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user457812
20:00
@sbi I look at it from a sort of semi-brainwashed nationalist perspective
Gaming easily has the best question titles of any Stack Exchange site.
41
Q: How can I keep monsters out of my nether regions?

Nick TIn order to find myself some nice lapis lazuli and get away from my current base, I'm building a little tunnel in the Nether to allow me to get into the midst of some fresh chunks fairly quickly. I have a nice little stone house, but as Ghasts and zombie pigmen can spawn at "any light level" in ...

34
Q: My wife is stuck in a wall, can I save her?

uncle bradMy wife, Lady Gray, is "stuck in a wall" in Fairfax Gardens, our Marital Home. I can't actually see her, but the glowing trail leads me to the guard house (on the left when facing Fairfax manor) when I set my family as my target. Is there any hope? I've started a new approach. I'm slowly tryi...

116
Q: How can I tell if a corpse is safe to eat?

Kaestur HakarlI am playing a human wizard, and I just killed a monster, leaving a corpse on the ground. How do I tell whether it is safe to eat this corpse? I leave the monster unspecified because I am interested in "how can I figure out whether this is edible," rather than whether any particular monster is e...

sbi
sbi
@nil That's what I was sying, no?
user457812
@sbi Not sure. What I'm saying is that even if they go somewhere else and it's really nice, chances are they'll be discontent simply because it's not America. In other words, even if they travel and move, they'll probably end up being unhappy with anything that differs wildly from America. Same could probably be said of people emigrating from other countries as well.
sbi
sbi
@Maxpm I have sen such a list under such a title somewhere already. Where did you copy it without proper attribution? :)
@LewsTherin. Hard to say. but most of them thinks money money money. fu*k studies, the husband will keep me as a "doll". So if you have money, dont hesitate. Your will get one easily :)
20:03
@legion lol wow
@sbi The first question was on Gaming's home page. The second two were linked to in the first's comments.
hopefully the dude gets his money worth
> [A] chicken is an object that you can physically apply force to. You may not be so lucky with your wife.
Chicken Chaser
20:07
german girls are the hottest. easily.
@legion that might actually be a good game to make
C++ girls are the best. Just by being their friend, you can access their private members.
=]]
@Maxpm xD
@JohannesSchaublitb she is soooo hot
Only German actress I know I believe..and she's just wow
20:10
@LewsTherin Her eyes are freaky.
@Maxpm yeah! Freakily hoot
Pfft.
guys
Brazilian girs/mother/grandmother are the best :D
20:12
AUUGH GET THIS OUT OF MY BROWSER HISTORY
If those are grandmothers I'd eat my hat
they are :)
wow ok I am booking a ticket
sbi
sbi
@Maxpm It's much harder to get it out of your head, though. Here, try BrainBleach.
20:14
In my gym comes one 53years. looks more or less the same as in video.
:)
@legion I don't go to gyms..but maybe I should..I could get lucky
heh, with grandma ;O
Can we stop talking about hot grandmas?
2
@Maxpm lol!
ok..
20:17
@Maxpm what should we talk about?
@Lews Let's make a list of why C++ is better than Java. People seem to like that here.
ugh, that's not fun
Gotta go
bye dudes
Aw. Bye.
sbi
sbi
@Maxpm That list is long and well-worn here. Boring, IOW.
@sbi Okay, then, uh...
Oh God, who pinned my message? xD
20:21
1) C++ is like hot grandma (from Brasil). Java is like young but ugly witch (from choose whenever you saw one ......) :D
sbi
sbi
@Maxpm Must have been a room owner.
I read a little while ago that Java is not an interpreted language, because that's not a distinction made by the language reference. It's up to the implementation to decide that, and it just so happens that there aren't any implementations of Java that directly compile. Is that true?
I'm sure a language standard could say, "This language must be interpreted/compiled," but is that ever actually done?
sbi
sbi
@Maxpm Actually, Java is compiled - just not to the machine code of the underlying machine.
Anyway, I'm off to bed. Good night!
@Maxpm I seem to recall that GCJ can compile Java to native code.
@sbi Well, yeah. It's compiled to machine-independent bytecode, which is either interpreted directly or compiled to native assembly at runtime. But you know what I mean.
I wonder if anyone's made a C++ interpreter.
sbi
sbi
20:33
> With a compiled language, code you enter is reduced to a set of machine-specific instructions before being saved as an executable file. With interpreted languages, the code is saved in the same format that you entered. - vanguardsw.com/dphelp4/dph00296.htm
There is one attempt but the dialect is degenerated in some sort of C/C++ unholy horror.
From the CERN.
@Maxpm yes, a few
Hmm. D is compiled and garbage-collected. I wonder how that works.
@Maxpm You can plug the Boehm GC in your favourite C++ implementation and try for yourself :)
@LucDanton I mean, how is that implemented by the compiler?
Then again, I guess Java JIT compilers have to do the same thing.
20:37
The GC is part of the runtime in all likelihood. As to the tricks a typical D implementation uses for code-generation, I don't know enough about the language to know what's allowed or not.
OCaml is garbage-collected and the reference implementation is compiled and as I understand it it uses (or used to?) tagged types.
Come to think of it, tagging integers isn't that useful for x64, is it?
Tagged types?
Encoding some sort of information into the data so that the runtime can identify its type.
IIRC some integer types in the reference OCaml implementation always have the highest order bit set to disambiguate them from pointers.
That way the GC knows not to inspect them.
The 'downside' of that is that that integer type will be e.g. 31 bit wide and not 32 which can make bugs appear in faulty code that wrongfully assumes the type to be 4 bytes.
Huh.
I really should learn x86 asm.
6
Q: Regular expression for string of digits with no repeated digits?

Johannes Schaub - litbI'm reading through the dragon book and trying to solve an exercise that is stated as follows Write regular definitions for the following languages: All strings of digits with no repeated digits. Hint: Try this problem first with a few digits, such as { 0, 1, 2 }. Despite having ...

I don't understand anymore what belongs on programmers.SE and what on stackoverflow
I thought it would not belong on stackoverflow because it has nothing to do with programming at all
What's the motivation for sentinel-terminated arrays, like C-strings? It takes up the same amount of space as it would if you put an integer with the length before the string itself, but it's less convenient.
@JohannesSchaublitb What about regex doesn't have to do with programming?
20:45
everything?
@Maxpm Space-time tradeoff.
you an program using regexes. but you can program using a keyboard too
Guarantees to encode any length with one char of overhead.
@LucDanton What do you mean?
both have nothing to do with programming
20:45
@Maxpm How would you encode an arbitrary length into a string?
@Johannes That's simply not true.
@Maxpm so what does that question have to do with programming
it just asks to find a regular definition/regex for a given language
@Johannes Stack Overflow is for programming and programming tools. I consider regular expressions a programming tool.
hmm good point
but so is a keyboard and questions about screens and LCD and stuff
@JohannesSchaublitb Good point.
20:49
@JohannesSchaublitb Are those not allowed on SO anymore?
Mmmh was it an incentive to start Programmers in fact?
@LucDanton I think they'd go on Super User, or Programmers if they were along the lines of "What should I look for in a programming monitor?"
> Regular expressions are a declarative language, mainly used for pattern matching within strings.
Keyboards are not a programming language.
Hi, btw.
Friendly greetings.
I think I got a near match on an implementation of std::underlying_type. Not perfect, but will do until GCC 4.7 comes out.
20:58
Debian unstable comes with gcc-snapshot. Just sayin'.
Got my fresh 2011-09-24 snapshot today, even.
Well, it was fun doing it anyway.
underlying_type?
It's a type trait that provides the underlying type of an enum.
If you have enum foo : int { blah };, std::underlying_type<foo>::type will be int.
Why would you need that?
21:01
Actually, I didn't even know enums could have "underlying types" like that.
static_cast<typename std::underlying_type<T>::type>(t); makes you sure cast to an integral type that supports all the valid values of T.
Honestly that stuff is pretty tame, the really wild stuff are the enum rules inherited from C.
The problem with my implementation is that I have no way to decide between types with the same size and same signedness, like say char32_t and int (32-bit on my machine).
So, it's more like a std::guess_underlying_type right now.
@RMartinhoFernandes Well char32_t is guaranteed to be a separate type in C++11. Or is it about sometihng else?
The real thing needs compiler magic.
@LucDanton Right, that's the problem. If I have enum foo : char32_t {};, my std::underlying_type could return int instead, because it has the same signedness and size.
21:05
I see.
Even though all the values in one are valid in the other, it's not the same.
It's pretty harmless, isn't it?
I don't see an issue coming from it, but it's not perfect.
:)
Cool, the no-more-software-patents petition garnered more than enough votes to require a formal response from the White House: wwws.whitehouse.gov/petitions/%21/petition/…
I should learn Lisp, too.
Haskell is cooler.
21:14
@RMartinhoFernandes Haskell sucks
Haskell is the coolest thing since the coolest thing since sliced bread.
Gotta love things like fix f = let x = f x in x.
Eh..no that's why I hate haskell
doesn't make sense
Of course it makes sense! It's the definition of fix that makes most sense of all languages I've seen.
fix f is supposed to return a fixed-point of f, that is a value x such that f(x) = x.
It's the most natural definition.
21:18
@RMartinhoFernandes still ??? lol
@RMartinhoFernandes Wait, that is actually valid Haskell code?
@DanielTrebbien Yes, it's exactly how the definition goes in the GHC implementation.
@RMartinhoFernandes Very cool.
@RMartinhoFernandes that code is insane
Morning nubbinses
21:24
@DeadMG Aren't you on GMT?
It's past 22.
Just saying.
Yeah, but its one of those days
Gotta sleep on the landing, grandmother stole my bed
Also I spent all day working on my machine again
@DeadMG is she hot?
Uh, she's like 70
Now I remember why I had to write my own unique_task and unique_function:
0
A: How do I create a packaged_task with parameters?

Luc DantonSince you're starting the thread with no arguments, you expect the task to be started with no arguments, as if task1() were used. Hence the signature that you want to support is not int(int, int) but int(). In turn, this means that you must pass a functor that is compatible with this signature to...

Silly libstdc++ :(
@DeadMG haha was just a joke..look at the starred comment >>
21:29
Need to do moar work on widec, haven't written any codes on it
Can't see starred on mObile interface
Your computer borked?
No, it's in my room. Cant exactly game whilst someone is sleeping in my bed
Ah, that seems annoying.
More than a tad. I also appear to be insulting my intestines again somehow.
Oh well. Such is life, I guess
I got agent-based co-operation for my third year project
That sounds neat.
I had to do something like that in Prolog.
21:37
Ouch. I get to use microsoft robot studio or something.
It was cool. In fact, it was what changed my mind about the language.
No program can undo my raeg
Hopefully that'll mean I passed my resits though
Get my results tomorrow if the university get their act together
What the hell is an lvalue?
Or rvalue.
I know it stands for right/left, but what does it really mean?
Standing for right/left is now an historical artifact.
They're different kind of expressions and not every 'operation' is available to each kind.
The historical artifact is related to how p[idx] = 42 is valid while 42 = p[idx] isn't.
21:46
Well, let's say I have an array class. Would operator[] be said to return an lvalue or rvalue?
Foo[123] = Foo[456];
far as i've seen, an rvalue is an expression that's not implied to be modifiable...an lvalue is something you can change
You would want to write it to return an lvalue so that what you wrote is usable.
(Formally speaking it's "you want to write such that calling the operator is an lvalue" but that gets tiring very fast.)
@Maxpm Note that lvalues can be used where rvalues are used thanks to what is called lvalue-to-rvalue conversion.
So lvalues are mutable, and rvalues are immutable? Why not just call it that, then?
@cHao vector<int>().push_back(10);
@Maxpm Because that's not the truth :)
Rvalues are completely mutable.
21:51
@Maxpm Because that's not true.
they're mutable, but they're not implied to be
And neither are lvalues.
int const x;. The expression x is an lvalue.
k, now i'm confused. :)
off to google...lol
An lvalue has identity.
Through C++03 it was simpler "[E]very expression is either an lvalue or an rvalue" ([3.10] Lvalues and rvalues).
21:55
Well, the original still holds in C++11.
C++11 introduces new categories: glvalue, xvalue, and prvalue.
Those are refinements :)
k, i'm reading that all expressions are rvalues, and a subset of those are rvalues
@cHao Where?
or rather, that all lvalues are rvalues too
wikipedia
In computer science, a value (from "fully evaluated") is an expression which cannot be evaluated any further (a normal form). The members of a type are the values of that type. For example, the expression "1 + 2" is not a value as it can be reduced to the expression "3". This expression cannot be reduced any further (and is a member of the type Nat) and therefore is a value. The "value of a variable" is given by the corresponding mapping in the environment. In languages with assignable variables it becomes necessary to distinguish between the R-value (or contents) and the L-value (or loca...
21:57
@cHao Pedantically, no. All lvalues can be automatically converted to rvalues.
@RMartinhoFernandes That's correct. Strictly speaking, lvalues are not rvalues, but an lvalue can be used where an rvalue needs to be because of lvalue-to-rvalue conversion.
10 mins ago, by Luc Danton
@Maxpm Note that lvalues can be used where rvalues are used thanks to what is called lvalue-to-rvalue conversion.
someone needs to fix wikipedia then...lol
Speaking of mutability, D makes a big distinction between const and immutable.
An immutable value cannot be changed anywhere in the code.
C++ just uses the same keyword for both.
22:03
const is seen as a window to a value through which that value cannot be modified. Like a filter. It can be changed elsewhere in the code.
Your thoughts?
int const x = 42; makes x as if it was D-immutable.
It's just that the same keyword is reused.
Eugh, keyword reuse.
Ugh, keyword pollution.
Pick your poison.
yeah, cause that's never happened in C or C++ before. :)
@cHao Exactly.
@RMartinhoFernandes I'd rather the keywords be semantic and numerous.
22:05
It's your preference.
I don't really care. As long as the semantics is here.
Also, struct and class are not interchangeable :(
In D or C++?
I mean, they're not in either, but which language are we talking about?
I'm talking C++.
Picking between struct and class has different semantics for not only your code (that public/private thing) but also for client code.
@RMartinhoFernandes How does it make a difference in client code?
Apparently that's rarely ever mentioned and the two are just waved off as the same thing except for the default accessibility :(
@Maxpm Inheriting from a struct and from a class is different.
structs give public inheritance by default, classes give private.
Hm.
22:11
So, you're saying they're the same except for public and private right?
I usually go with Google's and D's definitions:
@LucDanton Hehe, I rephrased it :)
structs are simple POD aggregate types.
classes are for all those OO goodies.
Luckily in C++ everything looks like an int.
22:14
When you're programming in C++, everything looks like an application where efficiency is a concern, but not enough of a concern for you to use C.
When would it be enough of a concern to use C?
When you want to sacrifice "programmer and code efficiency" for "possible code efficiency or inefficiency and certain programmer inefficiency"?
@RMartinhoFernandes Can't source it but I think there's a C++ quote to the effect of "make it behave like it works for int", in the context of e.g. overloaded operators. Point being that it helps writing generic code when everything behaves like int.
> Offering no exception safety guarantee should be an option only if your crack team of requirements analysts has identified a need for your application to leak resources and run with corrupt data structures. - Michael Meyers
So I'm really glad that in C++ auto copy = original; does a copy, that there isn't a distinction between 'value' types and 'reference' types shoved down our throats.
Seems relevant to struct vs class :)
@LucDanton D has that?
22:18
@RMartinhoFernandes When you're writing an operating system, for example.
@Maxpm Oh, yeah, right I forgot about that. I haven't written any new OS this week. I suck.
SomeReferenceType Foo = Bar doesn't make acopy in D?
@RMartinhoFernandes IIRC when it comes to value types vs reference types but what I showed might just work (i.e. make a copy), D takes care to support generic programming.
It seems to be quite involved.
Well, at least it's better than the distinction between 'reference' types vs 'primitive' types you get in Java.
So yeah, class implies a reference type.
22:21
@Maxpm That's the whole point of reference semantics.
I'm wearing a hat.
"synchronizable"? Does that mean all classes in D have associated monitors? (It's in the chart @Luc posted)
I hate that in C#.
@RMartinhoFernandes What is an associated monitor?
I know too little about D to know the semantics of that.
In concurrent programming, a monitor is an object or module intended to be used safely by more than one thread. The defining characteristic of a monitor is that its methods are executed with mutual exclusion. That is, at each point in time, at most one thread may be executing any of its methods. This mutual exclusion greatly simplifies reasoning about the implementation of monitors compared to reasoning about parallel code that updates a data structure. Monitors also provide a mechanism for threads to temporarily give up exclusive access, in order to wait for some condition to be met, befo...
22:24
What does that imply?
That you get extra memory footprint just in case you want to use some fancy synchronization syntax.
And then noobs (and non-noobs too) think they can just slap synchronized on every single method and their code is thread-safe.
I don't believe that's the case. Why not ask it on SO proper?
Because that's a lousy question?
I can just google it.
SO is here to help solve problems, not to be a crowd-sourced manual.
It also enables the lock(this) anti-pattern, which, unfortunately has some popularity.
22:27
@RMartinhoFernandes That sounds hilarious. Can it still make sense in some contexts?
@LucDanton To put it simply, no.
Locking on a publicly visible object is recipe for disaster.
Make your own lock. Or since all objects have a monitor, make a private readonly object sync = new object(); dummy and lock on it.
Note how the example shows this synchronized(this) anti-pattern. Sigh.
> A class can be exported, which means its name and all its non-private members are exposed externally to the DLL or EXE.
On the official website, really?
Having an easy form of delegation makes composition even cooler.
I'd like more control over this though.
Sure, being able to hand pick what to delegate would make it even better.
22:37
Or perhaps what I want is simply a compound form of operator[] tbh.
Ret operator[]=(Lhs, Rhs);
Well, there are other instances where using a proxy is problematic and which could be solved by that alias thing.
@LucDanton What's wrong with that being on the official website?
> Starting with dmd version 2.030, the default storage class for statics and globals will be thread local storage (TLS), rather than the classic global data segment.
WTF?
@Maxpm I'd expect a language spec to be platform-agnostic.
@LucDanton Oh.
@RMartinhoFernandes Perhaps it's a handle in TLS to an actual global somewhere in memory? :(
22:42
@LucDanton No, it's really non-shared data.
Mmh.
I'm having trouble understanding what reference and value types are.
Are they always pass-by-reference or pass-by-value, respectively?
That's the idea.
There's also a bunch of ignorant C# programmers that believe the difference is that "value types go on the stack, reference types on the heap", or that "value types are faster".
heh
Where does the ref keyword come into play in D, then...?
@Maxpm To pass value types by reference, I would assume.
22:51
If there are operations available on references themselves (e.g. reseating) then the changes those operations make would bubble up to the caller, too.
void foo(T t) { t = new T(); }; vs void foo(ref T t) { t = new T(); }
I'm assuming I won't be so lucky as to be able to pass reference types by value.
in c#, there's a whole other dimension...by default, everything is passed by value. passing in a reference type == passing the reference by value. passing by reference effectively means passing the variable itself rather than its value
Hence why formally what we call 'pass-by-reference' is 'pass-a-handle-by-value-in-an-impure-language' some of the time, obviously the second one is not as catchy :)
heheh
In C++ though pass by reference is exactly what it says on the tin.
22:53
It's aliasing, just like C#.
in c# it is too...there's just more to it
Contrast pass by pointer, which is not a real Computer Science term, but matches my long-winded 'pass-by-handle'.
Wait. So if I define a class Foo - a reference type in D - instantiate an object of it, and pass that object to some function, the function's actions on the object will have effects on code elsewhere?
if the class allows mutation, yes.
@Maxpm Just as if you passed a Foo& in C++.
22:54
That's disgusting.
@Maxpm Yeah. Which is why I don't like having the value type/reference type dichotomy shoved down my throat.
that's how all the common gc'able languages work, though
I feel like that can't be right. It's expected in Java, but in D...?
You can't define value types in Java.
22:56
sure there are. they're just called primitives. :)
heh
My point was, in Java, you don't have that dichotomy shoved down your throat.
In Java you have a monotomy shoved down your throat.
in java, you don't get the choice. :P
yeah, that.
Which I'm okay with (except the confusing part with primitives) tbh.
22:57
+1 for "monotomy". :)
The problem with the forced dichotomy is when writing generic code.
Right.
Note that in C++ you can consider an std::shared_ptr<T> a 'reference type' of sorts.
@LucDanton It works fine in C#.
But the burden of correctness is on client code at least.
22:58
and the problem with the forced...monotomy...is that you can't write generics that support primitives :P
And Java only allows generic code with reference types.
@RMartinhoFernandes Yeah, no forced dichotomy no problem.
@LucDanton Except for the problem of having to use pseudo primitives, like Integer.

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