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user1804599
00:00
Also, #/% is nice.
user1804599
(map #(str " - " (item-name %)) …)
Damn, I passed a lot of time the last two days on it (it must take less than 5 seconds), so I tried
user1804599
Also, if I wanted a challenge, I’d go and try to destroy my greatest enemies.
@Nic007 You may have a kidney problem - ses a urologist.
wut
00:05
welcome to the lounge
in a way
not only for MLP reference
user1804599
No wonder. :v
user1804599
Ruby’s syntax is even more complicated than C++’ syntax.
user1804599
00:07
Repost.
@rightfold This whole tumbler is great
it has a lot of strange terms I don't understand and I should learn Scheme
30 seconds later, I conclude that Scheme is Haskell with lisp syntax, meh.
Good night.
@BartekBanachewicz Scheme is dynamic.
@StackedCrooked even more meh
I don't know why people get so excited at new lisp dialects
It seems to me that Scheme is mainly an exercise in minimalist interpreter design.
Only a few primitives.
Kernel language approach isn't that uncommon in functional world
00:18
Ok, I can go to sleep now.
Good night.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Night
@R.MartinhoFernandes Meh - just return from wakefullness.
You know, it's a damn shame sketchup is written in ruby
I am starting to think if it was on purpose
To make plugins so fucking slow that people would pay for pro version
@BartekBanachewicz sketchup is deliberately slow?
I have one product that is like that. In the +250€ version, the Sleep(500) is commented out:)
00:34
There.
Also Idris programming language looks nice
> Apply functions by return type, rather than with arguments:
t <== f means "apply f with arguments such that it returns a value of type t"
Somebody here posted a link to a short video from the same guy (don't remember who), and I found this one in the related links. It's hilarious.
@BartekBanachewicz and where do the arguments come from?
@AndyProwl Oh, Mr Enthusiasm again
@Jefffrey Was it you who posted the link on floating point arithmetic?
nope
00:40
ah, nevermind
I hate that guy for some reasons, even though what he says might be useful
there's a computerphile too?
Is it just as misleading as numberphile?
I don't know numberphile
I just found that video hilarious
although I understand that some might not like his "acting"
I think it's more the "I'm the genius" attitude
and then he goes and explain SQL injections
he explains complex topics in the most trivial way for no reason
to give you at least an idea of the complexity
00:46
like the floating point number video: what did he actually said in 10 minutes? that computers store floating point values in a limited number of bits
you don't say?
and perform arithmetic in scientific notation base 2
that's something most newbies on SO actually don't know
i don't know it
and I still don't
why not?
well, actually I kinda do
but it doesn't matter
00:48
all right
sorry
lol no problem
I need some monthly ranting as much as any other person in this room
I have nothing against you hating some guy
00:50
hey there
@ScottW hello
damn it's 2 AM
why does it always end up like this
it has been worse
if my "morning me" had to meet my "evening me" he'd fucking kill him
00:53
I remember the entire room realizing it was 5am and panic one day
on a related note: good night ladies
night
only 8 PM here
that sounds better
I didn't leave
oh yeah I will have to
lol
making a note
there
Xeo
Xeo
@Rapptz only 2am here
01:01
> only
Xeo
Xeo
grrrr touch keyboard
@AndyProwl doesn't matter when I go to sleep, leg will wake me up anyways after a certain amount of time
Yeah I know that shit
Xeo
Xeo
that said, I should see if I can't get that orthopedist appointment just a few days earlier
I really hope you'll get out of it asap
Xeo
Xeo
walking to the super market earlier was crazy
amd ugh, I need to send in my out-of-order paper
or rather, should've sent it in yesterday. meh
01:06
hope the doctor will be a good one
Xeo
Xeo
he has good ratings at least
that's good
Xeo
Xeo
unlike a certain doc that is much closer to me
but apparently treats his patients like shit
good thing the interweb exists
esle I'd probably have gone to him
right
when I had to choose a doctor for my half-unknown problem it helped me seeing what patients were telling
mostly if he was ready to listen
@AndyProwl I've pointed it out before, but where normal people need an alarm clock to tell them to get up, programmers need one to tell them to get to bed.
10
Xeo
Xeo
01:10
welp, for now, moar grammar
@JerryCoffin I need both :(
@Xeo grammar?
I'm impervious to alarm clocks
Xeo
Xeo
@AndyProwl Japanese, can't continue to slack off with learning
ah, good luck then
Xeo
Xeo
not if I want to be able to read stuff in this life, anyways
01:14
@Xeo Are you going through a formal japanese language course?
Xeo
Xeo
nah
nice. you've got great motivation.
My experience with learning a totally different language is that studying the theory does not help much
At least it didn't in my case
(but admittedly not as "totally different" as Japanese)
@JerryCoffin How do you manage to maintain your health with irregular sleep patterns?
@AndyProwl yep. My entire japanese knowledge is based around watching anime.
you and thousands of other people.
Seems to be pretty common
Xeo
Xeo
01:19
> Using は and が to stress
In this lesson we learn a new rule. The basic rule is:
が stresses for は, and は stresses for が.
In other words, where が is normally used, は will be used to stress and vice versa.
yeah fuck you too, Japanese
so they stress each other?
Xeo
Xeo
ga exists only to mock language learners, I feel
@AndyProwl not only
Xeo
Xeo
both mark the topic, each in different cases
and then they get swapped for stressing
yeah
fuck them
@xslr Not :P
v_v
01:22
@xslr He certainly didn't maintain his mental health :P /cc @JerryCoffin
@Borgleader Although that doesn't prevent him from being awesome at everything about computers.
OK, I'll call it a night
see you guys
sleep tight @AndyProwl
I joined a skype group for game developers on 4chan.
and they're telling me that Java is a great start if I want to learn programming
:o
Xeo
Xeo
01:25
lol
pretty sure they're trolling
no they're serious
[8:24:37 PM] Neocyberman: Java is a really good start
[8:24:51 PM] dan.weaver21: c#
[8:24:52 PM] Neocyberman: then C# for its wide use in game development
[8:25:04 PM] dan.weaver21: may as well start off with c#, since they're pretty much the same thing
[8:25:09 PM] Adam NA: http://www.novelgames.com/en/spgames/fatherandson/
[8:25:23 PM] Adam NA: Just learn java
the weird thing is I didn't say I wanted to learn to program
Indie devs usually end up having to program their game too anyway. So that might be their motivation.
but wtf C# is widely used in gamedev?
not really
Xeo
Xeo
Unity
01:28
sounds like the channel is filled with minecraft and terraria fans.
Unity!
yeah but Unity isn't the most widely used engine in game development :v
I'd thought it is usually C++ with some scripting languages.
Well if you restrict to indie games, Unity is pretty prevalent i think
anybody want to give this a try:
0
Q: How do I update this old C++ doubly linked list code to C++11?

Glenn TeitelbaumI have the following code written in what would now be called C++98 It implements a doubly linked list, and I was considering updating it to C++11, but I had the following concerns: it would seem that using std::unique_ptr makes sense, but there still needs to be other pointers "sharing" the u...

01:32
you know std::list is a doubly-linked list
also wrong site
why wrong site?
you're probably looking for Code Review
I don't want it reviewed, I am asking how do you convert from old C++ to C++11
Yeah, I'm not sure that is fit for SO.
@Rapptz "using standard algorythms would make sense, using a standard container defeats the purpose"
01:35
It's offtopic in both Code Review and Stack Overflow apparently.
@Borgleader I'm not sure what is on topic anymore :)
So what is on-topic anymore on SO?
Xeo
Xeo
alright, guess I'll also (try to) hit the sack
night
user3010322
01:42
Nighty night!
user3010322
Yay, I got back in time to wish Xeo-chan a good night~
@Xeo Why would you hit it? It didn't do anything to you!
and which is that missing:
•a specific programming problem
•a software algorithm
•software tools commonly used by programmers
•practical, answerable problems that are unique to software development
does it have to be all 4 :)
01:44
207
Q: Stack Overflow question checklist

Jon SkeetMy earlier blog post on how to write a good question is pretty long, and I suspect that even when I refer people to it, often they don't bother reading it. So here's a short list of questions to check after you've written a question (and to think about before you write the question): Have you d...

user3010322
@Rapptz Put me in that channel!
It's a quiet place.
What you should avoid asking:
there is no actual problem to be solved: “I’m curious if other people feel like I do.”
you are asking an open-ended, hypothetical question: “What if ______ happened?”
Youre curious as to how you should update it to C++11
And its imo open ended. Theres never 1 way of doing things
user3010322
There are a lot of things which can be done multiple ways.
I'm not sure how much meaningful variance there is on an answer
user3010322
01:53
@melak47 In the ECS?
Please explain when that rule came into existance.
iunno. Been there since I came here.
mov edx, Rapptz
mov hell, edx
:(
Cute.
02:01
I try my best!
02:15
@Rapptz That's not really what the rule says.
You're supposed to be good at reading sarcasm.
user3010322
Kinky.
but anyone could be a Debian Developer ~_~
02:19
@GlennTeitelbaum I got half an answer but I have to do chores atm
it's an opensource OS ...
@LightnessRacesinOrbit get out
@MooingDuck oh. ok.
I could write a useless driver for it ...
Supness races in orbit
you gotta be a registered debian dev
"If you're interested, and a DD, simply mail [email protected]
with a mail signed by a key in the Debian keyring..."
user3010322
02:31
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Sup~
@LightnessRacesinOrbit SOUP
wait, did he actually leave?
yes
I should be more careful with the things I say when I stop by my computer between chores
@LightnessRacesinOrbit IM SO SORRY COME BACK TO MEEEEEEE
02:49
justice?
where is she?
taking a short, 3 million years nap
that's to long :(
cry her a river
well. She is blind right?
that implies she needs eyes ... but does she?
02:53
@sudorm-rfTelkitty yes. I was going to say something disgusting. However, I keep it clean. ;)
@GlennTeitelbaum now we're having dinner. Don't hold your breath.
Oh hello Mooning Duck where have you been
Good job Google
user3010322
03:14
@CatPlusPlus Kinky!
@CatPlusPlus no way.
im using chrome. now what?
Which of the following groups may form part of the Designated Work Health Safety Personnel?
Select one:
a. Principal contractor, Police, Designated work groups, Consumer Affairs
b. Principal contractor, Health and Safety Representatives, Fair Trading, Police
c. Principal contractor, ***Funeral services*** , Health and safety committee
d. Health and Safety committee or Representative, Principal contractor, Owner builder
big brother is watching
@MarkGarcia what was it?
MUAHAHAHAHAH i'm back
:3
> How To Overcome Procrastination & ADHD When Learning To Program?
@Mysticial moo
Though it was already deleted when I opened it. :(
Must have been fun.
user3010322
04:02
Sigh.
user3010322
I really wish I could declare variables in a switch.
@ThePhD You can bucko.
int main() {
    switch(int x = 0) {
    case 0:
        break;
    }
}
don't know why you'd do it though
user3010322
I meant in the case bits. =[
...
user3010322
The parens start looking really ugly.
user3010322
04:05
E.g.
user3010322
windowdriver.Push( window, messagequeue );
optional<MessageData> opmessage;
while ( opmessage = messagequeue.pop( ) ) {
	MessageData& message = opmessage.value();
	switch ( message.header.id ) {
	case MessageId::Keyboard:
		{ KeyboardEvent& keyboard = message.as<KeyboardEvent>( );
		if ( keyboard.Key == Key::R
			&& keyboard.Down ) {

		}}
		break;
	}
}
I see you liked my as/is thing :P
@Rapptz Is that a variant type?
@ThePhD usually I solve that by have case X: do_x(); break;
@MarkGarcia No.
user3010322
04:07
@Rapptz I've always liked as/is: it's short but clear and to the point. :D
I liked it because it read like english
if(x.is<int>())
man I hate git submodules
what a pain in the ass
user3010322
Are they really that bad? :o
Oh nice. CEF3 print support at last!
@ThePhD If you're not going to update the submodule at all, then no.
It's really basic if the submodules are static commit references to a repo.
user3010322
@MooingDuck That sounds like a good idea, but I usually want to use the state I've already built up in / around the loop.
user3010322
04:11
I could pass them as function arguments, though... maybe that wouldn't hurt.
@ThePhD yeah, sometimes the number of params gets in the way
user3010322
Hm, maybe for clean params I could just use a lambda that I call immediately?
user3010322
case X: [&]() { /* use all the things... */ }(); break;
Using lambdas for that crossed my mind, and now I'm ashamed. :(
Oh.
lol
What would that gain you?
04:14
@ThePhD that.... sort of defeats the point of calling a function
You just wrapped it around a lambda and called it a day
user3010322
I wrapped it in a lambda which I then immediately call.
writing a lambda to avoid writing {} seems counterproductive
For what reason?
user3010322
It's only purpose is to allow me to declare variables inside the case's scope.
04:15
@ThePhD {}
Why not braces?
user3010322
Braces places any other way looks a bit unnatural, at least to my eye.
user3010322
But an inline lambda is less optically offensive (at least to me?)
@ThePhD and a lambda doesn't?
that's crazy talk
user3010322
vOv
04:15
int main() {
    switch(int x = 0) {
    case 0:
    {
        // code as normal
        break;
    }
    }
}
user3010322
The brace style I have it it right now is pretty ugly. =[
this is the only place I put braces in a newline
user3010322
@Rapptz Well yeah, that's one reason I don't like it. The brace on its own newline 'n' stuff.
@Rapptz that's wierd. I indent everything in the case
I prefer the opening case in line with the case.
04:16
yeah this is my only exception.
int main() {
    switch(int x = 0) {
    case 0: {
        // code as normal
        break;
    }
    }
}
looks weird
user3010322
int main() {
    switch(int x = 0) {
    case 0:
    [&] () { // less offensive, maybe?
        // code as normal
    }();
    break;
    }
}
@ThePhD Gosh.
user3010322
Ehh.... it all looks wrong.
int main() {
    switch(int x = 0) {
    case 0:
        {
            // code as normal
            break;
        }
    }
}
int main() {
    switch(int x = 0) {
        case 0: {
            // code as normal
            break;
        }
    }
}
I indent my cases.
04:18
@MarkGarcia less common
I don't indent my cases because VS didn't do it when I first started learning C and I just stuck with it. Even if the editor now indents it.
Though it takes lots of horizontal space.
user3010322
@MarkGarcia I would do it something like that, but VS moves all the // code as normal and the break all the way up to where the first opening paren is after the case.
user3010322
So there's this really HUGE gap in spacing, and VS keeps doing it automatically, and I can't tell it to shut up. =[
@ThePhD VS2013 has options for that somewhere
user3010322
04:19
@MooingDuck An option for indenting up to where the open brace is?
@Rapptz @ThePhD Yeah. But I managed.
user3010322
I will say, the lambda approach allows you to return early for the case statement.
2
@ThePhD break?
@ThePhD as opposed to a break?
idk man
user3010322
04:20
True, could just break.
the lambda approach is pretty much giving you an extra "WTF" to the "WTF/minute" counter.
yeah. who would think to use break in a switch block? I mean really
oh btw @MooingDuck did you see my lua binding for C++?
@ThePhD switches are remarkably open about what you can put in them. Have you seen duff's device?
04:23
@Mysticial oh oh oh thanks!
how the fuck
+3818?
I want to click it!!!
I haven't clicked on it in a month.
@Rapptz I saw it ages ago, made suggestions, realized my suggestions were stupid and the whole idea is complicated (xkcd.com/793)
you are confusing me with Bartek
you didn't give me suggestions :(
you weren't even around when I made it
04:25
@Mysticial lol. Somebody suggested Quora.
@MooingDuck I meant this
@Mysticial mhmm so how's youtube ;)
Nothing out of the ordinary.
Hm. Time to eat.
At last they've patched the clang-cl type_traits problem: llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=17926#c7
But the current build is still far from the revision of the fix.
:(
04:31
0
Q: what is the output of below c programming?

Harshil Sonimain(){ int a,i; printf("%d",printf("PRINT %d\t",scanf("%d %d",&i,&a))); /* two integers are given as input*/ }

^^ ahaha, 3 comments saying the same thing.
Let's add more! :D:D
@Rapptz you're all the same
@Rapptz Bartek had a few loungers helping him I thought, so I presumed you were one of them
"Have I mentioned I hate GCC? I hate GCC."
@Rapptz I like how your first tests are "set a global variable" which depend 100% on lua.scriptthrowing/not throwing accurately for accurate results.
@Mysticial I think this is a dup - I am pretty sure I remember almost exactly the same question a while ago - I think it was deleted as well
did comment flag always say, "flag this comment as unconstructive, offensive, or spam? I'm thinking unconstructive is new, but then again, I am overdue for sleep
@MooingDuck I haven't done any table examples.
But tables are supported.
also script only throws if lua panics
04:46
@Rapptz I found TEST_CASE("tables/functions_variables"
oh, I immediately jumped into sol/tests.cpp to see intended usage. I didn't even look for docs, I assumed there weren't any
there aren't, I just wrote examples
oh. good enough
yes
state has a global_table function.
@Mysticial I like how one guy edited all the answers, and the question.
I realized lua.get<sol::table>("") probably does what I was thinking
04:48
lol
@MooingDuck nah, lua.global_table() does. :P
I have a terrible memory, but this seems quite similar to Bartek's. Which probably means either one of you forked off the other, or this is the most obviously good design.
not really
@Rapptz eh, .global_table() makes a lot of sense, that's good, but I'd probably want lua.get<sol::table>("") to also work, just for consistency
so my memory then
@MooingDuck so you wouldn't use unique_ptr?
04:50
@GlennTeitelbaum no, that would complicate things and waste memory
the test cases are copy pasted from lundi but adapted to my API
@GlennTeitelbaum also you're really fast
lol, 5 minutes
@MooingDuck maybe "_G" would work instead of ""
untested
@Rapptz lua.get<sol::table>("_G::os")`?
04:53
if you want the global os table just do lua.get<sol::table>("os")
@MooingDuck - containers generally store a rebound allocator as a data member? (allocators are stateful and should not just be created from template parameter type as needed)
but "_G" is the global table in lua code, so it'll probably work automagically.
@GlennTeitelbaum I don't know for fact, but doing anything else would be stupid. The rebound allocator is the only one they actually need
@MooingDuck lol, don't know why it wasn't sinking in, I was thinking that insert could just have a rebound allocator as a local variable, then i realized I might want to use one in remove
@MooingDuck - so basically - just add a rebound allocator (use it) and add support for move, thats all that needs to be changed, cool
@GlennTeitelbaum Also adding support for emplace and other C++11 functions. I'm reading your cod enow

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