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13:00
Just that what you think is best is very far from what the aviation industry actually does in the name of safety
@AndyProwl I have one of his books. But all the code examples were in Java. I was disappoint :P
(Also, fuck Uncle Bob. I really don't consider him an authority on airplane safety, or much anything else, other than Java and design pattenrs)
@FredOverflow We use Agile. That doesn't mean you should be fucking about with minute interface changes every 5 minutes!
@Borgleader You can do TDD in C++. TDD is not language-dependent (although managed languages do make it easier indeed).
@Borgleader not really
13:02
there is a cool book about TDD and working with legacy code in C++
forgot the title though ;000
I've read "Modern C++ with TDD"
it's not bad - although the author's style is questionable at times
oh yeah, it's this one
but that's not relevant to TDD
@BartoszKP Do you mean "Working effectively with legacy code"?
@FredOverflow no, the one Andy mentioned
13:03
you can also write haskell and have one unit test - does it compile? :P
@AndyProwl Java sucks. He's supposed to be a software guru. His book is full of Java -> I was disappoint. (How many fallacies is that?) P.S: I'm mildly serious, I hate Java so I was disappointed that he chose that language to illustrate his points.
@Borgleader What's wrong with Java? ;)
@Borgleader yeah, I also didn't like all the Java details. But when I abstracted from them and tried not to notice it was all right : )
@Borgleader I agree, Java sucks. And that book is probably old (~2003 if it is the one I'm thinking of)
I'm referring to Clean Code
13:04
Oh, I liked that book.
I don't see nothing wrong in illustrating design in java
I work with health care stuff, and TDD, or sane software design in any form is certainly not a requirement in this industry. It is barely tolerated, if you're lucky and your auditor is a generous soul, but really, the rules (all in the name of safety) pretty much point towards waterfall and upfront design. And I'm willing to bet it's much the same in aviation.
just remember your language will allow you to write 10x shorter code
the people writing the safety regulation are, almost by definition, not software engineers
13:05
@jalf That's sad
7 mins ago, by BartoszKP
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.
Like I said, if you want to feel safe, ensure you know nothing about how the device you're entrusting with your life is build, maintained or operated. :)
@jalf True. That's precisely one of the points Uncle Bob addresses in the video I linked :)
(saying pretty much what you just wrote)
But the video is 37 minutes looooonnnngggg :(
I know, but it's worth it
13:08
eh
'morning all
morning
I think he's overrated
he's just right most of the time ;0
13:11
bonjour
@Purrformance bon matin
@Borgleader lol @ quotation marks
yeah, idk whats up with those
@Borgleader smells of curry
pizza arrived, the movie you were talking about (primer) downloaded - see you later ;0
Xeo
Xeo
13:17
ugh, I also want some pizza :(
?(
CAPTAIN HOOK
@BartoszKP good luck
Why would copying a class that has a reference member be disallowed
@Purrformance It would not
@Purrformance Assignment is problematic, though...
@Purrformance You tell us? :p
13:20
anyone has any experience setting gh-pages as a submodule?
this guy's way gist.github.com/evanmoran/4747135 seems to copy the whole repository into itself
I'm stupid
user3010322
@Purrformance MyStruct& woof = mystructvector[0]; woof = mystructvector[1]; // ruh roh
@ThePhD Yeah, you can't (copy) assign, but you can copy construct. :)
user3010322
Copy construction might work just fine. Copy assignment would never work because of how a reference's syntax interacts with other references.
user3010322
Yeah, what @jalf said.
user3010322
13:24
Of course, this isn't good enough for std::vector, which demands copy assignment and copy construction, so.
@MartinJames lol, have some cherry pie before getting paid to work
user3010322
vOv
user3010322
IMHO I see it as a hole in C++'s syntax.
user3010322
There should be a way to exchange references, but not what they refer to.
@ThePhD it's not syntax
Xeo
Xeo
13:24
@ThePhD "never" is wrong. You can make it work, depending on your semantics
@ThePhD that would effectively turn them into pointers
Xeo
Xeo
i.e., if the reference is internal and points to another member, you can have a copy-assign operator
The entire purpose of references in C++ is to make them not be objects
13:25
v
user3010322
>
@MartinJames ... I find that funny due to juvenile interests and ... alternate names...
there, happy now?
good enough
user3010322
<3
@thecoshman Er.. no - I want actual pastry with cherries baked inside:)
user3010322
13:27
@jalf I would not mind that, because then they could be used as out parameters more effectively.
@MartinJames yes quite... turns out once you actually read what some stuff can do, and how much work it can take, you kind of don't think it is worth it any more.
fatal: git-write-tree: error building trees
Cannot save the current index state
uh oh
Saving Private Index
@ThePhD you do realize that the language actually has pointers already, yes? ;)
@thecoshman :)
user3010322
13:28
@jalf Ugly syntax. . or bust!
@ThePhD "I'll cry if I won't get the syntax I want"
Yes, let's replace arbitrary syntax with .
@MartinJames ¬_¬ yes... well.
seriously, if you don't like language syntax why are you still using it
int main() { return 0. }
user3010322
13:29
It's the only language I know well enough to do the things I want to do?
user3010322
Not particularly thrilled about hacking compute shaders into Haskell.
@ThePhD learn another language
@ThePhD compute shaders are DSLs, running on GPU. How is that related?
Oh wait, maybe you want to parse the shaders, in which aspect Haskell will shine again.
user3010322
My code has to talk to the GPU. I don't know what the state of Haskell DirectX or Haskell GL is.
user3010322
Last I recall they were sort of primtive, with the former not even existing.
@ThePhD so what? just continue using a hammer to cut down trees?
13:31
@ThePhD because you're a kind of person that will spend a year hacking custom solutions instead of spending an hour on googling
that's not a compliment.
@BartekBanachewicz says who
@Purrformance I'm an avid reader.
and wheel architect
All of my projects started because there was no available replacement
@Purrformance vOV he clearly just stole the idea from the cheese makers
13:32
I mean, library projects
hey guys I actually did something, can I be a real programmer now?
@Crowz do you hate everything?
I've always hated everything! :D
have you prayed to the Goddess of Hacking & Good Coding lately?
user3010322
13:36
@BartekBanachewicz vOv Haskell for D3DX9 is about the only thing that's there, and not completely ported. DX11, there doesn't seem to be much of anything.
if not, then your program luck would run low
@Crowz vOv fuck it then, what do I care if you are a programmer too
0
A: C++ interface inheritance

David HeffernanThe problem is that the types of a virtual method, both parameters and return type, are determined by the base class declaration that introduces the method. You cannot change these types in a derived class as you attempt to do. So you need the overridden method to return IB.

is this correct?
@ThePhD Also I didn't say it has to be Haskell.
is there such a thing as "texture maps"? This might sound really stupid
13:37
@Crowz texture mapping is the most basic mapping
user3010322
Graphics Programming has very few language in which I can actually do stuff. Those are C++, C#, and Java. Of the three, I know C++ best. So I'm going to work in C++. I don't see why this has to be a problem.
I thought applying a basic bitmap image or something was the most basic mapping
@Crowz yes...
@ThePhD Repeat after me: there are no references.
@Crowz oh right, you are confused.
user3010322
13:38
@R.MartinhoFernandes ;~; But.... but they're so useful!
@ThePhD you could also learn another language. It's not a problem per se, it's a problem with fucked-up attitude. Also C# is way easier than C++.
So what do you use pointers for in modern C++ (pointer arithmetic aside)
Exchanging references does not make sense, because they are not objects.
@Purrformance embedded?
@BartekBanachewicz Embedded aside too
13:39
texture mapping is just applying a 'texture' to a triangle. That 'texture' can mean anything, bumps, colouration, shininess, how much fur to add in a geometry shader.
Yeah keep in mind I am terrible at graphics programming... I made a rotating Earth (by applying a jpg texture to the sphere) but it looks too... flat. I want to apply something LIKE that texture but for it to also extrude and stuff on the sphere
@thecoshman well
@Crowz Bump map!
user3010322
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah, but there should be some kind of mechanism for it anyways. :c
@thecoshman can it be a pony?
13:39
@Crowz define extrude
how awesome is this? Guess who's editing a PHP file!
user3010322
I know they're transient non-objects, but I wooould like to be able to make them "refer" to different things without having to create a new variable.
@ThePhD For what? What part of "does not make sense" did you not understand?
@BartekBanachewicz like I want the Himalayans to look like... actual mountains, not just a flat phong lit surface
@ThePhD They're not transient.
13:40
@Crowz if you want to just making it look bumpy, but still be flat, a bump map can be used. You probably want a geometry shader though that can actually add the additional mesh data to make those hills stick out.
They are not.
@Crowz how close are you getting?
@Crowz so you need actual mesh modifications/tesselation. Or if you really only want to see the sides of mountains shaded, a bump/parallax map
user3010322
@R.MartinhoFernandes =[ Okay, okay...
yeah, bump mapping looks like what I am after... I need a book on this stuff or some really comprehensive noob guide but all of them seem either too simple or too advanced
13:41
@Crowz if you're using openGL, orange book is decent.
@Crowz again, how close are you actually getting though?
@Crowz For bump mapping you only really need basic vector math.
@Crowz It's very simple
@BartekBanachewicz WebGL and the Three.js wrapper... I always prefer working in web browsers whenever possible cause they do so much for you
what's up?
13:42
ohi tony
@Crowz I'd throw three.js away until you actually learn the thing. Steeper curve, but gives you much better understanding.
@Purrformance your ass ಠ_ಠ
@thecoshman just kinda hacking through the Three.js API and messing around, seeing what works
@Crowz do you really want to learn low level graphics shit though?
@Crowz oh right, well then try using a bump map, actually see what it does. Try a geometry shader, try them both together etc etc etc
@thecoshman nope. My goal is to be able to use 3D graphics integrated within my website. Tbh I'm not gonna be any REAL graphics programming, and I am pathetically bad at math so that doesn't help
13:45
when 'm' is changed to 'd', monkey becomes donkey!
@Crowz if you don't want to get into graphics programming, don't :P
it's a serious rabbit hole, find something that can wrap that all away from you.
Hmmm.
std::setprecision changes the number of decimal places.
That's why I am using Three.js, it's very basic and understandable imo. Wraps all the uglier WebGL parts
What bullshit.
How do I change the number of significant digits?
@R.MartinhoFernandes std::setsignificantdigits?
13:46
divided by 100 I assume
WebGL isn't that ugly
@Crowz I don't know what it presents to you, but I'd try to keep it as high level as you can. (insert zelda quote)
@BartekBanachewicz it's definitely not terrible but I feel like I have to repeat myself way too much and doing the matrices every time is kind of a pain imo
@Crowz graphics programing for you :P

Software Developer (Functional Programming) - London

Jane Street

Jane Street is looking to hire great software developers with an interest in functional programming. OCaml, a…

Posted on Careers 2.0 on May 1, 2013

heh
13:48
OOOOO
where do I apply
I mean, I'd rather do planet.position.y += .01 rather than a whole matrix to do the same thing
@Crowz nobody is telling you you can't abstract things
what's required is the internals of position.y += 0.01
or rather, recommended
@Crowz you should be able to... you just don't have shit abstracted enough :P
ah I saw that before actually
13:50
> The next great idea will come from you
this link doesn't work here :/
No it wont and I hate that kind of bullshit
@Purrformance that is a great idea!
Hey Purrformance
Hey Tonee
13:50
How you been?
Purrfectly fine and you?
I'm alright
> We are a global liquidity provider and market maker, trading mostly products that are listed on exchanges.
Oh, got it.
> Sets the floatfield of the stream str to zero, as if by calling str.unsetf(std::ios_base::floatfield). This enables the default floating-point formatting, which is different from fixed and scientific.
@TonyTheLion do you think I should apply?
13:51
Awesome.
@BartekBanachewicz If you fancy functional programming job, why not?
The worst thing that can happen is you get no response or rejected
Xeo
Xeo
should probably look at ocaml first
At least then you tried
> Winternship
what the fuck
@Purrformance hehe
13:52
@Xeo yes, good idea
@TonyTheLion I think the worst thing would be if I got hired.
I would have to move then :S
cause you don't want to move here?
lol
Also what about my education...
Xeo
Xeo
13:53
then don't apply vOv
There'll be another pole on Jane Stree
use Xeo's logic
okay, okay. :F
:F for :Functional:?
I'm going to see a presentation on our new top secret tech
bb in an hour or so.
Really, my final goal in WebGL is to be able to make a scene in Maya that can somehow import into a browser, and make individual components somewhat interactive... like you click something and it does some action
Xeo
Xeo
robot fighting the streams?
Is it possible to print floats with trailing zeros with iostreams?
damn, I was just about to be snarky about implementing your own formatting function.
13:54
std::printfloatswithtrailingzeroeswithiostreams should do it
3
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes I think so
@Xeo Go on.
@DeadMG What do you mean? Give me flak for doing it or for not doing it?
Xeo
Xeo
Nothing to go on with. I don't know the manip :p
@Xeo There isn't one!
no, suggest it, when you clearly meant "using Standard functions".
13:56
@Crowz use Unity3D vOv nearly all of that boring shit is done for you.
@DeadMG I would, but formatting floats is kinda nasty.
Fair enough, it would require a plugin to run in browser, but close enogh
Xeo
Xeo
just sprintf it!
Yay sprintf!
@R.MartinhoFernandes flak either way vOv
13:57
Heh, derivation of Flak: [German, from Fl(ieger)a(bwehr)k(anone), aircraft-defense gun.]
@TonyTheLion marathonf for long streams
@StackedCrooked lol
That does the "digits past the decimal point" bullshit.
@TonyTheLion oh, QI
13:58
I want to print n significant digits, no scientific notation, trailing zeros.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Ask on SO! :)
(i.e. example above should be 0.950, 9.50)
@R.MartinhoFernandes that might require some (custom) function to do
@thecoshman QI?

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