« first day (1458 days earlier)      last day (3719 days later) » 

00:01
@Ell Usually when you say something like that, people go full "either you are gay or you're ugly" kind of retardness.
16 mins ago, by sehe
We shouldn't care much. Don't let anyone here bother you about that.
It's not here I would be worried about.
Derp.
Lounge regulars are usually on another level.
Ell
Ell
@sofffia I'm on mobile, what message was that a rpelly to.
Oops. Reply to*
00:06
> I don't really want one either
user1646075
One of the reasons we are different from most animals. Cognition is the key line: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/…
user1646075
link has a # so no one-box
Ell
Ell
@sofffia meh. It is a lot of effort and time finding someone new to be close too
I feel kind of strange going out looking for that when previously it has fallen into my hands
@Sofffia Why are you saying this? "Oh, I don't think it's a thing, but, you know... not everyone is as open-minded. I don't mean to scare you, but if you don't adapt to this set of generally accepted social roles and prototypes, you will get backlash". To me it sounds like a bit of a double tongue.
If you truly believe none of that matters, you can be confident that Ell has the right kind of friends and it's all gonna be fine.
That's way too difficult to understand for some reason
00:12
No problem. Maybe later.
Who's saying the thing in the quote?
Ell
Ell
I understand what sehe is saying and I agree with it
Although I don't think sofffias intentions were to warn
Anyway.
@Sofffia It's a paraphrase of what you said, but exaggerating a bit the way in which I percieve that.
user1646075
backlash can kill you. Be thankful we live in reasonably enlightened times - when in the right places.
I'm going to sleep. Finally watched two CppCon2014 talks tonight.
Ell
Ell
00:13
@sehe goodnight :)
Oh no
Night all
user1646075
ciao
I didn't mean to warn that he should get a girlfriend or w/e.
Night
Ell
Ell
This isn't intended to be a dark suggestion or forewarning.
00:14
I simply stated that, IME, if someone says they are not looking for a girlfriend then either they are considered gay or ugly (if the claim is made on the internet).
And that's sad.
Ell
Ell
But I wonder if anyone here would know if I died
@Sofffia Oh good. I'm happy that it was just ambiguous then :) (The fact that you took the trouble to point it out after 15 minutes, made me wonder)
Ell
Ell
Just out of pure curiosity. I wonder what you folks would assume
@Sofffia what, rly?
@Ell Most people would assume you got bored of SO. I would assume that you'd died.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Yes.
user1646075
00:16
@Ell well, that might be tricky without an announcement, but we probably would wonder...
@Sofffia never encountered that. how sad.
@Sofffia I don't share this experience. Yes, there's a vocal minority that will resort to this kind of social cues to prompt reassuring behaviour. But... that's how it always is with the loud minority
I must be socially close to this "loud minority".
user1646075
@Sofffia adolescents and/or adolescent-minded "adults"
@Sofffia That's possible. Everyone is.
user1646075
who was it who said something like "There's no crime against nature; nature never filed suit"
@aclarke can't find it
user1646075
night be a post-modern saying rather than attributable.....
@LightnessRacesinOrbit dem blue eyes
user1646075
she must not know John Cleese. How could you not laugh
00:22
I wish Taylor Swift were more attractive
I wish you were more attractive
... sorry Taylor.
user1646075
i'm sure she hears it all the time.
Ell
Ell
I find it very difficult to quantify attraction of most women I've never met
user1646075
that's because it's not based on simple rules, contrary to popular opinion.
@Sofffia Wow. You have no shame huh m80.
@Rapptz Shame for what?
also m80?
"mate-o"?
matey
@Sofffia Linking that site!
I was laughing hard at it. I'm shameless.
pasta with pomodoro sauce is delicious
00:49
and easy to make
just onions, salt, tomato and oil
in terms of preparation skill/time I think pasta with pomodoro sauce is the best food there
I always like making it and eating it
01:14
@aclarke more attractive to me*
I did mean that
lasagna done; bedtime!
user1646075
one more dress-size up would help her, imho. Enjoy.
oh dear:
Thank you for the clarification so I would use ; instead? — Bolt2strike 5 mins ago
right bye :)
Yay insomnia is back
And also the deep self-loathing zone
And also Monday
ffuuuck everything
user1646075
Sorry, we already counselled Ell today. Please make an appointment.
user1646075
what's going on?
user1646075
01:23
@LightnessRacesinOrbit did they use Prolog before C++?
Who needs counselling when you can have cider
Monday is incurable though
user1646075
@CatPlusPlus Alcohol. God's cure for all that ails.
user1646075
Drink for long enough, and it will be Tuesday.
there is no god and i'm proof
user1646075
and so is the rum.
Ell
Ell
01:46
Robots library thing is generating quite some discussion on reddit
user1646075
@Ell links?
> Exceptions should be for exceptional things. Returning error conditions is perfectly acceptable for more pedestrian types if errors.
bad programmers dot txt
> We can't have exceptions being thrown when a pilot is in the air. Your library, should it be appropriate for my sphere, needs to tell me there is a problem and then I will decide how to handle it from there.
these people program planes
guys, I made a terrible website. Are y'all proud?
user1646075
@corvid sure why not.
01:55
It's one of those philosophical conundrums... is it better to create a terrible web site or not to create one?
> Thanks! Ugh, just so sanctimonious.
>
> How about 'Thanks! It fits a need in my code. Ide prefer X or Y or Z, but you know what, you just saved me hundreds or thousands of hours of work.'
PRAISE ME FOR I HAVE CREATED A SHITTY LIBRARY
@CatPlusPlus Keep going. I'm really enjoying this.
Reading nonsense spewed by those idiots is the last thing I need right now
 
2 hours later…
03:32
Do gists have an opt-out for comments?
user1646075
user1646075
for @Ell
03:47
@R.MartinhoFernandes Don't think so.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Wow those comments are horrible.
Huh, I accidentally plonked him. WTF.
Oh I didn't. But his messages doesn't show...
There.
> Not everybody library has the benefit of using exceptions, especially performance critical code. Blanket statement such as that are usually not well-received.
Oh my. Who's blanket statement?
@MarkGarcia you know ... people do things on subconcious level, maybe just maybe, you really wanted to plonk him?
@chmod711telkitty Sometimes... :P
04:02
A long time in the future, in a galaxy far, far, away, astronomers in the year 2008 sight an unusual gamma-ray burst originating from somewhere far across the universe.
5
04:55
XKCD releasing a joke a decade out of it's time? Well, it is still great.
user1646075
Must be a slow news week.
If it was slow news week, they would have made a joke on Ebola; Something must have happened.
user1646075
slow week for nerd news?
05:42
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Who is Taylor Swift?
06:04
Musician.
@SwiftOnSecurity, Check out my imgur album!
Information Security Thought Princess
3.2k tweets, 24.7k followers, following 1.1k users
Clarification: Parody account.
@Fred I know you're a big fan of D&E. Could you review this for me? manwe.rmf.io:8000/cxx11/2014/10/14/history-of-c++.html
@R.MartinhoFernandes No mention of Boost?
Not sure how I'd fit that in.
(I'm also not too keen in perpetuating the idea that the Middle Ages saw no progress)
06:19
@R.MartinhoFernandes That’s a lot of ‘BCE’ where there shouldn’t be, no?
Tbh I only noticed on the very last date.
Haha good catch.
Before C++ Era.
Hmm, killed the title while doing fixes.
Ya know, a little bit of terror and blood is how I feel regarding C++ these days. Spot on, really.
06:25
Also I like the moveable-type reference.
Hmm, that should be "rise", not invention.
Groceries.
Fuck that, I wouldn’t know what to purchase.
There’s something about tuple_cat that seems off. The way it ‘copies’ the tuple argument types verbatim. Or maybe I’m surprised to see something that doesn’t eagerly decay its arguments.
@LucDanton Just wait till the First C++ War, the Second C++ War (we already have atomic weapons!), and the C++ Cold War.
06:36
It's the "Great War"... there's no first war until the second one :b
Planning ahead.
Oh wait.. nevermind... we do offsets. So it's the great war then the first war.
Thinking of the C++ equivalent of World War characters...
Is Bjarne an Archduke?
Herb is the Archduke of the C++ Committee.
I cannot parallel Herb with MSVC's clear role in the war.
06:43
"Committee" should be spelled "Ccoommiittee" for consistency.
Do you guys bother with std::w(i|o|io)stream when it comes to insertion/extraction ops?
Did the regexp mistake make you completely lose sight of the question lol?
Yes.
Also, HELP, I now have some thirty tabs left open with European history articles on Wikipedia.
Get a new PC.
That will be rid of the tabs.
06:48
There's a great chance that there's some nude painting in one of those articles.
I should get going to work, but the Franco-Prussian War.
Mmmh isn’t std::nullptr_t supposed to get an insertion op at some point? I have my own for tests, and I’ve been expecting that to break whenever libstdc++ gets to it but that doesn’t seem to be happening.
It would be awesome if the last C++17 meeting took place in Vienna.
Surely you mean ‘latest’.
We don't want to be stuck in 2017.
07:03
, Requires<
    concepts::Tuple<Tuples>...
    , meta::bind_over_t<
        concepts::Invokable
        , typename meta::list<Functor&, void>::template concat_t<slice_result_t<ElementIndices, Tuples...>>
    >...
>..
Does this stuff make any sense? :(
nop
It does produce the expected diagnostic if I feed it wrong arguments though.
Eeeeh that concat_t relies on interpreting a tuple as a typelist, that’s just not gonna cut it.
concepts::Invokable<result_of::uncurry<Functor&>, void, slice_result_t<ElementIndices, Tuples...>>...
^yeah that’s better; now to find a better name than slice_result.
Fuck it I’ll put a result_of namespace inside a detail namespace.
@Xeo two days of work and then Essen!
user1804599
> I used to think that the brain was the most wonderful organ in my body. Then I realized who was telling me this.
9
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes whee
07:17
I need a name for a function foo<0>(a, b, c) that returns (get<0>(a), get<0>(b), get<0>(c)). Preferably not something that clashes with e.g. slice<0, 2, 4, 6>(a) that I have and which returns (get<0>(a), get<2>(a), get<4>(a), get<6>(a)) and which has many overloads doing tons of stuff already.
> Also, this is so not a dating site.
http://meta.stackexchange.com/q/240839/148545
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes Still debating whether to go Thursday only, Th/Fr/Sa, or all four days - planning to maybe play D&D on Sunday.
> I am going to fight italy, i will not be able to help against turkey.
So no need to worry, i will not dare do a move against you, however i wont be able to help against turkey
Sweet words, when they come from the "ally" you were planning to betray anyway.
Also in the news:
@Laura: I have to be honest: I set my default attitude to patient and welcoming some four years ago and it got old real fast... especially with those users who don't bother to learn anything no matter how "nice" you're being. Sometimes being "nice" just entirely disincentivises them from taking any personal responsibility whatsoever. After all, why bother learning the site rules if people will be nice to you and solve your problems for you regardless? Anyway, consider this my sign-off on these updated rules. — Lightness Races in Orbit 2 days ago
Tomalak is back :-p
Again.
user1804599
> Local objects cannot manage themselves. For that you need a local manager.
user1804599
07:24
werkzeug WHY
Because! Cargo cult
user1804599
Some parts of Werkzeug are so nice but other parts are so incredibly terrible.
> I am very confusing comedy gold, <10k image
user1804599
> I am very confusing.
user1804599
Couldn't agree more.
07:37
> rows
user1804599
And that's what drugs do to you.
Also almost 2k user.
huh... I see no starred/pinned messages
good job!
oh there we go
very lazy loading :P
@rightføld Did you notice that was a repost? :)
user1804599
No.
user1804599
07:42
But even then, "Couldn't agree more." wouldn't make much sense.
user1804599
Hmm.
user1804599
Rather than storing pin count in each object I think it's better to keep an std::unordered_multiset.
Hmm.
user1804599
Most objects are not pinned.
user1804599
And mark-and-sweep mark flag doesn't have to be stored in the objects either, but only while actually collecting.
07:44
@rightføld Haha. There you go. Let's not start one of those "let-me-vaguely-fantasize-out-loud" binges? I still remember the "A type is a set" episode
yesterday, by Puppy
marked and pin count stored per-object?
A bit slow on the take-up, it seems
what you on about?
> internal compiler error: unexpected expression 'ElementIndices' of kind template_parm_index
That’s new.
Compiler was too shocked.
user1804599
@thecoshman Garbage collection.
user1804599
@sehe You're my rubber duck.
07:49
@rightføld ooh
@thecoshman fwiw I was referring to this prior episode of language : Xeo: // nobody will understand this, ever!
I shan't waste my time trying to then :P
@LucDanton Huh. So, a parser/analyzer error is now ICE? I assume only because it went unhandled or because it's a logic error (invariant broken)
I’m working it through the testcase reducer.
is that trunk?
07:53
Ye.
user1804599
Hmm, I have a function styxrt_box_short.
@sehe Having seen other bugs of the same sort: yes, that happens.
Can’t find an open bug referring the assertion message.
@sehe Keep in mind that I’m not using a release compiler.
I have a question about std::mutex. I have two threads that will share roughly 6 queues. I want to use a mutex to lock a queue, then read from/write to it, then unlock it. However, from the examples I have seen... locking a mutex would inevitably lock all 6 queues... Could someone tell me if there is a way to only lock a single shared variable?
user1804599
I wish ∧ and ∨ were on keyboards. :'(
@LucDanton ah
Xeo
Xeo
08:02
@sehe whut?
user1804599
@TorbenC Use six mutexes.
Xeo
Xeo
Oct 1 at 19:42, by Cat Plus Plus
@rightfold // nobody will understand this, ever!
twas cat
not me
user1804599
Or use lock-free queues and no mutexes.
@Xeo Oops. Sorry. It took me a while to find that too, basically because I thought it was you who said it, didn't adjust my mental attribution :(
@rightføld How would I define a mutex to only block a single variable? Also, could you possibly guide me to a tutorial on lock free queues?
08:04
@rightføld Yeah this works heaps when queues are idle 90% of the time
@TorbenC You don't "define a mutex to lock X". You just define a mutex. And you use it to protect X or Y, or X&Y. As long as you're consistent, it's your design choice
user1804599
@TorbenC Again, six mutexes, not one.
user1804599
@sehe That was never specified.
user1804599
So I either have to ask for more detail, or give more possibilities.
user1804599
Six locker boxes is also an option.
@rightføld so, your "advice" was specuous
08:06
Test reduction going 30 byes per 30 bytes, out of 1.2M. Better make coffee.
Hmm, I don't understand. From the examples I have seen, it appears that one mutex locks every shared variable between threads. How would using more than one mutex do anything different?
@TorbenC see here about use-cases for lock-free queue: stackoverflow.com/questions/22486552/… (also scan the comments). Six mutexes are the way
@rightføld TBF I missed this one
Thank you @sehe
@TorbenC Your base assumption is wrong:
3 mins ago, by sehe
@TorbenC You don't "define a mutex to lock X". You just define a mutex. And you use it to protect X or Y, or X&Y. As long as you're consistent, it's your design choice
08:09
A mutex does not lock every "shared" (what is that) variable between threads.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Gabriel works at Microsoft now? I wonder what @ms means.
morgan stanley, (^T,"ms",^enter)
Ah.
@sehe Google always prioritises medical results for me.
I don't see Morgan Stanley until page 2.
That's not google.
user1804599
> Or use lock-free ...
08:11
I'm just saying.
By shared I meant variables that would be accessible on both threads. But okay now I understand. So a mutex does not block data from being accessed, it is only used for checking if thread B "should" access the data.
@rightføld I know right. Sorry again
@R.MartinhoFernandes Also I think this proposal is kind of lame. I don't see much of a use case :s
@Rapptz ^T: open tab, "ms" (type into address bar), ^enter: add www.(.*).com and load page :)
@Rapptz Smart references! :S
08:12
One doesn't google domain names (unless suspected malware hosting)
user1804599
@sehe top kek iedereen maakt ernstige fouten
user1804599
kan gebeuren
@TorbenC Mutices are used to define regions of code that execute in mutual exclusion.
@rightføld ik ben blij dat de doodstaf werd afgeschaft
I think since it's by Bjarne and Gabriel Dos Reis that it'll probably get accepted though
08:13
@Rapptz I bet 80% against that
I hope so.
Make it 90%
@Rapptz I’ve written proxies before and it was a bit of a bother to write all the forwarding members by hand. OTOH this is a heavy handed approach to ‘solve’ the matter.
I wonder what the "friend breaks encapsulation" folks will say if that is approved.
08:14
@R.MartinhoFernandes Right, I understand. :) Thank you,@rightføld and @sehe
@R.MartinhoFernandes Damn. Herb strikes again.
He's really taking features from D.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Too much python influx. I'd love the other way around: explicit self parameter on member functions; That way we could generically dispatch on cv/ref-qualification of the implicit this argument
user1804599
@R.MartinhoFernandes lol the "proposed new C++ code" example.
> Q: Is this fully backward-compatible without breaking existing code? A: Yes.
There is no breaking change.
Since the other mechanism to more or less blindly integrate behaviour into a class is inheritance, that could have been generalized (i.e. ‘inheriting’ functionality, but provided by something other than a base).
08:16
Did I miss something?
I think it is a breaking change.
This is definitely a breaking change
Well, depending on ADL and priority I guess.
user1804599
Stop farting you imbecile.
08:17
anybody know why a db table in SQL server would stop responding to any queriies
user1804599
Is it locked?
donno
I suspect it may be
lol his first motivating example :(
user1804599
Is there a transaction going on that blocks access to it?
@R.MartinhoFernandes There is a ‘apart from SFINAE tricks’ escape clause.
user1804599
08:19
@TonyTheLion Go find out!
@R.MartinhoFernandes if you mean that now external TUs can add methods to make existing ones ambiguous, yes. But that doesn't break existing code. It breaks some code when "extensions" have been defined (a case of "so, don't do that then")?
Oct 7 at 20:19, by Luc Danton
Could break SFINAE, but in exceptional circumstances. (Honestly that’s a cop-out that applies to any possible expression or type.)
user1804599
2
Q: Find out number of active locks on a table

Abdul RahmanI was wondering if there is a way to find out the number of active locks held on a table in SQL Server?

user1804599
Did you try rebooting?
I don’t really want to consider whether the claim is true even with the disclaimer though. Need coffee.
08:20
Good call. Coffee required.
> Note that regardless which unified call syntax we might adopt, member functions should be preferred, or at least equal, to nonmember functions for name lookup.
Is that a sane premise do you think?
> It is much simpler to get that result by extending the member call syntax, which already looks up members first (and then stops), than by extending the nonmember call syntax which creates a tension between preferring members and backward source compatibility with existing code.
I like the consequent; I’m not a fan of member call syntax but the argument does sway me a bit.
They're only generalising one of the two?
Yup. That’s also in the pap.r
08:21
@LucDanton No that's a breaking change.
That's awkward.
user1804599
I should find out how Unix signals work.
@R.MartinhoFernandes It’s kinda obvious you’re outsourcing reading the paper to us by now. How dare you!
Wait nvm
It's only one way not bi-directional.
@Rapptz yeah extension methods don't exist yet
08:23
> Q: What about the pointer-to-member call syntax, x.*f or x->*f? A: No change.
No change is proposed to that syntax. It is specific to members and rarely used, so it need not be gener-alized.
Rude.
@R.MartinhoFernandes sed who?
SCNR
@LucDanton It's kinda obvious the paper authors are outsourcing the claim checking to us now :)
I'm still torn whether it would be /better/ for them to provide their arguments for the "Non-breaking-change" claim, or not. I mean, at least this makes people think independently.
user1804599
I best... tail it
@rightføld this is a live db, can't just reboot it
08:24
@LucDanton That's why I posted it.
dat crop
Nice find
user1804599
@TonyTheLion yolo (So don't ruin it by rebooting production server!)
@TonyTheLion because you spelled queries wrong?
@TonyTheLion no worries, when you do, it isn't live
08:25
So we have two proposals about (ab)using periods in C++? :v
@Rapptz it can happen once a month :S
user1804599
@Rapptz inb4 C+=
@sehe I’m seeing many claims thrown carelessly into the air like that :( E.g. mentioning multimethods benefits(???).
> internal compiler error: Segmentation fault
You're progressing
^ooo, so that’s why you’re supposed to reduce against the larger error message
08:28
@Rapptz damn feminists. oh wait
The nonsensical fragment that produces that. I’ll put it aside and try preserving the ICE.
@LucDanton hmm. I completely don't see that either. Maybe they mean "emulating natural method call syntax on multimethod invocation"
user1804599
Is there a system call that does nothing until it is interrupted by a signal?
user1804599
Guess I can loop sleep.
08:32
@LucDanton what. that seems just corrupted and cut off at the end. Are you monkey/fuzz testing the compiler?
@rightføld that's the one
@sehe The reduced testcase is indeed produced mechanically, so I guess that’s in these waters, yes ;)
Although interestingly enough I did not produce the original code by wildly banging on my keyboard.
Oooh. Is that tool available?
@rightføld sem_wait() ? sem_post is signal-handler-safe.
Xeo
Xeo
om nom nom cake
@Xeo I haz deh cherry scones:)
08:39
@sehe C-Reduce, contains wholesome Clang goodness (I think?). I heard from it via the GCC wiki.
3
that's cool
It’s awesome. The initial preprocessed source is ginormous—but this makes it manageable.
This actually fixes nothing over my answer (except, of course, that you fixed the type in "Hello Wold"), and I notice you don't use c++11. — sehe 7 secs ago
@LucDanton I've asked about such a tool when reporting to the gcc bugzilla before. They didn't tell me about it
It doesn’t understand C++11/C++14 constructs all that well but it still manages to work, chug along and ignore those bits. E.g. you may have noticed in the example that the fragment still has using eval_t = typename Computation::type;, which is entirely trivial to transform.
That could be from me using a system-packaged version which uses a not-so-recent Clang though.
@LucDanton Or, maybe it has empirically found that if you do the transformation, the bug doesn't manifest?
08:47
Well I did check for myself.
It certainly depends on the issue. I once fixed a toilet door that couldn't be properly closed.... — PlasmaHH Aug 6 at 21:24
lol
@sehe I’d also claim that nowadays GCC is very good with alias expansion but I’m fairly sure that in this case it’s a culprit :Þ
dat smiley
Don’t I use it all the time?
You do.
08:55
@MarkGarcia also, meta-lol on the question itself:
in other words it wasn't a random passenger but a qualified mechanic known to the aircrew who just happened to be a passenger on that flight. Random event, not random passenger :) — jwenting Aug 7 at 8:02
Xeo
Xeo
81
A: Would a random passenger be allowed to fix a problem with a commercial aircraft?

TonnyI happen to have personal knowledge of this particular case. (I was in that airplane too and sat 2 rows away from him in the plane. I'm also a former pilot and was naturally very interested in what happened, so I asked him some questions during the flight back.) He had worked as service mechan...

cool
wait
I got there from here
damn!
user1804599
Jan 9 at 4:31, by Luc Danton
@Rapptz Thank you for playing along all this time :Þ
@Xeo It's even linked from the directly preceding message :)
Xeo
Xeo
shh

« first day (1458 days earlier)      last day (3719 days later) »