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00:00
@Rapptz switching to .hpp actually worked wow
yup
'I have suppositories..'
lets play a game of "what did adam put in his nose"
That is a tampon.
looks like O.B if you want to get specific
It's a rollup filter.
00:10
Chalk.
Rapptz got it right
Why yes. That IS a tampon in my nose. Nothing handles a nosebleed better. Deal with it. #NerdFest http://t.co/6IBnYloLWt
lol
O.B tampons are pretty good at nosebleeds indeed.
:v
00:42
@Rapptz Have you attempted any other Rosalind problems?
Nope.
Remaking my pushur thing.
You've had a full 2 hours since the last time I asked!
ever since SO got its own meta, people have been hardcore complaining
complaining about SO or about the new meta?
@Rapptz That part before the comma is superfluous.
00:54
s/[^,]*//
@Code-Guru SO
hmm...my fibd solution hangs
I think I hit an infinite loop ;-(
yup...had some indices reversed
01:13
still don't get the right answer...
@Code-Guru What is "fibd" ? Something that generates small lies in double precision?
@Code-Guru I think I prefer my idea. Fibonacci numbers are so 13th century!
but these are fibo numbers!
01:31
s/are/aren't/
@Code-Guru Close enough (too close, really).
whew, I think I figured out my error
off-by-one
@Code-Guru My, that's a huge surprise. :-)
shush
I have a question about sem_wait() and sem_close() if anybody knows stuff about it.
01:41
a new Nexus phone is coming, whoa, look at these damn specs
Google Nexus 6 specifications

True octa-core, 2.4Ghz+ processor
At least 4GB RAM (the present trend is already reached to 3GB RAM)
20MP ultra low light sensitivity camera sensor (expected)
5 inches 2K UHD resolution display
3100 mAh battery
Finger print and other security sensor
Health, atmosphere and thermo sensor
64GB and 128GB memory versions
are there even apps that use more than 4 cores on android
LINK
naoh
aka TriCorder
> Health, atmosphere and thermo sensor
@AlexM. I have a nexus one atm... would be a big upgrade :P
I just don't see how 8 cores can be relevant on a mobile phone considering there are probably no apps using that many cores
hell, for most people, 8 cores is overkill even on PC
01:43
@AlexM. a speculative blog? come on man
today's overkill is tomorrow's promise
@AlexM. one app might not use 8 cores but there are usually multiple services running
@Rapptz well it's all speculation after all
it's all garbage
it says so there as well
I wouldn't be surprised for those specs to be true though
I mean my HTC one runs at 1080p as well as many other phones; higher res is the next step forward
and there are already 8 core phones on the market
01:54
What's a quick & efficient library for computing large numbers?
std::pow(100000.0f, 100000.0f);
heres a large number, no extra library needed
.... that's floating point though, right?
I need it to be precise.
Though it would be fine to be floating point, as long as I could get a precise answer.
HIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
@R.MartinhoFernandes Hi
are you drunk?
02:02
we could have a gem solving maths quiz in C++, that would be awesome :p
s/gem/jam/ ?
correction:
we could have a jam solving maths quiz in C++, that would be awesome :p
happy now :p
@Rapptz Solved a PE problem! woot!
Congrats. Which?
Problem 31
The lowest one I hadn't solved yet. Now I have solved all of them under 60
02:09
oh
what was hard about this problem?
It wasn't really that difficult. I just had to figure out how to do DP in Haskell.
all I did was loop n amount of times
and then I had to debug my DP solution...had some indices reversed again lol
well, Haskell doesn't have loops =p
you can solve this one with list comprehensions
probably
countChangeDP :: Int -> [Int] -> Int
countChangeDP n xs = countChangeDP' !! (l-1) !! (n)
where l = length xs
      countChangeDP' = [[cc i j | i <- [0..n]] | j <- [0..l-1]]
      cc 0 _ = 0
      cc i 0 = if i `mod` head xs == 0 then 1 else 0
      cc i j = countChangeDP' !! (j - 1) !! i
             + countChangeDP' !! j !! max 0 (i - (xs !! j))
             + maybePlusOne
        where maybePlusOne = if i == xs !! j then 1 else 0
not the slickest solution, but it works.
02:11
the forum has this one
main :: IO ()
main = print $ count [200,100,50,20,10,5,2,1] 200

count :: [Integer] -> Integer -> Integer
count _ 0      = 1
count [c] _    = 1
count (c:cs) s = sum $ map (count cs . (s-)) [0,c..s]
I like it actually lol
it's neat
interesting
my original solution was recursive, but took too long
DP certainly helps with the speed.
iirc my solution was lame (like everyone else's apparently)
this is the lowest number I have unsolved: projecteuler.net/problem=375
I have a lot of gaps
I noticed. Slacker!
the highest problem I've solved is 203
the forums are hilarious
I don't know why this still makes me laugh
I skip around a little bit trying to find some low-hanging fruit, but PE is sparse on those.
02:17
"Here's my solution in Haskell"
and then the code tag says Ruby or something
heh
This looks similar to 31...
not really
I could give you a hint if you want
or well, the hint is actually in the title :P
these are called partition numbers
no spoilers!
the question itself spoiled it!
Seems to me that the partitions of n are exactly the same as making change for $n with every denomination from 1 to n
02:22
I find it interesting how the old questions (sub 300) have people complaining about the performance about their computers
until you realise that the posts are now 10 years old
guess their complaining makes sense
do you mean the ppl that answered the question 10 years ago?
yep
the first 100 problems or so are from 2004.
so I guess euler hasn't posted problems every week for the past 10 years then...
actually, first 85 it seems.
either he takes time off or he has to work at finding problems
02:26
nope
hmm...I think I have a solution, but it's too slow
when euler makes a question he makes a solution for it
true
I've noticed that the problems seem thoroughly vetted.
and 77 is similar
I'm a 4%er
02:36
sounds like permutation problems
wonder it can be solved by using some sort of recursion as part of the solution
recursively breaking down larger numbers into smaller ones
there's definitely a recursive relationship
02:51
@Code-Guru all partition functions
I'm trying to wrap my head around partition functions...
I found a summation formula.
I would love to solve pure maths problems, but I got real life tree removing/planning issue to do
simple maths - addition, substraction & multiplication
OEIS is your best friend in PE :P
it happens - 99.9% of the maths required in everyday life was taught in primary/high school
BTW, how's lunch with mom? :p
02:57
it was great
haven't seen her for quite a while, so was nice to be able to chat
it's only 3C outside. brr
03:15
-3
Q: YOU MUST HAVE 5 REP ON STACK OVERFLOW BUT I CANT ANSWER QUESTION

dgrI have more than 5 rep on stack overflow why it will not let me answer meta stack overflow questions? WHY IS EVERYBODY DOWNVOTING THIS QUESTION?!

Aww... It was better in all caps.
@Mysticial The "WHY IS EVERYBODY DOWNVOTING THIS QUESTION" part was not even an edit.
-4
Q: Attention all StackOverflowers: DOWNVOTE THIS ԚUESTION‼‼‼‼‼‼‼

dgrIn light of my recent question that was deleted and received negative 7 points, DOWNVOTE THIS QUESTION! HURRY! { Before the moderators delete it!; Tell your friends!; We could set a global record if we can get enough downvotes!; DO IT!; } Update Share this post with your Stack Ove...

^^ Check the revision history.
2nd revision.
so many bitter people on so
Because everyone hates everyone. :)
03:21
Apparently that little 4 camps thing I took from chat to meta was disturbingly accurate.
> Every day people upload more than 350 million photos to Facebook as of December 2012
damn
03:36
posted on May 04, 2014 by Herb Sutter

Anubhav asked: An interesting question has come up in our project while debating operator new as a class member function. Specifically, the question is about whether such a class should be allowed to be instantiated on stack. The understanding is that a class providing its own operator new would likely have special layout considerations which […]

@Feeds Wasnt that covered in Effective C++?
Nice code blocks Herb.
lol he fixed it
good job Herb
04:05
this requires make_unique to be a friend.
 
1 hour later…
05:14
Morning
@HamZa Not for a while yet (where I am).
I'm wondering why people add another answer while it's already correctly answered and complete? Answer in question stackoverflow.com/a/23452809
@HamZa An artifact of IRC, and therefore obviously evil.
@JerryCoffin hehe, let me recheck the "rules" if there is any greeting mechanism for this room
@HamZa Comment, downvote, delete. lol
It happens a lot.
05:26
He would probably come up with "comments are second citizens"
Often it's a rep-grab. Or someone trying to get out of question ban.
@Mysticial Already down-voted and voted to delete. Care to add your VtD?
While you're at it, might as well vote to delete the other one that's at -2.
I would help but I lack the rep.
When can I VtD? 10K?
20k I think
05:28
VTD'ed
wuuuut, so far. Can't be bothered to repfarm...
@HamZa Don't remember--some minuscule amount of rep, anyway.
lol
@Mysticial The more I think about it, the more I think Shog's right: we should only need one vote to delete, just like mods.
@JerryCoffin Wouldnt that be abused?
05:30
The suggestion requires gold badge in the tag.
And it's only for binding close votes. Not delete votes.
@Mysticial Oops--should apply to delete votes too. And once you're above, say, 200K, it should apply anywhere, not just tags where you have a gold badge.
@JerryCoffin I would apply a restriction that the post needs to be negatively voted.
@Borgleader Probably. But what's the point of power if you don't abuse it? :-)
@Mysticial Just as it currently is, in that respect. Yeah, I think that's reasonable.
It'd have to be -2 or more though
Imagine: "Downvote + Delete" combo.
05:36
@Rapptz I don't agree.
I think downvoting a zero score answer and then promptly deleting it is prone to a lot of abuse.
@Rapptz I'm not against it if there was a review queue for unilaterally deleted posts.
With the 100K rep requirement or gold badge it would be reasonable
@HamZa He must be really desperate for rep to answer a 4 year old question =/
@Borgleader I know :)
05:38
@Borgleader I've sometimes answered some really old questions when I happened to notice one that only had crappy answers.
If all the answers are bad then I guess that works, but it's not the case here =/
I've answered a question with 30+ existing answers before. :D:D:D
@Borgleader Yes--this answer added precisely nothing.
@Mysticial You're a certified rep whore though ;)
@Borgleader I didn't get a single rep point for it. :D:D:D
05:40
o.o you have me baffled
Meta
You don't get rep from meta anymore.
@Borgleader He used to be. Not so much any more.
Once a rep whore, always a rep whore. It's a taint that doesn't go away ;)
I should go read some Dresden Files and then go to bed =/
s/taint/saint/
I used to post 5 - 10 answers a day. It was really bad. :)
05:43
@Borgleader Can't say I agree. Or if it's true, it just removes any real meaning from the phrase "rep whore".
@Mysticial Same here, but nothing that got me more than +47
> answered Mar 27 at 7:40
Once every 1 month or so I guess :P
It becomes a little like labeling anybody who's ever made a mistake as "negligent", and anybody who's ever said anything that might not be 100% perfectly true as a "liar". If everybody on earth is a "negligent liar", neither word means anything any more.
@Borgleader I have about 600 FGITW repwhoring answers. A couple of them got a lot of votes.
I try to not answer everything
I actually like my rep:answer ratio
05:47
I remember getting ridiculously excited on that first Good Answer badge.
It was amazingly stupid.
@Mysticial There are hardly any good ones anymore though, ime anyway.
@Borgleader They're definitely getting a lot rarer now.
Good questions are so rare now.
:/
People are learning not to upvote stupid shit.
It still happens, but rarely.
@Rapptz I see maybe one good question a day.
@Mysticial It happens less, but I think "rarely" is overstating things a bit.
@Rapptz I'm not sure they're really a lot rarer than before--but they are surrounded by an ever-rising tide of crap.
05:57
Remember the shitty lady I was talking about a couple of days ago, I was right. She said she would email me last Friday, she did not, she lied!
The fact is that really good questions have always been pretty unusual. Back when I was working on the Legendary badge so I was quite active, I remember one day I was quite excited because I'd seen three questions I thought were quite good in one day. But even then, it was rare enough that I still remember the excitement from it quite clearly years later (and given my memory, that's saying something).
Doesn't matter, I plan to build the 2nd dwelling as close to her 'expensive' house as possible - you know I am trying to solve the housing shortage problem here, we can need to house more people close to the transport!
Two good questions in one day? That's insane.
2
two large windows over looking her backyard
I am so happy ~_~
Good morning Mr. Robot, sir!
evening
Are any Loungers going to the upcoming ISO meeting in Rapperswill?
@Potatoswatter I could only wish.
Well, I guess I'm off to bed. TTYL.
06:36
night
 
1 hour later…
07:43
@Rapptz nice ratio, 2x mine
Answering fast is prolly good for ratio though.
08:09
If you ask a lot of good questions you can get a good rep/answer ratio.
08:42
Cant somebody help me with semaphores?
09:02
@MohamadBataineh I'm sure that Google can and, anyway which of the two operations supported seems unclear?
Well it's not that I don't understand them. I researched alot about them. It seems like I cannot get other processes to wait on the semaphores. It just goes along and skips it.
it's like sem_wait and sem_post are doing nothing.
lol. Not only barge in with a question, but also pose it in the most negative fashion possible?
Congrats for setting a new record
I don't understand.
@MohamadBataineh Btw, usually in English questions like those are presented like "Can someone/anyone help me with ...?"
You don't? "Can't somebody understand anything?"?
09:15
Can somebody help me with semaphores?
@MohamadBataineh You need interprocess (named) semaphores
Well, at least you learned one thing out of Lounge<C++>.
@MohamadBataineh I'm pretty sure that inter-process semaphores work - if they did not, someone would have noticed before now, so it's OVERWHELMINGLY more likely that your code is using them incorrectly. Also, note 'Lounge' - ie. a place where you go to get away from work issues, and 'C++', which does not directly support inter-process comms because it's the job of the OS.
Ok, they let me rephrase. I cannot get my implementation to work. Dosent sem_wait() wait for a sem_post() before it continues on with the code?
@MohamadBataineh If the count is zero, yes. Why don't you post your question/code on SO?
09:21
I did.
@MohamadBataineh Oh - and then you dumped it here. Wonderful.
Well I wanted to get some things straight. If you don't want to help, that's fine. You don't have to answer.
You posted it 6 hours ago. On a Sunday. At a time when US and Euro developers were asleep.
@Navin How so? I don't see what we can add, besides finding the related bug reports/feature status from Microsoft Connect? — sehe 7 secs ago
I was briefly awake back then.
But I probably didn't care.
09:25
My bad. I'll just wait till tomorrow night for further questions then.
@MohamadBataineh You need to learn to ask in a friendly and considerate fashion if you want cooperation from those giving their time freely, else you will simply be told to piss off. If you cannot wait a reasonable time for answers, pay a skilled contractor.
How do you know it is a bug? — Navin 1 min ago
Bloody denseness on a Sunday morning.
@Navin Ok, it's a bug because it's supposed to work. GCC and Clang are happy to oblige. I'm not in the mood to search for standards quotes on a sunday morning :) — sehe 21 secs ago
user1804599
Hello.
@Navin You suit sourself. I'm happy to delete this answer since it is unhelpful. (The link was because you changed the topic to constexpr functions with double in the comments. I was confused by that, I guess). — sehe 2 mins ago
Fuck da shit.
user1804599
Even cryptographers can be confused.
09:34
@rightfold confusion is a principle in cryptography
It isn't. Really.
Non-detectability (deniability) is a principle. But that's hardly the same thing
In cryptography, confusion and diffusion are two properties of the operation of a secure cipher which were identified by Claude Shannon in his paper Communication Theory of Secrecy Systems, published in 1949. In Shannon's original definitions, confusion refers to making the relationship between the ciphertext and the symmetric key as complex and involved as possible; diffusion refers to dissipating the statistical structure of plaintext over bulk of ciphertext. This complexity is generally implemented through a well-defined and repeatable series of substitutions and permutations. Substit...
Wokay. TIL there's a strict definition of the popular term.
I was using the popular term, in which case it really comes down to obscurity. And that may play a (significant?) role in security, but not in cryptography/logy.
they are properties of a secure cipher
according to shannon
but yeah I get your point
Well. Hello. You already linked that, right.
And I acknowledged that :)
09:41
@sehe its a bit laggy I am on mobile broadband :(
Ah. You're forgiven :)
whats up with that constexpr thing
is it standard conforming or just things GCC and clang do ?
oh I see its a bug in MSVC
I'm pretty sure it's standards conforming. There's no way that double would not be constexpr-able. However, the limitation likely has to do with MSVC's support for member statics and the linkage class of the variable.
user1804599
MSVC supports only C++09 and constexpr is a C++11 feature.
5
Ah wait. I don't think MSVC supports constexpr, at all, indeed.
Ah. Here's the smoking gun: msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/hh567368.aspx says there is no constexpr support in MSVC. I should have known, because I use a CONSTEXPR define for MSVC2013 :( — sehe 1 min ago
user1804599
09:49
I like how OS X remembers speaker and headphone volume separately.
all major operating systems do
user1804599
Nice.
"Tabs vs spaces" and "opening brace on same line or new line" seem to have run out of steam. Now we have a new contestant: "null vs optional types" :)
25
Q: If null is evil (and it is) why do modern languages implement it?

mrpyoI'm sure designers of languages like Java or C# knew issues related to existence of null references (see Are null references really a bad thing?). Also implementing an option type isn't really much more complex than null references. Why did they decide to include it anyway? I'm sure lack of null...

null is great. I love it and use it every day. — Pieter B yesterday
WTF is up with you guys? Of all the things that can and do go wrong with software, trying to dereference a null is no problem at all. It ALWAYS generates an AV/segfault and so gets fixed. Is there so much of a bug shortage that you have to worry about this? If so, I have plenty spare, and none of them invoves problems with null references/pointers. — Martin James yesterday
3
user1804599
> But I couldn't resist the temptation to put in a null reference, simply because it was so easy to implement.
user1804599
Implementation-driven design!
user1804599
09:57
> I beg to differ! The design considerations that went into nullable value types in C# 2 were complex, controversial and difficult.
-1. This is like asking why mathematics has zero, when it causes so many problems for division. — David Wallace yesterday
user1804599
That’s because the type system was already a mess.
I need to remove a file from git history, pretty sure I'll mess this up.
why do you need to remove it from history?
does it have secret info?
> Orthogonality of language features is generally considered a good thing. C# has nullable value types, non-nullable value types, and nullable reference types. Non-nullable reference types don't exist, which makes the type system non-orthogonal.
Yeah, that really sucks.
09:59
@Rapptz It is a huge binary that got added by mistake, 105 MB that changes every commit. It also has locks messing up pulls.
user1804599
@FredOverflow I don’t like there being both value types and reference types at all.
user1804599
It’s a horrible idea.

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