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11:03
@thecoshman Collins still managed to get a cold call from 'Windows service center' to tell him that his guidance computer had a virus and offering to remove it for $200 :)
@MartinJames lol
@LightnessRacesinOrbit I rather listen to the original =/
@LightnessRacesinOrbit ಠ_ಠ
11:17
Is setprecision sticky?
shouldn't setprecision be set_precision?
iostreams have all sorts of awkward.
Dude, warning.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Looks like it?
11:23
Oh gosh, what ugliness.
Ah screw it, I'll trample over whatever the user had.
yaawbn
the embedded guy is a nice guy
he said that our showcase of deviceorientation is ok and we add some features he'll accept that
also I've managed to hear last 5 minutes of his lecture about HW-VMs
./whois "the embedded guy"
it even wasn't that nonsensical
I should be outside. I have failed according to all rules and customs.
@Borgleader the guy who's the head of our "embedded systems" class
11:30
Oh
Hardware Lua VM could be an interesting thing
I imagine there are more reasons than just performance?
@Borgleader power consumption, mostly
and cost of the devices
I guess I'll just set up a stringstream with my settings and, stream to it, and then send a string directly to the target stream.
Saves me from fucking around with saving and restoring these silly flags.
@R.MartinhoFernandes so you can stream while you stream.
11:33
Anyone know offhand how to stop GCC from producing output other than diagnostics?
stream.push_state();
// do things
stream.pop_state();
xD
user3010322
Blech.
in Room for doug65536 and vjain419, 49 mins ago, by vjain419
how do you get all this..i mean do you read books or your experince
@ThePhD you fixed whether it was you wanted me to take a look at?
@Borgleader I've seen that design pattern somewhere
> Build time was about 8 hours
TIL people build GHC on Playstation 3
11:43
in Room for doug65536 and vjain419, 1 hour ago, by vjain419
by the way my name is Vinay Jain
Good to know, I guess?
@LightnessRacesinOrbit not everyone hides behind a mask
@BartekBanachewicz There's a middle ground between using an alias online and sending everyone on SO chat your full name and employment details unsolicited
oh, I just got a reminder about a cancelled meeting
if you scroll up a bit, that whole conversation is kinda funny. Vinay wants to be Doug's best friend, with social networking and email contact
btw
in Room for doug65536 and vjain419, 1 hour ago, by vjain419
also thanks for introducing http://coliru.stacked-crooked.com/
11:46
my favourite:
in Room for doug65536 and vjain419, 1 hour ago, by vjain419
yes i agree...i am facebook but only use to chat with old and friends like you..i mean to say which we meet like..
I'll stop now
people here really need a life - and stop stalking strangers ...
don't stalk people you know either ... just saying ...
@LightnessRacesinOrbit I have the feeling he thought that was a private chat (SO really needs some form of that, imo).
11:49
@TheForestAndtheTrees could be
to be fair, I didn't spot it was a one-on-one until you just said that
also TIL armcc is a thing
it makes slightly more sense now
Why does SO need private chat?
@BartekBanachewicz I prefer armasm. I love armasms.
@R.MartinhoFernandes for all the naughty stuff, obviously :p
11:51
@jalf because totally everyone on SO wants to sext on this chat
actually, considering @ScottW
3 hours ago, by Tony The Lion
@Potatoswatter Time for a wank :P
Vlad's back in 5 hours
> See __declspec(thread) in the Compiler Reference Guide.
yay nonstandard C/C++
C or C++? Pick one.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit I know what I wrote
it's 1, then it increments C
11:53
it's C/C++
@BartekBanachewicz stfu
@LightnessRacesinOrbit I hope those those two are not related o_0
The ADS v1.2 and RVCT v1.2 C++ compilers enabled you to use old-style C parameters in C++ functions. That is,
void f(x) int x; { }
In the RVCT v2.x compilers or above, you must use the --anachronisms compiler option
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Tony's wanking; Vlad is back soon.
11:55
lol @ThePhD a compiler for you ^
No, I spotted TelKitty on the starboard when I went to grab that message, went to her profile to see what she's been up to lately, then decided to check on Vlad whilst I was on profiles.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit ...
so the link between Vlad and Tony wanking is, er, TelKitty...
@BartekBanachewicz I recently discovered we have some code using that syntax
11:55
@BartekBanachewicz void f(x) int x; { } what the fuck
@jalf I'm not sure whether I should laugh or pat your back.
ergh ¬_¬ can I just get binning rights?
I totally wouldn't write a script or anything...
elgonzo and linguini!? rofl
@thecoshman technically there's one owner spot open
pff guyse, be srs, I'll be the 14th room owner >.>
:P
@BartekBanachewicz well, the only reason it looks like that is that it was originally some third party stuff, and none of us have had a reason to touch that code for like 8 years. I predict that as soon as we find a need to mess with it, it will be rewritten :p
BTW meta chat has implemented a script to make me press extra buttons in order to stay there, I figured they must love me dearly
o_0 I see the owners list is slowly growing again :P
@sudorm-rfTelkitty That is certainly one interpretation:)
std::vector<T>::vector(It, It) uses assignment?
having to put templates in headers really sucks man
plz fix
@R.MartinhoFernandes std::vector<T>::vector !? shouldn't the second :: be a space?
@MartinJames I only have to press the back button each time
11:58
It's a ctor.
@doug65536 export is dead.
Y'know that makes sense now that you say it, but I wouldn't have actually thought of calling it that way.
hm how does it work in Haskell modules
Hmmm, wait, no.
But it doesn't use explicit construction.
Dammit.
if I, say, export a -> Int, it still has to have source for verification, no?
12:00
I have to call transform for this? :S
@BartekBanachewicz there was an election to fill it, but nobody voted
I always assumed it would do copy construction o.o
or move if you passed it move iterators
@Borgleader It's not a call, just a way to refer to it (it's how you'd write the definition)
@Borgleader The source iterators are for a container of a different type (but explicitly convertible)
Are there... transform iterators? Yep
12:03
fuck, someone stole all my Easynews gigs
@LightnessRacesinOrbit what?
Is FreeBSD in usable state?
@LightnessRacesinOrbit o_0
Oh ffs.
This would work if the stdlib didn't have this optimisation.
Now I wonder if it's standard.
I think I'll install FreeBSD on a VM today
I'd like to compare it to xubuntu
I should plink @Griwes at this point I guess
Hmm, this boost::transform_iterator thing is nice. I should really go over what boost has to offer at some point. I keep discovering gems like this =/
12:08
I thought I should share the barbie chick with meta too ...
@BartekBanachewicz what's confusing?
@Borgleader that's the only way to learn about boost IMHO
what you described can be s/Boost/Wikipedia/
hrsh
why the fuck is it still trying to assign :(
lol even if I read Wiki non stop, I would never manage to read all of it :P
@Borgleader just like Boost docs :D
12:13
Nah, boost doesn't get new modules fast enough
There should be a boostreference.com :)
@Borgleader vOv so start it
I'd be more interested in boost if they made a separate Boost-11
@Borgleader thought about the same but was wondering that there would be a low acceptance across the devs seeing that some of them even don't want/can't use github.
like, without all the unnecessary legacy crap
@R.MartinhoFernandes Hard to tell without a SSCCE ;)
12:17
but still with nice libs like spirit
@bamboon I'm not sure what you mean.
@Borgleader Boost devs wouldn't want to put their stuff on boostreference.com as they don't want/can't even use Github.
I like when thanks are in advanced (stage?), and when help is appreciable ;0
@bamboon And they wouldn't have to. It could be like cppreference, a wiki run for and by the users.
@Borgleader That would lead to the problem of duplicated content.
12:21
Yes, but then again not all the boost documentation is good. IIRC I've run into some modules where the information was just lacking.
@Borgleader Yep, totally share your opinion here.
Yeah, I remember working with boost::graph, and docs weren't perfect also
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Eh, I actually expected:
idk why but that's what popped into my head
heh, my server is still up
I consider it an achievement.
12:29
lol wat
-1
A: Parser Error Message: Could not load type 'TestMvcApplication.MvcApplication'

user3231521go to our project folder->find out global files->open it->delete codes.then run our project. thankyou

@LightnessRacesinOrbit ಠ_ಠ
"halp my code doesn't compile" - "no prob bro - delete the codes, all of them"
could you implement matrix multiplication in C++ that creates a statically-sized matrix based on the size of the inputs?
Oh wonderful. Bug report summary: 'Oil manager occasionally displays a floating-point exception box when attempting to validate jobs. Only happens when the system language is set to Slovak'. WTF is it only me that gets such bugs? Maybe I should post it on SO :((
12:31
@BartoszKP Its terrible but I'm not sure it's flag worthy =/ (or I would have flagged it)
@BartekBanachewicz as long as you know argument sizes at compile time
@MartinJames vOv drop support for Slovak
nvm
I'm thinking out loud.
@thecoshman Oh - that is so tempting...
@Borgleader it isn't related to the question, so I also hit "not an answer"
12:33
@MartinJames give in to temptation... and get some pie... both savoury and sweet
-3
Q: How can I write a for loop for list?

user3140486I am currently trying to write a loop for list . my code is : template<typename T> T sort(const T & mylist) typename std::list<T>::iterator it1; typename std::list<T>::iterator it2; for(it1=mylist.begin();it1!=mylist.end();it1++) for(it2=mylist.begin();it2!=my...

same amount of votes. one answer has one line and identifies just one issue. sigh
Well, tbf, yours only had one at the beginning as well ;)
In any case, there are so many things wrong with that function =/
@thecoshman Meh - I have to fix it somehow. They're paid €€€€€ for these systems. OTOH, it is Friday, so I'll go shopping for now instead. I do, actually, fancy a cherry pie.
list has a sort method member function, doesn't it?
@Borgleader yes
@Borgleader It was much bigger by the time even the second upvote came in
12:39
I don't even want to know how slow it must be to sort an std::list =/
@Borgleader n^2 log n^2?
prolly faster though
I literally hate it that I have to open a second file (the header file) every time I do a little change You shouldn't be doing lots of little changes. You should have spent a great deal of time coming up with an interface for your classes, then freezing that interface. It should be quite rare to have to alter it, adding reference types or "adding a const here and there". That's a failing in your design and development process, not in the language. — Lightness Races in Orbit 50 secs ago
@BartekBanachewicz Yeah but cache misses and whatnot tend to make real-world results differ slightly from theoretical models (i think). I wont go and benchmark though.
Heh Epigram document defines syntax coloring :D
> yellow says that Epigram cannot yet see why the piece of code is good
@BartekBanachewicz O_o why is that?
12:46
because access is n?
@BartekBanachewicz access to what? how is that relevant? Maybe I'm missing something, but when I imagine merge sort on a list I don't need to travel to a particular index everytime.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit You have never heard of Agile, have you? ;)
@FredOverflow was about to ask the same ;0
> [Editor’s note: In his freshman-year macroeconomics class, the reporter of this story received a C.]
12:50
@FredOverflow Dude, Waterfall model is the shit. I wouldn't use anything else.
BDUF is a myth that never works out
@LightnessRacesinOrbit fuck static models.
TDD ftw
Waterfalls are caused by gravity. I heard the movie Gravity was terrible. Hence, Waterfall is terrible.
2
12:50
prototype vigorously
check your options
@FredOverflow LOL
gravity is only a theory. it has never been proven
@AndyProwl TDD is more about implementation not design, me thinks.
fuck upfront design, refactor continuously, have good unit tests
@FredOverflow Waterfalls kill people!
12:51
guys I have a noob question. When you go to a site like jsfiddle and save, how does it generate that id?
@AndyProwl that's better.
@BartekBanachewicz TDD is mostly about design actually
I heard that you die if you fall in Niagara falls. That's terrible.
@AndyProwl Test Driven Design? :P
12:51
@AndyProwl it's about implementation and testing, but it results in a good design
@BartekBanachewicz pretty much
@AndyProwl Eh, I wouldn't feel safe going in a plane whose programs had been developed that way. =/
@Borgleader I would feel safe only in such a plane
@AndyProwl I'm not really sure how focusing on a functionality described by tests changes my atittude towards the design
Not in any plane controlled by fragile SW not covered by unit tests
12:52
@Borgleader would you rather be on the first test flight?
@Borgleader upfront design for a plane is safer?
@BartekBanachewicz It does. It allows you to shape your code from a usage perspective. Usage is what design and architecture are all about. Also, it allows to develop a suite of tests so comprehensive that it allows you to safely and continuously refactor, so that you can improve your design all the time
@BartekBanachewicz hahah. I missed that
@StackedCrooked I'm pretty sure the aviation industry has damn strict standards which amongst other things include a fair amount of upfront work yes.
Ok then.
12:55
@BartekBanachewicz writing test before also forces you to design things orthogonal for example
protip: the best way to feel safe in any kind of complex device is to not know anything about how it was built, maintained or operated
that goes for airplanes as well as for medical devices
@jalf Same thing applies to fast food and how it was prepared ;)
that too
@Borgleader most of which comes from falling planes and learning on mistakes
but at least fast food doesn't usually pretend to be manufactured with the utmost care and attention to safety and health
12:56
@AndyProwl I see your point.
@AndyProwl But but... writing tests is boring :( :P
@Borgleader For designing the plane, yes - there's no other way, because building a plane is damn expensive. For designing the SW which controls the plane, on the other hand, upfront design is not effective. A test-first approach is best especially for safety, because you have greater test coverage.
@AndyProwl they still have damn strict standards which include a fair amount of upfront work on the software side too
@Borgleader It's boring if you write them after the fact.
^ this
12:58
The alternative might be better, but that's not how the world operates. :)
And that also tends to be useless
@Borgleader writing test all the time is boring. Spending 10 seconds on writing the test and then 40 on writing the code that makes it pass is not so boring
@jalf Time to change it ;)
@AndyProwl good luck with that
yeah, that's the key difference between software and buildings or planes - in the latter design is easy and cheap relatively to extremely high cost of building them (and rebuilding). In software it's the other way around - building is extremely cheap. Redesigning is expensive.
12:59
@jalf Will do what I can :) Btw there's a lot more important people than me who are pushing for this change
(especially relevant for safety)
@BartoszKP Exactly
Well, I didn't say I disagreed with you

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