« first day (1117 days earlier)      last day (4058 days later) » 

16:00
@R.MartinhoFernandes Keep in mind, however, that ultimately, essentially no black box test can ever be conclusive. Just for example, let's assume your test rejects 0.1 % of possible results as being non-random. In that case, a source of truly random numbers should fail the test approximately 0.1% of the time. If it doesn't, that's an indication that the results it's producing aren't truly random (i.e., we've found a sequence it produces with less than the expected frequency).
@Rapptz Thanks. I'll look into it.
@JerryCoffin I know (I did mention the "pass" actually means "pretty sure it passes" but I'm fine with it)
@Xeo Something like data List a = Nil | Cons a (List a) describes the various ways of building a list of values. For codata you describe the various observations from a covalue. Imaginary syntax: codata Stream a = empty :: Bool & step :: (a, Stream a).
Xeo
Xeo
I see.... I think.
Reminds of those stream functions / processors that I've encounted in the Arrow papers
@R.MartinhoFernandes ... but you are unit testing no? So can you not say that 'yes' and 'inclusive' are valid outputs from the function you are testing.
16:07
@R.MartinhoFernandes no, it means it "The acceptable percentage of 'in the range' was met"
@thecoshman I am not testing the statistical test.
(I should, separately, because I can't vouch for its correctness, but assume I'm awesome)
@R.MartinhoFernandes o_0 I thought you said you where unit testing stuff... isn't that what Catch is for?
@thecoshman I am not writing tests for the statistical test.
16:09
@R.MartinhoFernandes ... then what are you unit testing? or are you not?
I am unit testing a generator of random numbers.
You should answer the following questions by 'yes' or 'inconclusive'.
@R.MartinhoFernandes ok, and what makes it 'acceptable'? That the distribution is even enough over a given number of samples?
@thecoshman From the sound of things, he's planning to use unit testing code as the framework for the tests of the random number generator.
apparently functions from TS code work, while from JS shell they don't /cc @rightfold
16:10
@JerryCoffin ... so unit testing?
You can always not use the testing framework, if it makes your life harder rather than easier
@JerryCoffin No, I'm really just testing if a <random> Distribution I wrote is correct.
Provisioning VMs on Azure takes forever
@thecoshman WTF does "the distribution is even enough over a given number of samples" mean.
@R.MartinhoFernandes and it either is correct (what ever that means for you) or it is not. how can it be 'a bit correct' - and if it's because there was not enough samples, sample more.
16:12
There are uneven distributions you know
@thecoshman The third state is not "a bit correct". It's "god knows".
@thecoshman No, this is not about more samples.
god why is web programming so fucking terrible
it was supposed to be simple
@R.MartinhoFernandes that your RNG did not produce more numbers in one range then another, it was linear distribution.
Ahaha who told you that
@thecoshman Yes, it is either correct or incorrect, but one cannot tell if it is or not.
16:13
and this crap just looks that it has more holes than a slice of a good cheese
You naive bastard
@R.MartinhoFernandes then why test it?
@thecoshman Yes, and that's what a statistical test is for.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Ah, that does change things a bit. Testing a distribution is really quite a bit easier than testing the underlying generator. In fact, you usually want to test with a non-random generator. Oh, and in this case, there's probably no real need for an "inconclusive" result either.
@thecoshman How much stats do you know (I know next to nothing)
16:13
@CatPlusPlus everything I'm using here feels like it was made to work by lots of ducttape
Welcome to the Web
come fucking on
I will end up writing this in C# probably
@R.MartinhoFernandes picked up some when my GF had to do it for uni. Enough to know it is a PITA
16:14
@JerryCoffin I'm using a pre-seeded generator. What would you suggest?
I could also use Love but this one made me uneasy for some reason
@R.MartinhoFernandes there is not third state. Either you numbers are correlated, or they are not
Ahah.
@thecoshman Either you can tell that or you cannot.
if you cannot tell, you did not enough samples
16:15
I have fixed most of my resizing problems.
@thecoshman IT'S NOT ABOUT FUCKIGN NUMBER OF SMAPLES
Xeo
Xeo
Mmm, smaples.
3
@Xeo rofl
@R.MartinhoFernandes tell what exactly? that no numbers are beyond one SD from the mean?
@thecoshman (Guess what, I get what I call a "pass" with 100 samples, and "inconclusive" with 1000000)
@thecoshman I won't continue this. Go read something.
I don't want to give you a lesson on something I don't really know much about.
@thecoshman What's the SD of a uniform distribution?
@R.MartinhoFernandes and what are you testing for to say that the 100 samples passed?
16:17
@R.MartinhoFernandes I would probably use something that generates all possible values from 0..N (possibly in shuffled order). Since you only care about producing the correct distribution, not about the randomness of the input, that gives a much more controlled result.
@thecoshman The same as for 1000000. The p-value of a chi-squared test.
@R.MartinhoFernandes so, either the p-value is low/high enough, or it is not. no?
@thecoshman And only one of those is useful. Can we stop now?
@R.MartinhoFernandes the p-value?
Yes, the p-value.
(I'm pretty sure I'm doing this wrong somewhere anyway.)
16:23
this piece of shit just doesn't work
for whatever reason
just fucking doesn't
i can't debug
god why does EVERYTHING that I'm trying to use have to suck
are my standards so high? Am I picky?
What are you doing now?
trying to find a platform for harvest that won't suck
@JerryCoffin Should I pick a particular N? What results should I expect? If I get what you mean right, I have a feeling this involves assumptions about internals that I don't want to make.
@BartekBanachewicz web, was it?
@Pawnguy7 web sucks obviously
16:25
Pretty much.
On the bright side.
I finally know how to handle window resizes.
yeah that's fuckign awesome
You are trying to get Lua to work on the web?
nah, that's long gone
Theoretically Java applets work.
no, they don't.
16:28
@R.MartinhoFernandes Let's assume you're modeling a continuous distribution. For any given N, you can compute how closely the result should approach the continuous model. That's not really even statistical--it's entirely deterministic. It's basically measuring the noise level introduced by a given sampling rate (e.g., DSP guys work with this sort of thing all the time).
You have made one?
Plugins are generally less and less trusted
Don't use Java applets
@Pawnguy7 I'm not going to use java come fucking on
Well.
Maybe I'm desperate, but I'm not that desperate
16:29
I find it easier to use than Javascript, personally.
who cares, the language is fucking terrible
Never made an applet though.
We are comparing with JS, aren't we?
You should have Java plugins removed or disabled
JS is much better than Java
which says a lot about how good java is
No it's not
But don't use applets anyway
16:30
just give me one fucking piece of technology that will work
god
I'm so tired of all this
everything is terrible
Welcome to the Web(TM)
@BartekBanachewicz lol, I thought you found Java not that bad when you used it in class.
Cinder authors can't configure project files properly
Please enjoy your stay
@BartekBanachewicz you should open some of old c programs :(
16:31
@JerryCoffin So something like checking if all observed frequencies are the same±1?
@R.MartinhoFernandes with IDE support it was bearable, but after a while lack of type inference and lambdas and stuff made it annoying
There's 8 with lambdas
IntelliJ already supports it I think
Weren't there some preview JVMs?
Here is a magical idea.
Don't make it for the web? :D
16:32
Anyway why use Java when you can use Csharppe
because cross platform
also I'm not going to use either of them really
I'm thinking about that Love thingy actually
C# is cross-platform
For what definition of cross-platform?
I've heard it's rather unreliable on OSes that are not windows
16:34
For definition of "works on more than one platform"
I've heard that next president of USA is going to be brought from Mars
sigh When there's a constant defined in a header, e.g. boost::none, this crappy compiler warns about an unused constant in every fucking translation unit.
Welcome to C++ compilation model
2
You can only blame yourself
seriously C# is not a solution to all problems
Of course not
Haskell and C# on the other hand
@CatPlusPlus nah, that's just the most useless crap warning ever invented.
16:36
Have you tried pure JS yet?
@ArneMertz It's not a useless warning
@BartekBanachewicz I heard otherwise :S
well fuck let's try that C# thing
That silly Unity using C# on all platforms
after (a mix of) Javascript, TypeScript and Lua, it can't be that bad
16:38
can't even shut it off by simy returning it from a function: bool stfu() { return SOME_CONSTANT; } ==> "warning, SOME_CONSTANT defined but never used"
@CatPlusPlus where would it be useful?
@ArneMertz lolwut
@ArneMertz Finding typos
Are there any rules to not ask questions here?
16:39
@CatPlusPlus It's too noisy. (i.e. generates false positives, i.e. produces inconclusive results)
Just noticed that ;)
sorry haha
is there a room where questions are accepted? I'm sure there was one before
@BartekBanachewicz Wait. Cross platform, or playable in a browser?

C++

Friendly conversation, including C++ talk — NOT the "Lounge"!
lol, that still exists.
16:39
@Pawnguy7 I was trying to use browser because browsers tend to be cross-platform
okey I've created an app in C# and the code is still not writing itself
thankss :)
my VS must be buggy
@CatPlusPlus a typo would make the compilation fail unless I have defined a second constant that has been named just like the first save some typo. unlikely
You lack R#
@ArneMertz Using wrong identifier
That's incidentally correct
@ArneMertz I like "save" there.
16:41
if that thing works I will get a nonpermanent tatoo of C#
@R.MartinhoFernandes yeah... my Engish is not the best, sry
@ArneMertz ftr "save" was correct
I'm afraid to click OK
VS will crash
@BartekBanachewicz If what works?
NuGet works quite nice with C#.
16:43
@R.MartinhoFernandes NuGet installing a library for my project
@CatPlusPlus that's what I meant. Why would one use two identifiers with such close names?
It's like getting someone who lived their entire lives in a deep jungle and showing them a toilet
Or whatever
"What do you mean nothing is trying to kill you in your sleep"
something like that
omg. #define someFunc SomeClass::someStaticFunc; WHY???
:allears:
16:46
what the fuck
@BartekBanachewicz "warning, Main defined but never used" lol
Never seen this
Maybe you managed to break it
@BartekBanachewicz dafuq who flagged this? why?
I have a rotating cube
life is beautiful
so soothing
16:50
What libraries are you using?
Hmm, stats book shipped. I guess I'll come back to this testing stuff when it arrives.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Something on that general order, anyway, yes. I'm afraid I don't have enough expertise in the area to say a lot more than that. The bottom line, though, is that producing a distribution is entirely different from producing the random input. For a random generator, you're trying to prove that the output isn't predictable--that from the outside it appears to be non-deterministic. The transformation carried out by a distribution, however, is intended to be entirely deterministic.
@JerryCoffin I'm afraid of the effect things like saving spare bits in the distribution might have on that sort of test (I am not doing that now, but since I'm composing it from a std distribution I can't rule it out). I'll try it out anyway, but I had enough for today.
@Pawnguy7 OpenTK
16:53
@BartekBanachewicz Are those thingies there all the time, or do you have to press something to get them?
@R.MartinhoFernandes they are there all the time
they slowly fade in when I'm scrolling
@R.MartinhoFernandes Fair enough--I have to admit that if I talk to my sister about stats too much, it can give me some serious headaches...
@BartekBanachewicz OH GOSH THEY BROKE IT
@R.MartinhoFernandes what
FTR I don't have R# now
How can you code with that thing in the middle of your code.
16:57
I don't mind TBH
it's outside function body
they might have placed ponies there for all I care
@BartekBanachewicz And before the attributes :S
@R.MartinhoFernandes soooo...?
It's in the middle of the signature.
urm no it's above
The attributes are part of it.
16:58
ah those things
I don't use them a lot
It introduces a visual separator there. That's horrible.
hm right that's a fail
I guess you can just disable those :v
They should be popups upon pressing a key or some such.
int vertexShaderHandle,
for fucks sake
someone hold me.
Imma wreak havoc
16:59
I THOUGHT THIS WAS MURICA C #
People are great at APIs.

« first day (1117 days earlier)      last day (4058 days later) »