000 operations?

Loren PechtelThe task will not complete. This is far beyond theoretical limits on what a computer with the mass of the universe could accomplish before the universe either collapses or runs down.

@GamesBrainiac Not anymore, I've DL'ed all of it a long time ago. If it's EP11 for this season I don't think it's out yet. For the previous seasons, you'll find them in the batch downloads.
@Mysticial Its for this season, actually.
user784668
@A.H. lol, correct answer
17:24
@GamesBrainiac I just checked, it's not out yet.
@Mysticial That sucks, they left off at an interesting point.
Oh well, I'll read deh manga
ahaha
god dammit !
@A.H. C++ is already damned.
@GamesBrainiac I didn't mean C++
17:28
@A.H. Right ;)
stupid debian won't detect my hard drive
@A.H. Yesterday, you were saying how awesome it was. Now it sucks. Sounds like a girlfriend to me.
7
@GamesBrainiac That can be read in two different ways. :)
@Mysticial ;)
@Mysticial btw, I sent you mail.
user1804599
17:36
@FredOverflow Looks like the same slides again. :V
@FredOverflow When were you a Stroustroup fanboy?
@GamesBrainiac I'm a fanboy of lots of C++ celebs.
@FredOverflow C++ has celebrities? Dayyum.
user425495
Chandler is my newest cpp-crush
3
@GamesBrainiac its a complicated relationship
but like any other software it sucks when it doesn't work
17:41
@A.H. Make sure you change your status on facebook. People need to know.
I feel evil for some reason all of a sudden.
user1804599
@A.H. Install Gentoo.
I don't use facebook
@not-rightfold shaddup
@A.H. Interesting
Debian superior
user1804599
It doesn't detect your hard drive.
17:45
and Gentoo would do any better?
user1804599
> I noticed your profile on GitHub. As part of a research team from the University of Victoria in Canada and the University of Natal in Brazil, I am looking for active GitHub users for a survey. I'm interested in how and why software developers use or don't social media -- so even if you don't use anything you consider to be social media, I'd be highly interested in your response!
user1804599
Why do people send me emails.
@not-rightfold Well, maybe its because of your colorful personality.
@not-rightfold better reply, you get to be part of a sample
I get lots of emails by people who think my genitalia are too small.
18
17:46
@FredOverflow lmfao
Ell
Ell
I want something like coliru for the desktop
and don't say a compiler
I mean something I can open and do quick compilations on
ide
terminal ?
sublime
clang?
vim? dare I say.
@Ell browser and open coliru
Ell
Ell
my internet is too slow to do that every time :3
17:49
@Ell Then ask luffy, to make a chrome app. He's done it before.
Ell
Ell
luffy?
@Ell Yes. Luffy.
Ell
Ell
I don't know who that is
I'll google later :P
@Ell I mean crooked man. He's the guy who made corilou.
@Ell avatar of stackedcrooked, doubt google will tell you that
Ell
Ell
17:53
@A.H. ohhhhhhhhhhhhhhh
@Ell @A.H. Our young padawan has reached enlightenment.
Ell
Ell
@GamesBrainiac I was the first in this lounge I'll have you know! ;)
@Ell You were? Ehem, I mean our young old padawan has finally passed, after years of resitting. We must make an offering to the spirits.
Ell
Ell
@GamesBrainiac I might be or might not be, I was earlier than a few of the other regulars though. I'm still one of the youngest age wise though :P
I'm an experienced young padiwan :P
@Ell Well, I'm just 18, so who the hell cares! :P
Ell
Ell
18:03
Exactly :)
18:13
@Ell s/di/da/ :F
I think its important that a coder be an anime lover.
@Ell heh. a "padiwan" - lol
fuck yeah ! I just burned an image on a CD , without making a single coaster
Ell
Ell
18:46
@A.H. congrats!
That's pretty rare for me
user1804599
Hmm.
user1804599
If you multiply two prime numbers, do you always get a non-prime number?
Ell
Ell
@not-rightfold yah
user1804599
Ah, cool.
Ell
Ell
by the definition of prime numbers
18:50
@not-rightfold you get compound prime numbers though , right ?
numbers only divisible by themselves and other primes

« first day (1065 days earlier)      last day (4112 days later) »