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00:00
@sehe that backflip..
reminds me of this:
yeah
that's a tight ball weight competition
Amount of sports are positively correlated with the amount of bruises
The outdoor/bushwalk group I am with, quite a few people got a broken arm or leg or sustained some rib injury last year
user1804599
@sehe dat backflip
00:09
@AndyProwl I'm more impressed by the bigness of that wave.
I wish "of that wave" was in a new message
We don't have that here at the North Sea.
@StackedCrooked falling in there must have been quite an experience
I just realized
"polymorphism" is the word I hear about the least in programming
there's this top network question about the word
You hear words when programming?
00:12
also the guy swimming against it to reach the top was nearly screwed
I hear cheesy songs when programming..
@AlexM. really? I think I hear it quite often
I think the last time I heard of polymorphism was in college 1st year
in fact I think I also pronounce it quite often
@AndyProwl shrug
apparently people do talk about it
lol
I think I'll download sims 2 again
last time I tried to play it it didn't go so well
I created an old sim and after some half an hour of playtime it informed me that he was going to retire soon
I was like holy shit I need to mate quickly or this will be the end of my family
00:16
did you watch him die?
nope
I just left the game alone
This is wildly assumptive. It's a bit like saying that because the population of Ireland is 51% female, Captain America is probably a woman. — Richard Sep 11 '14 at 20:22
I'll start with a teenager next time
2
00:16
@R.MartinhoFernandes I think Filip lives there.
user1804599
> Hot Coldman
user1804599
dat name
@AlexM. You forgot to add "of that wave" against out-of-context starring
> I'm guessing @sehe's approach is stronger, but until I understand it better, I find myself leap-frogging off of @MichaelSander's extension. I modified it to match the syntax and return type of the built-in Enumerable.Join() method described here. I appended the "distinct" suffix in respect to @cadrell0's comment under @JeffMercado's solution.
What a way to start an answer
00:24
I am not a feminist, feminists are more altruistic than I am. But I have sharp claws and big pointy fangs & if being a female stops me from getting what I want, I will make sure those lovely weapon land on the raw, tender flesh of whoever stands in the way!
Good evening to you too
Hey do you guys have a favourite way to inspect thread concurrency on Linux? I'm trying to figure out if stuff that I think happens in parallel actually does..
> Even the finest programmers could use a little help from their friends on Stack Overflow now and then. The site, which invites users to ask and answer one another’s questions about specific coding problems, has become a global hub for software engineers, catering to pros and amateurs alike. Silk Road mastermind “Dread Pirate Roberts,” it seems, was no exception. slate.com/blogs/future_tense/2013/10/02/…
TIL
@Mikhail I'e never found any requirement for such inspection. If there is more than one ready thread, and there are cores free, then they run in parallel. I've never felt any need to check it. It always happens.
00:38
@AlexM. Old news. It led to his arrest.
I know it's old
StackExchange gave out his info or something and then he got arrested.
it was dropped randomly into some comment from arse technica about new news
but I only found out about it today
@MartinJames So basically this guys code is spamming threads, possibly more then 16 can be running at once. I need to check what actually happens :-)
00:42
@Rapptz what I remember is that he actually dropped the info himself (using a name linkable to his real identity). He changed his name later, but he kept using the same account, and by then it was too late.
@StackedCrooked yep, standing there and literally just screaming at the top of your voice is totally the mark of top talent
Glad you agree.
@Mikhail or you can look at true execution time... Only valid measurement is the observable throughput/runtime/latency/ ...
I am looking for a mini crane for hire & I found this ...
0
Q: Is there something like boost for C?

gabrielhidasyI know there are many libraries to replace each and any part of it, and I suppose many of then are probably better in their tasks then a one-size fits all library. I was just curious if there is any maintained collection of libraries like Threads Parsing Async IO Networks Graphics Useful Conta...

Dat envy in the title.
Also, dat dupe voting in ...
00:47
@Mikhail printf the thread ids?
@chmod711telkitty nice
(what is it?)
> And while this won’t appear anywhere in the criminal charges against Ulbricht, the court of computer-programmer opinion may duly note that he asked two questions on the site, but didn’t take the trouble to answer anyone else’s.
THERE'S NOTHING WRONG WITH THAT!
(Dealing drugs is kinda wrong though. I think.)
@sehe You don't have a choice, afaik clang-cl does not support exceptions.
In any case, his blog is full of really interesting articles
fortunately no... — iharob 43 mins ago
Edgy.
00:57
@sehe Isn't there CPAN .. Oh wait.
..that was Perl.
@Borgleader duh. he could use a compiler on a supported platform (or is windows suddenly supported?)
If C had had a library like boost it'd be called bump.
@StackedCrooked CPAN is prolly >10% C code from what Iv'e seen
@StackedCrooked *dump FTFY
@StackedCrooked penalty
01:00
casualty
<frantically>what did he say?!</frantically>
@sehe you should use CSS for that
01:18
@Borgleader The only spectacular thing I could do at home would be to jump from my balcony. But then I'd be dead. And it wouldn't be really spectacular.
02:05
I'm sure you can permanently deafen yourself at home somehow
laff GTA5 preorder bonus is the best
Whole $1M in-game
@BartekBanachewicz Give me 6 to 8 days
> Offering a total sandbox experience, H1Z1 is a zombie survival MMO set in a post-apocalyptic world.
y u so adorable D:
@Rerito *mozzarella
@milleniumbug I would actually like to try that, removing the ketchup of course.
Ketchup is the only salvageable part
02:18
Ketchup on pizza? What the fuck.
^ this
If there's no good sauce around
Garlic <3
garlic's nice too
Garlic is life.
Onions too.
No: Poutine is love, Poutine is life.
02:26
Especially if this poutine features onions and mushrooms.
02:49
@worrydream http://t.co/S0EkXHR0Gl
@EtiennedeMartel I'm almost tempted to post a picture. There's a restaurant here in San Diego that serves something they call poutine, but I'm afraid a purist or aficionado would find it offensive.
@JerryCoffin Seriously, I'm not really that anal about what is a poutine or what isn't.
The hell is poutine. Sounds like someone dangerous and in power.
@EtiennedeMartel I don't mean to accuse you of being anal--but even I thought calling it poutine was a bit of a stretch.
@Nooble That has a capital "P" and no "e" on the end.
its dangerously delicious
02:53
I'm hungry all of a sudden.
@Borgleader Is that cheese? Or mashed potatoes?
@Nooble Fries, Cheese and gravy
for Italian Poutine replace gravy with spaghetti sauce
Hi.
02:59
@Borgleader Officially, that should really be "cheese curds" rather than "cheese".
@R.MartinhoFernandes Hola.
:(
@JerryCoffin true
Whatever.
Sorry. I'm psyched.
I'm watching Forbidden Planet. Guess because robot watched it, it must be good.
hahah, thanks.
03:06
@milleniumbug One of the more commonly known rule-of-thumbs.
@milleniumbug It's not my favourite movie and I don't think it's especially good, but I watched it when I was young and it resonated with me for some reason. Then people started calling me 'robot' here and I thought Robbie would make a great avatar.
Totally worth watching though.
03:25
@R.MartinhoFernandes I'm pretty sure by the nature of things, one person actually started calling you "robot", and others just followed... :-)
I was wondering about something this week, why is it that in C++, binary literals are written: 0b100101, hex: 0x124F, but octals is jut 0456. I would have expected 0o1456.
(which means 0 is an octal literal, if im not mistaken)
what's the deal with apple using the color red now? It's pretty unappealing
@Borgleader It's that way in C++ because it was that way in C. In C, it's mostly historical. First came decimal, then octal. Hexadecimal using a prefix was added later (and binary much later still).
@corvid Beats Bondi Blue!
@JerryCoffin I see, so there's no technical/language grammar reason?
I liked the blue, it was relaxing ._.
03:29
@Borgleader If you mean "could they have used 0o for octal?" then I'm pretty sure the answer is yes.
yeah thats what i meant. I like consitency
It also avoids certain wtf moments if you write 09 and it fails to compile
@Borgleader Could have, but given the order it's pretty easy to imagine how it didn't happen. When they added octal, I'm pretty sure nobody really contemplated adding more bases, and space was still at quite a premium, so the "waste" of adding an o to an octal literal would have sat poorly with some at the time.
Useless historical background: BCPL used #123 to denote octal literals. B could not adopt this because # meant conversion from int to float, so they used 0 instead. C cargo-culted this from B, and C++ from C.
Useless fun fact: 0 is an octal literal in the C++ grammar. Perhaps for consistency we should write decimal literals as 0d123.
BCPL also used #x123 for hexadecimal, so we get both the octal 0 and the hex 0x because B replaced # with 0.
No one uses octal literals now.
I saw some POSIX code that used open() the other day...
But granted, apart from access rights it's rare to see octal literals.
(except 0, hur, hur)
03:40
@Wintermute Access rights in octal? o.o
@Rapptz Yes we do. 0 is an octal.
Oct 27 '13 at 0:28, by Rapptz
0 is an octal literal.
@Borgleader Sure. Like chmod(filename, 0644);
In Unix-like operating systems, chmod is the command and system call which may change the access permissions to file system objects (files and directories). It may also alter special mode flags. The request is filtered by the umask. The name is an abbreviation of change mode. == History == A chmod command first appeared in AT&T Unix version 1. As systems grew in number and types of users, access_control_lists were added to many file systems in addition to these most basic modes to increase flexibility. == Command syntax == Usual implemented options include: -R recursive, i.e. include objects in...
you can get by without using octal in chmod now a days on some commands though
You could, but it kind of makes sense to use octal if you work with bitmasks that are three bit wide.
04:23
Hi All
Can somone care to answer this question
3
Q: Overloaded Virtual Function in Virtual Inheritance

Talha IrfanMy question is bit lengthy. Kindly answer it only once you go through the whole problem. I have implemented the Diamond Problem as follows: class Polygon { protected: int sides; public: Polygon() { cout << "Polygon's Default Constructor being called." << endl; } ...

when we want to answer questions we do, dont need to post them here
Agree but question's comments got too lengthy
and stackoverflow suggested me to go to chat
and take it there
Looking at the list of comments my guess is it told you to chat with @vsoftco specifically
can we chat in private as well (Sorry new to this chat etc thing)
04:29
thanks
 
2 hours later…
06:28
Hmm. I took some compressed air and blew it through my laptop. I didn't see that much dust fly out, but it dropped my temperatures by more than 10C.
Okay... Good enough for me. It doesn't throttle anymore.
@Mysticial LOL
@MarkGarcia I wish I could do the same with my desktops.
That's one of the reason I'm excited about fanless laptops.
@Mysticial Kind of amazing how little it really takes to form some insulation.
I run benchmarks on my laptop since it's the only working Sandy/Ivy Bridge machine left in the family.
And throttling really fucks up benchmarks.
06:30
@Mysticial It took me some time to process that you're using water cooling. (right?)
@MarkGarcia Even with water, they still have a radiator and a (large) fan on it. But dusting it out is less important.
@Mysticial ...unless you connect the water to a heat exchanger with (for example) a geothermal system. Then it's just water from the CPU shedding heat to water you pump underground to radiate the heat into the soil. At 50 feet down (or so) it'll stay a nice, even 68F winter and summer almost anywhere.
@AlexM. lol, that is hilarious failure. :D
07:36
Oo, new diplomatic move: sending the poor mothers to plea for sons lives ... yesterday was from Japan, today from Australia - because if your heart doesn't soften when a poor old woman begs you, you are an asshole
> Passengers aboard the 787 Dreamliner will benefit from a smoother ride. The 787 is equipped with Smoother Ride Technology.
One more thing to hate marketing.
@MarkGarcia Is this some Intel marketing for their next processor?
@Mysticial I read that MS's HoloLens uses Intel's Cherry Trail processor. Intel must have also made MS go for the term "Holographic Processing Unit" complete with the oh-so-clicky acronym HPU.
Cherry Trail? Did they run out of names? lol
Haswell -> Broadwell. Bay Trail -> Cherry Trail.
@Mysticial But wait for what's next to Cherry Trail. Braswell.
I can't even fathom why'd they go to such measures to introduce that NSFW-y name.
07:50
rise of robots - rose & rose for the past 50 years and I still have to cook my own dinner ... useless people who can't create a robot chef
I am useless because I am a nobody, but what were all those 'useful' people doing?
The lamest thing was when the successor to ValleyView was named ValleyView2
I just want a humanoid that cooks and clean my house for me that would cost me less than $200 per month, is that too much to ask?
08:12
All’s well that…
 
1 hour later…
09:18
hello is anyone alive?
sbi
sbi
Yes.
Oh hey hello
I have a question regarding creating a flexible events system
I'm creating an Event/Receiver/Observer class to listen for events and I intend for it to be attached to a parent class
In short, it's supposed to be a Component
But how do I relay information correctly to the parent class?
I'm about to use templates in the initializer so that you NEED to specify which class you're sending in
But I don't understand the performance penalties and the paradigm troubles I might encounter
Do you have any insight?
i.e. template <class Parent>
no
So don't use templates?
no
09:28
So should I instead have all my objects inherit from an object class so I can point to it?
(No)
So what then?
nah
So uh...
Nothing?...
TL;DR; What is the best way to sent parent class information from a class that receives events?
or, rather, get the type of the parent class
@Cinch you should ask it on SO, not here
usually we don't answer any questions here
Uh... You think? All my questions are usually downvoted...
we don't give a damn. it's your problems
09:36
@Cinch thats a pretty loaded question with not a lot of context
you should post a question on SO with your specific requirements, and what you've tried so far
Mmm... I see...
Once I do, would any of you like to take a look at it?
Lots of people in this chat browse SO already, if they want to check it out, they'll do it on their own
sbi
sbi
@Cinch If they are as badly worded as yours here, this is no surprise.
HOLY SHIT! I just realized that 14882 starts with 14 and 88
sbi
sbi
@Cinch We might. If it's interesting, well-described, and fully explains what you're actually trying to do. (But then, if you do that, you do not need to rely on us, because everyone on SO will beat each other over the privilege to ear rep from this.)
@Abyx What's the significance? Were you born in February 1488?
09:41
The Fourteen Words is a phrase used predominantly by white nationalists. It most commonly refers to a 14-word slogan: "We must secure the existence of our people and a future for White Children." It can also refer to another 14-word slogan: "Because the beauty of the White Aryan woman must not perish from the earth." == Origin == Both slogans were coined by David Lane, convicted terrorist and member of the white separatist organization The Order. The first slogan was inspired by a statement, 88 words in length, from Volume 1, Chapter 8 of Adolf Hitler's Mein Kampf: What we must fight for is to...
@sbi Hmmmm.. There's no guaranty. Look at your own question you put a bounty on
sbi
sbi
@Rerito Obviously, it wasn't all that well worded. You guys suggested improvements, and I changed it. (Note: I was fighting the ridiculous claims that it's off-topic, not that it was improvable.)
It wasn't off topic at all to me
sbi
sbi
@Rerito That's why I was fighting those claims.
(Are you still tired?)
Nope but I just came home from a jog so I might be a little braindead
sbi
sbi
09:46
Ah, I can currently relate to that very well, although for me, it's induced by these temperature fluctuations.
Indeed, I got snow on the way!
sbi
sbi
You jogged through the snow? That's what I call determination.
Anyway, since I feel too frail for hunting, and reading, an original Dijkstra paper:
Am I right in assuming that in Dijkstra's paper "Solutions of a problem in concurrent programming control" (Sept. 1965), a P(m) operation locks the mutex m, while the V(m) unlocks it? Otherwise this paper from '71 @wilx linked me to doesn't make much sense to me.
There wasn't snow when I left. But once you're out and like 3km from home... You have no choice!
sbi
sbi
@Mysticial From what my admins told me, this would make the fans work as generators, driving voltage through the electronics backwards. They specifically told me to not to do that. I dunno if that is superstition or a real problem.
Thanks, @Rerito!
@sbi I've always been told that too
09:54
Okay, so I posted the question as: "What are several ways for a child Event Listener class to send event information to its parent?"
It appears the P and V operations are defined in a Dijkstra's paper...
sbi
sbi
@Rerito Yeah, I have come across that in other places, too. I just don't know if it is true.
The little abstract you linked to does not even explain concisely what they are
sbi
sbi
@Rerito That's why I asked. I feel so goddamn bad, I am too lazy to google for a paper and read it...
Otherwise that paper wouldn't make much sense to me. But then, currently that could be me...
I vaguely remember P and V being some dutch thing that meant 'raise' and 'lower'
for a semaphore count
sbi
sbi
09:57
I suspected exactly this. :)
Me too, as these functions operate on semaphore objects in the aforementioned paper
P = Probeer ("try"), V = Verhood ("increment")
@Pris Oh great that settles it I guess
sbi
sbi
@Pris Thanks!

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