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00:01
contains(Object, [Object | List]).
contains(Object, [X | List]) :- contains(Object, List).
that should work, right?
ok, I need to hit the sack
and get some sleep, if at all possible
@DeadMG IIRC, your second should be:
contains(Object, [_|List]) :- contains(Object, List)
...but take that with a grain of salt -- it's been a long time since I played with Prolog either.
it would be cool if Microsoft offered modern .NET versions of all the old languages, like Pascal.NET, CommonLisp.NET, Scheme.NET, Prolog.NET and perhaps also for completeness Fortran.NET and COBOL.NET heh
and of course, MIX.NET :-)
and perhaps Ada.NET and Eiffel.NET
and C.NET
and finally Java.NET
We already have "Python.NET" (namely IronPython) and I think some .NET version of Eiffel
Rob
Rob
00:19
Seems to support .NET framework classes as well
IronScheme ( ironscheme.codeplex.com ) targets the DLR
GNAT for .NET ( adacore.com/home/products/gnatpro/add-on_technologies/dotnet ) is a fully featured Ada compiler + toolset
It seems someone developed Prolog.NET as a senior project ( hodroj.net/blog/?page_id=3 )
...
C.NET is just a horrifying idea
@AlfPSteinbach : Haha, and Fortran.NET : mpassociates.gr/software/distrib/science/lahey/lfnet.html
I'm sure you could go on and on and on. It makes me kind of sad that so many new languages take the high road by targeting the CLI ... I'd rather be writing native code.
00:42
@AlfPSteinbach What exactly would be "cool" about polluting perfectly good languages with .NET?
00:52
@Jerry: well, would you say that it would be "hot"?
@AlfPSteinbach The word that comes to mind is "bleh".
but actually i'm confused. what's correct: "she's hot" or "she's cool"?
@AlfPSteinbach Personality -> cool. Looks -> hot.
Hmm... Just got chat privilege...
01:08
so, it would be like double compliement to say "she's hot and cool" :-)
O/T: could someone recommend a decent pair (good sound and build quality) of headphones for less than $150 or so?
Those look sweet. I assume you own a pair / heard them irl?
@StevePh I haven't owned that exact model, but I had something close to its direct predecessor, and currently own a slightly nicer pair.
@JerryCoffin ever use them at work? I don't want them to bleed too much sound; will probably be distracting to others.
@StevePh They're open back, but you'll be deaf before anybody more than 2 feet away can hear them. OTOH, they don't block external sound a whole lot.
GTG -- suppertime.
Thanks for the info.
02:34
@StevePh Surely.
 
5 hours later…
07:21
ah, starting the workday fixing an instance of the most vexing parse
@jalf did you explain what was the mistake to the one who did it ?
@JonathanMerlet not yet. He's not here atm.
07:49
morning
Hi
Heh, there is a Java.NET. It's called J#
It has been dropped since. (According to wikipedia)
08:05
I think there was a lawsuit about that
Again ? lol
08:37
pretty quiet here today
hmmm
for fun I'm attempting to write a recursive directory iterator program, using Boost::Filesystem, I'm failing :(
What troubles you?
doesn't the boost docs have a full example of doing that?
@RMartinhoFernandes well, I can show you what I have, and you can perhaps give me hints on what's wrong, I want to however, solve it by myself though
@jalf haven't seen one
What arguments does std::copy take?
@jalf I want recursively iterate dirs and subdirs too, this doesn't do that, just shows what's in the given dir
:1274205 template<class InputIterator, class OutputIterator>
   OutputIterator copy(
      InputIterator _First,
      InputIterator _Last,
      OutputIterator _DestBeg
   );
Oh sorry, your code calls that correctly. I should have scrolled right.
Silly me.
lol
it does go to the first file, and then returns and exits, so it's not really doing anything recursive at all, only for the first file in the dir
so I think my recursive call is misplaced somehow...
Ok, how many subdirs can a directory have? Possibly more than one, right?
08:49
Into how many is your code recurring into?
<Whatever is the right word before "into">
which of the 'into's?
The one with something before. SFINAE, dude.
none, actually, cause the first few things in my trial dir, the first few things are files, and then some subdirs, so it sees the first file, and then exits
so
- file, file, file, subdir, subdir
Lemme give that hint another way. With std::copy you're looping through and the subentries, and printing them out.
Yet when you do the recursion, there's not looping. Why?
@RMartinhoFernandes cause I thought with recursion, the loop is supposed to be unnecessary
I started out with a loop
that called the function itself
looking at quicksort for example, there's no loop
09:00
You need to do one recursive call for each of the subdirs, right?
yes
so I guess I do need a loop in this case
for each subdir in the current directory, you need to recurse into the subdir
So you basically need two "loops", one for traversing the "width" (each item in current dir), and one for depth (traverse the contents of an item). Or one loop and one recursive call, or two recursive calls
Only you usually really want to do a breadth-first traversal, which requires only one loop and no recursive call.
not if you're trying to get a better feel for recursion though ;)
yea and that's what I'm trying to get, that feel for recursion :)
09:11
@TonyTheTiger Ah, I guess i didn't look back far enough before jumping in. Yes, if you're trying to get a feel for recursion, eliminating recursion wouldn't be very helpful.
heheh yes
Exploring ways to replace recursive calls might be a good exercise nonetheless. Once you have the recursion working, of course.
but what I meant was that conceptually, you need to traverse along two axes, breadth and depth. So you either need some mechanism to traverse in each direction (which can be done using a loop or recursion in each case), or using Jerry's approach, you can turn that into a linear search space and then do it with a single loop (or, again, a single recursive call)
Just don't cheat and do the flattening of the hierarchy with a recursive method. One of my classmates did that once.
hmm. so this is what I got so far, it seems to go through each subdir, however in that process it reprints the original dir too
09:20
Btw, why aren't you using end_iter (couple with the scrolling, that's what confused me a while back)?
you mean, as in check if it's got to the end?
I'm using end_iter in the for loop
Nah, I meant in the call to std::copy. It's not important at all, it's just that it was an unused variable in the previous version.
oh I See
Ok, look at the code and check how many times the call to std::copy will run.
it will run for each time the function is called and each iteration of the loop where it's a directory
09:31
So, it runs once per iteration of the loop. And each iteration of the loop *iter is an entry in the "current" directory. So that std::copy line will print the contents of... the "current" directory for each iteration.
Hmm.
yea but *iter should point to the new dir, no?
blarhhh I'm confused
well if iter points to a file, it shouldn't get into the if (is_directory(entry)) statement, so it should only print "current" when the new dir is a subdir, no?
however that behaviour is not what I"m getting, cause it reprints the starting dir's contents over and over, with inbetween the subdir contents
@TonyTheTiger Why not? Does if (is_directory(entry)) depend on the value of iter?
@RMartinhoFernandes well, I"m calling iterate_dirs(*iter) inside that if statment, so I guess so
Try to think about a single invocation.
if (is_directory(entry)) depends on: what is_directory does, and the value of entry. There's nothing else on it.
When the loop goes around and does iter++, the value of is_directory(entry) will still be the same.
and afaik, the value of entry should change on each recursive call
09:46
@TonyTheTiger But so does the value of iter.
Changing iter (happens each iteration) does not change is_directory(entry), right?
Hmm, "C/++". That's new.
Next: /C++.
@Tony you need to stop thinking about the whole thing at once and think about only one invocation at a time.
@RMartinhoFernandes hmmm. yea, I'm stepping through it now with the debugger, and indeed that if statement is executed each time in the loop
Debugging recursive functions is fun (not really).
lol
thinking about recursive functions drives me baloony
:P
I keep thinking about the same thing
/me is thinking about recursion and it seems to be a recurring thought :P
my joke failed :(
10:17
Heh.
I usually have problems with starting and ending conditions. The middle part of recursion is usually easy.
> to get the line of intersection between two rectangles in 3D , I converted them to planes, then get the line of intersection (...)
There's something wrong here, right?
Hmm, no, why?
It seems reasonable.
Yeah, there is. It's me.
I somehow didn't read the 3D.
It seemed like total nonsense in 2D.
10:32
@RMartinhoFernandes I fixed it, it works now :) Recursion Pass :)
interesting learning exercise.
    /// <summary>
    /// Changes the state of the blocked.
    /// </summary>
Crap, someone has been using an automated doc generator here.
10:55
    /// <summary>
    /// Saxons the XML transformer.
    /// </summary>
@CatPlusPlus how not to create variables and how to make one's code unreadable in two easy steps
What are the steps?
 
1 hour later…
12:17
hi i have a trivial ques
when i create and initialize an array like this `int a[5]={1,2,3};`
and then do `printf("%d",a[3]);`
it always shows `0`. can u explain why?
Yes: "undefined behavior"
oh no wait
that's not true
Is it ?
I think since the size of a is 5, it's filled with zeroes.
you declare an array with 5 elements, and you initialize the first three to 1, 2, 3
The remaining ones are then filled with zeroes
@kbok yeah, I hadn't noticed the size of the array. I just assumed it was 3 :)
basically, once you do any initialization, every element is initialized. The ones you don't specify are just zeroed
That's interesting. We could use arrays like null-terminated string literals that way.
I'm testing scons. It's super nice, but the documentation sucks
@jalf thanks i thought that it should be garbage
13:00
oooh, I'm all celebrity-like now. Kate Gregory replied to me on twitter
who's that
C++ person and MS MVP and... stuff
been on channel9 a couple of times and such
also got a reply from some MS Connect guy promising me that they're working on improving it
of course, improving Connect as it is today shouldn't be too hard
ah, she's a blogger
I found this:
"So, you're a C++ programmer? You've written a Windows app or two in your time? Let me propose a little challenge to you. Write one. Only start with File, New and don't let Visual Studio generate any code for you. Write each line of it. Then explain it. No MFC, No ATL. That's what was asked of me a while back, and the result is a six-paper series that has finally arrived on MSDN."
He he, no wonder new applications are so incredibly bad
@AlfPSteinbach as opposed to old applications, you mean? ;)
I mean, writing a Windows app in C++ is trivial. I never let Visual Studio generate any code. It's very disconcerting to see that people exist who do let Visual Studio do that.
And judging from her blog entry it's not just a case of some people doing that, it's like it's the norm.
It's like, maybe Charles Petzold wasn't just joking in his "Does Visual Studio rot the mind?" article.
Ouch
So much incompetence.
13:13
@AlfPSteinbach ah yeah, I definitely think it's the norm
sadly
pmr
pmr
13:30
What's the reason for std::initializer_list not having the size as a template argument. It kinda prevents a lot of optimization.
Oh, I'd like that as well.
pmr
pmr
@RMartinhoFernandes
I think I'll open it as a question. Maybe someone knows the reason.
is there any rules that says that a binary search tree cannot contain duplicate data?
It needs an ordering relation. Just that.
cause if you build a tree where left < root and right > root, then if the nodes contain numbers, you'll eventually end up with duplicate nodes
13:40
If you define the ordering with <=, of course you can have duplicate data.
Use the fixed-font button for ASCII art.
@AlfPSteinbach The same could be said for Eclipse.
yea, whatever, you knew what I meant
There's a button for that ?
@kbok I appears when you paste a multi line msg in the txt box
nice
13:43
Pity you need to align things in a separate editor. Unless you set your browser to use fixed-width fonts everywhere.
Which is ugly.
hmmm I wonder what that would be like
18 hours ago, by Jerry Coffin
I nominate "Erotic C++".
class woman {
pubic:
  void touch();
};
@TonyTheTiger Took you a while to notice.
@kbok Calling woman::touch is UB.
@RMartinhoFernandes That's what the pubic access modifier is for :)
come on guys, that's just childish
just take a lesson from @Tony and just say "SEX".
13:49
Sex.
feeling better?
Not really :(
lol
Anyone using github here ?
I have an account there.
13:53
nope
Mercurial.
Do you know whether it's possible, and how, to create a file using the web interface ?
I use mercurial most of the time, but you can't fork from github to bitbucket.
@kbok A file in the repo? Are you "git-less"?
@RMartinhoFernandes Yes, my proxy does not allow git access. Well in fact it may allow it, but it's to shitty to do it without corrupting the data.
I have no idea if that's possible.
bitbucket is nice because it has private repositories for free
13:56
And unlimited space.
Spaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaace.
> Space is big. Really big. You just won't believe how vastly hugely mindboggingly big it is. I mean you may think it's a long way down the road to the chemist, but that's just peanuts to space.
What is the difference between -std=c++0x and -std=gnu++0x ?
-std=c++0x disables GCC extensions.
Ok.
pmr
pmr
14:02
Is there a batch for upvoting questions?
You mean, a badge?
pmr
pmr
Ah, yes.
There is. "Electorate".
You need 600 votes (up or down) on questions, and 25% of your total votes must be on questinos.
And there is "Vox Populli" which requires you to use up all 40 daily votes.
Of those 40, 10 are question-only.
pmr
pmr
I'm just wondering how some really bad questions get upvotes.
@pmr reference?
pmr
pmr
14:04
@CodeMonkey A reference question?
user53670
,
@pmr roger
@pmr it got one upvote
and 8 downvotes
Sounds like a sympathy upvote.
pmr
pmr
14:06
@CodeMonkey I'm not saying that the amount of upvotes to downvotes is wrong. I'm just wondering who would upvote something like that.
@pmr sympathetic upvoter
it's not right, just how it is
pmr
pmr
And apparently badges provide enough reason to do so.
I could upvote to troll people.
3
@pmr Well, for some people. There's plenty of good questions to upvote out there.
there is a psychology to upvoting and downvoting.. i'm surprised no one has done a study yet
14:08
And you get the badges with downvotes too.
@pmr And downvotes on questions are free.
There's no incentive to upvote crap questions.
pmr
pmr
@Martinho But you lose rep for downvoting.
Ooh, I'm so going to be upvoting bad questions now.
Finally something fun to do.
@pmr Downvotes on questions are free.
for instance, for a question that is reasonably active - if you were able to somehow give a somewhat correct answer (but maybe has some incorrect information), a large number of upvotes, say 9, I guarantee you that people won't read it who visit that question and will blindly upvote it.
There. I made a sandwich out of replies.
14:09
and then you have an answer with like 25 upvotes!
pmr
pmr
@RMartinhoFernandes Didn't know.
14:37
woah
I've been trolling fb
Hey guys
Hi
Stackoverflow is built on C# right?
So I heard.
> Programming is the most empowering thing we can do on a computer, and that’s what we do. We write the code that makes the whole world sing.
I hate my work these days...
I work in SEO company and I'm pretty much the only developer in the company
they just throw things at me and expect them to be fixed in seconds...lol
14:43
you should write a rant at programmers.stackexchange.com, that's what everyone else does
2
> IntelliSense is considered by some to be the most important programming innovation since caffeine.
Not the C++ variety, that's for sure.
yea I should!
@RMartinhoFernandes there's a C++ variety of caffeine?
Is that some terribly clever pun on Java?
BTW, kinda related to an earlier discussion reddit.com/r/proper
14:45
@jalf Maybe my sarcasmeter is broken again, but I'll explain nonetheless. I meant the C++ variety of IntelliSense.
Coffee sucks anyway.
I find the underlying of everything that's not yet defined in red really annoying
it compiles as you go
@RMartinhoFernandes oh, that wasn't sarcastic. The first line was a sad attempt at being funny, and then the second one was just too good to pass up. ;)
> My coding has become a constant dialog with IntelliSense.
Do you guys code like this?
No, I don't talk with the compiler. I only yell at it.
14:52
IntelliSense is not a compiler.
@RMartinhoFernandes not really. I certainly used to use Intellisense more when I worked with .NET
but still, I wouldn't call it a "constant dialog"
@CodeMonkey So rant.stackexchange does exist!
I use with with .NET, but it's more like a monologue with me doing the talking, and Intellisense just nodding its agreement.
@RMartinhoFernandes yeah, glorified autocomplete, basically
With C++, I've been using plain vim, without tags or anything like that, and I'm actually finding it enjoyable.
14:58
@sbi How about "Cromulent C++" for Simpsons fans?
Doesn't start with E.
How about "Embiggening C++" then?

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