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user1804599
17:00
@Jefffrey Oops. :D
user1804599
Thanks.
user1804599
Fuck six; not a power of two.
yup, it works ;)
user1804599
It’s a pity String isn’t Enumerable.
user1804599
Hmm, I got it to 67 by using chars instead of split(//).
17:04
yeah, I didn't like split(//) much either, but I was too rusty with Ruby to remember an alternative
user3010322
@DeadMG It works!
I'm willing to bet getline now reads into a std::string and you return the value from c_str(). Oops! Reference to local/temporary. Solution: return std::string? — sehe 7 secs ago
Psychic Debug Mode Engaged
user1804599
@Jefffrey 62 by using === instead of .include?.
user1804599
59 if using p instead of puts.
hi guys, I know that in c++ a functions can't be declared implicitly by their appearance in a call, but it's possible for class to be implicitly declared by appearance like this: class A* p; is this a compiler bug or it's a legal code ?
user1804599
17:19
It is legal code.
user1804599
It is not a bug.
^ true that.
doesn't this break the consistency of language design
You can even have anonymous classes.
@AlexDan It doesn't.
@sehe anonymous classes ?
17:25
Such Anynomous, Many Wow (DogeC++)
I thought you meant struct{//...}; since in a union, union {//...}ob; is not considered anonymous union.
oh don't you start
i still don't know what "doge" is
@sehe isn't that an unamed class, or it's called anonymous ?
don't be a lawyer
user3010322
@LightnessRacesinOrbit such ignorance, much shock, many dissapoints
user1804599
17:28
@Jefffrey can’t seem to get any better (or worse) than 59. :(
@rightfold it currently doesn't work
user1804599
How does it not?
on input 1234 gives [-1, nil]
user1804599
Huh.
I think it's the === thinghy
user1804599
17:32
> '2468' === '4'
=> false
user1804599
This worked half an hour ago. :(
user1804599
Oh well.
user1804599
@Jefffrey now it works. :)
yeah well, you a cheating though
the output should be in the form x,y not x\n'y'
put those #{} baby
user1804599
The rules don’t say that.
user1804599
17:36
It doesn’t say anywhere that the output must be exactly like in the example.
user1804599
Just that it has to print two integers.
hmm
I guess you are right
user3010322
0x04ca692c
user1804599
@Jefffrey you can remove some spaces in your C++ example.
user3010322
0x0470692c
user1804599
17:39
for(char& k:s) => for(char&k:s)
user1804599
That’s one character.
user3010322
Ah, found the bug.
yeah return 0; should stay
I don't like it either though
user1804599
return 0; => exit(0); will probably work instead. :P
17:43
missing include.
ow
I wonder if #include directives should be included in the count
doesn't sound fair
user1804599
Does <iostream> implicitly include <cstdio>?
user1804599
Then you could use printf and puts. :F
@rightfold the printf version is actually longer
@rightfold not by the standard
user1804599
17:49
int main(){std::string s;std::cin>>s;for(char c:"2468")for(char&k:s)if(k==c){printf("%d,%c",&k-&s[0],c);return 0;}puts("-1,8");} is shorter than int main(){std::string s;std::cin>>s;for(char c:"2468")for(char&k:s)if(k==c){std::cout<<(&k-&s[0])<<','<<c;return 0;}std::cout<<"-1,8";}.
user1804599
Oh you’re subtracting pointers ugh.
eh
the problem is that I need <iostream> for std::cin and <cstdio> for puts and printf
doesn't sound like a win
lol, still the trolling question thing
nope
oh
looked like that
pardon :)
user1804599
17:52
@Jefffrey Use language extensions to have puts and printf be declared implicitly!
not even sure I know what you are talking about
@BenjaminGruenbaum Insanity- principally because C#'s type system is pretty busted, not to mention the complete non-applicability of non-deterministic destruction.
user1804599
Non-deterministic destruction is a non-issue.
@BenjaminGruenbaum Java has better performance than C#?
@JohanLarsson no it doesn't?
17:57
but Java is to the right in the chart?
That's just the same "square". I don't think JS is more productive than C# either.
@DeadMG he said they're changing that non-determinism.
oh yeah, that is even more shocking to me. Maybe if you can type Console.Log really really fast all over the place?
if you cut the non-determinism, you gain non-safety.
user1804599
@JohanLarsson It depends on the code and the implementation.
ok I have no idea, know 0.1 languages (including some )
user1804599
18:02
lol netcat
user1804599
@sehe Nah; they’re in the office.
user1804599
Making some space for me.
cpx
cpx
I have a floating number question.
floating number question are the worst sausage
cpx
cpx
What does the range for float 1.175494351×10^-38 to ±3.4028235×10^38 represents?
0.0000000000000000000000000000000000000118 to 118000000000000000000000000000000000000
0.000000000000000000000000000000000000034 to 340000000000000000000000000000000000000
This?
18:14
@cpx -340000000000000000000000000000000000000 to 340000000000000000000000000000000000000? (for the second, the first is not even a range)
cpx
cpx
I picked it up from here:
IEEE 754-1985 was an industry standard for representing floating-point numbers in computers, officially adopted in 1985 and superseded in 2008 by IEEE 754-2008. During its 23 years, it was the most widely used format for floating-point computation. It was implemented in software, in the form of floating-point libraries, and in hardware, in the instructions of many CPUs and FPUs. The first integrated circuit to implement the draft of what was to become IEEE 754-1985 was the Intel 8087. IEEE 754-1985 represents numbers in binary, providing definitions for four levels of precision, of wh...
user1804599
I does not represents anything.
@BenjaminGruenbaum Yet more of Microsoft trying to push C# as the greatest thing since sliced bread. When the first thing you see is ranking Javascript highly for safety, and he isn't spending his time destroying this nonsense, the only real question left is whether the guy's insane, stupid, or lying.
what does he mean by 'safe'?
cpx
cpx
@Jefffrey 3.4E +/- 38. From 3.4E-38 to 3.4E+38?
18:18
@cpx ±3.4028235×10^38 and 3.4028235×10^±38 are two very different ranges
@TomW He fairly openly conflates several different things (e.g., range checking and type safety) none of which really applies to JS.
cpx
cpx
@Jefffrey Oh, I see.
@JerryCoffin ‘Safe’ as a byword for ‘memory-’ and ‘type-safe’ is a fairly common usage I would say, esp. in the PL community.
cpx
cpx
@Jefffrey In our case, is it 3.4E-38 to 3.4E+38 or -3.4E38 to 3.4E38? In scientific notation.
If he was talking about 'safety' in the opposite sense to what is represented by keyword unsafe in C#, then I think I'd understand what he's getting at
cpx
cpx
18:25
I find the numbers ±1.18×10^−38 to ±3.4×10^38 confusing for float range. What could they be?
@cpx "±1.18×10−38 to ±3.4×1038" means "from -3.4E38 to -1.18E-38 and from 1.18E-38 to 3.4E38" if you ask me
but I'm not sure
cpx
cpx
I think the same.
@cpx There are four numbers total, delimiting two intervals around zero (itself being a, or rather two, special values).
CBWT
What's confusing about it?
@LucDanton Yeah, I don't particularly mind conflating a number of different concepts under one word, as long as he's fairly clear about what he really means by it. The problem here is that it's not really at all clear what he means, because most of what he says seems self contradictory.
cpx
cpx
18:32
@Jefffrey So, according to this the range will be: −340000000000000000000000000000000000000 to −0.0000000000000000000000000000000000000118 and from 0.0000000000000000000000000000000000000118 to 340000000000000000000000000000000000000
cpx
cpx
I mean float x = 340000000000000000000000000000000000000; really?
I never thought of assigning that larger number before.
@cpx Better tackle on .f though.
@JerryCoffin discussion in this room is so "subtle" :P anything you people don't fully agree with is idiotic and anyone claiming otherwise is stupid, insane or lying ^^
That's hilarious
@LightnessRacesinOrbit wtf is he talking about? That guy must be insane, stupid or lying...
Looks to me like a range the size of the galaxy around a central value the size of a subatomic particle away from zero.
@BenjaminGruenbaum Calm yourself.
There is a difference between polarising debates where some people in the room disagree with an alternative view, and there is blatant bullshittery.
I like that image.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit that was a reference for @JerryCoffin ... not my opinion - I just think the guy in the comment just isn't very good :P
18:37
@BenjaminGruenbaum Yes, I got it
cpx
cpx
@Jefffrey There's one thing still gets me though: What's special about the number 3.3 in float?
We just figured out the ranges. How come this isn't valid?
it's just imprecision.
there's nothing special about 3.3, you can get the same effect with infinitely more numbers.
FP represents a large range, but the precision isn't perfection.
integers or decimals represent smaller ranges but with better precision.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit I do, what do you need?
@ScarletAmaranth Could you try out coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/a539f8064c4a18e8 please? Apparently MSVS 2012 accepts it
18:44
========== Build: 1 succeeded, 0 failed, 0 up-to-date, 0 skipped ==========
works
MSVC was always a lot more flexible about template specs
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Eats it
cpx
cpx
@LightnessRacesinOrbit I found it hard to read. Would there be a simple answer to this like I suppose it's something to do with limited number of bit places?
@cpx If by "limited" you mean "not infinite", then yes. Fractions are funny. Tell me, how would you write 1/3 in decimal notation?
cpx
cpx
Something like 0.33333333...
18:49
how about 0.33333333333 then?
@cpx Representing the full range of floating-point numbers with absolute precision would require inifinite RAM.
or 0.3333333333333333333?
cpx
cpx
It goes up to the infinity.
0.33333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333
see the problem then? (of course, there would be a way to represent something like this, actually, but certainly not with mantissa and exponent)
1/7 is less boring: 0.142857r
18:52
@cpx There you go then.
@cpx Try to read it. As the title says, you really should.
well, I am pretty sure that 99.x% of programmers have never ever had the need to deal even with the notion of denormals and their "implications", so unless you want to get into "Computer scientist vs programmer" sort of debate, the title is misleading
floats suck
I really admire the specification actually... also, you reckon everything sucks
@ScarletAmaranth 99.9% of programmers had to deal with floating-point inaccuracy. 80% of those did not realise it. 95% of those consequently got it wrong, and therefore 100% of their production code is horribly buggy.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit what do you mean my if (some_float == other_float) is buggy?!
19:03
@ScarletAmaranth inorite
also, I am talking about denormals particularly
Use ReSharper, get warned about it :v
@ScarletAmaranth ok
the article says "what everyone should know" and then it goes on about denormals, really?
user1804599
sub is_palindrome { $_[0] =~ /^((.)(?1)\2|.?)$/ ? 1 : 0 } Perl is cooool.
19:06
I see just noise
almost like reading Dietmar's IOstream stuff
@rightfold But that's just unreadable :(
@ScarletAmaranth Not sure whether you're referring to the FP article or the Perl code. Could go either way..
user1804599
Why? It says is_palindrome.
user1804599
Don’t look inside the black box and you’ll be fine!
@MartinJames oh, I understand FP stuff well, was talking about the Perl code, that I don't even want to bother to understand
19:08
O...k
:)
@rightfold ʎlǝɔᴉu os spɐǝɹ
@rightfold does it like reverse and compare or what the hell is it doing anyway?
It's Perl - nobody cares.
user1804599
The most beautiful palindrome check I have seen is still the APL one.
s.SequenceEqual(s.Reverse());
19:17
other == String(other.rbegin(), other.rend()); vOv
uglier :(
mmm, thinking about reverse() but it reverses in place I think and doesn't return : - /
bool is_palindrome(string const& s) { return (s == string{s.rbegin(), s.rend()}); }
@rightfold use boolalpha you amateur! :)
user1804599
This is how I did it in APL, translated to C++ (is_palindrome <- {×/⍵=⊖⍵}).
19:23
Oh wow, now we are on schoolchilds niveau... — Magnus 6 mins ago
from 50 rep
user1804599
Or let isPalindrome s = (/= 0) . product . map fromEnum $ zipWith (==) s (reverse s) in Haskell.
C# won right?
user1804599
@JohanLarsson APL did. :)
oh, can't read it so have to trust you.
19:33
APL: brainfuck++
@rightfold isPalindrome xs = reverse xs == xs?
user1804599
@AndyProwl That’s not analogous to my C++ and APL solutions!
oh, I see :)
0
Q: Suppress CPP GNU Header Message

user3142618How do I get rid of the following header /* Copyright (C) 1991-2013 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This file is part of the GNU C Library. The GNU C Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published ...

^^ Is this guy trying to compile C as Fortran?
He's using preprocessor and includes a C header in Fortran code
For some reason
19:49
Jeb's rockstar pose
such sex symbol
much sex
wow
who is jeb?
kinda the boss of minecraft
leading developer, or something
The guy cleaning up notched code
@CatPlusPlus he could at least say he's using cfortran if he's going to make a post like that otherwise it makes no sense
no that would require effort and a sense of not-bad-posting
20:00
@CatPlusPlus "notched". I like that word. Sounds like "botched".
I know, yes.
I didn't.
I still don't.
I'd rather buy the thing I want directly.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit thanks this made me discover ilounge.com
20:07
hey
YouTube player is so shitty
yeah I agree, I have no idea what's up with it
user1804599
It’s a website specifically made for displaying videos, in production for several years and being worked on constantly.
user1804599
If course it has a terrible video player.
user1804599
What would you expect?
zch
zch
20:09
Adobe Flash player...
yeah, it's rly weird
And seeking in a video makes the player shit itself 80% of the time
ditto for Skype being really buggy
and the facebook app for droid being really buggy
I use HTML5 and think it has gotten better lately
seeking videos doesn't work, preloaded-bar doesn't tell you jackshit, sometimes videos fail to load and stay black, sometimes they error out
zch
zch
20:10
HTML5 player is better, but only work for ad-free videos
naturally, swaping resolution sometimes bugs the video out as well
never had any trouble seeking
playlists are a joke and sometimes refuse to move to the next video, sound is occasionally out of sync, I have no idea what the jolly fudge they're doing
I never see ads on youtube
adblock blocks them off
(which is good because they also load in playlists, rendering the feature unusable without adblock)
20:14
@BenjaminGruenbaum I'm quite capable of disagreeing more subtly when that seems justifiable and/or sensible. In this case, however, he's left little room for subtlety or nuance.
zch
zch
Adblock blocks ads, but you still get flash player
@JerryCoffin Oh, that wasn't negative criticism, I like that :) When people are angry about something in coding it's usually a good indicator.
@BenjaminGruenbaum I'm not angry in the least. If anything, I'm quite befuddled that somebody intelligent enough to tie his own shoes could make such obviously idiotic statements.
Gunpoint is $3.33 in the Steam sale for the next 7 hours! http://store.steampowered.com/app/206190/ End the year throwing yourself and others through windows.
If you still haven't got it for whatever reason go buy eet
20:18
wtf
Cat Plus Plus likes something?
i know right?
@CatPlusPlus Are you all day on steam and buying games?
No, I already own half of them
Cat the game hoarder
Also GPU drivers that actually work with my laptop's shitty GPU don't want to install on Win8
Cool
20:24
that's why real men game on desktop PCs :)
Fuck laptops forever
@ScarletAmaranth I can't even put YouTube video on fullscreen, because it either breaks (with hardware acceleration on) or is a chopped mess
user1804599
Install Gentoo.
yeah laptops tend to suck
good luck installing GPU drivers on Gentoo
user1804599
Gentoo users don’t need GPUs.
user1804599
All they do is installing and configuring Gentoo.
20:26
I see, they're all fans of serial computation :)
user1804599
You don’t need a GPU for that.
Uh, there's a bit in the Rayman Legends soundtrack that sounds suspiciously like the Rayman 2 leitmotif.
@BenjaminGruenbaum Ignoring the nonsense about JS and getting to his basic premise: again, I'm much more puzzled than angered or bothered by it. He's talking about the idea of using C# for system programming as if it were new and different, even though Microsoft Research wrote (at least a substantial part of) an OS in C# using .NET years ago now. Given that he apparently works at Microsoft Research, his apparent ignorance of that work seems strange (at best).
But that was Sing#, completely different thing
How well does C# garbage-collection work in a NIC device-driver?
user1804599
20:30
Good enough.
@CatPlusPlus Sarcasm perhaps? Sing# was an extension of Spec#, which was an extension of C#. What he's advocating seems to be C# with at least roughly similar extensions to do roughly similar things.
@MartinJames The GC currently implemented in .NET probably won't do it at all, but that doesn't mean a GC to handle the task couldn't be written.
@JerryCoffin Yes, sarcasm :v
If anyone is interested, my Japanese friend sent me an email this morning saying that, "it's done". So now I can release this: numberworld.org/misc_runs/pi-12t
18
I've removed the GPU driver to install an older one, rebooted, Windows installed the newest one again
Helpful
Thanks
And everything because there's a built-in Intel GPU here that fucks with the standard AMD drivers
@CatPlusPlus you have to explictly revert in the device manager
20:35
THAKNS INTEL GPUS
otherwise it will keep loading the new one
Hmm.. I think I'll just carry on not installing or continually-rebuilding anything:)
@Mgetz There's nothing to revert
Or you can just stop using Intel CPUs. :P
ah intel HD
yeah you're screwed
20:37
@Mysticial cool
that's new WR right?
When this laptop breaks, I'm gonna build a new desktop PC, buy a large bag, and drive around with that
72 TB rofl
@Mysticial Congrats :)
Stupid worthless garbage
20:38
@AndyProwl thx!
@CatPlusPlus ahaha
'Ugly Nested For Loops of the Year' entry:
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/20818410/c-program-eating-all-my-ramswap-resources
user1804599
Needs more recursion.
he can't be serious
@Mysticial I love those HDD stacks
20:43
And people ask me why we can't use GPU. Because of that.
I/O bound.
36% CPU utilization on 32 logical cores says something.
So you don't wanna go via network?
ah fedexnet
@bamboon It's not fast enough. We had nearly 2GB/s sequential bandwidth on this machine. Gigabit doesn't even compare.
Infiniband isn't something we've tried. But it's a little bit beyond "commodity".
If it doesn't work, it'd be a lot of wasted hardware.
Sure, it wouldn't be fast, but isn't it the only possibility to somehow calculate more digits?
Ok, that was my next question.
@Mysticial Fascinating read, very well written. (Also well done.) Are you going to reap all that reddit karma?
20:49
@LucDanton lol, I haven't logged into my reddit account in months. :)
Think of the amounts.
user1804599
Why did I download UML spec.
@LucDanton I got a 1k SO answer for the older records. That's already more than expected. :)
Hi.
Now you can release picoins
20:53
oooooh....
Hmm, are people starting to spam other questions around?
@Mysticial infiniband is fun... but powerhungry
@Mysticial Wow. Not even Jon Skeet has an answer with >10k upvotes
But disk bandwidth isn't the real issue. If we wanted to, we can throw in 3 more SATA cards and run 48 drives for double the bandwidth.
The problem is when you have so many drives, they become unreliable.
I don't think anyone has tried mixing some fancy combination of RAID5 subarrays or something.
Anyways, I'm off to lunch.
@Mysticial at that point you might as well do a SAN
20:57
@Mysticial Maybe you’d get gold. Now that’s something SO doesn’t have!
@AndyProwl That got there last night. It seems like it breaks some of the css layouts on the site. (especially search)
@Mysticial lol. I guess it's the most upvoted answer on SO

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