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08:00
I mean I can't prove that it's silly because silly is subjective.
Why is time of release important...?
she said
It's 9AM I should go to sleep
What's up with folks listing their SO profile as their website, on the same SO profile? I've seen this 3x lately. (Maybe just looking at too many profiles.)
@Potatoswatter some of them just don't have any other "their" website ; )
08:06
I dunno, leave it blank? A circular link just makes one look stupid.
@Potatoswatter you won't get the badge then ;DD
@Potatoswatter IMO that is SO's greatest problem. It is populated by programmers, and programmers have OCD
And programmers need non-programmers around to keep their OCD in check
I don't have OCD, I only obsess over how many blank lines to leave between two functions :P
Is it OCD if I get the shivers whenever the compiler emits a warning? :D
08:21
None of the examples provided are of OCD. Well, except Tony's I guess.
@CatPlusPlus brodzinski.com/2012/04/you-can-deliver-late.html I've sent this once to my managers. They agreed mostly with it, but didn't see nothing wrong in leaving their attitude towards silly deadlines unchanged ;0
Reminds me of this quote attributed to Shigeru Miyamoto.
A late game is only late until it ships. A bad game is bad until the end of time.
2
nice, basically the essence
It's probably from before patches were a thing though :P
JBL
JBL
08:36
Mornin' !
@CatPlusPlus yes you should. it's scandalous to stay up so late.
But I want good / reliable software and so most open source stuff is out.
most open source stuff is crap
but 90% of anything is crap
so it's not really saying much
lol at flag
definitely invalid
what got flagged?
A gif of dressed-up people dancing slightly obscenely.
08:49
link?
Xeo
Xeo
D Piddy!
The flag is gone, I don't remember which room it was in.
The monkey had good cards.
09:12
clang's error messages are nice.
Indeed. Finally something I can use.
@GamesBrainiac I'm so sorry to inform you that line 10 uses an undeclared variable.
this is near where my dad crashed the car today - I suspect he drove into one of those mini tornados
yea, also the warnings are good.
09:14
It's overrated.
They're not really that great.
Too bad there is no clang PPA. ;_;
(There is one, but it's always outdated somewhat.)
Clang does generate more warning messages than GCC in my experience.
Which is good.
@Shiki there is one.
I use it for ubuntu
Oh. Link pls? <3
@User17 impressive
ty
@Rapptz lol
did you mean hecto?
That glorious feel when I first installed NetBeans and a fresh Clang back then and I could just code. Dayum.
@StackedCrooked It is actually scary ... 3 metre wide ephemeral tornadoes that could push you into incoming traffic ...
09:18
@StackedCrooked nope
it is not actually windy in the area today ... & the area is not big ... scary ...
I like wind. But I never experienced such a storm.
Storms in Belgium aren't very powerful.
My coworker wants to get me interested in football
good luck
Did he give you a FIFA game?
Xeo
Xeo
09:22
@TonyTheLion ow
@JohanLarsson hmm
in English Language & Usage on The Stack Exchange Network Chat, Nov 15 at 3:20, by cornbread ninja 麵包忍者
@MετάEd You have to trap her fully, until she makes that arched back d'oh move and the board refreshes.
yeah I got the point instantly
it's okay, good time killer
I just liked the quote
I don't like CentOS very much.
09:26
Trapped the cat five times in a row
user1804599
@Rapptz lol
poor cat, man
what is that?
09:29
I felt good about releasing the cat.
Rapptz felt differently
lol
the random positions decides the outcome imo
@GamesBrainiac Where did you get that idea?
user1804599
imo
09:31
@FredOverflow Just curious.
@Shiki not too badly
sec, reboot
@GamesBrainiac There are no magical overheads in C++.
@FredOverflow Hmm, its amazing how everything just takes more compile time, but the same run time.
using std::array won't increase compile-time to a noticeable degree..
user1804599
09:37
Unless your hard drive is slow as a dog.
I know, and right now as C++ stands, you barely have to use pointers.
user1804599
Pointers gonna point.
6
I mean it feels different.
Honestly, I can't remember the last time I used pointers in C++.
JBL
JBL
@FredOverflow You can't ? Or you don't want to ?
09:39
I only had to use them for school projects. Otherwise, I never felt the need for them.
@JBL Oh, I'm not afraid of pointers, I use them in C all the the time.
JBL
JBL
@GamesBrainiac That's because most of the time there's a better alternative :/
I know the stdlib is really good now.
o_0 erm, why does head^1 work, but you have to do head~2?
Taking the bear out
Xeo
Xeo
09:43
@thecoshman head~2 is "from head to head^2"
@Xeo ... but I can do checkout head^1 but not checkout head^2 ie, I want to look at the code from two revisions ago (because I may have got a bit overzealous deleting things on Friday)
Xeo
Xeo
wut
@GamesBrainiac I remember a time where I used X* instead of X as data members and newd them up in the constructor, because I needed to initialize X with arguments, and I didn't know about the ctor-initializer :D Anybody else guilty?
user1804599
Initialisation list.
Maybe before I started reading Accelerated C++.
I had toyed a little bit with the language at that point.
But I don't remember this specifically.
Xeo
Xeo
09:48
Ugh, using State is kinda awkward when using a record for state and manipulating only some members of it.
@rightfold I can never remember the darn name! The standard says "In the definition of a constructor for a class, initializers for direct and virtual base subobjects and non-static data members can be specified by a ctor-initializer"
@Xeo Records suck.
@Xeo inb4 lenses
user1804599
@Xeo Use lenses.
@FredOverflow I'm not guilty of that. I ain't that old :P
Xeo
Xeo
09:49
@FredOverflow mem-initializer-list
@rightfold Not to be confused with initializer list. (That I am guilty of.)
Xeo
Xeo
dafuq
@GamesBrainiac Today I realized that I have been programming for 25 years already :-/
user1804599
I never confuse the two.
You suck not.
09:49
@Xeo I was wondering how that could have been a joke.
Xeo
Xeo
Don't ask how I managed to hit o instead of e
@FredOverflow Cool!
@Xeo Right, that's the ctor-initializer without the colon.
I am 33 and I wrote my first program at age 13. However, my first real code I probably wrote at age 23.
So I only count 10 years of experience.
I wrote vocabulary trainers and Sokoban clones on the Commodore 64 back then :) Also sprite multiplexers.
09:52
Rise if you're sleeping; stay awake.
Xeo
Xeo
Hm, I've been programming for about 5-6 years now, I think.
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes :<
@R.MartinhoFernandes That's longer than I expected.
Man, that's a hell of a long time.
09:54
36
(Yeah, yeah, shut up you old farts)
@MartinJames Just checked your age. Impressed :)
You sound 25+-ish.
@StackedCrooked Martian years.
Ah, maybe that's the reason.
09:57
@Xeo ... I can use checkout head^1 to go to the previous commit, but if I want the one before that, I have to use checkout head~2
What comes after head^1 and head~2?
head#3?
What language is this?
I have no idea.
Xeo
Xeo
gitian
git is so darn complicated, I wouldn't be surprised if it was Turing complete by accident.
10:02
@thecoshman iirc, ^N means "the N'th parent" (and apart from merge commits, commits always only have one parent). ~N means "the Nth ancestor" (basically, just taking the first parent N times)
well... you can do aliases within git... so it might be :S
So you can just use ~ all over
@jalf ooooh, that makes sense.
so if I merge a commit, I can use head^1 to see one, and head^2 to see t'other
10:03
yep
When a company gets to be a certain size, hiring managers don’t have the bandwidth to look over every resume and treat every applicant like a unique and beautiful snowflake.
2
lol
holy crap
the coffee at the office is never amazing, but this is just atrocious
@jalf wtf, do is there some company that specializes in crap coffee?
I don't really like the coffee from Nespresso machines.
user1804599
@FredOverflow it would be the only thing I would look at.
10:12
@rightfold But don't stare at the syntax for too long ;)
user1804599
Or else they will turn me to stone?
Depending on how many errors there are, yes :)
I believe that self-motivated college dropouts are some of the best candidates around because going out of your way to learn new things on your own time, in a non-deterministic way, while juggling the rest of your life is, in some ways, much more impressive than just doing homework for 4 years.
^ @DeadMG good news!
user1804599
@rightfold s/at/for/
user1804599
Fucking Google Chrome.
user1804599
10:18
Clicking a link on Stack Overflow makes the YouTube audio falter.
In latest Chrome vertical resize of Coliru window doesn't resize the contents.
user1804599
Eww breaking changes.
my arm changed, it's broken now
@_@
i guess that makes it a breaking change :P
10:29
should we be worried?
@FredOverflow was the lecture worth it? Should I see it?
he uses legs. for writing code.
@BenjaminGruenbaum Brian Goetz didn't appear at all :( It was a good lecture, but nothing new was learned.
10:30
@FredOverflow Thanks, you just saved me 40 minutes ^^
Just watch the first ten minutes, and if you like the guy, keep going.
@StackedCrooked doing homework for 4 years in a time demanding environment is damn impressive too. It shows dedication, consistency and that you're able to complete a hard long term task. It doesn't show plenty of other stuff (getting things done independently) ut that's another story.
@StackedCrooked Not every college dropout learns things in his own time and juggles the rest of his life successfully. Just saying.
user1804599
@StackedCrooked my x86-64 changed, it's broken now
@BenjaminGruenbaum Depends where you went to school. For a manager who doesn't know which schools are tough, it might be easier just to pick dropouts :P
10:33
@Potatoswatter That's an extremely poor argument imo. I wouldn't hire a college dropout if that's what they are - if they're an independent successful coder that get things done I'd hire them for that - not because they're a college dropout.
Being a college dropout isn't a plus over not attending college in the first place.
@BenjaminGruenbaum I make joke.
@BenjaminGruenbaum ermagod but wasn't Bill Gates a college dropout and Einstein bad at math???
@FredOverflow Regarding Einstein, it's all "relative" I suppose.
user1804599
And only in theory.
@Potatoswatter Y U NO FUNNY THE SECOND TIME :((
@FredOverflow haha. Einstein's grade records are literally 60 meters away from me right now. We have them here in the university. Needless to say he wasn't bad in math ^^
10:36
But by most standards he was a pretty competent mathematician at any stage of his life.
@BenjaminGruenbaum you can read his grade records from 60m away?
testing
lol?
@rightfold ermagod that's one of my questions!
@jalf He's a spy.
10:38
@jalf Yes, I can. Ever since I've started this new project in Haskell I can do that.
I typed in 'testing' from both the PC and on the laptop at the same time, yet only 1 'testing' is shown
@User17 Fascinating.
testing2
testing1
@User17 You can't write the same thing twice. Which is a sensible precaution.
11
Q: Any risk to moving const_cast elements out of a std::initializer_list?

CodeAngryThis question builds on this @FredOverflow's question. CLARIFICATION: initializer_list approach is required as the VC++2012 has a bug the prevents forwarded expansion of namespaced arguments. _MSC_VER <= 1700 has the bug. I've written a variadic template function that collapses any number o...

Sep 8 at 18:23, by FredOverflow
> I decided to const_cast the initializer_list values and still move them out. An eviction order needs to be enforced.
still so funny :)
Guys! Question (yay - that's first).
What would you use to statically assert that a container argument is a sequence container having contiguous element data? I.e. assert that it is std::array<T>, std::vector<T> or std::basic_string<> etc.?
10:43
@sehe Has data() that returns a pointer (and size()).
JBL
JBL
Damn. No std::is_sequential<T>. Quick, a proposal.
@sehe Name the iterators RandomAccessIterator?
@JBL Yeah. I was hoping for such a thing. Anyways, sequential is not strict enough :)
JBL
JBL
@LightnessRacesinOrbit wall'o code.
10:44
@LightnessRacesinOrbit ugh
@FredOverflow Not strict enough. I need to know whether I can "just" pass the start pointer and length to C api's (crypto)
@R.MartinhoFernandes but a sufficiently messed up container could use non-contiguous data until data() is called, or something like that
@sehe Is std::dequeue random access? Darn.
Wouldn't the simplest option be to just to specialize for the known contiguous containers?
@sehe Then just check if you can get the start pointer (hence data()).
10:46
Yeah my point. I think I'll just write a simple trait for it. Thanks guys for confirming my suspicion.
@jalf Good enough for most purposes, though :P
JBL
JBL
std::vector<int> vec(100); //Haha, so messy while he doesn't look at it
vec.data(); //Damn, everyone in a row, quick !
@R.MartinhoFernandes I'm hesitant, because that will work for the standard library containers, but ... you never know what moronic containers will get passed
@JBL impossible due to complexity/resource/realloc constraints
@sehe Machiavelli.
Don't design for that.
Can't you just write API documentation and blame the user if he gets it wrong?
10:48
@R.MartinhoFernandes Oh right. Good call. I'm having to get used to making API design decisions on a regular basis here. Will have to get that into my system
I mean, this is C++ we're talking about, right?
JBL
JBL
'fuck is wrong with formatting.
@FredOverflow Meh. Documentation :/
@R.MartinhoFernandes but he should design for the assumption that "contiguous-memory containers will have a well-behaved datafunction"? That doesn't seem much better
@JBL You cannot use backticks on multiple lines. Just indent the text by four spaces.
like
that
10:49
@jalf Why not?
JBL
JBL
Fail. And I missed the timer.
Meh
Thanks anyway.
@R.MartinhoFernandes because the simple solution would be to just specialize for the cases you know will work. Is there a feasible use case for anyone to pass in a continguous-container-which-is-not-one-of-the-std-ones?
@jalf I'm inclined to agree. I just improved my generic code to use cont.data() instead of &cont[0] or &*begin(cont). I'm happier now
user1804599
Nov 5 at 14:10, by Cat Plus Plus
Read the newbie hints. We ran out of jokes to put in the pinned message.
user1804599
GUILTY
10:51
and because it seems like an arbitrary convention. The existence of a data() does not really indicate "this is a container which internally uses contiguous memory"
@sehe sure, go with what's simpler to implement, unless you actually need more than that (which it seems like you don't, so both options would do the trick)
yup
@jalf data is a horrible meaningless word which should never be used for anything.
lol. I just ended up with ~ foo(data.data(), data.size()) in my code because of that :/ Changed the name of the variable
JBL
JBL
@rightfold I never dealt with multi-lines before :( Completely forgot...
Well, I still plead guilty.
@jalf That's not what he wanted anyway. He wanted a pointer and size he can pass to a C API.
I think data(), size() is perfectly suitable for that. A class with those two behaving in a weird way just seems wrong to me.
10:56
^ that and Machiavelli won the argument. Thanks again.
JBL
JBL
@sehe yada.yada()
I love people who can reason about those things quickly.
That said, it breaks down for raw arrays, so I'd put a trait with that for generic, plus a specialisation for the damn arrays.
I also decided against doing base64 and urlencoding as output iterator adaptors. I thought: fuck it - template wankery and premature.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I don't want to support raw arrays. I'll add a band-aid specialization if the need ever arises
(I'm using std::array anyways)
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes ADL-found data and size with a generic version delegating to the member versions! :D
11:09
I usually use dataPtr and dataLen for those classes that can store contiguous memory.
Our kerning is wrong.
I'm wrong.
@R.MartinhoFernandes so wrong that it becomes keming? :)
It's not the kerning code, though. Something else is fucking up.
"P9R" is fine, but "P9Rg" just looks like "P9 Rg".
ergh, stupid program, why you no show up in taskbar?
JBL
JBL
11:16
Some crazy dude wanders in the capital with a rifle, shooting journalists... O_O
o_0 and not even showing up in alt+tab
@thecoshman you modifying a virus?
11:31
never show your window and BAM it's a virus :p
@User17 here, have a free virus <3
#include <windows.h>
#include <thread>
int main() {
	std::thread t([]{
		for (;;) Beep(rand(), rand() % 1000);
	});
	for (;;) SetCursorPos(rand() % GetSystemMetrics(SM_CXSCREEN), rand() % GetSystemMetrics(SM_CYSCREEN));
	t.join();
}
5
JBL
JBL
Ugh. The ears...
@melak47 I would instead add or remove a tiny random amount to the current cursor position. That would make it shake instead of just randomly jumping.
Without some cleverness, it would be a random walk. But that's probably even better anyway.
11:43
@R.MartinhoFernandes hmm good idea!
BBC News top headline: "Homophobic phrases upset gay pupils". Breaking news. Stop the presses. Fuck me..
@LightnessRacesinOrbit "Heterophobic phrases upset straight pupils" would have been news.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit There was a headline last week that aggressive sibling rivalry can leave emotional scars… odd because it's not really a slow news week.
I have seen some serious sibling rivalry between the two baby magpies
11:52
@melak47 Can you also write a real virus? (infect a host program and reproduce)
@StackedCrooked nah :/
@Potatoswatter It's a slow news week in UK. Hurricanes in the Phillippines, tornadoes in US and plane crashes in Russia don't affect Londoners, so they're not news.
@R.MartinhoFernandes works nicely - unfortunately it only seems to shake around the original position, and not random walk around
11:58
@TonyTheLion surely I hadn't. Giving it a quick scan. Probably no time for that
I just got a mail which starts with: "Dear Sir/Madam,". So 99.9% certainty that it is spam.
JBL
JBL
Meh. So I understand C++ doesn't want to generate a copy assignement operator when a class has members that are reference, but why also when having const members... ?
I'd believe a const member can be copied... (Technically it's not modified)
@JBL What would you like the assignment to do when it gets to updating the const member?
@JBL It is modified, because an existing object is changed. No constructors are called to create new ones
That's the difference between copy assignment and copy construction
JBL
JBL
Oh right ! Fuck me I'm dumb... I was thinking of copy, not assignement...
A copy constructor works just fine on types with const members, because it constructs all members. Copy assignment does not work, because it assigns to all members
JBL
JBL
12:00
Mixed the two.
Thanks !
np :)
"I just got a mail. So 99.9% certainty that it is spam"
FTFY
I don't know what my real/spam ratio is.
@ScottW at 7am
you asked for it
@ScottW oh baby
Well, at 12:00 here.
12:10
you need some love
@MartinJames yay! lunch
Good idea!
have lunch
of course
What you did there, I see it
lol
Xeo
Xeo
>>= [Just (42 :: Int), Nothing] ^. ix 1

<interactive>:60:32:
    No instance for (Data.Monoid.Monoid Int)
      arising from a use of `ix'
I must be missing something. ^? works... /cc @rightfold @R.MartinhoFernandes
aaah, wait
12:27
@ScottW ugh
skype I can do
just a sec
I'm on skype
morning
@LightnessRacesinOrbit erm...
Lounge<creepy cyber sex>
@ScottW linky :)
user1804599
12:43
@Xeo never heard of ix.
Xeo
Xeo
@rightfold lens for indexing traversables
user1804599
You probably want […] & ix 1.
user1804599
Or something like that. Dunno.
user1804599
Last time I used lenses was half a year ago.
Xeo
Xeo
12:58
Nah, problem was that Maybe is only a monoid if the underlying type is a monoid :/
And plain Num a isn't

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