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15:00
@sudorm-rfTelkitty Shouldn’t that be [sudo] kill -9 $(pgrep DeadMG)?
so does GLTF, maybe it will work better than Collada
user1804599
@BartekBanachewicz what is wrong with the second one?
@centurian: s/you were expected a 'logicaly' result of false/you didn't bother to read any documentation, and instead sat content with your false assumptions/Lightness Races in Orbit 35 secs ago
find(this->chat.begin(), this->chat.end(), "C++")
user1804599
15:01
@Lundin ok.
@Lundin ugh where are the ranges. Why are you using this->
find(chat, "C++");
user1804599
@BartekBanachewicz The first pair of arguments is the range, fool.
user1804599
Are you blind?
> pair of arguments
sec, lemme
HWND WINAPI CreateWindow(
  _In_opt_  LPCTSTR lpClassName,
  _In_opt_  LPCTSTR lpWindowName,
  _In_      DWORD dwStyle,
  _In_      int x,
  _In_      int y,
  _In_      int nWidth,
  _In_      int nHeight,
  _In_opt_  HWND hWndParent,
  _In_opt_  HMENU hMenu,
  _In_opt_  HINSTANCE hInstance,
  _In_opt_  LPVOID lpParam
);
great API
user1804599
No, that's a terrible API.
15:03
@rightfold look, a pair of 6th and 7th arguments is the size!
user1804599
Yes, but that's not the reason it's terrible.
it's one of the reasons alright
even funnier because COORD is defined in WinAPI and they could use it
@Bartek Because chat was declared as vector<random_crap> chat;
:)
user1804599
Eww.
15:04
&&
user1804599
random_crap is a terrible name for a data type.
@KonradRudolph Just killall.
Xeo
Xeo
would be funny if variadic expansion didn't have a defined order
user1804599
It would be terrible.
@ScarletAmaranth she entered some kind self-protection mode, I think..?
15:07
@StackedCrooked she saw the video imho
which video?
user1804599
The video.
the one while he was panicking or the one he asked to record
well, Banri's talk was probably recorded on accident
yeah
ah, that one
btw, did you know that tada also means merely in English?
you might know this if you watch lots of anime
His name, Tada Barni, is kinda depressing :P
15:10
@StackedCrooked It does?
I am lost in the technical platform names
AFAIK "tada" is like "voilà"
I don't know the official translation, but the word is often used.
15:11
what the fuck is Merrifield
@R.MartinhoFernandes lol
You meant "tada" in Japanese.
@StackedCrooked mmm, yeah, now taht you mention it tho! didn't realize :)
that's kinda funny
15:11
> Atom Z3480 (Tangier, platform Merrifield)
I'm Tada Banri
ah wait
> Intel will be launching its new Smartphone architecture 'Intel Merrifield' fully compatible with Android. The Architecture will be based on 22 nm fabrication process and will launch in Q1 2014. It will be followed by its 14 nm refresh Moorefield in Q4 2014.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Oh, I should not have used the word "also" there.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Tadaa! is universal language :P
@StackedCrooked So is "voilà"!
15:14
Is using __Uppercase identifiers allowed in freestanding environments?
user1804599
( . Y . )ԅ(‾⌣‾ԅ)
@R.MartinhoFernandes sigh
I think tadaa is not really a word, but an imitation of the sound that often accompanies acrobatic stunts in circuses etc.
Double underscores nowhere.
15:15
@R.MartinhoFernandes wait even __lowercase?
It's reserved for the implementation, always
An onomatopoeia (sometimes written as onomatopœia) (, from the Greek ὀνοματοποιία; ὄνομα for "name" and ποιέω for "I make", adjectival form: "onomatopoeic" or "onomatopoetic") is a word that phonetically imitates or suggests the source of the sound that it describes. Onomatopoeia (as an uncountable noun) refers to the property of such words. Common occurrences of onomatopoeias include animal noises such as "oink", "meow", "roar" or "chirp". Onomatopoeias are not the same across all languages; they conform to some extent to the broader linguistic system they are part of; hence the sound of...
> An onomatopoeia (...) is a word (...)
@CatPlusPlus do triple underscores count as double underscores?
what about 4 underscores?
15:16
@StackedCrooked No.
But they have double underscores in them.
@R.MartinhoFernandes not sure if 'tadaa' is a word in the first place though... but ta-dah is
@thecoshman Can you read?
> An onomatopoeia (...) is a word (...)
_________________________________________StackedCrooked_______MAX_INT
^ this should be allowed
The difference in documentation between vswprintf() and vsnprintf is confusing me. Does vswprintf() actually act as like vsnprintf() or is there a difference (beside the obvious char vs wchar_tdifference)?
Here, you can use this helpful Python function to determine if identifier is reserved
is_reserved = lambda s: '__' in s or (s[0] == '_' and s[1].isupper())
15:18
@R.MartinhoFernandes ... they still have to be words.
@thecoshman What?
user1804599
@CatPlusPlus Meh, a lambda for that.
user1804599
Just use def.
wait really no double underscores ever
my world has collapsed
Even though onomatopoeia are words, they are only words if they are words?
15:19
@BartekBanachewicz like double references :)
@thecoshman It's not not-a-word just because it's not in a dictionary hth
I have to review all of my code again
@DeadMG Do you do crack that you could have been on it? Or is amnesia one of crack use effects?
Also someone explain Trello to me
@R.MartinhoFernandes ... yes, and I was questioning if 'tadaa' is a word in the first place.
@CatPlusPlus the task board thing?
15:20
@thecoshman And I told you it is, because onomatopoeia are words.
In linguistics, a word is the smallest element that may be uttered in isolation with semantic or pragmatic content (with literal or practical meaning). This contrasts with a morpheme, which is the smallest unit of meaning but will not necessarily stand on its own. A word may consist of a single morpheme (for example: oh!, rock, red, quick, run, expect), or several (rocks, redness, quickly, running, expected), whereas a morpheme may not be able to stand on its own as a word (in the words just mentioned, these are -s, -ness, -ly, -ing, un-, -ed). A complex word will typically include a root ...
@R.MartinhoFernandes so if I take any combination of letters, if you can pronounce them, you get a word?
Note lack of "and must be contained in a dictionary" in the definition
@thecoshman That's not what I said.
@thecoshman Yes
What should be a board, what should be a list, what should be a card IT'S TOO COMPLICATED
15:22
lol and it's even UB
@CatPlusPlus I love you too.
I thought it's written as "ill-formed"
@CatPlusPlus erm... last I looked at it, you have tasks, that you put in columns on a board.
Ill-formed programs must be rejected afair
15:22
but no, they just slapped UB on it and called it a day
@CatPlusPlus it's almost like pivotal vOv
@BartekBanachewicz It's nothing like it, that's the problem :v
@CatPlusPlus ha ha MSVS
@CatPlusPlus so why is 'ing' not a word and onomatopoeia?
@thecoshman For your information: books.google.com/ngrams/…
Rejecting programs using reserved identifiers is impractical
15:23
@thecoshman No. You tell us why it is an onomatopoeia.
Not with C++ compilation model
@R.MartinhoFernandes tadaa
@CatPlusPlus -XAllowReservedIdentifiers anyone?
hey lads.
15:24
@BartekBanachewicz idgi
is there any way to add a small wait before doing another method?
@CatPlusPlus reject and allow not-rejecting via flag. aka warnings as errors vOv
I would just do a sleep on the main thread.
but that would pause my whole game.
Except there's no practical way of distinguishing between e.g. stdlib and user code
It's not about defaults
@CatPlusPlus IIRC there was some flag that made g++ treat code as stdlib code
15:25
@R.MartinhoFernandes it's a not. it's not a word in the first place. Yes it is the phonetic spelling for that noise. But 'ing' is not a thing that sounds like 'ing'. A splash sounds like 'splash', but an 'ing' is not a thing in the first place.
@BartekBanachewicz Which people also use for any system library, because you don't want to deal with warnings from system libraries
@edwoollard you mean async([] { sleep(10); f(); });? Remember about data races. You might also want to engineer your own task scheduling if it's a game.
> a word that phonetically imitates or suggests the source of the sound that it describes.
you can't have a 'tada'
'tada' isn't a thing, you would not describe something as tada
IT IS A VERY IMPORTANT THING
I'm a noob lol.
that doesn't mean too much to me.
I know it's an async task.
but it's not recognised etc.
15:27
@edwoollard then go and read up, because you'll just fuck yourself over if you don't
don't do uneducated threading TIA
okay lol.
altough....
this "async - sleep - lock - call" thing might even work
Why do you want a delay in the first place
let's call it a pattern
@thecoshman Then why did you gave it as an example of anything.
15:29
@CatPlusPlus "boss spawns after 10 seconds"
@thecoshman Many things aren't a thing and have words for them.
@thecoshman I don't see what's sooooooooooooooooooooo interesting about that. (see what I did there?)
ASLC pattern.
@BartekBanachewicz That's a terrible thing to use async for
user3010322
@CatPlusPlus I was going to say "Timer...?"
@CatPlusPlus Well it's not in say, JS.
15:30
@R.MartinhoFernandes because stacked brought it up, and I questioned it even being a word in the first place.
it's also conceptually simple
@thecoshman Stacked didn't bring up "ing".
It's also extremely easy to turn your flow into undebuggable mess
but yeah, own timer thing here all the way
Stacked brought up "tada".
"Tadaa" is the same word.
user3010322
15:30
In the same way "sooooooooooooooooooooo" is the same word as "so".
@R.MartinhoFernandes we got swept up on what a word is in the first place.
@thecoshman Nope.
user3010322
@FredOverflow ^^^ metal batman!
Nice I think this is my first Great(tm) Java Answer! stackoverflow.com/a/687842/34509
15:31
@R.MartinhoFernandes except it's basically nevered used, ie wrong form.
@StackedCrooked I am kinda glad I didn't quit Golden Time
And I don't see how that makes "ing" any relevant.
@R.MartinhoFernandes not really, one is an accepted spelling.
@ScarletAmaranth Good :)
15:31
room topic changed to Lounge<~C++>: Taking arguing about :words: to the next level by arguing about definition of :words:. loungecpp.net [hope]
@ThePhD oh look an ibanez.
Nerds, I need some advice
nothing interesting, black RG standard tho.
@R.MartinhoFernandes what?
@CatPlusPlus do you have gifs in the upper-right corner now?
15:33
@TonyTheLion Yes, it is a word
Replicating vowels is a common mechanism for transmitting additional cues in writing that would not be needed in speech.
@BartekBanachewicz I don't have gifs, I substitute mentally
I serialized an object using XmlSerializer and then wrote that XML to a database (SQL Server), now I'm reading that back into memory into a string and from that I want to deserialize back to my object, but that fails, and doesn't throw or give me anything. Any ideas?
C# of course
It's particularly effective with onomatopoeia.
@StackedCrooked I almost quit Fate / Zero after first episode because its writers have no clue how to do exposition properly
15:33
Why are you serialising XML to the database
because that's what I was asked to do
its a way to log something
Anyway, dump the string and look at it
> NVidia off the scale in compiler performance test
well it looks fine to me
15:35
@TonyTheLion Want to bet on the date of puppy's next doctor's appointment?
@DeadMG No, because the chances that I lose are too high
I wonder what NVidia uses for their compiler backend
@DeadMG april 17
20th May.
@BartekBanachewicz "We picked up a bad scale ON PURPOSE!!111"
15:35
@DeadMG that's terrible
Seriously if something is off scale then you suck at making graphs?
you tellin me
@DeadMG that's fairly prompt compared to what you get in Slovakia
> tomorrow
is the only acceptable appointment date
@CatPlusPlus uhm, not really. The results were just so different, which hinted at some other optimization, like caching.
15:36
@R.MartinhoFernandes but that does not make 'so' and onomatopoeia, it does not describe the sound of something. Look at the examples, roar, meow, splash, crash, pop. Those words are all said close the sound they are the words for. 'shot' how ever is not, as a gun shot does not sound like that, it's more like a bang.
go to a private doctor
Or "Fiiiiiiiiiiiiine", to express exasperated resignation.
private female doctor
user1804599
Kontrust.
user1804599
Woo.
15:37
@thecoshman "roooooaaaaaaaaaaaar", "meoooooooooow"
Neeeeerds
@TonyTheLion Cost a shitload.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I think you and the point have failed to meet.
4 mins ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
Replicating vowels is a common mechanism for transmitting additional cues in writing that would not be needed in speech.
15:37
@DeadMG I know
@R.MartinhoFernandes no... because 'fine' is not a sound
3
Q: How to work around partial specialization of function template?

user1899020For example, I have a class class A { enum {N = 5}; double mVariable; template<class T, int i> void f(T& t) { g(mVariable); // call some function using mVariable. f<T, i+1>(t); // go to next loop } template<class T> void f<T, N>(T& t) {} // s...

So anyway
upvote good questions instead
user1804599
@TonyTheLion how does it "fail?"
@R.MartinhoFernandes and what has that got to do with onomatopoeias?
I really should be out starting my career and getting laid.
@thecoshman "tadaa" is just "tada" with an elongated vowel. Like all those other examples I gave.
> How do I work around the fact that I'm using C++?
@rightfold it doesn't deserialize, my object stays empty of values
15:38
instead of waiting months per consultant appointment
user1804599
FAIL.
Japanese word tada is not related to "tadaa!" though. (translate.google.com/#ja/en/…)
@EtiennedeMartel almost like my unicode
@thecoshman It has to do with the fact that adding extra vowels is a perfectly fine mechanism that you are ignoring.
World women's day today!
15:38
@TonyTheLion We can't divine your code
Sometimes extra consonants too.
user1804599
You probably don't assign the result or something.
user1804599
PEBKAC.
@R.MartinhoFernandes sure, I can accept that. It is still not the 'correct' spelling of the word. I also thought that 'tada' was perhaps not a ~real~ word in the first place, but turns out it is. Either way, it is not an onomatopoeia.
15:39
@thecoshman It is.
@BartekBanachewicz Typical Japanese development methods.
Keep adding more code until it appears to work.
@EtiennedeMartel that's how I do my uni assignments
> An imitation of a fanfare (typically used to indicate an impressive entrance or a dramatic announcement).
I don't really want to post work code
on the Internetz
@R.MartinhoFernandes no. Onomatopoeias are words who sound like the noise they are words for. What does a 'tada' sound like?
15:40
> Michael Barr, a well-respected embedded software specialist, spent more than 20 months reviewing Toyota’s source code at one of five cubicles in a hotel-sized room, supervised by security guards,
> used as mock fanfare
@R.MartinhoFernandes o_0 people really think that?
@BartekBanachewicz is there a way to do it not using threads? ie a timer counter and just check once it goes past say 1 second?
@thecoshman You really think otherwise?
15:40
@edwoollard yes. And it's a better method actually.
@R.MartinhoFernandes considering I didn't realise that is what it was supposed to be, yes.
Onomatopoeia don't have to be perfect renderings of the sound they represent.
and that is lol? Please.
@R.MartinhoFernandes apparently not if that counts as one.
@edwoollard creating your own scheduler. Hint: take a look at the priority queue data structure.
hint #2: you can store objects of type std::function easy enough
15:41
hello everybody, is anyone familiar with how to setup custom nameservers?
@TyreeBrown no, I always fail on that and then weep in the corner.
@TyreeBrown this is not the place you are looking for.
@BartekBanachewicz Shitty car software is really important
@BartekBanachewicz HAHA, thanks for the tip.
@CatPlusPlus it kinda is when you're sitting in said car
15:43
Also it's amazing to me that there are cars where you can't turn off the engine
Future :allears:
just like human body
what's to fear about?
Business idea: shitcode-free cars
@thecoshman Many others don't. "bang", "splash" are just two of your own examples that are very crude approximations.
how about buy detroit?
15:46
what's a good code thingy for C#?
@R.MartinhoFernandes I'd say they are vOv but I guess your accent will influence that.
codepad.org is terrible
@R.MartinhoFernandes oh well... I guess...
user1804599
@TonyTheLion Ideone.
15:46
@TonyTheLion Coliru should have Mono
@CatPlusPlus Ada.
Ada actually isn't that bad of a language.
wth, today is your youtube day?
Altough I really doubt if it's much safer than Haskell (FTR I didn't write that much in Ada)
15:47
Ada was a very pretty lady
lol.
that Lovelace queen.
Australian Deer Association: ADA - The Deer People
O_o
@BartekBanachewicz I heard it's safe as fuck.
Maybe too safe.
@R.MartinhoFernandes not all splashes sound the same ¬_¬
15:49
@user132263 Come on. Where's your effort? Where are you stuck? What is the actual problem you have, outside of "I didn't start"? — sehe 7 secs ago
Find me one that sounds like "splash"!
@EtiennedeMartel Never too safe when you're making a space probe
better spend 2 years fixing compilation errors than make it break because you left something
in this case, software development cost is minimal compared to the hardware anyway
user3010322
@R.MartinhoFernandes Sploooosh.
user3010322
Pwahhssss.
user3010322
Also, Sproink.
15:54
> I've used C# at work for years, and for almost any project, if I needed to assemble a team and build something from scratch I'd rather have two good Haskell programmers than a dozen good C# programmers and be stuck using C#.
Reddit delivers.
Are you reading r/programming?
Altough I think that 10-people C# team would outperform the 3-people Haskell team rather easily
@R.MartinhoFernandes r/haskell
thread "what haskell isn't good for"
@BartekBanachewicz Totally neutral source.
30 secs ago, by Bartek Banachewicz
Altough I think that 10-people C# team would outperform the 3-people Haskell team rather easily
Oh god, I can picture the circlejerking that goes on there.
15:56
@R.MartinhoFernandes I should join it.
I don't even remember what I was doing on Tuesday when I had that great idea I forgot, so I can't ignite a primer and recover it.

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