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22:00
@rightfold Dat UK spelling
user1804599
Lisps FTW!
@rightfold Dumb and fragile
user1804599
@ParkYoung-Bae my spell checker complains if I use American spelling.
@rightfold America > *
if you reference a dynamic symbol in Linux, is it loaded before process entry or on first use?
22:00
@CatPlusPlus if it's a simple config, like "key = value" series then it's also nice and can be loaded as a Python script
@Puppy I think it should work now. But ultimate test will be next wide update.
So, @CatPlusPlus, what was wrong with YAML?
The implementations don't remember comments
user1804599
@ParkYoung-Bae I think you mean **************************************************
@StackedCrooked I'll let you know how it goes next time. I've got some failing tests to debug tomorrow morning and I'll probably push fixes for them.
22:01
@BartoszKP You get no guarantees about that and it'll break because someone added something that parser didn't account for
Urgh
@CatPlusPlus I think the Python one does, so just switch languages
It's not that hard
@Puppy Depends, do you do load it manually or not
@false It doesn't
Is it true that C++ defines NO precedence for operators? [stackoverflow.com/questions/24685173/…
22:02
I'm using Python
@ParkYoung-Bae No, it's built against a dynamic lib
Then it'll be loaded before
:lol: you thought I was writing this in Shituby?
user1804599
@modeller no.
@modeller Of course not.
22:02
Ruby should die in fire along with everyone involved
@CatPlusPlus No, I thought you were writing it in C++
@modeller lolwut
@modeller Yes.
user1804599
Well I guess the standard defines no precedence table but rather makes it part of the grammer.
@false I can't decide if that'd be worse or not
user1804599
22:02
Although I’m not sure.
user1804599
* has precedence over + regardless. The standard says so, implicitly or explicitly.
@CatPlusPlus in every possible config file format someone can add something that parser didn't account for :0
The C++ standard doesn't have a precedence table, it's inferred from the grammar though.
I was told that there is no such a table in the standard in that post. I was confused.
2
Q: How are (complex) declarations parsed in terms of precedence and associativity?

modellerSymbols, like &, *, etc., are used in both expressions and declarations, which are two distinctive concepts. In expressions, the symbols are operators, for which we have a well-defined table of precedence and associativity. When an expression is complex, we can decompose and analyze it using t...

@BartoszKP That's not the point
22:03
just because there is no table doesn't mean it's not defined.
it's obviously well-defined.
oh, I didn't see that you were the questioner.
I gave you an upvote to counter with Puppy's dumb downvote.
8
user1804599
> The precedence of operators is inferred from the grammar.
user1804599
Learn to read.
Yeah the answers there are fine
user1804599
> ++c
22:04
@CatPlusPlus, PyYAML?
Ok. Now I see.
user1804599
lol spiral rule
user1804599
awesome
Also what's wrong with YAML is this: "Warning: It is not safe to call yaml.load with any data received from an untrusted source!"
22:05
@CatPlusPlus don't get your point then. I'm thinking about SConscript configuration in SCons for example, or just simple "key = value" that will run correctly
What’s the syntax for comments in YAML, anyways? #? Silly YAML.
@ParkYoung-Bae sillyaml
@CatPlusPlus Yes, that’s bad, but you’re using safe_load, right?
@BartoszKP Programmatic access. I'm modifying it with external tools. They need to ALWAYS be able to load the config. With unrestricted code being configuration, it can break reaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaally easily, because the subset of code that can be easily manipulated in this way is REALLY SMALL
Or is that the wrong language
No, it is safe_load. Phew.
22:07
@CatPlusPlus ok, didn't get this particular use case
I'm not too concerned, since if you can modify the settings you can very well modify the code or whatever anyway
But it's silly for a serialisation format
What kind of features did you need? Nested dictionaries?
anyway, don't use xml and you'll be fine :S
If I used XML I wouldn't be having problems like "hey doing programmatic load/dump loses comments OOPS"
user1804599
You’d have lots of other problems.
22:09
Or "how do I express interpolation nicely"
user1804599
For example, exploding brains.
Oh, it loses comments?
blah blah blah
@false load returns a dictionary, the comments are discarded somewhere during lexing
Or parsing but early anyway
lol, just read ~hour ago the transcript. Most of the code I work with uses inheritance, for everything. I've started throwing new small classes with static functions to handle quite functional bits of logic, and it sort of throws most people "why use a static"... why use an object?
@CatPlusPlus Yep, I thought you meant it didn’t support comments
22:10
I said "remember" :v
user3010322
XAML
user3010322
FREEZING MY VS
user1804599
@thecoshman polymorphism!
Use the a.b.c = def format
user3010322
Jesus christ now I remember why I hated this shit.
user1804599
22:10
Wait, you can pass static methods around now, right? :P
@rightfold for what?
# denotes comment, later entries override previous ones, append instead of rewriting
@false Meh, unreadable. Also I need lists
XML is… better than that… though
user1804599
S-expressions!
22:11
sex pressions
And really the type tags will come in handy, too
Some silly Django libraries typecheck settings for godknowswhat reason
@rightfold oh I see what your getting at, kind of hard when you basically are working with 'objects' that are really not much more than maps :S
Configuration in the form of a SQLite database
Ooh I need to figure out gettext, too
@false Doesn't really solve much
Only makes more problems
Unreadable, unmergeable
@CatPlusPlus It makes comments entirely impossible, so you don’t have to worry about them
user1804599
22:13
s/SQLite/MySQL/
i heard sqlite is slow
That, too
user3010322
/// <param name="sender">The element that sent the change.</param>
          /// <param name="args">The arguments for the DataContextChanged event.</param>
JSON makes comments impossible too, so that's where I'm at right now
user3010322
Ground-breaking, style cop.
user3010322
Thank you for making sure my users are WELL INFORMED.
22:14
@CatPlusPlus Use the Python ast module to implement the “configuration subset” of Python
@cat what's this for tl;dr?
user3010322
Holy SHIT, it evne checks my fucking spelling
user3010322
"You have some incorrectly spelled words: Listview"
@rightfold MySQL is slow, use Memcached
user3010322
GEE THANKS STYLECOP THAT'S NOT A WPF CONTROL OR ANYTHING.
22:14
@ThePhD Well, what else would you suggest? Go ahead.
user3010322
Fuckin' asshat tool.
user1804599
@false REDIS
mongodb because it's webscale
nodejs because it's a great language
Not really. It’s close to the metal, but it has its issues
22:15
@ThePhD stylecop if only useful after some careful configuration. otherwise just turn it off :v
user1804599
@ParkYoung-Bae I prefer to program in Git.
user3010322
@ParkYoung-Bae I would suggest it not bothering me about all the things that don't matter. :c
user1804599
@BartoszKP COMPANY POLICY
@rightfold I use butterflies
user1804599
Emacs <3
22:15
@rightfold team policy :)
user1804599
@thecoshman you should try Scala.
user1804599
You’ll hate your job even more.
@rightfold lately i've been using functional SQL and it's pritigud
user3010322
ALL METHODS MUST BE PLACED AFTER ALL EVENTS
user3010322
Who wrote the rules for this thing.
22:16
@ParkYoung-Bae What… what does that mean
@ThePhD you didn't, and that's your problem :)
user1804599
Fuck SQL.
@false you've never heard of it?! it's the next big thing
@rightfold because of scala itself, or because it should be so easy to use it... but rules is rules and thus no Scala?
user1804599
Use Datalog.
user1804599
22:17
@thecoshman because Scala has a lot of niceties that Java lacks, but is still compatible with it.
@ParkYoung-Bae Like functional MongoDB?
user1804599
Queries should be data structures not fucking strings.
You can pass arbitrary JavaScript functions to MongoDB
user1804599
Fuck strings.
@false I prefer NodeJS to JavaScript
22:17
@rightfold yeah, so I'd hate that even though I code right better code, safer code, more dependable code, I can't because 'policy'
@ParkYoung-Bae I like ClusterPHP
user1804599
Use Clojure. You can then reverse polishy.
@thecoshman Word 2013 is better
@ParkYoung-Bae phft, 2000 ftw
user1804599
@thecoshman ClusterPhuck
A failed assertion is a warning in PHP by default
22:19
As it should be
Mock it all you want
user1804599
Hurry–Coward isomorphism.
@rightfold NodeJS has that
user1804599
No, it has Hungry–Callback isomorphism.
Not if you enable reference collapsing in the main menu
22:21
Does anything let anyone pass a query that isn’t a string?
Beyond… named queries
Well sometimes you don't build the query by string
I don’t care
Idk how it really is represented though
@false mysql and sqlserver have query builder objects I think (in .net)
@false Think fluent builders
22:22
@BartoszKP I think (for MySQL at least) that just makes a string
@ParkYoung-Bae That’s still building a string and not really okay
@false yeah, but you don't have to see it, nor build it
@false I don't know if it's really building a string, actually
Okay, but that’s the case for every ORM or query builder ever
so has anyone actually done Java with Scala stuff?
Scale or Scala
22:23
gtg, good night
@BartoszKP nity~
@thecoshman The JVM is scary
is it really as smooth as it likes to proclaim?
You can use Java things in Scala yes
Hah, totally missed that, not sure how, I was just excited to get od -cvAnone -w1 working in my CYGWIN instance, then I sorted it uniquely (which ended being exactly what I needed), then came back here to upvote & comment, all w/o reading the rest of your post (till now). — delliottg 2 hours ago
generation of hurriers and ADD-ists
22:25
@sehe TL;DR, what does the comment say?
(I do the same)
@CatPlusPlus not the question
@ParkYoung-Bae It says "TL;DR"-ed on a short answer!
@sehe I'm kidding
I know :)
22:26
A double!
You were fast though. It took me a second
any way, I'm off to lay with a woman who is not (yet) my wife
std::string firstToken, lineTail;
while (std::getline(std::cin >> firstToken, lineTail)) {
// I feel that I'm writing something wrong...
@thecoshman heh
Yeah, you are writing C++
22:33
Maybe growing C++ compiles are a Good Thing because it means our compilers are doing something useful?
Perhaps in the future we will spend 10% of our time writing code and 90% of the time waiting for shit to compile?
And 0% of the time debugging because there will be no undefined behavior.
What if programmers will create robots programmers?
@Mikhail Implying all bugs are caused by UB.
@Mikhail Already happening
We'll all lose our job.
@Jefffrey Will happen at some point
22:36
And die of hunger.
I'm fine with loosing my job if I still get paid
Thats why I'm a communist
You are not going to get paid if a robot does your work for free, silly.
My boss still gets paid, and I do his work?
Any thoughts on how to cplusplusfourteenify stackoverflow.com/questions/24650626/… my meagre push?
    libtorrent::error_code ec;
    auto fatal_error = [&ec](const std::string& msg) -> bool
    {
        if (!ec) return false;
        std::cerr << "error: " << msg <<  ": " << ec.message() << std::endl;
        return true;
    };
    ...
    session.listen_on(std::make_pair(6881, 6889), ec);
    if (fatal_error("failed to open listen socket"))
        return EXIT_FAILURE;
lambdas FTW.
let's drop old boring regular functions and use only lambdas.
and more lambdas inside of lambdas
until compiler will start coughing blood and its guts
dammit, it's 2:40 AM, have to stop writing code
22:41
@Abyx You'd be first
ewww error codes...
@Puppy yeah I disabled exceptions
why would you do such a thing
because... dunno, I can live without them
Maybe C++ is converging to Javascript with lambdas fucking up our precious this pointer?
I avoid C++ libraries that make me use an error code.
@Mikhail no, this is never confusing (unlike JS)
anyways, with exceptions I'd write try { session.listen_on(std::make_pair(6881, 6889), ec); } catch (system_error& e) { fatal_error("failed to open listen socket")); return EXIT_FAILURE; }
so I really don't need'em here
You should do return fatal_error("...");
:p
yeah.
22:44
@Rapptz I'd rather you said "I avoid C++ libraries they make me use error codes."
but I still don't wanna use try-catch around each function
I know I could write set_next_function("open listen socket"); session.listen_on(...); but meh
well you shouldn't do that
Ok, wrong crowd. Where is @sehe when you really need him.
i.e. wrap everything in a try catch
22:46
so I better use good old error codez
@Abyx how did you come to that conclusion???
@CaptainGiraffe read above.
the only place error codes make sense are in http libraries and only because there's no way around it
if you have to wrap everything in a try catch block then you're obviously doing something wrong
@Rapptz Or Java :-)
How to handle exceptions that are thrown inside async operations is not obvious. Alexandrescu's Excpected<T> is a possible solution.
22:47
I did read the above. It makes me wonder how you do resource management.
I've recently found myself wrapping all my PHP application in a try catch block.
@StackedCrooked Store them in the future duh
@StackedCrooked Er, it's quite obvious. It comes in the future.
Reraise on receiving end
Then I've just realized I could set a "trigger normal errors" option.
22:48
@CaptainGiraffe huh? smart pointers of course
If you are using futures it's easy. I was assuming callback-based response.
That's the dumbest way of doing async shit
But then it can be just an argument
Jan 30 '13 at 10:47, by R. Martinho Fernandes
@BartekBanachewicz You know how you can turn a bag inside out, as people do to pick up dog poo? Imagine that "inside-outing" process, but on a person. Do you see the guts all over? Good. Now turn the guts themselves inside out. Repeat until you cannot turn anything else inside out. That's CPS.
CPS.
22:50
SPC.
In functional programming, continuation-passing style (CPS) is a style of programming in which control is passed explicitly in the form of a continuation. Gerald Jay Sussman and Guy L. Steele, Jr. coined the phrase in AI Memo 349 (1975), which sets out the first version of the Scheme programming language. John C. Reynolds gives a detailed account of the numerous discoveries of continuations. A function written in continuation-passing style takes an extra argument: an explicit "continuation" i.e. a function of one argument. When the CPS function has computed its result value, it "returns...
23:07
@FinalContest No problem (I don't know who you are)
@CaptainGiraffe I dunno. I never know when people do
Ell
Ell
23:19
Hey I'm looking into CPS now
@R.MartinhoFernandes it can be prettier sometimes :P
Is CPS useful?
Ell
Ell
@Jefffrey In some circumstances
you can use it to implement control flow things
your mother's useful for control flow
Ell
Ell
I'm using delimited continuations to implement coroutines
delimited?
Ell
Ell
23:33
it's when you take part of a continuation and turn it into a function
> git is a decentralized revision control tool. No wait! It is a beautiful decentralized data store with a grotesque revision control tool built on top. (Zooko takes full responsibility for this careless slander.)
Ell
Ell
It needs language support I think
@sehe I thought you were fishing salmon.
not to discriminate, but do I look brown?
@Jefffrey no that's the stig's sehe's african cousin ;)
/cc @LightnessRacesinOrbit
23:38
looks boring to fish like that
Yeah. After I while I even checked to see that it wasn't secretly a looped gif
@sehe Maybe you got a tan in the summer. The fuck do I know?
@sehe what did you think about arg vs ned?
Ell
Ell
I might implement while,for, try.,.catch with continuations as an exercise
@Ell Watcha writing?
Were you drunk? — rabbit hole digger 3 hours ago
Ell
Ell
23:46
Scala
My long term goal is chat server replacement.
I might go back to being 80% done though
I was existing prosody, but Lua is so awful imho
you mean for the lounge?
Ell
Ell
Yup
nice
Ell
Ell
*extending
@JohanLarsson boring. Both pretty tame. And only one can be "lucky" in the shootout
Ell
Ell
23:48
But Lua is just tables tables everywhere
@sehe maybe neither wanted to win and be slaughtered by ger?
@Ell What's the current status?
> IMO, tests are a good idea - 2h ago by false
Ell
Ell
I have a regular xmpp chat client written
But basically no extensions yet :P
@JohanLarsson nah. We wanted to. I kinda hoped we might (after all, GER had quite a boost compared to earlier matches when they "handled" BRA; perhaps NED could have found something like that...)
Ell
Ell
23:51
I was part way through doing openID connect authentication when I realised it would require a more drastic change to the server
And not just extension
I mean I might take prosody on holiday with me and read it over and over
I'll might have to deal with OpenID some time in the future
Did you understand it?
Ell
Ell
Well I'm dealing with OpenID Connect which is surprisingly different
But I do understand it now
Not that tough really
Takes a bit of reading and memorising terminology
What are you writing?
Currently a stupid uni project with forced PHP and MySQL.
night peeps
nighz
Ell
Ell
23:55
@sehe night :)
@jefff fun :P
Ell
Ell
Anything on the side?
At least it's teaching me to get stuff done instead of masturbating over architecture
Ell
Ell
I don't know how to get stuff done yet :P
@Jefffrey A.k.a. getting stuff done badly
23:57
Since I don't care much about the project, I don't care if I ship bad code; I just want to get it over with. And it's helping surprisingly well in lowering my standards.
C++ Primer book: C++ practices discourage the use of external variables but encourage the use of external structure declarations.
Hmmmm. What do you guys think?
Also nobody learns to code properly without writing some shitty code first.
4
@cyberspace009 What's an "external" variable?
Global Variables

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