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00:00
@LightnessRacesinOrbit are you? If not, apply boolean logic
I do not ascribe to the principle of the excluded middle
@LightnessRacesinOrbit starred it just to irritate you
wait
@DeadMG Didn't irritate me but okay
00:00
:lol:
worth a shot
OMG it works
is sehe's "are you? ..." message starred or not?
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Is that the greek there is a statement not true nor false?
this statement is false.
00:02
True
I'll go with true
The excluded third is the form I've heard it in.
user $ do
    traversed.position.(element 0) %= change
@DeadMG In most grammars that is an assertion.
hell fucking yeah
00:03
@BartekBanachewicz and that's Haskell?
well, I'm English and it's written in English so it says what I say it says.
@Jefffrey I don't think so
@Jefffrey of course
should be position.x though. Yep, just added x = element 0, GL vectors.
@DeadMG And you say it says what?
I know . only applied to modules, what's traversed.position?
00:05
@CaptainGiraffe That's another name for it, yeah.
In logic, the law of excluded middle (or the principle of excluded middle) is the third of the three classic laws of thought. It states that for any proposition, either that proposition is true, or its negation is true. The law is also known as the law (or principle) of the excluded third, in Latin principium tertii exclusi. Yet another Latin designation for this law is tertium non datur: "no third (possibility) is given". The earliest known formulation is Aristotle's principle of non-contradiction, first proposed in On Interpretation, where he says that of two contradictory proposit...
@Jefffrey function composition :3
(and function composition, but that's not the case)
@CaptainGiraffe That I'm smarter than you.
that's exactly the case :D
00:05
what else would I make it say
@DeadMG Ok :(
I thought you had to put spaces before and after .
@Jefffrey you know, you can really write traversed.position.x += 1, for example
@Jefffrey nope.
traversed is a special Lens though, it iterates on every element of something
in this case, I have four triangles
Or, as Aristotle put it:
> But on the other hand there cannot be an intermediate between contradictories, but of one subject we must either affirm or deny any one predicate. This is clear, in the first place, if we define what the true and the false are. To say of what is that it is not, or of what is not that it is, is false, while to say of what is that it is, and of what is not that it is not, is true; so that he who says of anything that it is, or that it is not, will say either what is true or what is false
@BartekBanachewicz why would you though? I mean, isn't something like move user (Vector +1 0) better?
00:07
@LightnessRacesinOrbit I like that.
It looks too C like
@Jefffrey because it's easily composable. traversed, position and x are separate parts. In your solution we're back to C like, actually.
this is way more powerful.
Also I guess @Lightness would prefer += syntax :P
well in my case change is
 let change x = if x < 1.0 then x + 0.01
                              else x - 2.0
oh, I guess I'll trust you on that... still too newbie :P
:s/yet/still/i?
00:09
@CaptainGiraffe how did you do that?
I see no reason why imperative code shouldn't look like imperative code
@Jefffrey Magic
@BartekBanachewicz oh man that's a long article
and uses concepts I've yet to learn :(
@Jefffrey well you probably should read it in depth later, but for now you can just skim through and see how awesome Lenses are :)
@BartekBanachewicz this "x" there so bloatful
00:23
@ScarletAmaranth lol wat
I think I like

change x | x < 1.0 = x + 0.01 | otherwise = x - 2.0
> I played this game for a few hours. I enjoyed the straightforward format. There isn't a huge learning curve. The one huge thing that was lacking was control of villagers. They rarely built things when you ask them to. They will do it for the beginning buildings and then seasons go by where they do nothing. It's just a crappy game with no real direction. Not fun for casual gamers.
@Jefffrey guard syntax? yeah, it's cool.
better
Guess what score he gave?
00:25
this was some ad hoc code
Ell
Ell
5?
Out of 10
pattern matching is particularly cool
@Ell He gave it a... 0.
Ell
Ell
Wat
This game is awful 10/10
00:26
@Ell Metacritic user scores strike again.
@EtiennedeMartel Metacritic is useless.
@Borgleader I think it's a rather interesting tool to show how broken the whole game reviewing field is.
oh no somebody made a vote you disagree with the system must be broken
hmpfh, I need to find a way to fix those ambiguities
00:29
Is there anything about gaming that doesn't suck?
@LightnessRacesinOrbit There's jumping to conclusions, and then there's what you just did.
People getting mad about video games are funny
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yes, The Witcher 2 doesn't suck :D
> Gift key already used!
00:35
You're too slow then
or maybe you were too slow giving us the link
nope
I used it.
It's my link
oh xD
damnit >.> i failt at excuses
Ell
Ell
Puppy so sponge ;)
00:36
I think I need Control.Monad.Morph
it looks exactly like what I am trying to poorly do by hand
@EtiennedeMartel :D
night, kids
Ell
Ell
Night
o.o I should stream some HS... 21k viewers must get you a lot of money xD
I found this little snippet in "C++ concurrency in action". I think private class and inheritance thingy is clever.
@StackedCrooked That showss me the google homepage in a language I can't read =/
00:43
fixed!
So its a queue of type erased functors?
Why is it better than std::function? It's the same thing.
that is the simplest possible implementation of std::function, give or take.
Hm, let me check the book..
Page 277 FYI :)
" std::function requires that the stored function objects are copy-constructible. function_wrapper can handle move-only types. "
ah, so it's unique_function kind of thing.
00:48
Anyway I just thought the private class was cool.
Apparently it's because std::packaged_task is not copyable only movable. So for compatibility with that.
I'm not reading carefully though :)
And I think tbb::pipeline is way cool. Making serial things parallel is magic :P
I want a kebab
@StackedCrooked When you're done reading the book, tell me if I should buy it ;)
The chapter on memory model is good.
And that makes it worth buying.
Because good documentation is scarce.
But I also learned to make more use of unique_lock::unlock.
In the past I always messed around with {} scopes to reduce my lock scope.
00:53
more reliable
@BartekBanachewicz How high were you when you wrote this?
ha ha
01:18
> Will this technique work on IE7 and jQuery?
wut
01:33
fucking hungry
y u no eat
right, let's eat
Problem Solving 101.
I once bought a book called "Successful Problem Solving" but it turned out to be all about "core beliefs" and shit.
Didn't solve any problems.
pretty good for basics
I'm a meme now ;)
02:00
うおおお!<-- what does that mean D:
Woooooooooow
or Oooooooh
thanks!
I want to be able to block specific telephon numbers
are you serious? I need to have iOS 7 to block fucking calls? WTF
are you telling me you added that feature in 2013?
FFS Apple, wake the fuck up
Another satisfied customer :3
I'm mostly satisfied
02:11
At least OS upgrades are not that difficult
but of course I have the only phone that just happens to "not be able to support" iOS 7
do you still have to pay $10 for them?
:lol:
Mobile platforms are so bad
I thought about Windows Phone but hell, I'll probably be too lazy to actually write stuff for that crap anyway
also facebook paid 19 billion dollars or 16 billion dollars for whatsapp? everyone says a different amount
I'd look for their corporate info pages, but all the useful links are at the bottom of the page, and you can't stop infinite scroll bullshit
02:15
Windows Phone uses C# and WPF :(
yeah it's fucking annoying sometimes
Yes, that's why it's way better than Android or iOS
yeah
Still shit, but better
tried some android yesterday, pretty terrible experience all around
02:15
The most annoying thing is that it requires Win8 to develop for no fucking reason
marketing
^ that's the reason, right there
Also, I wonder now, can you replace the call app on Android? I never tried
yeah
Google Voice does it
well, bedtime
night
@Rapptz And it was worse
They keep improving, but it doesn't really do much, shit's fundamentally fucked
02:20
my Android Studio took up 1.2 GB of RAM on my small Hello World project
Eh, that's all IDEs all the time
It doesn't really grow that much for larger projects
And IDEA is way fucking better at everything than Eclipse was
I guess I'm spoiled by using my text editor 24/7.
never takes up more than like 20 MB :/
Buy more RAM, stop paying attention
the whole thing felt pretty miserable to me, kind of surprised I liked Microsoft more by the end of it all
Xcode manages to be more annoying than Eclipse somehow, though
02:22
Xcode is terrible =/ surprisingly so even
I'm so glad I've never had to use it in my life.
Default key bindings for both OSX and Xcode are downright retarded
Like Page Down takes the screen page down, but not the cursor
So then you press anything and go back to where you were
And it's so stupid it's hard to remember it actually is a thing
I also managed to crash Xcode on quite a few occasions, sometimes 5 min apart
Esp if you only thankfully use OSX/Xcode occasionally
I had more examples but I forgot what they were, and I'm happy about that
Store upload is shit, too
It fails for flimsiest reason and then you have to bump the version up and rebuild and then you can try again
iOS development is easily worse than Android
And Android dev experience is horrendous
Want to test payment processing? HAHA NOPE CREDIT CARD PLEASE
Accelerometer? Can't emulate that, nope, never, too hard
And I'd still rather deal with that than deal with OSX and Apple in general
That doesn't use the <string> library right? Because I can't use that — Matt Ray 15 secs ago
oh ffs
02:29
Aww, you still try to answer stupid homework garbage
Commented
app development in general seems miserable
It's worse than web if you can imagine that
Trying to make an income from app store seems like a gamble.
You invest your time, but you have no clue if it will sell.
And also the market is oversaturated with shit
Even more so than anywhere else
You definitely need to put a lot of effort into marketing
02:42
that's what bird apps are for
Flappy.
I know someone who is good at it. His personal high score is 10 points.
that's bad-ass, I can do 2
@StackedCrooked seen the latest Kill la kill btw? that shit's getting really interesting / cc @Xeo
Not yet.
what are you doing with your life?! :)
living it apparently
03:02
I'm consuming it.
> Similar to boost::variant, but has no space overhead over a raw pointer, as it relies on the fact that (on x86_64) there are 16 unused bits in a pointer.
o so bold
03:17
@StackedCrooked bold or just stupid :P
03:35
I thought about trying monotone out for something but it doesn't look very active
@Borgleader Yeah, such a minor benefit compared against the future troubles.
OVERHEAD
so funny
03:56
> A really, really small spinlock for fine-grained locking of lots of teeny-tiny data.
04:06
Folly contains a bunch of useful stuff.
Elf and Dwarf parsers!
> Folly is an open-source C++ library developed and used at Facebook.
This is what every useful short description needs: a language and place of origin
It's kinda crazy that they put this online. It's kinda messy and full of random little utils. It really feels like I'm looking at non-public code.
It doesn't hurt them to put this online, they're bound to get shitton of contributions for free
> It complements (as opposed to competing against) offerings such as Boost and of course std.
And then fbstring
And COW :allears:
04:19
COW? Where?
huh, lol
Manual partial unrolling
I'm disappointed Duff's device isn't here
Also crazy inconsistent naming scheme
malloc, malloc everywhere
it was one of their selling points
what's wrong with malloc..?
not type safe, can only be used with free
apart from the slowness in concurrent situ
There MPMCPipeline class has a clever application of pass-key idiom.
Also templated on char type for whatever the fuck reason, let's just duplicate stupid crap std::string does
> FBString. @author: Andrei Alexandrescu (aalexandre)
:)
He doesn't care about C++ anymore :P
sizeof(size_t) == 4 ? 0xC0000000 : 0xC000000000000000
Fixed size integrals for constants are too hard
Ahaha because they store it in capacity, of course
I wanted to say that at least it doesn't do stupid implicit converts, but it does
04:29
idgi
they use namespace folly
but still prefix things with fb
They have a define to switch it to namespace std :v
FBString? Facebook String? As in, "halp my accnt hacked! XXX post on boyfriend's wall..."
I can imagine how it is actually used in their codebase
@CatPlusPlus lol that's awful
using namespace std;
Also, err |= __ios_base::eofbit;
Touching private implementation of stdlib :allears:
Shitton of reserved identifiers in this thing
#undef throw
Haha
04:32
Alexandrescu's secret is that he always wanted to be a standard library implementer.
He's just expressing it in folly.
They have benchmarking thing
under dependencies it doesn't list boost but they use it a lot
{ 1E-6, "u" }, // micro CRIME cc @R.MartinhoFernandes
oh wait I see it
They have FBString.h and String.h
04:34
Folly: Facebook Open-source LibrarY
where'd the second L come from?
To make it sound better
I wonder what folly means
> lack of good sense; foolishness.
String.h duplicates string algos from Boost
They also have FBVector
and SPOOKYHASH.
With more unrolling and still no Duff (and even weirder naming conventions)
void M_deallocate
It's like someone looked at stdlib but decided they don't want _ in front :allears:
04:38
//
    // Init: initialize the context of a SpookyHash
    //
    void Init(
        uint64_t seed1, // any 64-bit value will do, including 0
        uint64_t seed2); // different seeds produce independent hashes
man.
Overload? Nah append _a
Ahaha seriously every fucking member has capital letter at the start
they have Init but not Deinit
I guess that's good
D_uninitialized_fill_n_a
they use something called jemalloc
> jemalloc is a general purpose malloc(3) implementation that emphasizes fragmentation avoidance and scalable concurrency support. jemalloc first came into use as the FreeBSD libc allocator in 2005, and since then it has found its way into numerous applications that rely on its predictable behavior. In 2010 jemalloc development efforts broadened to include developer support features such as heap profiling, Valgrind integration, and extensive monitoring/tuning hooks.
// data
pointer b_, e_, z_;
b_, a_, d_
04:41
inconsistent horrible variable names
dunno if you've worked at many C++ shops. but if you think this is bad...
then you should probably consider self-employment :P
You shouldn't accept this nonsense.
I'd rather starve than work at C++ shop
TIL about lz4.
They're meh, really
Who cares about speed when you can compress shit into a black hole with PAQ
:v
04:52
They don't seem to support streaming yet.
@StackedCrooked the compression algo?
PAQ will never cease to amaze me
> PAQ is free software distributed under the GNU General Public License.
Alright, sudo port install paq8
04:54
It will take days to compress anything, and eat all your RAM in the process, but at the end you'll be able to distribute your DVDs on floppy disks
lel
I'll keep using 7zip thanks
Why doesn't paq use multiple cores?
maybe it cant D:
It's streaming algo afair
Streaming compressors don't parallelise very well
Also why LZMA is not multicore
05:02
~topical commentary~
I wanted to do a comparison between LZMA and PAQ, but I fucked up the setting, the video I compressed is 230MB and only went down by 400kb with LZMA =/
Videos are already compressed dummy
should have compressed Boost instead
but but :(
Well I already know how big a boost distro is with LZMA cuz they provide it themselves.
and it's pretty good
05:06
PAQ is not very useful, but it will probably win against LZMA every time
It includes models for specific things and does crazy stuff
cargo cult programming
youtube got a new look (again)
except this time it's actually good
Someone answered my question on SU, but it wasn't Carmack. Bummer
miracles only happen once
Carm...iracle xD
@CatPlusPlus I see you werent kidding when you said PAQ was slow.
It has to compute 1 billion digits of pi to prepare.
05:49
Ooh, folly has a nextPowTwo function.
@StackedCrooked revolutionary! :)
I've often wanted that but I never bothered to implement it.
It would be dead-easy of-course but the fact that my solution would not be optimal discouraged me.
need for purrformance
06:07
Listening to the Sabbath Bloody Sabbath album.
It's fun.
@ScarletAmaranth Btw, you might want to add Golden Time to your list. It's an fun but also weird yet fascinating series.
mm, drama / romantic comedy
i'll give it a bash though, thanks for the tip
> My only regret is not to have produced any code of my own to prove that the access patterns I recommend are actually the best.
why would anyone visit reddit to read about programming ^^
that's like going to 4chan for relationship advice
programming is big on reddit
mmm, maybe I've been misinformed!
06:19
Also STL, Alexandrescu, Walter Bright are active on reddit.
are they? interesting, what subreddits are worth taking a look at? "programming"?
I frequently check /r/programming and /r/cpp.
I don't really follow any other programming reddits.
alrighty, thanks
06:32
morning
Hi, @ScarletAmaranth
06:49
@StackedCrooked lol
@R.MartinhoFernandes I added my entry.
So... GCC 4.8 optimizes FMA better than VS2012 and VS2013.
Not unexpected... Because VS is being stupid...

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