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22:00
determine...portions? wut?
compiling with <regex> takes ages
yeah like... hmm... instead of runtime constant if-elses inside the lambda, create it only with the desired path
@Kahler you mean templates?
@Kahler if the condition is constant then it can all just be optimised away, right?
It's really easy to do compile time conditionals with templates, but really - usually not worth doing anything but type specificity of stuff with them.
22:04
well I'm suddenly feeling a bit better
yay amitriptyline
Or maybe something like a constexpr function? I'm really not sure what you're asking for :P
I feel like password protecting constructors and state
How dumb would it be to make every property private set and set them using reflection?
Idea is that it will be too hard to figure out for the mindless mutators
but they will probably just add more duplicate state and move on
@BenjaminGruenbaum I'm willing to concatenate some operations (variable order/kind) into a single one. Will give it a thought or elaborate an SO question (for the lounge mood sake)
@LightnessRacesinOrbit but even the const comparisons inside lambdas are performed every time =(
Is computing log(x^150) resource intensive when done in a for-loop relatively speaking?
@KevinDuke yes
22:16
Relatively to what?
Just in general I guess. I have an algorithm that computes the size of n with that formula. Wondering if I should modify it so it doesn't contain x^150
Is it slow?
You should be the one answering, not us.
we have no idea what it's relative to or how tight it really is so how the hell should we know
the compiler might well pull it out anyway.
if you didn't profile then you suck and you need to fix that.
anything to the fuckin-power-hundred-fifty, I assume like a huge operation
rofl, you suck.
log(x^150) = 150 * log(x), so it's the grand sum total of one multiplication extra.
22:23
@KevinDuke wolfram alpha is nice to give alternate forms, give it a try bit.ly/1nwkHAY
You fail math forever
and most processors will compute stuff like log or pow in the same time regardless of what the input values are.
unless they happen to be powers of two or other special cases.
and especially if the value is a constant the compiler probably optimized it beyond your recognition anyway
in PHP, 4 mins ago, by Benjamin Gruenbaum
That's just computing 150*log(x)...
lol.
@CatPlusPlus Sorry, I forgot all the rules of logarithms and stuff.
Not you :v
22:25
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Less code. Maybe even more inefficient though:
@DeadMG haha your formulae is right
user3010322
@Rapptz ^ It's working. Tests are passing (and a new test was added). Have fun. :D
user3010322
I am now done. sol is complete to the max, with good syntax and a great interface.
user3010322
I can't wait to use it for my own scripting needs when I have time. <3
22:26
hmmm
I gotta admit, and I find this embarrassing, I got no idea how to implement name lookup for function locals anymore.
life was so much simpler before incremental re-analysis and delayed code generation.
@JerryCoffin std::iota is C++11
I like the use of std::rotate, though
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Yes. Yes, it is.
easy to write manually though
@Rapptz Assuming you mean iota, yes, it's trivial. If I were writing it manually, I think I'd prefer an iota_n though.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit rotate is the coolest algorithm they have atm :P
22:37
I wish there was a templated to_string or from_string function in the standard library (i.e. lexical_cast<T>)
There's to_string/stoX for numbers
I know
I just want it to be templated so I could do return from_string<T>(str);
I wonder why lexical_cast didn't make it :/ I'm sure someone proposed it
@ThePhD Nice gigantic commit you have there
user3010322
@Rapptz Yeah, yeah... but it works.
user3010322
I even did my best to format everything really nicely. :D
@ThePhD hahaha
22:51
holy shit
playing a game of Mafia
15 players
first two nights no kills, night 3 8 players die.
Xeo
Xeo
man, I got my ass handed to me today in SpeedRunners
welp, time to finish that Japanese book
man <regex> really destroys my compile times
I'm not even doing anything complex and it takes ~25s
concatenate lambdas -> static labels as values inside the lambda. Close enough.
23:09
@Griwes :lol: idiots everywhere
user1804599
(define (all xs) (or (empty? xs) (and (head xs) (all (tail xs))))) is wonderful.
@Griwes These have to be fake... they have to be...
user3010322
@Borgleader Whatever helps you sleep at night.~
@Borgleader No, people are dumb
guys, i have a problem here. If i have ostream& operator<<(ostream& s, const string& a) as a function to let print the string, how should I call this function??
23:14
I'd call it "grand pa"
@Griwes #5 is excellent
@Rockink You mean, how to invoke it? std::cout << std::string("")
...I have to say that the banks do a lot of effort to make you forget about paying back
and so it happens
@Rockink std::string s = "Hello, C++"; std::cout << s;
23:17
no no
std::cout.operator<<(s) obviously :v
@Rapptz I think you mean operator<<(std::cout, s)
since it's not a member function
is it?!
From the declaration given by Rockink
I'm just joking
=p
the net dropped your humor packets
23:19
@CatPlusPlus yeah. I mean the propaganda, the illusion of free money etc
none built for responsibility
Dumb people are dumb
y u no love?
/s/Dumb//
user1804599
Argh.
23:28
norevengonnaopenthatmoronosity
go to bed, Martin James, you're drunk.
@MartinJames it's okay. it's a single sentence
@Code-Guru congrats on project-euler so far =)
@DeadMG Oh.. I seem to have no secrets from Loungers.
thanks
23:30
@MartinJames It's 00:30 on a Sunday morning and you've lost the basic capacity to spell. Didn't take a genius to put it together.
@DeadMG could have been autism caused by vaccines
user3010322
It's okay, we still love Martin. <3
@DeadMG Ummm.. good analysis:) The Tribute was in good form.
I tried to sleep but am still refactoring
@ThePhD I don't mind being unloved, as long as I'm not actually hated:)
@MartinJames but is it better to be loved than feared?
-1
A: how do I fix this code

seheSince this is homework, I cannot post a straight answer. However, this should count as a good demonstration of modern c++: See it Live On Coliru #include <boost/spirit/include/karma.hpp> #include <boost/iterator/function_input_iterator.hpp> #include <boost/random.hpp> boost::random::variate_ge...

Hahaha. Not appreciated by some
@LightnessRacesinOrbit different prince
23:50
-1 just because this is a bit advanced for the OP — Outlaw Lemur 1 min ago
@JohanLarsson OK, I've had 7 pints of Tribute. That's about as much philosophy as I can stand:)
@LightnessRacesinOrbit I liked that show.
@JohanLarsson Meh - no probs....
user3010322
@sehe +1 for trolling.
23:51
Whoops. Someone could have told me I posted the same link twice by accident :)
Just in time
@sehe Another one to add to the 'bad questions' meta.
@sehe Well, he has a point. I wouldn't have downvoted but not upvoted either.
he will vote neutral
@MartinJames Oh, think that's bad?
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Of course, no one claimed it was helpful. It wasn't really meant to be. It's meant to be informative. Perhaps a tad amusing. But, informative was the leading motive to actually post.
@sehe Not done any main site stuff tonite but, sure, there is probably worse:(
23:55
@MartinJames Take this then: stackoverflow.com/q/23315122/85371
I mean, probably didn't merit any answer. It's just an excuse for me to retry my bumpy relation with Boost Graph. And that helped me.
@sehe OK, that's pretty fucking bad 'do my work for me' :(
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Thanks for remaining neutral. It really helps me keep faith in SO. I seem to need to be able to hug the wrong questions, with - if possible - more bad answers. SO is a catalyst for "Sharpening The Saw" and a playground for me. Where would I be without it?
Over the last months I literally learned Boost Asio by answering on SO. I did, because I knew I was going to use it at work. It always works this way.
@MartinJames Yup.
you could come to Sweden and write some code

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