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23:00
@FlorisVelleman that doesn't seem right
user1804599
@FlorisVelleman dat parentheses.
@rightfold I know :L
user1804599
What is m?
the amount of months in which a rabbit dies
user1804599
If it’s near me, that’s 1/31.
23:03
@Code-Guru It's pretty close I think
Not all of the F(n-m+1) rabbits will die at month n. Some of them may die sooner.
user1804599
I wish I were in love.
user1804599
Lol, giant wall of Dutch code. stackoverflow.com/questions/23450701/…
user1804599
And those getters and setters lol.
is clang-format sane
Qt Creator offers the ability to use it apparently
but I don't know how to
user1804599
23:15
@Rapptz Last time I used it it was perfect with the sole exception of initialiser lists and lambdas.
user1804599
It saw [] () -> T {} as subscripting, calling and dereferencing, making it []()->T {}.
user1804599
And for initialiser lists it tries to put multiple elements on a single line until the line is full even when not desired.
what's the file called?
Oh .clang-format. Clever.
user1804599
Dunno. I just passed the configuration as an argument.
@Rapptz okay...so it isn't exactly a recurrence relation, but it definitely screams DP
user1804599
23:19
fun! <SID>ReformatCXX()
    let l = line(".")
    let c = col(".")
    %!clang-format --style='
\{
\    BasedOnStyle: LLVM,
\    Standard: Cpp11,
\    IndentWidth: 4,
\    UseTab: Never,
\    AccessModifierOffset: -4,
\    NamespaceIndentation: All,
\    PointerBindsToType: true,
\}'
    call cursor(l, c)
endfun

autocmd BufWritePre *.cpp,*.hpp,*.c,*.h :call <SID>ReformatCXX()
what language is that?
LLVM's style looks terrible, so does WebKit's and Google's.
> When testing a pointer, use (!myPtr) or (myPtr); don't use myPtr != nullptr or myPtr == nullptr.
user1804599
@Rapptz It doesn’t change those things.
Oh I know
user1804599
It only affects formatting.
23:24
I'm just reading this stuff
user1804599
The only thing I don’t like about the style is the space between template and <.
I've only read Google's before.
AccessModifierOffset: -4 does this mean you don't indent?
user1804599
It means I don’t indent public: and protected: and private:.
user1804599
Otherwise it will indent those with IndentWidth.
user1804599
23:26
So I need to add the negative IndentWidth.
Oh hey. I survived.
user1804599
My ear is itchy.
Switched to Ruby in a glance, and I'm super productive again. I'm happy :D
How come the worst languages are the most productive ones?
because you can be terrible without caring about how terrible you're being
Oh.
Aaaaaand sad again. Thanks lounge.
23:31
1
Q: Measuring the performance cost of std::function

roboto1986I'm trying to measure the performance cost of std::function vs C-Function pointers. I want to know if my measuring technique is fair to both for this particular function (decibels, see below). To test the following measurements, I recompiled the program for N 1 to 6 (see below) and toggled the c...

user1804599
Jefffrey you’re terrible.
user1804599
But you don’t care.
>measuring performance with optimisations turned off
"decibels"? wtf
@Rapptz ...
user1804599
23:32
Optimisations turned off? Downvote.
> This question appears to be off topic because optimizations were turned off.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit He wants to know whether his measuring technique is sound.
@Mysticial haha
@minitech also haha
@rightfold Yay.
user1804599
@Mysticial Reminds me of that guy who wanted to debug with optimisations turned on.
23:36
@rightfold I do that lot. Not by choice though.
74
Q: How slow is python really? (Or how fast is your language?)

LembikI have this code which I have written in python/numpy from __future__ import division import numpy as np import itertools n=6 iters = 1000 firstzero = 0 bothzero = 0 """ The next line iterates over arrays of length n+1 which contain only -1s and 1s """ for S in itertools.product([-1,1], repeat ...

was about to link that
dat fortran
lol
The challenge is to see if this code can indeed by made 100 times faster in any language of your choice. I will test your code and the fastest one week from now will win. If anyone gets below 0.09s then they automatically win and I lose.

Status

    Python. 30 times speed up by Alistair Buxon! Although not the fastest solution it is in fact my favourite.
    Octave. 100 times speed up by @Thethos.
    Rust. 500 times speed up by @dbaupp.
    C++. 570 times speed up by Guy Sirton.
    C. 727 times speed up by @ace.
Ah, the good old "language speed" thing.
it's worth a chuckle every so often
23:41
Yep.
> C: 7.5s; C++: 1s;
It's settled then.
Finally we have the answer.
user1804599
@Sylwester that makes no sense. Lua, Python, Ruby, PHP, Javascript, C++, C, C#, VB6, VB.net, VBScript, Pascal...... All those languages run at different speeds! Usually C is the fastest, probably PHP is the next one in the list (it compiles down to C). — Ismael Miguel Apr 28 at 8:30
user1804599
LOL
@Code-Guru Seems like it is though ( coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/a94d831d25424942 ) @Rapptz
@FlorisVelleman neat
23:48
@FlorisVelleman did you get the correct solution?
looks like it
sweet
I'm not sure why it's in a class though
user1804599
IF NOT OOP THEN IT IS NOT GOOD
user1804599
AND CLASS IS OOP
user1804599
23:50
I like how the JVM source has an oops directory.
@Rapptz If I upload it to github it won't mark me as a C programmer.
And what rightfold said
I don't have this issue
C++ 99.7% Python 0.3%
It gets marked as C for me as soon as I don't use classes or use a const char*
Have you considered naming your extensions .hpp or .cpp? :>
@rightfold What a total twat.
user1804599
23:59
I have repositories in C++, Emacs Lisp, Go, Haskell, JavaScript, LiveScript, Perl, PHP, Python, Shell Script and Vim script, lol.
user1804599
(In alphabetical order because OCD.)

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