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07:00
oh, I didnt' need to write it. I just was annoyed of ever recurring coding I and a colleague had to do and came up with a way to shorten it. It was an embedded DSL, and right now I am wirting a parser to make it an external DSL to be used by our actuarial guys. It's kind of "my baby" and for me its way more fun than the stuff I have to do usually
@JerryCoffin sounds familiar, somewhat :-)
although I'm just at the beginning of the compiler/interpreters career path
I wrote a cool compiler
I should add, however, that in the process, I implemented a reasonably complete Lisp interpreter, and based on that I supported myself for a while doing quite a bit of the work on a Smalltalk implementation, so what I learned didn't go completely to waste.
@JerryCoffin I sometimes wonder how much knowledge you have in that head of yours.
Jerry has done pretty much everything
Then again, it didn't ultimately accomplish a whole lot either: although they paid me for the work, the publisher decided against trying to sell the Smalltalk environment.
07:05
@JerryCoffin I was just going to ask if the compiler/interpreter stuff has been a pure free time/fun thing or if you got a job in the topic
@GamesBrainiac Not as much as it might seem--I've known a lot, but when I quit working on something for the odd decade or so, a lot of details get forgotten...
@ArneMertz Cool is a good language to write a compiler for
@JerryCoffin well, you did your job and got paid for it - if some marketing strategy of others decides not to bring it to market, it's not your fault.
@JerryCoffin Still, you've done a lot of awesome work.
@ScarletAmaranth just looked up the wikipedia article, sounds promising.
07:09
@ArneMertz I don't know if you can really call it marketing strategy. More suddenly realizing they'd made a stupid mistake. Insisted on developing it for MS-DOS when Windows is growing faster than a weed. I could see some of the logic (it could target Windows, even though it ran under MS-DOS), but the whole idea still seemed pretty silly to me.
@JerryCoffin okay, maybe it was not a marketing strategy - but it was some strategic decision you had no part in, right?
people who write code rarely do get a say in strategic decisions - imagine someone would bring some sense to said decision, what then?
@ArneMertz I gave them my input, but yes, it was ignored. So no, it's not a question of whether I was responsible, or anything like that. It's still disappointing (to me, anyway) that it was never put to any real use.
@JerryCoffin well, now you write technical reports IIRC! :)
@ScarletAmaranth Yeah, mostly. Starting to look for a job where I can write code again though.
07:15
@JerryCoffin hahhahaha, with your portfolio, you can just write your name on the CV and then insult the CEO and his / her family (of the company you want to apply to) and you would be hired anyway
Jerry Coffin doesn't "start looking for a job", job starts looking for Jerry Coffin
11
@ScarletAmaranth It might be nice if that were true, but reality seems to be rather different.
@JerryCoffin it is true and you know it :)
This is another place it would be helpful if the Smalltalk environment had been published. If I could point to its having been on the market and sold to end users, that would be a big help. As is, it's a product nobody's ever heard of (never really even had an official name) from a publisher that's been gone for more than a decade now. Nearly nothing to put on the resume at all.
@ScarletAmaranth 'fraid not. In most cases, it's pretty clear my resume never gets past the HR people (the complete lack of a college degree probably hurts in that respect).
@JerryCoffin Well fuck, Jerry Coffin says he has nearly nothing to put on his resume. I might as well go plumbing.
when you go to a programming job interview, they have all these sky high expectations of absolute mastery, when half their existing devs are barely even competent. it's frustrating
07:22
@ScarletAmaranth I didn't say nearly nothing overall--but nothing from that work. Most of the work I've done for quite a while now hasn't resulted in code that was ever sold to a customer though. I do write code, but most of it is basically custom debugging stuff that then forms the basis of a technical report (that's unrelated to the code itself).
then the push the dreaded pen and paper toward you and say, "write us a C++ template that achieves self awareness and is capable of taking over the world, like SkyNet in Terminator 2"
@JerryCoffin trust me, I know how it feels to cry for some reason and being ignored. Or better yet, poking at the wound every second day and demanding a change, being agreed on it by everyone, but yet noone grants the resources to actually do something about it.
The other part of it is that at my age/experience level, they pretty much have to hire me as some sort of senior developer of team leader or something. I can (easily) understand how it's hard for somebody to contemplate that with a guy who's written nearly no code intended to be used by a customer in over a decade. Yes, if they went by SO rep (or even looked at my answers) they might gain a little confidence, but most HR people probably can't (not to mention will).
@doug65536 I can deal with that one: "I actually did that once, but realized what I'd done, destroyed it, and resolved to never repeat the mistake." :-)
@ArneMertz This was a marginally different case. The owner of the publishing company had tried Windows 3.0, experienced its instability, and became convinced it was a dead end. I didn't spend much effort or thought on fighting it.
Before we were done, Windows 3.1 had come out and fixed a lot of the problems (but that didn't really matter anyway: there was hardly a single developer on earth who wanted to buy an MS-DOS based development environment right then).
Worse, being a highly interactive, graphical development environment meant that the MS-DOS memory limitations hit it particularly hard. Despite a lot of work on optimization, speed was a constant problem.
07:37
writing 16-bit windows code was about as much fun as stabbing yourself in the eye with a pencil. everything could hang and it was all memory management contortions
@doug65536 Certainly true in real mode. Much less so in standard or 386 mode though. Given the target audience (developers) making it 386-only wouldn't have bothered anybody (I'd guess, anyway).
@DeadMG wait. You have the most versatile toe system then. Seeing that even farting is easily expressed in it.
this lounge suddenly feels like an old folks corner ... & I thought I was old :p
<3 'old' loungers >_<
07:55
:1417012 pretty sure protected mode wasn't added until windows 3.1 - at least the time when I took notice. Till then, e.g. console boxes couldn't actually multi-task (because of the lack of "virtualization" control in 186/real mode)
In fact, I used DR-DOS for a while because it had that (it remapped the video memory buffers and "dynamically" drew them on a single (EGA) graphics screen instead.
"386 enhanced mode" IIRC
That's what they marketed it as. I'm pretty sure 286 had protected mode, but maybe not quite the address space virtualization things needed to "fool" real mode programs
Wait. That's not DR-DOS. It was something with "Desktop", Gosh. Memory fail...
yes, 286 had protected mode, but just with a new type of selector with base and limit
and "permissions" on segment descriptors
the killer 386 feature was paging
That sounds right. I must admit, I stopped actively "learning" new intel processors after 286. Books were scarce and expensive. And I had Turbo Pascal. Borland C++ even (though I didn't use it much in those days)
@sehe I think you meant DESQView
08:04
@doug65536 Well, let's start from the fact that 286 only had 16-bit protected mode.
yeah, they pretty much just added a new "control word", a way to get into protected mode, and no way to get out (you had to reset the machine and the BIOS had a way to "check" if you were ripping the machine out of protected mode. and a new meaning for the segment registers and new segment descriptors, and new "gates" for handling interrupts and exceptions, for restricting entry and exit from "executive" code, etc
it was a good try but AFAIK only OS/2 really used it fully
@doug65536 At the time, the killer 386 feature was V86 tasks, that let you run MS-DOS programs inside windows, multi-task them, etc. In 286 (standard) mode, you could only run one MS-DOS program, and it mostly didn't multitask.
Uh, so when did they introduce the official way to jump back to rmode?
Ah. You meant 286.
Right.
08:09
you had to clear (bit 0) of CR0, then do a far jump to flush the prefetch queue
and reload the real mode segment base and limit
@Griwes Presumably you mean "to real mode"? Mostly never. What you did was put the real mode stuff you cared about in a V86 task, which was just another 386 task.
@JerryCoffin I mostly use "rmode", "pmode" and "lmode" these days.
@doug65536 I know how you jump back to rmode, thank you, I was just pretty sure it was there from 286.
@Griwes Nope. On the 286, to get back to real mode you set a flag in memory to tell the BIOS not to do a memory test and such, then you reset the processor (e.g., with a triple fault).
@JerryCoffin Also, there are reasons to jump back to real mode, at least nowadays - to avoid setting VM86 in bootloader just to get the rest of it and the kernel loaded.
@JerryCoffin Huh. Good to know, I guess.
@Griwes There are a few, and BIOSes (for one example) have had to do so all the time. Most multitasking systems don't though.
08:14
@JerryCoffin Yep, I agree.
remember A20? having to enable/disable the A20 line to preserve the wraparound from segment ffff to 0000 (minus 16 bytes)? :D
what a hack
and 5 or 6 different ways of enabling/disabling it, depending on the chipset
doing an OUT and praying it didn't touch some I/O address of some random device. what a disaster
@sehe Windows 3.0 had three modes (real, standard, 386 enhanced). 3.1 eliminated real mode.
@doug65536 You better remember it, since you can still find computers "featuring" it.
Also I like to make fun of hardware designers for putting the switch on keyboard's controller.
@doug65536 You would go and remind me of that, wouldn't you? And just before I really need to go try to sleep too. You are personally responsible for any nightmares I might have tonight!
2
08:20
@Griwes I'd guess all PC compatible machines still have the A20 gate.
@JerryCoffin Not all current x86-based computers are PC compatible anymore.
yeah, it was hillarious. you would have to spin a few thousand times because the latency of changing the A20 gate was huge
And the worst thing, there are IIRC four ways of enabling it.
Which might be present or not.
And you do actually have to check if it's enabled before trying to enable it, because hardware is usually broken and breaks when you do things you are not supposed to.
I am happy UEFI will finally be able to allow hardware manufacturers to drop all that legacy cruft.
Well, not all (looking at you, RTC).
@Griwes I s'pose those that have only EFI or UEFI and no traditional BIOS any more aren't.
@JerryCoffin I really wouldn't dare to assume "there is BIOS, so it must be PC compatible". I really wouldn't.
08:27
have you guys tried windows 3.1 on a 3.6 GHz Core I7?
you type win<enter>, BANG, program manager loaded instantly and ready to go
lol
Talk about overkills.
@Griwes I think it's more the other way around, "it doesn't have BIOS, thus is not PC compatible" (interpretation of @Jerry not my own view)
@doug65536 yeah, but you could probably fit the entire 3.1 OS in CPU cache these days :P
With this solution, you can write on (==) value :: Pixel -> Pixel -> Bool (on is from Data.Function) to compare two pixels using only their values. — user2407038 6 hours ago
@thecoshman exactly
wow, that's interesting
08:36
@BartekBanachewicz meh, functional
@thecoshman "meh, that short, expressive and safe syntax is not familiar to me because I'm used to java"
meh, shitposting
@BartekBanachewicz meh, I couldn't care less really, I program for my job because I need money, and that means I work with Java.
mah, mah
I wish I could type on Mondays.
@thecoshman oh right, I forgot that puts you in a position when anyone talking about anything else WRT programming is automatically meh because it doesn't mean immediate money.
08:40
@BartekBanachewicz no, it's because it is of zero interest to me.
that's what i said
@thecoshman point being, you actively went out of your way to say "meh"
like I insulted you personally, your hard working majesty, with posting it
oh, solution!
solution to what
@BartekBanachewicz Saying "meh" is "actively going out of one's way"?
Soon, saying "meh" will be "going too far".
@Griwes I'd imagine someone that "couldn't care less" wouldn't bother :P
08:43
Hello meh'ers
@BartekBanachewicz u mad?
@BartekBanachewicz I couldn't care less what you'd imagine.
... ...
@TonyTheLion meh :P
08:45
:D
“U MAD?”, sometimes written as “you mad?” or “u mad bro?”, is a catchphrase that is often used in discussion threads to imply that someone is losing their temper during the course of an argument, sometimes taunting or baiting other posters into a flamewar. Due to the agitating nature of the phrase, it is often considered a form of trolling.
@StackedCrooked lol
best definition I've seen so far
first definition I've seen thus far :)
morning
08:49
morning
JBL
JBL
morning
Monday mornings are haaard.
5
JBL
JBL
Coffee coffee coffee mgnnnn!
09:00
@JBL Coffee zombies?
@StackedCrooked I noticed that cppreference uses your online compiler for their examples. pretty cool
JBL
JBL
@Griwes Yep. And a long day ahead. Better start piling up caffeine now.
@Xeo Not sure what the problem is, is it impossible to fix when using lambdas? Why do I need to unwrap the reference_wrapper? I don't see that part in your solution either
@StackedCrooked indeed, but no more than any other morning that expects something of you.
09:07
@JBL I want this long day to be finished already
I can't believe Yahoo sent me an email promoting Yahoo Answers with the slogan "Real People. Real Answers."
@TonyTheLion you sure it doesn't say "Real People. Bad Comedians" ?
@TonyTheLion wait... the internet is pretending Yahoo answers are not just trolling? Who asked if it was?
Cut off the users hands?! — Ed Heal 1 min ago
haha xD
@AndyProwl fuck reference_wrapper
also
09:14
@TonyTheLion Given the quality of the questions and the answers I believe them.
@Rapptz I would, but I don't know what's the problem with it
@doug65536 Yeah, that sounds like it :) It was pretty nifty. "Almost no lag" on my hercules graphics card
@StackedCrooked lol
oh the only thing I dislike is that it's in <functional>
there's nothing functional about it
I don't know why it's there
Perhaps because it's often used with bind
09:16
@Rapptz It's a facility that's added for bind
yeah but that's not its only use case
should have been in <utility> or something
Actually, if a library feature doesn't specifically support reference_wrapper, you can't use it anyways. So, yeah it makes sense to put it in the header with the library feature that supports it?
@sehe Like tuple?
std::thread supports reference_wrapper though
@Rapptz Normative much? What other library feature supports reference_wrapper? Don't say thread, since it uses bind
Dat deal
@AndyProwl ^
@sehe std::tuple
09:17
@Rapptz you're gonna have to suck it up
@sehe How do you know thread uses bind?
it uses special_decay when you use std::make_tuple.
@sehe It actually doesn't
there's an SO answer about that
I _was_ wondering :) Thanks
Anyways, I'd hope the specs are in terms of bind/share common description
I'm trying to look for it :/
Here is the Q&A
09:20
Oh there
(I think it's that one)
no that's not it
Yeah, robot mentioned it. I guess make_tuple is a decent example. But, you could argue that it's surprising that make_tuple supports reference_wrapper in the first place (since it is declared in <functional> ... ) :/
catch 22
yeah I realized
@R.MartinhoFernandes soooo With the coroutine rewrite of your actor based ccy - did you select stackless or stackful coroutines?
I'm having to decide. I'd go with stackless but I would like to check whether there's anything downside I didn't think of
09:24
:( can't find it
I thought it was by Dyp but it isn't
Yeah, can't find it either
who else has a green avatar and posts a lot in
@Rapptz KerrekSB, maybe TemplateRex used to have a .... green lizard(?)?
Ah I think this one
GManNickG?
09:26
@AndyProwl Yes
Ben Voigt?
that's exactly it
I was actually looking at Casey's next :D
I wonder if that's related to the problem Xeo find in my prebind based on generic lambdas
Dat moment when you find that your mental model of std::thread needs changing: #cpp std::thread class vs std::bind http://stackoverflow.com/a/21059616/85371?stw=2
@thecoshman Now I am surprised, because I seriously didn't expect that to be a fetish too...
oh this IDE works SO well with that vcs -.- I want to change a line in the .cpp. To save it, the IDE wants to have write access to the .h, too. Since the vcs sets any files to read-only that are not checked out, I have to check out the header or clear the readonly flag manually. If I do that, the IDE thinks the header has changed and starts to recompile everything
09:29
@AndyProwl I think his problem is that you're relying on operator T& instead of get.
@sehe so in fact you already knew this but were using the old mental model
questions are just extremely low-views in general stackoverflow.com/a/21198617/85371
@sehe reule 34.... sadly
@Rapptz But why is it a problem?
it's not very reliable
09:31
can you show an example where it creates trouble?
I'm a bit rusty on C++
@AndyProwl On the contrary. I really believed that std::thread supported reference_wrapper exactly the same way bind does. Maybe because my compiler, too, was in on the conspiracy?
@sehe But your twit shows you were aware of this difference
Ah wait
the twit is new
@AndyProwl His tweet was made just now.
Yeah, brainfail
lol
@R.MartinhoFernandes Thanks. It would have taken me some time before realizing this wasn't obvious :)
09:34
@sehe It was, I just have a tendency not recognize obvious stuff.
like, the date was just there
if INVOKE is defined with std::reference_wrapper in mind, invoke.hpp is going to be mildly annoying to fix :(
@R.MartinhoFernandes Anyways, if you can spare a moment, I'd really appreciate your 1-line verdict (1-word even?) ^
Oh.
Sorry.
I'm using stackful.
@Rapptz Doesn't seem the case according to 20.9.2/1
@AndyProwl Apparently, you don't expect people to tweet that fast. I learned that. That's helpful for me
@R.MartinhoFernandes Any specific reason? I'm worried about... performance (har har) and portability (<-- serious)
09:38
@AndyProwl There's a defect report to add it.
So, guise, stackfull or stackless?
@Rapptz Ah, didn't know that
@Jefffrey Undecided. Hang on
Hanging on...
I'm using quasi-stack coroutines.
09:40
Now you're just bullshitting :/
You mean, stackless but you maintain your own state
@Jefffrey stackedcrooked lolololol
lol, I'm sure @sbi can make use of this at some stage :)
You mean, stackless but you maintain your own steak?
s/stake/steak/ FTFY
lol
\ o /
09:42
o7
put your hands up for the lounge
sorry
@Borgleader Don't have headphones :(
great... so this JEE course turns out to be yet another introduction.
09:47
@Borgleader "They are coming too fast!" -- "Nickle for every time I had that problem..."
lol
-3
Q: for(++i;++i;++i) the second argument is < or <=?

Nat95In this for loop statement static int i; for(++i;++i;++i) { //some code } Variable i is at first 0. The arguments in the for-loop at 1st round are 1st ++i: i = 0 + 1 = 1 2nd ++i: i=1+1=2 So, in first loop I have this for(i=1; i<2; ++i); or for(i=1; i<=2; ++i);?

@Jefffrey seriously?
some men just want to watch the world burn
@Jefffrey My brain just melted. I just can't comprehend.
@Jefffrey ow
@Jefffrey let's hope his compiler is smart enough to just do movl $0,_i
09:52
@sehe They feel more robust.
@doug65536 That would be a dumb compiler.
Xeo
Xeo
@AndyProwl templates
@Mysticial notice the semicolons after his for loops that make sense. that was the joke
Xeo
Xeo
it's not hard to fix the lambda-based prebind, though.
for(i=0;i++;++i){if(i++ > 7) break;}
09:53
@Xeo What is the problem exactly?
@doug65536 Yeah, I know. The compiler would be dump to emit anything. :)
@Jefffrey it.... got upvoted. Twice! =/
Xeo
Xeo
@AndyProwl with struct X{ template<class T> void operator()(T const& v){ v.g(); } };, the following would yield an error: prebind(X{}, std::ref(something_with_g))
@Borgleader for the lulz probably
09:58
@Xeo Ah, I see, thanks!
So to fix that I would have to introduce a little helper for unwrapping
@TonyTheLion Seems fine.
It's C and goto is the best error handling mechanism you have there.
Those functions are so long
@R.MartinhoFernandes s/best/only/ ?
@Borgleader You can have all sorts of horrible alternatives.

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