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18:00
Yes
@AbhishekGupta That movie is way better than spy kids
It's an extremely dumb film
spi kides lol
shoshank redemptian master race
@AlexM. why are you spelling like an illiterate person all of a sudden?
I'm a bit bored
torn between making my troll pathfind to the player and playing a game
18:02
MEH! That movie was so lame and boring :P
Even a better one was `23`
i'm so hungover. and i was supposed to go out for a birthday four hours ago.
_"film"_ Movie you meant? Are you german after all?
Did my people such serious damage in your contry. I have to apologize :P
wrong
the right term is "motion picture"
get your English right
noob
Well yes ...
English is hard for anyone, but native speakers (and even then ...)
I'll do pathfinding now and play games later
here's my reasoning
by finishing this task I'll feel more accomplished
and more likely to enjoy a break
18:15
it's "film"
movie, film, motion picture etc.
they're all synonymous according to any dictionary
not this again
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Really! "film" is used in english as a valid synonym for motion picture? All the US people rather use "movie"
not you being wrong again
@πάνταῥεῖ fuck 'em
"movie" is an Americanism
18:17
how is "movie" not a synonym for "film"
oh noes
someone tainted the One and Only English with Americanisms
@AlexM. be gone, troll!
@LightnessRacesinOrbit I rather like to stick with brit. english. Looks all more clean for me
@πάνταῥεῖ good chap
And they have the Oxford Dictionary :)
Though I like the scots slang a lot (not I'm understanding that much)
why is "oh noes" starred?
18:20
I have a theory
whenever stars like that happen
navta pei is around
the secrecy of one's starred messages here on SO is holding my investigation back
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Wasn't me that time (inadvertenly starring)
but I'll get to the bottom of it
eventually
wtf
0
Q: Change original struct when overloading == operator

Kushagra SharmaWhat I want to do is overload the == operator in a C++ struct while also changing the value of the initial struct. The reason I want to do this is because I have a set_intersection running which only returns the first element in the first vector that it finds in the second vector, but my struct a...

@AlexM. it's "panta rei"
panta rei, right
18:23
@AlexM. Well right, of course!
0
Q: Change original struct when overloading == operator

Kushagra SharmaWhat I want to do is overload the == operator in a C++ struct while also changing the value of the initial struct. The reason I want to do this is because I have a set_intersection running which only returns the first element in the first vector that it finds in the second vector, but my struct a...

he wants operator== to mutate.
2
wot.
I think that's UB
If you use a standard algorithm I mean.
It assumes it doesn't mutate
I would have thought so too
@Rapptz lol
18:35
That was horrible.
WHOA
I discovered "peek definition" in VS
holy shit this is cool
was this pro only
Not that I know of.
You're just slow.
Go to Definition is a pretty old feature
no, I'm talking about "peek definition"
Xeo
Xeo
Go to Definition != Peek Definition
Peek inserts a small preview window into the current file
Xeo
Xeo
18:37
I think it's new to VS'15
Peek Definition is pretty old too.
@Xeo No way lol
Xeo
Xeo
Oh, right
Never used it before, anyways :D
> Peek definition is a Pro+ only feature. I saw it in a version table on the microsoft site, but I can't find a link anymore. (comparing express vs Pro vs ..).
Pretty sure it's from VS 2013.
so I'm seeing it for the first time because I have the 2013 community edition
which is new
18:39
@AlexM. Wouldn't know.
M$ and stupid extensions. Endless story ...
2013 Community Edition is just renamed VS 2013 Pro. Not really new.
Go to Definition and Peek Definition are pretty useless for C++ though.
Doesn't show ~implementation~ in the .cpp iirc.
Just whatever is in the .h(pp)
Xeo
Xeo
I wish people would stop with the stupid "M$"
fuck me, should have made a Cell class from the start
I used Vector2s
@πάνταῥεῖ r u drunk — Don Larynx 2 mins ago
LOL
18:42
replacing everything in the code was easy
but now I have to redo the hardness map
sigh
ok, one hour of choosing which cells can be walked on and which cannot be walked on
@Xeo Microcrap is just too much typing :P
Xeo
Xeo
How about just "MS"? Anything else makes you look like a try-hard hater, IMO. But whatever floats your boat, I guess.
What's a good way to convert std::wstring to std::string and vice versa?
GCC doesn't have std::wstring_convert.
Xeo
Xeo
Wasn't there something like wstring_convert?
lol
user1804599
Cool.
18:48
GCC doesn't have <codecvt>
I don't think libc++ does either but I didn't check
Xeo
Xeo
check what wstring_convert does, do it yourself?
nvm it does have it
The issue is that std::wstring_convert needs std::codecvt_utf8 etc
Which is part of the <codecvt> header that is missing
50
A: How to convert wstring into string?

namar0x0309Solution from: http://forums.devshed.com/c-programming-42/wstring-to-string-444006.html std::wstring wide( L"Wide" ); std::string str( wide.begin(), wide.end() ); // Will print no problemo! std::cout << str << std::endl;

Yikes.
50 upvotes
If you scroll down you'll see other people essentially suggesting the same thing lol
@Mysticial I was gonna work on getting 10k today, but Columbo serially upvoted me and now I have to wait to tomorrow =/
18:58
You're already at 10k
@Borgleader Doesn't matter. The vote reversal script will only undo his votes.
So if you keep getting upvotes, when the script runs, you'll still keep the rep from the other votes.
@Mysticial I'm repcapped. I doubt the script is smart enough to give me rep when it undoes his
@Borgleader It recalculates your rep as if he didn't vote on you at all today.
Really? nice
19:00
Also, the script will give me 8 rep i lost last night to a serial downvoter
This wchar_t to char thing is troublesome
Stupid Windows.
@Borgleader A conscious serial downvoter undergoing the automatic reversal scripts radar?
user1804599
Wunderbar.
@πάνταῥεῖ 4 downvotes in 34 sec, if they dont get reverted, their script sucks donkey balls
user1804599
I made a crappy documentation tool.
user1804599
19:03
#doc("Returns the absolute value of `x`.")
def abs(x)(ensure !isNaN(out) -> out >= 0) = Math.abs(x);
user1804599
user1804599
:D :D :D I'M ON DRUGS :D :D :D
All within 34 secs, should be reverted automatically. There are more sophisticated douchebags (like e.g. Vlad), that manage to fly under the mentioned radar.
Seems at least he's been caught about this anyway
@πάνταῥεῖ cuz he was dumb enough to admit it
fucking lazyness
19:06
@Borgleader Didn't see he did so, but I certainly believe that he was dumb enough just doing so :D
Well, we gotta prepare for that point of time, Vlad is unleashed from the penalty box again :(
Jan 12 at 14:14, by Bartek Banachewicz
@Bartek Banachewicz All my qestions were down-voted at once after I mentioned you in a comment. I am ready to spend all my reputation to whose who behaves such a way. — Vlad from Moscow 20 secs ago
Dec 10 '14 at 14:46, by Griwes
@Borgleader I have only refreshed that it is not only you who is allowed to down-vote answers. — Vlad from Moscow 59 secs ago
@Borgleader Seems both of them suck in a way. But there may be more valid reasons to DV Vlads answers than Bart's
context on the second one, i pointed out something wrong in his answer, got triple downvoted suspiciously, called him out and then he said that
@Borgleader As mentioned, Vlad used to use a subtle downvoting pattern, that's not easily caught up by the automatic reversal script. I've been a victim several times :P
Oh I'm pretty sure he kept downvoting me after that, but at longer intervals
ive lost more rep than usual after that encounter
but the first 3 downvotes were within 5 min of my comment on his answer
19:15
@Borgleader Vlad's just a stupid Igor
Igor, or sometimes Ygor, is a stock character assistant to many types of Gothic villains, such as Count Dracula or Dr. Victor Frankenstein, familiar from many horror movies and horror movie parodies. Although Dr. Frankenstein had a hunchback assistant in the 1931 film Frankenstein, his name was Fritz. == Origins == Dwight Frye's hunch-backed lab assistant in the first film of the Frankenstein series (1931) is the main source for the "Igor" of public imagination, though this character was actually named "Fritz". The sequels Son of Frankenstein (1939) and The Ghost of Frankenstein (1942) featured...
I wish SO implemented a feature where people who have serially downvoted don't see the username of the people who comment on their answers... i guess they could just log out and see it but wtv
... And may be more important: He's an unemployed Igor, looking for their vampire to get a job.
why are you evaluating these IO actions lazily you stupid fucking ass haskell
... stahp this is not Meta Café
Xeo
Xeo
Hm... why is the Box2D simulation off by 0.015. Wtf.
19:21
and above all, why don't you flush the output when you are evaluating them, even if I call hFlush stdout explicitly at each one?
@Xeo Box2D?
Xeo
Xeo
2D physics lib
@Borgleader I like you BTW. Resistance is futile <3 ...
tfw no is_char_type type trait
@πάνταῥεῖ You've assimilated well
19:23
@Borgleader :) Didn't even hurt.
Now I have to write these 10 lines of boilerplate
@Rapptz If you have recurring boilerplate, make it a template or function (or templated function)
..?
19:29
@πάνταῥεῖ pastebin.com/tf9dxKah this is what I meant by "boilerplate"
.
Tadah!
I am back at my nick name.
@Rapptz Oops boilerplate template specializations? Add another level of meta indirection maybe?
@wilx Hi Vaclav (was that you?)
@Xeo You mean like, private info that some dumbass decided to open to everyone in the Lounge soon after it ended?
@πάνταῥεῖ Yes.
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes ?
19:34
@wilx It's all hollow words (Besides my nick of course ;) )
Still don't have a sane solution for my stupid std::wstring <-> std::string issue
:)
hmm
-5
Q: BUILDING A PowerPC?

ravish0906I am a student from India and have been entrusted with task of designing a PowerPC based PC for a project. I am a noob in this area and would require the help of gurus here to build it from scratch. Please advice me on the same. Basically I need help in following areas :- Understanding how do...

@wilx Closed, s.o. was even faster than me :)
@wilx But seriously, I still seem to close vote too many. My triggers are set too low ;P
19:38
what the fuck are you evaluating
what the hell is going on
user1804599
Welcome to Stack Overflow! Your question appears to be off-topic as it is way too broad, you might get better answers on Computer Science. — cybermonkey 5 mins ago
user1804599
Houston, we have a Vlad.
@πάνταῥεῖ Yeah, I think many questions get closed too fast, before the person has a chance to react. This one was obviously off topic, though.
@Rapptz wstring_convert with codecvt<wchar_t, char_t, mbstate_t>?
GCC/libstdc++ does not have <codecvt>.
19:39
How the fuck can mapM (a >> b) [...] evaluate all bs and then all as.
Jan 5 at 23:31, by Bartek Banachewicz
the hell am I supposed to do, tell them a fairy tale about the Witch of Goto and the Hero of Immutability?
@wilx Especially for lower rep users this should be thought as a good excercise, to keep on with their questions, and to let them know SO is a very highly reactive site.
user1804599
@Jefffrey that code makes little sense.
Lo
19:41
@рытфолд how come?
0
Q: Nested class member access on C++11

user1631747In C++11, I am trying to access a member variable of an enclosing class from a nested class in the following way: struct Enclosing { int a; struct Nested { int f() { return a; } }; }; Even this doesn't compile using g++4.7.2 with -std=c++11, producing er...

user1804599
Are you using the function monad?
needs close votes
@Rapptz I already dupe voted
@рытфолд are you complaining because it should be mapM (\i -> a >> f i) [...]?
user1804599
19:42
Perhaps, I don't know what you want to do.
I could have gold closed it but he missed
@Rapptz Dupe is much better. Otherwise it would have deserved an answer.
Let's say I have: mapM (\i -> print i >> return $ hugeLongFunction i) [1..n]
Jun 12 '14 at 0:30, by Cat Plus Plus
Gimme mail if you're not on Slack already
So it goes from 1 to n and for each number it prints the number and then calculates some huge expensive thing with that number. Somehow what I get is me waiting for 20 seconds or so, and then all the output printed out in 1 shot
So I'm guessing that each hugeLongFunction is evaluated first and then all the printing is done.
Xeo
Xeo
19:45
@Rapptz Get C++11 gold, scrub
user1804599
@Jefffrey Could be buffering.
I even tried to explicitly hFlush stdout in: print i >> hFlush stdout >> hugeLongFunction i, and yet it's not flushed.
I have a gold C++11 badge in my heart.
user1804599
It shouldn't calculate everything beforehand since it's lazy.
Also tried with hFlushAll (which should take care of reading buffering too) and still the same result.
user1804599
19:46
Then I don't know. Ask on Stack Overflow.
thanks for trying
user1804599
Wait.
I stumbled upon this guy's profile. He doesn't like me or @Xeo
RIP
user1804599
It shouldn't evaluate hudeLongFunction i at all.
@Borgleader Just unclear, no matter which tags
user1804599
19:47
Unless you use the result of mapM.
@рытфолд Of course I do.
user1804599
SSCCE.
Xeo
Xeo
@Rapptz Now I'm sad. ;_;
@πάνταῥεῖ I just wanted to get this C crap out of my question feed :P
mapM builds a IO [a] which contains a list of something that is written to file.
@рытфолд Too complicated to unfold. I know that makes it impossible for you to help me. It's ok, I have to eat anyway.
I'm eating my liver over this one.
I've been swearing for a couple of hours now.
user1804599
19:50
You cannibal.
@Rapptz I like what he did to his face
user1804599
@Jefffrey Good.
user1804599
Feel the fury.
user1804599
Let the hate flow through your veins.
user1804599
19:50
Set the world ablaze.
@рытфолд my arse
I fucking love haskell, but jesus fucking christ! every once in a while it really pisses me off
user1804599
@thecoshman no, your pooper is not a proper SSCCE.
user1804599
Jesus fucking Christ? That's epic incest!
@рытфолд Boolucks
@Jefffrey when you try to use it?
@R.MartinhoFernandes my initial response was "I think it's a little late for christmas stable scenes"
@sehe My thoughts exatly
very exat, that is
Xeo
Xeo
Seems like I just need to find a better scale for SFML space <-> Box2D space
One were a 0.015 inaccuracy doesn't look so annoyingly bad
@Mysticial interesting? stackoverflow.com/q/28003334/85371 Or FAQ maybe?
20:05
omg Miranda Lightning <3
Puzzling has LaTeX support
Why doesn't SO?
@sehe The truly complete answer would be too broad.
user1804599
@Rapptz Ask on Puzzling.
47
Q: There's seriously no reason why LaTeX markup via MathJax shouldn't be enabled on SO

A. DondaI know this has been discussed over and over again, and it may be very boring and annoying for people who have been around a while, but I'm telling you: Unless this need is fulfilled, it will continue to come up again and again and again. I've read the other posts about this matter, and as far as...

hmmm... an function that takes a 'display' and a 'window'... do I make that display.fn(window w) or window.fn(display d)... I don't want this to be a free function...
20:07
youll find your answer here methinks
user1804599
@thecoshman Make it a free function.
@рытфолд but I don't want to :S
user1804599
I also don't want a lot.
user1804599
Now make it a free function and your problem is solved.
-4
Q: code skips instance of "if" check even though it's true

Don LarynxI have the following code #include "stdafx.h" #include <iostream> #include <string> #include <algorithm> using namespace std; long int qualities(long int number, std::string &strpand){ strpand = to_string(number); int strsize = strpand.size(); if (strpand[3] % 2 != 0){ cout <<

S.o. else here who thinks this deserves closing?
20:09
I think it makes sense to be member function of display... you have to have the display in the first place to even map a window...
@Borgleader Can't they do it cleverly and load MathJax only if the question page contains any LaTeX math?
user1804599
Define "display" first.
lol, I've already wrote this function :P
user1804599
written
I bet you done
20:11
@wilx I have no clue how their shit works...
learn to talk left
user1804599
This is kinda annoying.
user1804599
#someAttribute
let x = 42;

#someAttribute
let y = x;
user1804599
Currently this makes 42 have two attributes.
user1804599
I think I should make attributes apply to variables, not to objects.
20:17
@рытфолд I'd guess 42 has actually infinite attributes :P
@πάνταῥεῖ Being the answer to life, the universe, and everything, it certainly seems like it would.
@sehe don't encourage kids to play with matches! (associating namespace through template arguments, cute but devious)
@TemplateRex How is it devious. It's already happening all around.
@JerryCoffin Yeah, that's what I've had in mind ...
20:21
Is it me or there are very few questions today?
user1804599
Ah, I can solve this problem in a very nice way.
user1804599
I just need an attributesof operator which returns the attributes of the given variable or member.
@Borgleader At least offhand, it seems about normal for a weekend.
@sehe but why would you want to? operator<< belongs to the Object interface, so it should go directly into it's surrounding namespace, no tricks needed
@TemplateRex Kids need to play with matches (under controlled conditions of course). Do you want to see all of us getting exstinct because loosing the knowledge how to handle fire and control it? (My princess is member at the pathfinders, and that's very good so)
20:23
@TemplateRex I guess you've seen the answer? No need to tell me. I'm merely pointing out /how/ it is designed and intended to work. A (clever) sample goes a long way; people might just /get/ it, instead of going "oh, aha - complicated!" (blank stare) reading the specs or average description of ADL.
Sue me for "explaining" by demonstration
user1804599
what is the topic about
@рытфолд Dunno
@sehe don't sweat it, I upvoted already, like I said, it's cute.
:D
Just following methaphores :P ...
20:26
@R.MartinhoFernandes do you understand STV?
@sehe btw, it is a dangerous trick, IIRC, if a template argument itself is a template, then the association goes one level deeper to its argument
@thecoshman Single Transferable Vote?
can surprise the heck out of you
@R.MartinhoFernandes yeah
20:27
been looking for someone to confirm I got to the right result from the poll
Where are they?
probably too late to really matter now, but for peace of mind like
@R.MartinhoFernandes oh, that never got pinned
@R.MartinhoFernandes here
@TemplateRex Why would you one-sidedly call that "dangerous"? Seems so... arbitrary to call it that. It's powerful. It can be unexpected. But it can also be extremely nice
@0x499602D2 To be fair, I learned this when troubleshooting this: Getting the address of template class object leads to full instatiation of template parameters (It includes the relevant standards quotes). I was pretty wowed back then. — sehe 1 min ago
@thecoshman Wait.
How do you even want, what.
There's only one seat to fill.
yeah... so it needs 6/11 votes...
20:30
Hmm, I guess that still works.
So what's the question?
London wins.
did I apply the logic right?
user1804599
oh my vagina
yeah, just wanted to make sure I did it right
@thecoshman There's no need to apply anything. A voting system that wouldn't pick a simple absolute majority to fill a single seat would be broken.
@TemplateRex So the rule of thumb is to always overload operators/well known free functions for specific argument types, lest you want to end up in a swamp of ambiguous overloads for compound types with lots of ADL-associated namespaces.
Incidentally, this was a key insight of experience I applied yesterday. The rest was plain sailing there IMO
20:31
There's more than 50% of people wanting London. The winner can't be anything else.
@thecoshman If you have only one "seat" to fill, and one candidate starts with a majority of votes, then that candidate wins. End of story. No need for anything more complex.
@sehe the danger is that inside any of the associated namespace might be another operator<< that might be a better match than the function you intended to be called (say, better CV-qualifiers) and your code might even run and fail at runtime
@TemplateRex Assuming that that better match was not suitable
(you do test, right :))
The complexity of STV is to deal with a case where you have multiple seats to fill and/or no single candidate starts with a majority of votes. Only in one of those cases do you have to do complex logic.
@sehe right, Items 57/58 from Alexendrescu/Sutter coding lines has some nasty examples
20:33
s/ / guide/
@TemplateRex Wokay. I'd be hard pressed to come up with pathological ones that couldn't be prevented by appropriately restricting applicable overloads anyways (i.e. Sfinae or no-implicit conversions)
@sehe I do test, but I don't like to make my code dependent on some namespace over which I have little control. My stuff goes in my namespace, and ADL is a friend to retrieve it using natural syntax.
@sehe s/ lines/guidelines/ perhaps?
@R.MartinhoFernandes @JerryCoffin vOv either way, London wins
@thecoshman Yes.
@TemplateRex Well, tough luck. This is C++. Even if you "don't encourage it", you're still stuck in the same swamp
20:34
That's what we're trying to tell you. No sane voting system would pick a different winner.
:) This was more funny
I just wanted a fresh way of saying "You accidentally a"
> right, guideItems guide57/58 guidefrom guideAlexendrescu/Sutter guidecoding guidelines guidehas guidesome guidenasty guideexamples
top kek
I've seen some very guidesome people the other day.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Except in the Netherlands, where the cabinet considers passing a law using "emergency ruling" even though senate rejected it (of course, it won't happen, but parties are voicing the idea as munition in the debates)
20:38
@sehe He did say "sane". :-)
I know. I was giving the example to make a point about the sanity of governments/democracries
Someone put a chair on top of some pallets next to the window in our office, and climbed on top of the chair (there was a footprint) to, I suppose, look inside. And then left the whole setup there.
@sehe Fair enough.
@sehe it's not exactly emergency ruling, but the cabinet was claiming that a watered-down version of their proposed law was already allowed under current law. They wanted to implement the watered-down version in so-called "lower administratitive rulings". This is a normal procedure to work out details of general laws.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Optimization. He might want to check regularly. Or he's sharing the opportunity to look more easily with his co-workers.
@TemplateRex I'm p. sure I heard different things on Radio 1 but - hey - all the better if it wasn't so
20:42
@sehe EU should make rulings on lower cubicle walls in offices :-)
At least the journalist was speaking in terms of "unconstitutional".
@sehe the cabinet of course was a bit obnoxious in rubbing the senate's nose in that fact. They should have resubmitted a different version of the law through parliament. But technically, they were within the law.
@sehe journalists don't know shit. I happen to have worked on that particular law proposal at my previous job.
Btw, speaking of STV.
Does anyone know the name of this system that we use to assign factions to players in games: everyone writes all factions down in order of preference. Then the first preferences are compared. Whoever has a unique one, gets it and is out. Then the second preferences of all who didn't have a unique one are checked. And so on. The process repeats until everyone has the same preferences in the same order, at which point we use luck to decide.
20:51
@R.MartinhoFernandes stable matching?
Googling that didn't produce good results.
Oh wait, it did.
I saw "stable marriage problem" and thought it was about marriages and divorce and shit.
Didn’t know that name, cool stuff.
they use it in all kinds of shit, e.g. applications from students to schools, and also to match kidney donors to recipients
2
this guy won the Nobel Prize in Economics for it, few years ago
Oh, it works two ways, too (hence 'marriage')?
@LucDanton yes schools have to accept students, and student have to accept schools
20:55
Crazy stuff.
it's a "stable" match if noone wants to change after all is being sorted out
Hmm, there's one difference I notice, though.
In my scenario, one side has no preferences.
Should still work, just set equal preference for that side? Or something
> each woman replies "maybe" to her suitor she most prefers and "no" to all other suitors.
20:59
@R.MartinhoFernandes what happened to, no=maybe, maybe=yes, yes=slut? :-)
1
Q: Stable marriage problem with only one side having preferences

Vishaal KalwaniI was wondering about a variation on the Stable Marriage Problem. Initially, we have two sets of entities, usually males and females, and they have preference lists ranking the other group, and through a series of proposals, we end up with a stable matching. Thinking of it like medical schools ...


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