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14:00
@R.MartinhoFernandes what? what do you mean by significant digits? because you just multiplied by ten for no reason...
oh, looked at sample
I think I need to offset my earth to a 23.5 degree axis but I have no clue how that would even be achieved in 3D graphics
@Crowz ¬_¬ of course it can
simple rotation
rotate it when it's still at the origin before you move it, duh
@Crowz You should read a book
14:02
@Crowz rotation.z = 23.5?
@BartekBanachewicz degrees
@R.MartinhoFernandes another problem, printf truncates, not rounds. see
@thecoshman See! THIS is why C sucks! :P
now the planet is sideways D: I just don't see how to translate degrees/radians from whatever unit is being used right now
They use radians
14:03
@Borgleader o_0 whoah there mr hostile
@Crowz Two pies of radians is 360°C
@Crowz abstraction abstraction abstraction
@thecoshman :P --> I'm joking
@Purrformance Tau ¬_¬
Fuck Tau
2
14:04
@Purrformance that... actually explains a lot, thank you
ITT Crowz is becoming ThePhD
Its spreading vOv
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes btw, what's exactly wrong with fixed?
Same thing for the "vOv"
vOvitis
Cat Plus Plus-itis
14:06
@Xeo That it can't move.
mmmm vovitis
@thecoshman i-is that a bad thing? ._.
yes
ThePhD is a master of invoking UB
@Crowz It's a been a pleasure working with you Holmes.
on purpose
user3010322
14:06
It's very bad.
user3010322
Your fingernails will grow black and fall out.
@thecoshman Wrong. Terrible example.
user3010322
Your hair will turn wiry and thin.
That's rounded.
@Xeo It doesn't use precision as significant digits.
Rounding a numerical value means replacing it by another value that is approximately equal but has a shorter, simpler, or more explicit representation; for example, replacing £23.4476 with £23.45, or the fraction 312/937 with 1/3, or the expression √2 with 1.414. Rounding is often done on purpose to obtain a value that is easier to write and handle than the original. It may be done also to indicate the accuracy of a computed number; for example, a quantity that was computed as 123,456 but is known to be accurate only to within a few hundred units is better stated as "about 123,500." On ...
(It's a link to a section)
14:09
@R.MartinhoFernandes ah... I learnt it as always up...
@R.MartinhoFernandes Do you have example behaviour of say, std::cout not doing what you want wrt trailing zeros and what not?
Gonna post a question.
@thecoshman There's all sorts of methods, each with different properties.
@R.MartinhoFernandes so it seems.
> The lightning came down the chimney into the bedroom of a 15-year-old girl.
pervert lightning (dutch)
@R.MartinhoFernandes well, for my view of rounding, it is wrong :P
14:11
@Borgleader See above. For n=3, 0.95 should print "0.950", and 9.5 should print "9.50". 123.4 Should print "123" (I don't mind the dot or not much)
@thecoshman Well, next time you'll know not to use a corner case to check if something rounds or truncates :P
@R.MartinhoFernandes what? no, if I didn't use that corner case, I would not have learnt that rounding is not always 'always up'.
@Purrformance to hell with radians
@BartekBanachewicz ?
@Purrformance what more do you nee to say :P
14:14
perhaps he wants a monad context
Let's use gradians.
2
A: Formatting n significant digits in C++ without scientific notation

BathshebaThe best way I know (and use it in my own code) is #include <string> #include <math.h> #include <sstream> #include <iomanip> int round(double number) { return (number >= 0) ? (int)(number + 0.5) : (int)(number - 0.5); } std::string format(double f, int n) { if (f == 0) { retur...

@R.MartinhoFernandes ¬_¬ stupid french
Ha, this might help.
Convoluted as fuck, though.
user1804599
I’m surprised by our amount of code coverage.
I wonder if one could make that into a manip.
Prolly not.
Looks good, thanks a lot. The whole issue is frustrating as the "significant digits" logic is clearly present in the standard library, but it's inseparable from the S.N. aspect. — PeteC Jun 20 '13 at 12:28
@Xeo this sums up my frustration quite well.
14:19
Man, I'm getting really passionate about that range-for-dumb-feature...
This is not gonna end well
@Jefffrey what?
Hello. Is here any one who knows haskell?
nope
haskell sucks
go away
@PavelStrakhov YES
@BartekBanachewicz Haters gonna hate.
14:20
shut up @Jefffrey
@BartekBanachewicz How selective of you.
go back to your corner
@R.MartinhoFernandes did he just say he dislikes range for?
@PavelStrakhov (I'm just kidding, no need to open that meta post)
@R.MartinhoFernandes hey it's true, no?
@BartekBanachewicz No
14:21
It's also true for PHP or JavaScript.
@Jefffrey I like it.
I know
Hand in your license on the way out.
@Jefffrey oh come on, writing huge for loops with function calls in them is half the fun of C++ :P
Let's say I have two functions
let test i = (i+1, i+2)
let test2 x y z = x + y + z
how can i pass two numbers from test as y and z arguments of test2?
14:22
@Jefffrey can be done with for (tie(key,value) : zip(v, numbers)), though, no?
oh wait tie suckage
@BartekBanachewicz you are planning on sinking C++ so that Haskell can rise
you monster
@BartekBanachewicz What
Are you by any chance looking just at the comments?
@doug65536 range-for loops are terse enough, no need to reduce them to (:) {auto}
2
@R.MartinhoFernandes nevermind. I can't reddit.
Xeo
Xeo
@PavelStrakhov uncurry (test2 xval) $ test i, would be one way
user1804599
14:24
94% coverage. :v
@PavelStrakhov or simpler, test2 x y z where (y,z) = test i
Real men use let.
Xeo
Xeo
@BartekBanachewicz pfff, too easy
Too many points.
14:26
@Xeo <insert mom joke>
Points are evil.
Xeo
Xeo
uncurry totally needs an infix operator
test2 x `uncurry` test i
thank you
@Xeo citing Epigram report, your code is cleverly dreadful rather than dreadfully clever :P
@Xeo (test2??) x $ test i
14:29
whaat
@R.MartinhoFernandes did you end up posting a question?
We need abovefix operators.
@BartekBanachewicz Abusing sections to make unary operators.
@PavelStrakhov no problem. Drop by anytime.
oh god Community was hilarious this week
@LightnessRacesinOrbit it's still ongoing?
14:30
Though wait.
I thought they cancelled it
It'd be ((test 2 x)??) $ test i
@LightnessRacesinOrbit huh?
@Jefffrey It was at risk of cancellation, but then Dan Harmon came back
14:31
@TonyTheLion huh? huh?
user1804599
Excluding integration tests.
WTF
Community doesn't onebox.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit is it worth it?
14:32
lol
@LightnessRacesinOrbit what are you referring to?
@TonyTheLion tv show
@R.MartinhoFernandes probably because the - fucks the regex up
@Jefffrey oh
I see
I thought he was referring to the bot on SO
@TonyTheLion The TV show known as "Community".
@Jefffrey Yes.
I'll watch it then
14:34
@LightnessRacesinOrbit So there are TV shows racing in orbit?
@TonyTheLion sure
Great.
libstdc++ doesn't have std::defaultfloat nor std::floatfield.
Oh wait.
It's std::ios::floatfield
Fucking streams piece of shit.
2
@R.MartinhoFernandes starred for emphasis :p
I don't have anything against streams yet, but I'm joining the rage for the funzies
it's always fun to hate something together
14:38
@R.MartinhoFernandes C'mon they're not so bad
Of all the bad things one could point about iostreams, I think "stateful, completely ad hoc formatting features" has overcome "hey, I could do this if I extended it by writ--nevermind" as the most annoying in my view.
inb4 fascist
tracert 216.81.59.173
^do that
I know what it does, but just for your pleasure.
$ tracert 216.81.59.173
No command 'tracert' found, did you mean:
 Command 'tracer' from package 'pvm-dev' (universe)
 Command 'tracert6' from package 'ndisc6' (universe)
tracert: command not found
$
traceroute
14:41
I know, but then I'd get my pedantry license revoked.
they spent time setting host names to say some star wars stuff? must be nice
user3010322
Pedantry is boring anyways. :D
@doug65536 the routing too
@ThePhD Some people here love it.
Robots were built for pedantry
14:43
... by humans. Just saying.
@ThePhD I think you really mean "Pedantry is boring in any case."
:-)
Pedantry is a geek hobby like any other.
@R.MartinhoFernandes lol
@JerryCoffin lol :)
You guys are being pedantric about pedantry...
14:44
@JerryCoffin lol (thanks @ScarletAmaranth for making me get it)
@ALOToverflow We're the best there is.
@R.MartinhoFernandes clearly not on my level :)
pedants gotta pedant!
I'd like to call myself a "pedantrier". Gives it a more sophisticated sound, especially if you say it as a French word.
14:45
Yo Lightness
how do you call a pedalo practitioner?
pedaloer?
14:46
that was fast
@TonyTheLion Woah, chill, dude.
a knob
@TonyTheLion not okay
@user3123545 Hi.
Simple question: Should you use a method to get a variable off your parent class? eg super.getVar() instead of super.var?
user3010322
I'll make that an object in my game.
14:47
@ThePhD What?
flagging is also not cool
@user3123545 Yes. Only way to make use of polymorphism. That's not to say that you should always prefer getters over direct member data access, though!
That's not a simple question :S
user3010322
If you correct enough people or do enough things of a pedantic nature, you'll get the Pendant of Pedanticism.
@ThePhD s/pendantic/pedantic/
Am I doing it right?
user3010322
@R.MartinhoFernandes We have our first winner. \o/
s/out/— I'll stop now.
user3010322
FML.
Not sure why I haven't been using that compose key.
s/t f/r f/
14:49
@LightnessRacesinOrbit What if the variables are protected? should I still use getters?
@user3123545 If you want to, sure. Do whatever makes you happy.
@user3123545 according to Bjarne members variables should always be private (or sometimes public, but never protected).
This prevents subclasses from causing inconsistent states.
@StackedCrooked that's what i looked for, ty
I think my rule is better. Happiness trumps inconsistency
@jalf But bad code design doesn't bring me happiness :(
14:52
@R.MartinhoFernandes What did you map it to?
@StackedCrooked inconsistent states are half the fun of C++
But the badness of your code does not depend on whether or not you use getters
@LucDanton Scroll Lock. I'd rather have something closer, but I don't have many useless things around.
by get your private members protected, you & your children will never get wrongly violated
Especially at home, where there's only one Win key and no "right-click" key.
14:54
Same. Well, I suppose I have ‘menu’ available.
why why why C++ always sounds so dirty
I want a keyboard that’s programmable in the firmware though.
Good luck with that.
@LucDanton build one
14:56
I wonder how hard that'd be.
@R.MartinhoFernandes It’s not too uncommon these days.
@TonyTheLion No, neither do I.
@LucDanton You mean, on sale?
Yes I’m not too keen on building one.
Interesting. Link?
14:58
What is the name again for things like int n:2;
I've been thinking of badgering one of the guys at work to help me build one.
huh? gcov is a profiling tool?
Are you going to get mad if it’s a mechanical one for enthusiasts, priced like it? :Þ
@StackedCrooked bitfields?
@LucDanton link first, mad later
14:58
@LucDanton No, just means I probably won't buy it.
@ScarletAmaranth right, thanks
@R.MartinhoFernandes The open hardware thingy one?
@StackedCrooked that's another thing I've never used :)
Maybe print some keys meself. If I'm going for control I might as well go all the way :D

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