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06:00
You can also go for unlocked phones.
user1646075
and before that, try to nutt out the spec comparisons across the brands and within. i have no idea even the clear differences across the ipad range. the price spread is big but the shop pages are vague.
user1646075
then again, i haven't put in a big effort to compare yet. Sounds like tomorrow's task
For example, the Samsung Galaxy S5 costs $525. It's about the same as a OnePlus, but with a better camera, GPU, and it has a heart rate monitor.
user1646075
heh - heart rate. He'd better not need one of them for at lest the next 40 years.
I use CM11 on a Samsung S3... it's kinda shitty ... but it's way faster than the crap Samsung uses.
user1646075
06:02
Hello. CM11?
user1646075
oh rigt. an android flavour
And.... it's 1am here.
Good night.
user1646075
@Nooble okelies sweet dreams
I'm here for the hats. Now be a good Pirate and click the star button. --------------------->
user1646075
noooooooooooooo
user1646075
06:10
use this chat.stackoverflow.com/… and pick any of them
It seems that secret hats do show up on chat profile pictures.
user1646075
yeah, it seems inconsistent. not appearing on ident-popups.
06:26
Real funny, robotics programmers. Spent last hour debugging a library that was not opening. Found out by strace, that they write an error message to the error log file, but never closing the file, so the message was never written to disk.
user1646075
oooooops
user1646075
log files should be written in line-buffering mode, or even no-buffering.
That is a good question.
They do write a \n, but the line does not seem to be going to disk.
My error message is definitely the last write, and there is no close to that file handle;
eh why can't I just write code in Visual Studio and hit "Compile" and it will spit out a valid .so file :/
life is hard
also the compiler decided to screw me and my project (and it's database) by optimizing out all memset calls
hurray for that.
you probably did something wrong
06:39
also getting non-ascii characters to work on linux is a pain too, especially when all libraries you use are using char*
I'm wondering how it works on windows o.O
06:53
do you guys sometimes light candles?
Just realized I've never done this since living alone.
Not that I care. Just a funny observation.
Only during a heavy winter, and the power goes out.
Did you usually light candles for the smell? :o
@StackedCrooked Never.
user1646075
@StackedCrooked {barry white voice} only for setting a moooode baby - oh yeaahhh
07:17
@StackedCrooked Yeah, when power breaks down !
Does that happen sometimes?
Unfortunately yes ... Just a week ago I got a power off for nearly 2 hours
user1646075
where are you?
Near Paris
user1646075
that's unexpected! is it common(ish)?
user1646075
07:20
hmm already answered...
No but that proves it can happen
user1646075
yeah
Anyway I was happy to have candles at that time :p
07:36
2
Q: I need to solve an NP-hard problеm. Is there hope?

templatetypedefThere are a lot of real-world problems that turn out to be NP-hard. If we assume that P ≠ NP, there aren't any polynomial-time algorithms for these problems. If you have to solve one of these problems, is there any hope that you'll be able to do so efficiently? Or are you just out of luck?

That's interesting :)
It is a pretty good answer. Even that the guy did answer his own question.
user1646075
ooh big solid answer.
user1646075
heh true!
I think he intended to right from the start
user1646075
07:39
i think he was hoping for a miracle. Is it worth suggesting he scans nearby beaches for a genie bottle?
I am confused. He did answer in the same second he posted the question?
user1646075
ohhhh - i seee. He's after a hat
user1646075
answer your own question.
Good morning, ladies and gentlemen
@Nican : I hope they don't expect the #define to be inside the namespaces !
07:46
@Rerito They might.
At least that gives me hope
I may not be a total wreck
Can anyone explain to me by what Bjarne Stroustrup says C++ is not a purely object-oriented programming language like SmallTalk. What did SmallTalk offer in terms of object-orientation that C++ does not offer? Wasn't C++ the first of the mainstream object-oriented programming languages?
I don't know SmallTalk but since C++ has been designed to be reasonably compatible with C, you can use C++ without doing OOP
Maybe he says it's not purely object-oriented in that sense ?
int/float/etc... are not exactly objects.
You usually do "std::to_string(5)", but not 5.to_string()
user1646075
Smalltalk does not have anyrthing that is not a class and/or not in a class
user1646075
07:49
C++ classes are optional. you can still make primitive native objects (eg int, char [] ,etc) and they can be outside of any class
Right, what I said is actually just a consequence of that
user1646075
even java has a bit of a divide. it's primitives are value-types and sit uncomfortably with classed objects that are accessed by reference semantics. Boxing and unboxing is a hacky solution to that divide
user1646075
yeah
@GuruAdrian My favorite part about the Java source code: grepcode.com/file/repository.grepcode.com/java/root/jdk/openjdk/…
user1646075
even in Smalltalk smallints and floats are slightly value-typish. But it pretends well. A comprehensive language with reference AND value (expanded) types offers the chance to streamline and embrace the difference
07:54
He said that it is object-oriented in the sense that Lisp is
user1646075
ewwww. seriously?
user1646075
that's the object-ish int in java isn't it? it offers integer and Integer?
@MoonOwlPrince lol?
@GuruAdrian int (primative) vs. Integer (class). And to help with GC, they cache Integer instances.
user1646075
@MoonOwlPrince lisp is wierd. It's been said only partially in jest, something like: "LISP has anything you can think of. All you need to do is wrap parentheses around it and there you are"
user1646075
@Nican freaky.
07:56
@Nican He said it supports object-oriented programming but it is not an object-oriented programming language and then he started discussing alien ideas.
user1646075
true. you can totally make a C++ program without OO, but not vice-versa. Every object at some level needs to use an int, a float or a pointer.
Someone remarked that being class-oriented is not necessarily being object-oriented and that JavaScript and Python are more object-oriented than Java. I am now confused
user1646075
Javascript is a "prototype-based" approach.
Just forget about it.
user1646075
some OO langs don't even have an obvious 'class' keyword or structural feature
07:59
+1 for the "Forget about it"
user1646075
heh
Yeah, do your stuff, enjoy it
Epicurian programming
@GuruAdrian :-| So how do they work with object-oriented programming? and @BenjaminGruenbaum good morning
user1646075
wellll, since you ask. In JS, you have admittedly poor range of native types, but one is simply "object" and it pretends to be a hash and/or an array as you need. It can also have attributes like x.a. With me so far?
08:01
It is midnight...
user1646075
now, the magic is offering a special attribute which can be shared and it's job is merely to collect shared attributes. Shared betweeen as many objects as you like. IF those shared objects are functions, tehn they are effectively methods on a class. You can make another object sharing that at any time. You can also say "this block of shared things is like that block of shared things PLUS ...." so then you have inheritance.
user1646075
this is the 'prototype' attribute of JS. check it out on the googles. cannot put lessons here.
user1646075
the JS runtime is programmed to look in the prototype attributes when it's trying to find attributes and functions, and it's also programmed to copy it around as needed when objects are created based upon the original 'design'
user1646075
@BenjaminGruenbaum good evening.
Tea time
user1646075
08:08
Mr 10 has just gleefully told me he's tricked Evie into saying "stop, hammer time". Seems like he's been working on it for about half an hour.
And then there is a paradigm I have never understood: Logic programming
user1646075
like prolog?
I have never learnt Prolog
user1646075
it's fun. give it a go one day, then you'll know!
I tried to imagine the philosophy behind logic programming
user1646075
08:10
you can imagine it as picking and choosing 'facts' that fit based on rules that show how to combine facts.
user1646075
that sounds really vague, sorry.
So logic and declarative programming are similar
user1646075
the engine inside prolog tries a bunch of available definitions/facts that 1/2 fit, filling in blanks as it goes until all the blanks are resolved and it reaches the end of the original rule. At that point you have a claim of a derived fact.
user1646075
declarative is more an umbrella classification, covering a few things. eg SQL is in principle declarative. Given schema and data, it's once again up to the engine to figure out the answer. You only declare facts you know and rules you know, and then exploit that
I will learn prolog after I am done with Stroustrup's books
user1646075
08:14
it's certainly another dimension of computing. Clever stuff
I hope the creator has written at least one book on the language
user1646075
oh yeah, there's stuff out there.
user1804599
hi there
user1646075
unfortunately prolog suffers from implementation variations. but that's because it's more an experimental lang. although it has of course been used in real production systems too
user1646075
@rightføld howdy.
user1646075
08:16
@rightføld is a prolog master, so feel free to harass. /ducks and runs
So there is no reference implementation? or an alternative language that is to logic programming what Ruby is to object-oriented programming
user1804599
No, I'm not.
user1804599
I am terrible at Prolog.
I read the dude was killed during the raid in Sydney
user1646075
an "Edinburgh" version is common enough. In a way, the different implementations ARE alternatives. they just happen to be close.
user1646075
08:18
@Rerito yeah, shit happened. Seems like one of the hostages went hero-mode. Apparently he tried something that let the first 5 out, and got savagely beaten for his efforts. Then he tried again at about 2am and shit broke loose.
user1804599
@Nican pfft efficient algorithms
user1646075
There's 2 or 3 prologs out there that are worth trying. When the time comes, ...
The newspapers in France points out the same problem we met with our local terrorist frenzy dudes
user1646075
@Rerito He's more 'unstable individual' nutjob type, hooking into that extremist stuff because it suited his problems. So mostly motivated by his issues rather than specifically a terrorist.
Yeah it follows the same trend every where. Self radicalized individuals
08:21
So it is like Unix. I will never see the real Unix. Only clones and ports
user1646075
@MoonOwlPrince unix is dead or dying. all linux is a clone. Who cares?
I do for historical purposes. It would be seeing the first version of Windows that ran on NT in 2066
user1646075
@Rerito slightly different though, because the guy has had real issues that are recognisable. In another time and place he could have latched onto astrology, or celtic runes or Voodoo or .....
user1646075
@MoonOwlPrince heh. I might still have a 20-floppy set of Xenix if you wanna pay the shipping. Good luck installing
Didn't he already do that ? He called himself a spiritual healer or something
user1804599
08:25
@Rerito He heals you from being spiritual?
user1646075
@Rerito yeah, dunno what he got upto at that point in his life. Apparently he left iran because he felt he was 'too liberal' and recently he's been so radical that apparently local extremist groups have rejected him.
@GuruAdrian wasn't Xenix Microsoft's Unix distribution? If so, why did they move onto NT
@rightføld I think the healing involved its essence ... Since he had been accused several times of sexual assault
user1646075
so maybe in the middle he tried the mumbo-jumbo. He was on 40-odd sexual and indecent assault charges from his time as a 'spiritual healer'
user1646075
sounds like a Jim Jones kind of nutter....
user1646075
08:28
@MoonOwlPrince yeah. They bought into it very early. But that doesn't mean it would replace the MS-DOS and Windows streams. It was a cash-cow for a while, being a UNIX for Intel processors.
user1804599
84
A: Designing a Santa alarm (honestly)

Dan LaksAdorable. Frankly, the Little Bits kit is way overkill and incredibly expensive. If your goal is to make a simple sensor that detects pressure and turns on a light bulb, that can be done using stuff you probably have around the house. Here's a basic idea that might be "good enough" for this yea...

user1804599
lol that image
user1804599
fucking awesome
@GuruAdrian I thought when Windows came onto the scene DOS was immediately retired
The question itself is awesome
user1804599
08:30
TL;DR
user1646075
no, MS-DOS was a work-horse for many many people, windows was a bit of a luxury, and DOS also was a cash cow until it was completely supersceded by win.
But from your own perspective which operating system was better designed from the ground up: Windows or DOS?
user1646075
hard to say. Windows, at first, had to be run on top of DOS! then it was integrated to be able to boot straight into windows, appearing seamless. then progress and progress.... until the DOS core was dropped for NT kernel
And why was NT considered cutting edge by many OS researchers at that time?
user1646075
Windows 2.11 was best Windows. Also 5.0
08:34
What is it that it had than Unix, Linux and BSD did not have
user1646075
well, now that I think of it, it was architecturally quite modern. so ... just due to reasonably good design for it's time. Like anything it's got some warts these days
user1646075
a different model of kernel. I'm way beyond remembering that stuff, given that I only really ever had an overview out of curiosity in the first place. You can feel the difference when you code for them though.
So do you think Windows will be retired since I have heard people saying it is now a legacy operating system and that Microsoft wants to replace Win32
user1646075
*nix never had a windowing core. X11 was an add-on kind of like a cancer is an add-on to an organism.
3
I have never any Unix programming so I would have no idea
08:38
@GuruAdrian Here, take my star as a token for your ability with metaphors
user1646075
there's a new windows API out there already. It refreshes a bunch of issues. I'm not familiar with it due to lack of interest. As for 'legacy' I laugh. It's just a stupid word that is way overused these days. Everything can be labelled legacy if some dick wants to use something that's 2 or 3 years younger.
Now, I'm going to tell you a secret.
user1646075
@Rerito :->>
@Jefffrey is it cognac ?
grape juice
08:39
This image up here is computer generated.
cognac4.jpg
but what is it?
ah, cognac
user1646075
oooo - beautiful. did the code come from your bare hands?
Didn't notice the url :)
Interesting! I have noticed that on most PC's game graphics are worse in Linux-based operating systems than in Windows. Does that have roots in the design of the operating systems? Sorry to ask stupid questions but I am just wondering
08:41
@GuruAdrian no, he wore gloves
little cheater
user1646075
@StackedCrooked protection is important.
@MoonOwlPrince Whoever ported it used bad textures.
user1804599
user1646075
@MoonOwlPrince not sure, that's outside of my interest really. I'd guess lack of input of money on the *nix side. it seems more a labour of love for open-source people.
Which leads to believe programmers are more artists than artists themselves O:)
2
08:43
user image
2
I mean... wtf
All computer genereated? WOW!
Maybe I just woke up from under a cozy rock, but jesus christ. Are we at this point already?
Wow you guys are wayyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy behind
@Rapptz Yeah.
user1646075
08:45
gorgeous. and the first one was watermarked for 1995. I bet that took 2 days and/or 4 MIPS cores to render.
This kind of CG is nothing new.
Games in 2015 are going to be mad
2
Ray tracing is nothing new.
2
Er.
@MoonOwlPrince You won't see that in games.
@StackedCrooked Collected garbage?
08:45
:-(
Yeah this probably took forever to render.
So we must get more powerful computers then
user1646075
@Rapptz that's the thing. getting seriously commonplace now, but still. Pretty is pretty.
Welcome to the last 20 years or so.
5
user1804599
That reminds me I'm getting a PS4 next year.
user1804599
08:46
can't wait
user1646075
@Rapptz ... when even a school kid can render that. Almost.
Jeff Atwood remarked that CPU's are never getting faster again
2
user1646075
@MoonOwlPrince it does seem like it at the moment. That's that point called? it's been reached.
That image is dated from 2006.
08:47
Cinema 4D.
user1646075
now they're going sideways. MORE CORES!
@Ell I'm going with this.
Concurrency is the paradigm of our times
I made a render yesterday.
2
user1646075
@Rapptz Well done. Have a lolly.
08:48
Thanks.
You guys are game developers?
@Rapptz Wow, sure that's not a photograph?
I know right?
user1804599
@StackedCrooked It's a photo of a 3D editing program.
@Rapptz Where did you take that picture? I don't recognize it.
08:49
That pine ... Wow chills in my spine
user1646075
@MoonOwlPrince no need to get rude ;-)
user1804599
@GuruAdrian no need to get nude ;-)
user1646075
too late!
@GuruAdrian Expected that, wasn't disappointed !
user1646075
mid-summer and my house is not well insulated. Can't wait to renno-vate
08:50
Okay :) The added code made it clear what exactly you were stuck with. I hope my answer helps! — sehe 19 secs ago
user1646075
actially i have a pretty lace g-string on.
user1646075
want a selfie???!?!?!!?
Not long until I should get a badge :/
@Mysticial My desktop. Around 4 PM EST yesterday using Blender.
user1646075
@sehe a badge? Sooo last year! All the kids want hats now!
08:51
:p
Fuck hats.
God mornings
user1646075
@sehe Rule 34!
Who wants hats. HATES
user1646075
hehhe
user1646075
bigot. Whatever yo be hatin' on
user1804599
08:52
Where all the disdain about game programmers come from ? (Not Jon Blow I guess even he understandably might have a fair share)
@GuruAdrian You can leaheave your hate on!
@Rerito Have you sane game dev code?
(suggestion is a fun rhetoric device)
@sehe Never tried but I found games can be quite great as a support to learn new stuff (algs, data structures, whatever)
user1646075
Never gonna hat you up
Never honna hat you down
user1804599
@sehe I think the source code of Pork is quite representative.
08:54
@Rerito games are great. It's their source code that stinks
Yeah. I guess there is good code strewn all across. The thing is the percentages and the culture around it.
user1804599
Self-modifying code is best code.
2
user1646075
@rightføld programming hasn't been the same since PEEK and POKE fell from favour
Culture around it : you mean like ppl going all hipster about how they make games and shit ?
Guys sorry for linking my own answer, I guess. But I'm pretty psyched I finally got the hang of this C++11 (scoped) allocator model. Anyone have anything to add while I'm learning?
0
A: making non-shared copies of boost::interprocess shared memory objects

seheOk, you've run into the Frequently Annoying Edgecase that template-template arguments aren't first class citizens in C++ (you cannot pass them around/typedef them). allocator::rebind<T> Allocators have a rebind mechanism, I daresay precisely because of this. So you can pass a alloc<void> as if...

user1804599
08:56
@Rerito No, about unperformance and singletons.
@rightføld Some Intel processors have a bug where if you self-modify code using floating-point stores, it does the wrong thing.
@Rerito yes. and the focus on bullshit details
Basically, if you're gonna write self-modifying code, make sure you do it using floating-point.
8
user1804599
@Mysticial yeah, but my game runs on my VM, not on some silly Intel weirdness.
user1646075
@Mysticial that's - - - - surprising? wait what?
08:57
@Mysticial s//don't/?
@sehe :)
user1646075
@Mysticial Duly noted.
user1804599
Also in the source code I load 40 as the code point value of ( because that's shorter :)
@sehe Using self-modifying code is like taking a knife and stabbing yourself. Doing it using floating-point is pointing a gun to your head and pulling the trigger. Which do you prefer?
user1646075
yes, 40 is quicker than '('
08:58
I prefer kittens
@GuruAdrian inb4 language has unquoted literals
user1646075
7 mins ago, by Guru Adrian
@sehe Rule 34!
user1646075
@sehe damn.
user1804599
">("3p replaces the question mark on 4:41 with >. :P
Although Intel didn't disclose what caused that bug, it's easy to hypothesize that it has something to do with the way that integer and floating-point are decoupled in current Intel processors. So the instruction queue doesn't see the floating-point store until it's too late.
user1804599
If I wanted to do 40 with digits I'd have to factor it and use *.
user1804599
09:00
Like 19+4*.
Needless to say, nobody actually hits this bug. Not even Microsoft writes code that's bad enough to hit it.
2
user1804599
But since I use quotes anyway I can just as well use (.
Hello guys! I need help choosing a framework for gui in c++! I want it for ordinary windows as well as some graph rendering. Any tips?
user1646075
@Mysticial i think it's time to change all that. Are you up to the challenge?
user1646075
@TheDillo yes, work hard and be kind to your mother.
09:01
But I already do that... :)
user1804599
@TheDillo Use Emscripten and canvas.
Aaaah, some wit
user1646075
I've had decent results with MSPAINT
@Mysticial they do, but it didn't manifest yet
user1804599
I want Descripten to convert JavaScript to LLVM.
user1646075
09:05
and a partridge in a pear tree.
user1646075
I'm watching a cooking show. Have you ever noticed how TV chefs CANNOT avoid using the word 'just' in almost every sentence? Once you've seen it...
Sorry for spoiling all cooking shows for you. No wait, not.
@TheDillo Qt? I have no idea.
Qt definitely works, for native looking GUI and OpenGL. Not sure if it's the best option.
Xeo
Xeo
user image
6
nice
Especially if you don't like all that OOP crap they shove into your mouth or the new overuse.
@Xeo So true
user1804599
09:18
@Jefffrey the best option is no GUI at all
user1804599
Lack of GUI gives the best user and developer experience.
You are not going to say CLI, are you?
user1804599
Command-line interfaces, OTOH, are great!
user1804599
Easy to use, easy to automate, lightweight, easy to maintain.
You can't expect users to use CLI, jesus
user1804599
09:19
Depends on the audience.
there, I put the comma so you know I'm not talking about "CLI jesus"
you all pedantic bricks
Unit testing is a great way to find broken unit tests.
@rightføld yeah
user1804599
If you have a decent audience, like {me}, then a CLI may work very well.
user1646075
@Xeo now that's worth a star. unlike most that are popping up today ;-(grrr
09:23
in Haskell, 14 secs ago, by Jefffrey
https://nixos.org/nix/ any thoughts?
user1646075
@Jefffrey Why? CLI forces the user to use their imagination. Plus, given the recent cinematic framerate vogue, consider being told how to imagine the scene.
user1804599
@Jefffrey Font is too large.
ok, maybe not any thoughts
user1804599
Won't use.
user1804599
It's probably shit.
user1804599
09:25
They can't even get the overview page right.
Stopped using cabal a couple of months ago. Using Nix for all local #Haskell development, cabal is just on a build server for deployment.
@rightføld webdev is hard
user1804599
I want to wait for Annex.
@Jefffrey I like ice cream.
user1646075
@StackedCrooked strawberry ftw!
@rightføld ?
09:26
Strawberry is good.
user1804599
@Jefffrey ??
I don't really have a favorite.
@rightføld ???
@rightføld What's that?
Annex I mean
user1646075
i had green tea icecream once. that worked. Sesame not so good
Not the question mark
user1804599
09:28
user1804599
@StackedCrooked Jullie hebben een saai Woord van het jaar.
user1804599
flitsmarathon
user1804599
pfft
user1804599
We have dagobertducktaks.
@rightføld I agree.
user1804599
09:44
I love my typecheck function.
Holy shit, the new office is gigantic.
your company moved office or you moved office?
I assume it's because your company want to add more people, not in preparation of all your colleagues turning obese and each would demand a roll to him/herself?
didn't you move with them?

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