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13:00
Oh guess what. "New updates are available" Geez, why didn't you install them yesterday you stupid fucker?
user3010322
Some have to be applied sequentially after re-evaluating the system again after the SP1 updates, IIRC.
user3010322
Still, it should be able to predict that shit in advance.
yesterday was sunday, if you could take a day off, why couldn't your PC?
@ThePhD Well, it's not an unattended install anymore now :S
user3010322
@R.MartinhoFernandes :D
13:02
aren't you two a cute couple now
user3010322
Speaking of unattended installs, I hope you packed your fresh Windows install with stuff using Ninite
user3010322
Why? :c
user3010322
@Telkitty @TonyTheLion is the only person I want to couple with~~
@ThePhD you can install most of those using windows app store
user3010322
13:04
Except it installs the Windows 8 version of them, which is baddy mc badikins.
@BartekBanachewicz windows 7 has no "app store" :V
user3010322
I wish I could get a handle on the old Windows 7 dropbox, so I didn't need to keep UAC on to use some of dropbox's features.
Ahaha Windows app store
@ThePhD then just disable uac altogether
My friend gave me a mango flavoured bath bomb for Xmas ... going to take a hot bath, I am sticky from sweat (jogging)...
13:05
@CatPlusPlus the idea is good
Don't disable UAC jesus
I mean, it's closest to proper package manager windows ever was
@Telkitty ....do you drink your bath water? :S
Chocolatey seems nice.
13:06
I don't want to browse websites in order to install shit
user3010322
It's really dumb that killing UAC turns off all the metro apps in existence and ALSO disables features in non-metro Windows such as Dropbox's indicators on the files that are inside of it and other things.
Why do you want to disable UAC
user3010322
Of course, killing these features is for ~~~Security~~~.
user3010322
@CatPlusPlus Because it's a pain in the ass and annoying.
@ThePhD turning off UAC in Win8 is not the same as in Win7, it doesn't mean everything automatically has admin privileges
user3010322
13:07
@melak47 UAC can never really be turned off unless you slay the Group Policy for it.
@ThePhD HAHAHAHAHA Awesome.
Elevation prompts are supposed to be annoying
@ThePhD I like the "killing metro apps" part though :D
I don't use my computer to install stuff all the time.
Most of the time I spend using the things I installed.
user3010322
@melak47 I wouldn't mind either.... if it didn't ALSO disable other features of the OS.
13:08
That sounds great.
user3010322
"Well, since you turned off UAC it's clear we can't trust ANYTHING DISABLE DISABLE DISABLE DISABLE."
At least like that people might stop disabling it.
user3010322
Only applications that are marked as Windows-8 worhty (i.e. show up in that stupid appstore, like Dropbox) exhibit that behavior when UAC goes down.
"Oh, you don't want elevation prompts? Sure, no elevation whatsoever"
Any other option is silly
13:10
Should have been that way from the start.
user3010322
It didn't ask for elevation about letting dropbox stick fucking useful notifiers on my WIndows Explorer.
user3010322
It just did it.
user3010322
And then when I turn UAC off "WELL DAMN BETTER SHUT THIS OFF TOO."
yyyyyyyy
Oh.
Wrong keyboard.
13:10
Then don't turn UAC off
@R.MartinhoFernandes Go on - say it, you have six keyboards.
@MartinJames I'm using my laptop.
user3010322
@CatPlusPlus I like having UAC off, because then I can do things like program my FileWatcher and SystemJournalMonitor and not have to be fucked in the face for trying to access the root directory.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Heh - to reduce eye and neck strain from your mountain of monitors?
user3010322
13:12
I also like being able to edit, change, and copy-paste things into Program Files, without it swallowing, destroying, or otherwise maiming the files I put in there. ._.
Who needs integrity
@ThePhD Why are you acting like some sort of manual installer?
user3010322
"You need to okay this to allow these files to be copied into C:\Program Files (x86)\ShitIWantToMod\..."
user3010322
- Yes
You suck.
Just that.
user3010322
13:13
"Okay, let me freak out, not properly paste in folders, and oh some of the files are missing."
user3010322
- Wat?
If you don't want protection on Program Files, then just modify the damn ACL
@ThePhD don't install to program files. :D
user3010322
"If you try to manually create the folder, we'll tell you you can't. That's because we created entries in teh file system for them already, but didn't actually put the files there because... ... well, why not? :3"
Oh right modders community
13:14
@CatPlusPlus inb4 gets Cryptolocked.
user3010322
- q___q
we had those people here
lol I wish I had Prolog installed for PE#9
it's even terser than Haskell in that stuff
@melak47 Well, don't manually install to Program Files - that's what recognised installers are for.
user3010322
"Recognized Installers."
13:16
@MartinJames or just install your programs somewhere else
That's an interesting password :/
user3010322
@melak47 Some don't give you a choice.
user3010322
"Oh, yeah, you selected APPDATA.... buuuuuuuut some of the shit is going in Program Files anyways. ... Because we said so. :D"
Stop it.
If you want the folder writable, make the folder writable.
user3010322
u.u Fine.
13:18
Is there uncurry3 in haskell?
@MartinJames huh? what do you mean by "recognised"? any program with admin. rights can write in program files
@Abyx Don't need explicit admin rights for installers.
Xeo
Xeo
@BartekBanachewicz hoogle it
user3010322
@BartekBanachewicz ı̴̴̡̡̡ ̡͌l̡̡̡ ̡͌l̡*̡̡ ̴̡ı̴̴̡ ̡̡͡|̲̲̲͡͡͡ ̲▫̲͡ ̲̲̲͡͡π̲̲͡͡ ̲̲͡▫̲̲͡͡ ̲|̡̡̡ ̡ ̴̡ı̴̡̡ ̡͌l̡̡̡̡
13:20
what the fuck
That said, the Windows ecosystem sucks terribly when it comes to installing shit. Still makes disabling UAC stupid.
user3010322
It's a house. I made it specifically for you.
user3010322
It's even got trees and shit.
...
That's... likely gonna work.
@ThePhD hmm but it has linebreaks
13:21
@BartekBanachewicz I haven't seen you complain when someone else does it.
@MartinJames nope. you need admin rights for installer.
user1804599
@BartekBanachewicz It’s called (\f a b c -> f (a, b, c)). :D
@R.MartinhoFernandes eh, my fault for not having proper symbol fonts on this PC
@R.MartinhoFernandes If the emotion is not directed /at/ Bartek, he's impervious to it
i am emotional as fuck
13:22
@Abyx Hmm. there may be a permissions issue on my development box. I must investigate...
user1804599
@sehe Bartek is immune to emotional splash damage?
2 mins ago, by Bartek Banachewicz
don't use random unicode characters to output emotions/images in the chat TIA.
user1804599
I think I know how to allow f := foo in Styx where foo is an overloaded function.
Meh, overloaded functions.
13:24
hola
user1804599
Yum, overloaded functions.
I just want loaded functions
user3010322
Bleh, overloaded functions.
@TemplateRex aloh
@sehe what's that now, public shaming?
13:24
just wait until your Xmas office party
@BartekBanachewicz It's a relevant answer to an inane question
user1804599
It would automatically generate a single anonymous subtype of all the types of the overloads.
user3010322
@CatPlusPlus So I did some things today that were pretty fun. I managed to get into DogeCoins.
Good job
user1804599
Hmm. Overloaded variables.
13:25
can anyone tell me why I would ever want to use std::tie instead of std::forward_as_tuple since the latter uses perfect forwarding?
user3010322
I know it's a shit currency, but for the cost of electricty I farmed up a few thousand Doge Coins, and then gambled with it like a tool. Managed to get to 54K Doge Coins.
user3010322
I know it's shit, but the trick is: other people don't know that. So I've been trading DogeCoins directly for more useful stuff.
user1804599
@TemplateRex int a, b, c; std::tie(a, b, c) = std::make_tuple(1, 2, 3);.
user3010322
Like Hearthstone Beta Key. :3c
@rightfold and this would not work with std::forward_as_tuple?
13:26
forward_as_tuple doesn't support ignore AFAIK.
user1804599
Oh, right. :D
@ThePhD WOOF WOOF motherf... no, hang on... identity crisis:)
@ThePhD Worst Things For Sale (aka WTFs) guy has a nice view on that
> I'm not sure why someone would want to waste their anonymous drug money buying a t-shirt bragging that they’ve invested in a drug-money-based pyramid scheme, but then again, we were invented 6000 years ago by a magical sky-man who told us it’s okay to hit women and own slaves.
@R.MartinhoFernandes but std::tie it is not constexpr, at least until my DR gets discussed in February
I love that quote
13:28
@TemplateRex That doesn't make forward_as_tuple support ignore.
@R.MartinhoFernandes ok, with the ignore caveat, is std::tie just a shorthand to use std::forward_as_tuple for lvalues?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Seems to work though
@ThePhD you are fueling a meme
13:29
Oh ignore has the magic, not tie.
It works with anything.
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes didn't we already go over the fact that std::ignore simply ignores any assigns and isn't handled specially?
Oh well.
tie is kinda lousy anyway.
@AndyProwl I don't consider this expressive code, though. I'd veto it in CR
And meh, constexpr.
Xeo
Xeo
I like tie :(
13:30
@sehe Yeah, not that I like it
Me too. Except bow::tie
@Xeo 2-phase init!
the reason I ask, is that I use std::tie to quickly write operator< and operator==, and normally I just pass the class members into std::tie, but once I tried to pass the getters and of course I got burned. So I wonder, can I just always use std;:forward_as_tuple without worrying?
Needs language-level tuple support with definition-unpack :v
@TemplateRex How would you get burned there? The getters return by value, perhaps
13:31
a getter returning an rvalue
See. I got it in the nick of time
@CatPlusPlus Yeah. Tuple as a library feature is a such a pile of bullshit.
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes it doesn't have to be used for just that!
I remind you of compare_by
That's the odd use.
The primary use case is 2-phase init.
@sehe OK, so I will search/replace for std::tie, simply a lvalue-overload then
user3010322
13:32
2-phase init?
std::tie basically buys you nothing over output params
Also having to declare variables before calling tie sucks
That's what we get from this stupid obsession with making everything a library feature.
4
std::tie(int x, bool y) = foo(); would be nicer IMO
Hyper-V networking is weird
13:33
And then we laugh at, say, Java's obsession with making everything an interface.
Agree
I think also smart pointers should be a language feature, ownership is an important primitive
Being a library feature gives no benefit other than not having the goodies a language feature would have. Wait, that's not a benefit.
user1804599
There is a program on TV about the manufacturing process of jukeboxes.
it might be easier to adopt; TR's go down with implementors better than core language changes. Not saying it's always rational, but...
@AndyProwl so you use std::tie to express the lvaluedness, and use std::forward_as_tuple in generic code where you don't know what valuedness you have
13:35
@rightfold keep us posted. Are you at the airport?
@TemplateRex Well, my first thought would be to use forward_as_tuple when I want to forward, and not use it when I don't want to forward.
If I were working on C++ core, I wouldn't want to touch it either
user1804599
@sehe Vanavond pas weg. :v
@sehe i want videostream
user3010322
@CatPlusPlus Heart of the beast.
13:36
Zoidberg is becoming airborne?
Heart of the garbage pile
user3010322
The Garbage Pile Beast?
@AndyProwl I guess I want a std::tie then that take const& instead of only &
@MartinJames Madagascar is already closed
@rightfold then you have no excuse to be watching tell-sell rated shows
user1804599
13:37
It’s not Tell-Sell-related. :v
it's related by way of it's quality
@TemplateRex I think std::tie was designed for the specific use case of unpacking a returned tuple, so const& would not make sense there
@CatPlusPlus :)
please tell me there is some lol on tv
user3010322
C++ is frustrating. ⋋_⋌
13:38
The op< thing is the abuse case. The use case is assignment.
user1804599
@sehe I don’t get it.
> tell-sell rated
^ I specifically meant to imply ultra-low-quality
@AndyProwl OK, but the operator< trick is really nice, and typing tie is nicer than the forward_as_tuple, ah well, I can write a wrapper myself
user1804599
Oh, “rated.”
hmm I could watch that C9 vs FNC rotflstomp
user1804599
13:38
I read “related.”
not elated?
@TemplateRex As the robot wrote, "The op< thing is the abuse case"
@AndyProwl only in C++ would unpacking be called tying.
@TemplateRex Eheh, right
Kinda sad, because I find the op< use much interesting.
13:40
But well, we have worse namings
Like std::move that doesn't move
@R.MartinhoFernandes tnx, that's helpful.
@StackedCrooked seldom
@AndyProwl I think I'm the only person that thinks that's ok.
@sehe and gelmorra
so geeky
13:40
@R.MartinhoFernandes I would prefer std::as_rvalue
Rogue Legacy is -67% if someone missed it
@AndyProwl std::rvalue_cast
make it rvalue_cast()
I kinda forgot the sale was going on
@sehe beat ya
13:41
I don't find any of those particularly compelling.
@TemplateRex Not sure, I tend to see casting as an operation on type, not on value category
@AndyProwl what's the precedent for as_*? No as_tuple etc.
@CatPlusPlus still too much
@sehe Is a precedent needed?
Worth it
13:42
I don't like that std::move silently results in a copy if const ref was passed to it.
@AndyProwl yes
Also forgot to install a mail client
Oblivion for 4.99€ speaks more to me
@sehe How so? Also, is it the "as" prefix you mind?
@CatPlusPlus Worst sale ever: stuff I own + stuff I don't want.
user3010322
13:42
@CatPlusPlus Is it fun?
I bought book bundle today
so enough sales.
@ThePhD Yes
Did you get that one about Type systems?
user3010322
Hm.
user3010322
13:44
I wonder if there's an automatic typing system that doesn't require specifiers and is not dynamic.
user3010322
Like
user3010322
arf = 1;
arf += 2;
arf += "Meow"; // Errors: arf is not a string
user3010322
(Using C-like syntax)
auto arf?
user3010322
13:45
Without auto.
Without auto it's dangerous.
yesterday, by sehe
@ThePhD Well, I'm sure that means something. I, for one, can't see beyond the purr and meow. Sorry
Because a typo would result in new variable declaration.
user3010322
Just where you specify stuff, and the compiler figures out the earliest type to which it can nail the variable's legs to.
13:45
@ThePhD autocreation of variables is not a part of a type system
@ThePhD No, BASIC is gone.
argggghh Indians they are not called "clicks" they are called "photos" aguahrguiyaghsdkfuyagskudygaskduyfgasdfa
@ThePhD That's broken.
> nice click
fuck off
@R.MartinhoFernandes VARDECL, LET and sigils!
user3010322
13:46
@R.MartinhoFernandes Jus wonderin', is all.
@StackedCrooked what happened to the "give 'em rope" principle?
@LightnessRacesinOrbit for once I agree
@ThePhD you never wrote any BASIC?
@TemplateRex never heard of that one
user3010322
Nope.
user3010322
13:47
Don't think I intend to.
10 ? "ASS"
20 GOTO 10
user3010322
... Wat.
I want to claim bonus points for ?
user3010322
That looks horrible.
13:47
@ThePhD so many jokes I could base on that
user3010322
I was thinking more in the context of a scripting language, where if you didn't specify a type it would be the type of the first thing you equated it to.
@BartekBanachewicz you can, but none will be awarded. After all, with Alt-F11, ^G, ? "Boo" you get my rating (in outlook, word, excel, powerpoint, etc.)
user3010322
(Or the first thing you used it as).
user1804599
Now it’s about spark plugs. :v
user3010322
Probably moreso the first than the latter...
13:48
"Scripting language" is not synonymous with "crap language".
How do you safely declare local variables with that thing?
user3010322
With regular types.
@BartekBanachewicz hehe. Just tried it and still works the same in Outlook 2007
user3010322
int arf = 1;
@sehe oh my. Good one.
PHP, JavaScript, SQL, Perl....
13:49
Then why even.
user3010322
@R.MartinhoFernandes It's an optional deal.
@sehe 2010 here. :) Altough I am not sure if ^G is "Ctrl-G"? That doesn't seem to do anything except selecting some shit
user3010322
Shrug.
Why are you always so eager to sacrifice all sorts of good stuff in order to save a few keystrokes?
user3010322
Just thought it'd be nice as a sidebar thing for people who just want to x = ... y = ... z = ...
13:50
@BartekBanachewicz Oh, here too likely. I don't use them programs much. I live in a console even though I'm on windows
@StackedCrooked Itś an expression: give someone enough rope to hang himself, I think it was applied to C mostly
@BartekBanachewicz Yes
user3010322
Mmm. Nevermind...
@BartekBanachewicz It goes to the immediate pane (optionally opening one if not already open). Of course, in the VBA section
@ThePhD you can also not use variables :)
13:51
Because saving keystrokes is really what this is about.
user3010322
@BartekBanachewicz What do you mean?
@ThePhD did you stay up all night again?
user3010322
@Telkitty Maybe. But you'll never know.
Why is it that when there is a small pile of shit in a language, someone always wants to crap on it and make a bigger pile?
@ThePhD immutability is where it's at.
@sehe lol, don't laugh, but... I had the window moved down a bit and I didn't see the immediate pane on the bottom
13:52
@ScottW hello hello, you are here too :D
I'm here in spirit..
any IOstreams experts in da house by any chance? I want to define a sticky user-defined manipulator and am not sure whether to go down the xalloc/iword/pword route, or simply derive from std::basic_iostream and add the sticky state myself in a more controlled fashion. What is a good way to tackle such a thing?
I don't care. I have cookies.
spirits
(spirit is not a mass noun in that meaning)
@ThePhD if you don't have things that change, the problem dissapears and you can just write x = ....
13:54
@TemplateRex The best way is to search on SO/ask on SO (I'd say xalloc/iword etc. sound just about right)
Though these didn't work out as well as the other ones.
I'm gonna check the kitchen cupboards. There must be cookies in there somewhere...
And I still haven't figured out how to not make them flat.
@sehe yeah I found a couple of posts, one by litb in particular, but I wonder what people use in practice
user3010322
@R.MartinhoFernandes IIRC, Baking Soda / Baking Powder causes them to flatten out?
13:55
@TemplateRex I think that in practice people don't extend iostreams ;)
@R.MartinhoFernandes if only C IO was extendible, then...
I need to save a few to take tomorrow to my grandma before my flatmates eat them all.
@TemplateRex people keep wrapping streams because it's "easier". But we don't need the downsides of fat iterators with streams too. Last week I debugged boost::iostreams::close on a filtering_streambuf and I found out that there's at least 25 nested (template) function calls before we actually arrive at the ultimate close_impl<> specialization
inf printf(); override;
@TemplateRex dible? sible, dable; ok
13:57
I'm working on something neat.
@sehe wobble, gobble, I have a crappy keyboard
@R.MartinhoFernandes Cookies
nibble, ribble, what a useless quibble
(also, mine rhymes)
@R.MartinhoFernandes I'm diluting mine. Neat is too much.
God. C4996 warnings are annoying.
I found jammie dodgers, but no cookies:(
13:58
@sehe enter a nice choir and Xmas is close
It's virtually impossible to silence them without resorting to _SCL_SECURE_NO_WARNINGS
@TemplateRex Tonight, Bethelkerk, Vlaardingen, 20:00 CEST; be there!
@sehe what? are you singing ?
Won't likely catch me singing, I'll be facing the choir though.
$ git add .git
GOSH
useful - is that the neatness you are working on?
user3010322
13:59
... Wha.
Luckily it's a no op.

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