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00:01
@rightfold Meh. Not true. Many libraries "boast" this. Always gives me mixed feelings
Ell
Ell
I don't see why libraries boast the contrary
I think stuff like that is mentioned by recovering C programmers :)
Ell
Ell
all they would use is some home grown equivalent?
> Microsoft's Joe Duffy and team have been (quietly) working on a new programming language, based on C# (for productivity, safety), but leveraging C++ features (for performance) Joe's Blog
Woot /cc @DeadMG @R.MartinhoFernandes @anyone else ^
Ell
Ell
Hmm
00:13
C#: "Why can't I [x]?"
C++ "Why does it let me [y]?"
makes sense to me
@sehe Nope. At least not yet
@Mysticial Wokay. I just selected a few interesting quotes and blew them into twittersphere
user1804599
I have a class C which has a method M. I want to invoke extra code every time somebody calls M on some objects of type C. I don’t mind wrapping them in an extra type.
user1804599
How would I do that? Return public inheritance Voldemort type that overrides the method in question non-virtually from operator->?
Why do I have to click back twice on MSDN?
00:21
That happens to me too
it is annoying
because fuck you, that's why
@rightfold unless you want to mess with the vtable manually, decorator would seem ideal
user1804599
The type has no vtable, silly.
00:23
oops
user1804599
I was thinking of this:
user1804599
template<typename T>
class wrapper {
public:
    auto operator->() { return &object; }
private:
    class inner_wrapper : public T {
    public:
        auto operator->() { return this; };
        void foo() override { T::foo(); … }
    };
    inner_wrapper object;
};
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Meh, missed the point.
If the preconditions are already there we are not adding anything later, which is the whole "point" of this bullshit: time travelling requirements.
@Dukales I just noticed your deleted question. You probably realized I don't have access to that BB repo. I hope you find the time to reduce to a SSCCE that you can include and (re)open that question? Good luck — sehe 6 secs ago
I'm a stalker for
Ell
Ell
Til about julialang.org
00:29
@rightfold that would work yes, but seems like a bit of a hack. But unless you want to switch to an EDA or do virtual hacks that's probably the best choice.
user1804599
I better require that T is polymorphic and somehow that foo is virtual. :V
user1804599
Dunno. Everything sucks.
@rightfold in an Eventsourcing architecture it doesn't, but only because you can always attach another event handler
In that case you probably have undefined behaviour. This is likely a problem elsewhere in your own code. Assuming it isn't in your code leaves... a SDL2 library that requires a different (non-compatible) MSVCRT library (MT/D/DLL) and or a very insiduous evil macro that violates the ODR rule. For the first: check builds and docs. For the latter: move SDL2 includes to the end of includes for a start. Good luck. — sehe 14 secs ago
err ... off 2 fix a plumbing issue for a tenant ...
00:42
@sehe that question will probably never be answered, not with the OP combative like that and unwilling to produce an SSCCE
@Mgetz I know. It's just that I sometimes can't resist squeezing at a problem like that just to think about inroads on spotting the problem.
oh I think you hit the nail on the head, VS2010 has its bugs but those are pretty well known by now... and I'm pretty sure the community would have pointed those out if it was one of them. But without an SSCCE who knows.
This is probably because of experience: this kind of problem (while almost always self-inflicted) can be so costly and debilitating. I have an innate fear of them (GoodThing(TM)) which makes me wanna "practice trouble-shooting skills" whenever I see someone else stranded badly
It's a basic sublimation of fear: instead of fleeing you force yourself to be solving the issue (even though it's a fake problem/not your problem)
I know the feeling
Geez. I should spend 4 hours sleeping in front of the TV more often.
I just realized I might be answering SO questions out of... insecurity.
00:47
Heh, it seems that the Boost's Subversion to Git transition is anything but smooth.
It feels vindicating when even Boost devs have problems using git.
Mmm? Cloning things was non-trivial (read: time-consuming), but what else is the problem?
git isn't the cure all but its not horrendous either
what's wrong?
looks pretty good to me
Yeah. To me too. Looks like they had their act well-prepared (which is crazy complicated for a project this size)
I am reading the ["How do I ignore an upstream change to one file?"][1] thread.
00:49
Oh well. "How do I ignore an upstream change" <end object="attention-span"/>
that sounds like one person having trouble... RTFM
Why would anyone wanna do that?
(note: I don't know how to do it either, but I don't see why I would do it)
12
Q: git pull keeping local changes

Jhonny EversonHow can I safely update (pull) a git project, keeping specific files untouched, even if there's upstream changes? myrepo/config/config.php Is there a way, of, even if this file was being changed on remote, when I git pull, everything else is updated, but this file is unchanged (not even merged)...

@wilx He's just a git noob without a clue. Just git stash would have sufficed. How's that for a single command
The fact that he's loud and noisy doesn't mean he has a valid problem
Oh, changes in the working directory.
I thought he wanted to git pull everything except a single file.
00:53
That is how he framed the question yes. But the real question was: pull with local changes
@sehe I find it non-intuitive coming from Subversion and Bazaar. I guess he has the same problem. Both of these simply merge the incoming revisions with your working copy changes.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Well, tell him that
I fixed up MoveConstructible and some related things on cppreference to match the std a bit more. Better? — Cubbi 5 hours ago
^ EXCELLENT man
@wilx Oh, no doubt, and many of the answers are supportive of the OP and that impedance mismatch. However, you barged in claiming:
6 mins ago, by wilx
Heh, it seems that the Boost's Subversion to Git transition is anything but smooth.
That's a complete non-sequitur
@sehe OK, it was an exaggeration.
00:55
@wilx Mmm. It completely changed the subject. In my mind "exaggeration" would be like "amplification" (where phase, direction and spectrum aren't changed) not distortion
@sehe The fact that he's loud and noisy may indicate some problem ;)
(inb4 "says you")
It does indicate a people problem
Heh. OK.
You could probably paraphrase the gist of that thread as this:
> Unsurprisingly, Boost's adoption of Git still didn't make Git more user friendly
I think it's telling that more projects keep moving to Git even though, by popular consensus, it's not as user friendly. Apparently, user-friendliness is not the most important goal.
--theirs and --ours still confuses me
it shouldn't, but it does.
01:00
IMHO mercurial is more user friendly
but has less support
So now that we might have a slightly different crowd, let me ask this once more (I won't ask again):
8 hours ago, by sehe
Anyone else here use hosted email? I'm ready to ditch my aging mail server (dovecot). I've seen it, been there, now it's time for a sane solution :)
nope I'm gmail and google apps
which is a variety of hosted I guess
@Rapptz Me too. But I never need it (outside an occasional .gitattributes spell; which is usually an indication that the repo contains stuff it shouldn't)
@Mgetz Google Apps would be an option. It's free for home/small org, right?
@sehe was...
no longer
Oh. Fammit
01:03
yeah it's free for me because I got in before they changed
but it shouldn't cost too much, I've heard good things about fastmail too
The most important thing is I don't want to change email addresses (keep my own domain) and I'm used to having finegrained control over aliases (virtual aliases)
but neither are free
@Mgetz Fastmail. Lemme have a look.
@Mgetz Nah, I'm not looking for "free". I'm looking for "hassle-free"
@sehe I have used Dovecot and I do not know anything saner. It seemed fine for what I did with it.
I'm currently using dovecot/postfix. Have been for ~7 years. I'm ready to out-source it. Or I'd need to replace my server hardware (also ~400€ since I demand fanless, low-power operation)
01:08
@sehe don't just look at the cost of the server, look at the power costs and features when you're comparing
Goddammit, spent the last 2 hours fiddling with a USB 3 card only to find out that it's probably DOA or incompatible with newer hardware.
Tried it in two different machines - and neither will operate higher than USB 2.
Even with newest drivers.
fuck
technology <3
I thought it was a driver issue the whole time.
And then I decided to pull it out of my AMD machine and put it in the Haswell machine.
@Mysticial What? On Windows?
Same thing.
WTF.
@MartinJames Win7.
01:11
@Mysticial Send the fucker back.
When I plug in any of my USB3 devices, I get the box that says "This device can operate faster if you plug it into a super speed blah blah..."
@MartinJames I will...
@Mgetz That's what I do. Obviously. That's why I mention all three.
If I can find the receipt.
The elephant in the room is sys admin and that's why I'm looking for hosted solutions.
I bought the card on Thursday since I ran out of USB3 ports on my AMD machine...
01:12
@Mysticial win7 doesn't support USB3 out of the box as I recall...
Didn't try to install it until today.
@Mgetz Even with all the latest drivers.
I have USB3 built-in to the mobo that works fine.
And my older Nehalem machine has a USB3 card that works perfectly.
@sehe your crystal ball problem has been deleted
Great. That's for the best.
hmm lost an answer to someone who didn't really answer the question... go figure
> Java is closer than C# thanks to the excellent work in HotSpot-like VMs which employ code pitching and stack allocation. But still, most hard-core systems programmers still choose C++ over C# and Java because of the performance advantages. qqq
^ I think that's true. Sadly for C#
01:16
What is this, groundhog day?
C# was an improvement over java... but at the end of the day it still has many of java's issues
Hello, Lounge!
I think Microsoft has an idea with their C++/CX idea
@Mgetz C# is an improvement. However, the article is not comparing language features, it's comparing VM performance
01:17
where you can do basically either shared_ptr or stack allocation... but nothing else
@Mgetz I think Microsoft has had this idea 4 times over in the past. It never panned out.
(concerning C#)
MS has an idea? Duck and cover!
surprise surprise, some of the library methods in .NET blow
@sehe last I checked the JVM beat the pants off of the CLR when comparing apples to apples
01:18
:D
and double surprise, being lazy about how you pass parameters makes it worse
@TomW Yes, that is a shock. Where's my vodka?
He does defend the .NET GC
Along the lines of "if you aren't stupid about allocations, it does its job well"
Fuck GC - never needed it.
@TomW cd /tmp/ && http://video.ch9.ms/sessions/teched/na/2013/DEV-B333.mp4
01:20
implicit is "We can't un-dumb your code for you"
@MartinJames s/needed/used/
@sehe Both.
@TomW why can I not see the talker :(?
4
@MartinJames It's kinda hard to argue that, right. It's like the carpenter saying "I never needed another kind of hammer (I can prove it: I never used one)"
01:22
@TomW Well, sure. But most Loungers don't know how attractive I am, so doesn't apply.
why is that star-worthy o_O?
Because it is so on-topic.
fwiw, his diction and sense of humour is somewhat like Hanselman's, which makes him alright in my book
@sehe My apps run without leaks. There are no leaks, (OK, I have one app in service that throws an AV that appears in the log, which may be due to a memory-management issue, but it continues to work:).
@MartinJames The purpose of GC is not to prevent leaks.
1 min ago, by ScarletAmaranth
test
Thank you for your contribution
01:28
hahahah, the talker presented a bing search, credibility lost
@sehe So... it's to inject indeterminate, and unpredictable, extra loading?
@MartinJames ^^
@MartinJames Yup. And to reduce time taken to develop the same
@sehe LOL!
That wasn't just funny
01:30
I know:)
It's true because it recognizes the boon and the bane
OK, I'll try very hard to search for the boon.
@MartinJames if your application is well-designed the impact of GC should be negligible. Unfortunately .NET supplies a number of holes to fall into in that respect
The real reason (or at least the primary reason) for GC is to enable types of programming that are impractical without them. The most obvious is to allow shallow copying many times that (to keep your own sanity) you'd do deep copying in something like C++.
@JerryCoffin I reagrd any type of deep-copying as a design failure, (even if it's sane/possible).
01:35
Consider, for example, a Lisp with manual memory management. Yes, you could do something vaguely similar in some ways, but it's almost certainly going to end up quite a bit different at best.
Anyway, I'm a bit wobbly, so I'm off to bed. Nite all!
@MartinJames I'm not sure I agree with that, but I suppose it could be reasonable.
@MartinJames G'night.
@MartinJames Let me help:
> [...] reduce time taken to develop [...]
@MartinJames Oh ... :)
@sehe At least in my experience, it mostly fails in that respect. I'd posit that Java and .NET (for example) improve productivity almost entirely by providing extremely large libraries and good IDEs (and other tools). When using the same language with and without GC (e.g., C++with/without the Boehm/Demers/Weiser collector) I see very little difference in productivity at all.
In this kind of situation, about the only positive I've seen from GC is exactly what Martin James sort of implied: add it to code you know has serious problems to ameliorate at least one kind of those problems.
Darn network problems
> we guide that by [what] we call the "Scientific Method Of Performance" -- that's kinda this thing we make up for this stuff [at 5:28]
Lolwut
01:46
makes perfect sense to me
you have to, you know, listen
Yeah. But it is the most twisted bit of logic I've heard in a long time
No, not really.
I suspect [scenario]. I will collect empirical measurements to support or reject that hypothesis.
I know. No need to be so defensive. It's just funny/awkward that he uses these clashing words together
Pretty much the scientific method in as far as it can be stretched to something created entirely by people
Anyways, I can listen. But I'm a programmer too. I'm not just listening to what someone tries to say. I'm also paying attention to what they actually say.
This serves me well. Because it's much more fun.
@JerryCoffin As I'm a c++ programmer by choice, you're partly preaching to the choir. I think you're probably right on the money.
Except I do think that GC does reduce time to develop code without many constraints (i.e. if you don't care about those "problems" it ameliorates). Also, I think there is a snowball effect: it does seem to help even in creating this rich library environment (and making it consistent so everyone will know how to use it, cf. Boost). At least that's what I see happening, even in your Lisp example
I have read over that possible duplicate thread with no success in solving my problem. — user246181 1 hour ago
Well, okay. You've proven that you have a valid problem that can't be solved :v
02:00
I added "ameliorate" to my list of English words I learned from Sehe
(it's there along with belligerent)
> Often leads to rejected changes [...]
Trying to see how things interact [...]
But every change should - and often does - lead to further investigation, will give you information to help you form the next hypothesis, so making uhm informed hypothesis instead of making a guess.
And so, uhm you know, make a series of these sorts of changes and _hopefully_ over time, you see performance improve.
If taken without further context, that sounds eerily close to "trial and error". Only "scientific" part is: measuring effect.
(before anyone points it out: those two aren't mutually exclusive, yes they are related)
@ScarletAmaranth Really? A quick search shows that the first use of "ameliorate" here in the Lounge was to you, but not from sehe:
Apr 26 '12 at 22:02, by Jerry Coffin
@ScarletAmaranth While I think it's possible to largely ameliorate the problems, experience indicates that quite a few programmers are stupid (based on that criterion).
Too droll
I stand corrected, I have managed to forget the word (as I surely googled it then too)
@JerryCoffin I have to agree 98%, one of the things that a GC does is it actually takes the running shoes off so to speak. Which prevents a lot of "Well if I do this it will go faster" (running with the knife in counter strike) sort of behavior. Which means ultimately people spend more time doing actual work... and not optimizing for cmov
02:04
let me post this again, simply because it's too good:
Ell
Ell
Ugh. I have grown too attached to someone again. Time to detach, move on and find a new host >.<
@ScarletAmaranth history.google.com/history/… to find out! /cc @JerryCoffin
@ScarletAmaranth Interesting that the previous use was with respect to GC as well...
@Ell lol @cynism.
@Ell maybe time 2 settle down ... >_< MUHAHAHAHAHA!!!
02:10
TIL Lounge drives a lot of my traffic to Google.
@Mgetz I suppose it probably works that way for some people (hard for me to be entirely sure). I have little trouble doing most work in C++ at a relatively high level, and when I used GC with C++, I didn't find that it changed my behavior much, but that's somewhere between a tiny sample and nothing meaningful at all.
Why do I have to log on to click that link?
Dammit. Clipboard fail
./bin/shoot: line 39: xclip: command not found
A little paper-cut from having reinstalled. One of the very very few things that have disrupted my workflow though
"Only you can see your history"
28.1k total searches : - / where would we be without internet?
@ScarletAmaranth I apparently haven't nearly so inquiring a mind -- a mere 4.4K searches.
02:16
Total Google searches: 22262
I need to do ~6k searches today to overthrow sehe immediately!
@JerryCoffin Or you (a) haven't had history enabled (b) been logged in (c) used googles SE
@ScarletAmaranth You can't. You'll be throttled
@sehe Hmm...Okay. Probably 2 out of the three, come to that.
bool selfshadow = mc.selfShadow == 0 ? false : true;

why do people do this : - / ?
@ScarletAmaranth I once wondered as well, but long since gave up on that one.
@ScarletAmaranth not lazy enough
02:21
there are like 2 redundant booleans there, 3 total : - /
@ScarletAmaranth if(x) return true; else return false;
right?
or somebody being unable to do return !x; but decides to if (x) return false; return true; sort of nonsense
@ScarletAmaranth I admit I have something of a search fetish
May 20 '12 at 23:59, by sehe
@ScarletAmaranth Ok, i admit it seems to be more something of recent weeks
I've complained about my uni a lot it seems
Ell
Ell
@sehe its just a laborious process :P like moving house
02:23
@ScarletAmaranth In the past. How did that end, anyways? (I remember a specific Mumble Chat. I'm pretty sure I don't have it logged/indexed :))
it hasn't ended yet (for better or worse)
ehh, writing a thesis on C++ concepts, at least I get to have some fun
2
That's not bad at all~!
sure, I only had to ask a sockzillion people before I could find someone willing to be the an advisor to it
That's the sign of determination. Without determination, no achievements
well, stuff that was made available by the faculty was of... dubious quality
02:26
Always
(Android app for <X>.) (substitute a crappy game for X and you get the idea)
Yup
So you're going to make an android app for C++ concept checking? :)
Ell
Ell
Also meh that jagermeister isn't sitting well
Not for ingestion. Btw. s/jager/Jäger/
you know, I wouldn't mind android apps at all if some creative use of input techniques widely available for such devices was to be used, but doing a Sudoku game for Android as a thesis is a joke
02:30
A bad one
@Ell you like it?
yeah, he loves that it's not sitting well
Ell
Ell
I like the taste, not that its not sitting well :P
Well you know the taste isn't that great really
I am just surprised there is many an "academic authority" willing to sign something like that, I would feel ashamed actually
Ell
Ell
But I had a bottle of it I didn't want to waste. Only drank a small amount though
02:32
but you like it anyway, that's the spirit!
i like the taste, it's actually one of my favorite digestives
@ScarletAmaranth After a while, you become used to it. And management will require it. Metrics, third-party money streams etc.
yesterday, by sehe
booze::spirit
it's second only to brancamenta
i have that glass too
Ell
Ell
How do you drink your jäger?
inb4 orally
02:34
with rocks
Ell
Ell
I've never heard of the drink you mentioned
Straight?
@Jefffrey Ew. Dentists disapprove
Ell
Ell
I was drinking it like that this evening
its not too bad
they say you can mix it with redbull
if you like that kind of stuff
02:36
I guess so... also, there's this issue of even said "academic authorities" being incompetent. Had a tutorial with a Phd. student that couldn't decide whether something stored **names of files** in 16bits or 16bytes. After 1 minute of considerations, he concluded that it is probably bits : - /.

After having complained to some of my school mates about the joker being incompetent, I got an interesting answer: "Well, he does computer graphics mostly, maybe he's not good at Operating systems (the class that he had had his epic epiphany on)."
@sehe remove teeth: problem solved
Dentists still disapprove
because he doesn't get the bitcoinz
If that's a pun, it missed me
oh, wait
it's "on the rocks" not "with rocks"
lol
02:38
Yup. That. Dentists approve
Ell
Ell
I drank it with knock off red bull too. Come to think of it thats probably what isn't sitting well...
it describes the state of academia in Slovakia fairly accurately - also, I feel that there is not much that can be done to ameliorate this
Don't drink Red Bull knock-offs. They're not unhealthy enough
3
@ScarletAmaranth ...
Maybe this is the correct answer, but for some other question. — Dialecticus Sep 25 at 11:54
02:40
whops, I bolded the word by accident!
> \*
yeah, those wild **
@ScarletAmaranth academics are usually very good on theory... implementation is another thing, point in case GAMESS
@Mgetz They're having kids and elderly do the work!
pretty much
and in FORTRAN77
02:44
Woot. They could have used COBOL
seriously... they can't use FORTRAN03 at least?
COBOL might be more readable
remember F77 had identifier limits
how about APL? I heard that one is readable plenty
COBOL as I recall doesn't
GAMESS has its own build system too built in csh
@Mgetz That would surprise me. Ask @rightfold though
@Mgetz Oh that kind of annoy
yeah I participated in the SC08 cluster challenge and that was one of the things we had to run
you never get more appreciative of ./configure && make && make install until you deal with scientific code
02:47
YAY, I can run two instances of Visual Studio, double the doom!
only two?
I've run 8 concurrently before
debugging with three of them
multiple versions too!
~5/6 GB ram gone already
I need to download more ram
@Mgetz s/scientific/idiosyncratic/
Maybe I was a cat in my previous life that's I hate water/diving so much ...
@Telkitty and I just happens to know a Cat that hates pretty much everything
02:49
@Mgetz lol. you have been banned from commenting on bad practices from now
@sehe I recognize your point... but I'll stick with what I said... scientfic code is the worst
@ScarletAmaranth my systems have min 32 Gb
@ScarletAmaranth incremented cat?
@sehe oh that wasn't by choice
Sure :) Lol. Nobody chooses to use Visual Studio, right
02:50
@Telkitty hint: he frequents this lounge
I was debugging an azure app, a native bit we had running inside the VM and a native app that ran on the desktop all at once
@sehe that surely helps me with my ram issues, asshat ^^ :)
and the idiots who build the desktop app made every single component it's own solution
@ScarletAmaranth That's the solution, just saying.
@Mgetz ITS!!!!
see, I am now belligerent, good thing you can still edit to ameliorate the problem
02:51
@Mgetz You can just merge them for the occasion, right. Reduce a lot of other annoyances too. (inb4 no source control)
@ScarletAmaranth Don't tell me you didn't know belligerent too
I didn't know back then when I was enlightened by you
@sehe unfortunately no... the build order was so weird and had some circular dependencies
I have, however, memorized the word... well, not as much as memorizing as understanding the etymology and being able to somehow piece it together
Wut. I enlightened someone by introducing "belligerent" to his/her vocabulary?
@ScarletAmaranth Bellum gerere ("carry" (monger) war)
reminds me of vocabulary tests forever ago
when I used to think words like complacency were cool.
02:53
@sehe nods
Now you became complacent
oh, @Sehe, finished this yet?
@ScarletAmaranth Haven't bought. Did I?!?!? I should check my dusty shelf
you HAVE bought it unless I am experiencing a minor case of brain fart
I think... I intended to. It might have dropped off my Amazon wish list :(
02:56
@sehe now you're just being discombobulating on purpose, it's fortuitous that I happen to know the word
I am sure you said you had ordered it, mmmm
To The Search Engines!
it was in the context of my asking whether you actually find knowing Latin useful and you said that you would as your HP had been on its way
Looking
can I say "find" there? I mean, you haven't forgotten Latin... but then again, it did happen in the past when I asked
Apr 29 '12 at 12:21, by sehe
@Pubby OMG. I'm going to have to order this. Immediately:
That's... a long time ago. Back when people still boasted taking arrows to the knee

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