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Ell
Ell
00:00
@BartekBanachewicz to me that means you can't drive :P
You can drive as long as you believe.
In that getting arrested is worth it.
Or fined.
@Ell Well, I have no software qualifications either, but I can still... oh never mind :)
Thinking of it I have no driving licence either. I have a record on a disk in Swansea, but I have lost my paper/plastic licence. I guess I should renew it.
I will take a large pepperoni, with pineapple pieces, please.
@Nooble Also, I prefer obsproject.com
I use that for streaming.
Again, severe disk bottlenecks.
I need an SSD.
Ell
Ell
If the disk is the bottleneck, use a better encoding
Video codec
00:15
Hey, I'm having Pizza tonight. Just a frozen one though.
@Ell I'm trying to find a good one.
@CatPlusPlus Googling it leads to a lot of results about "20fps max while recording"
Sounds fancy.
Ell
Ell
I need a portable laptop for travelling
For browsing the internet and maybe a little light coding
Something cheap
Maybe I could try a chromebook
@рытфолд One of the other guys in my group removed strict and warnings everywhere
wat
user1804599
@Jefffrey tell him he is a fucking idiot.
00:24
@Nooble You have no SSD? I thought I was the caveman.
@caps Me too. It's in the oven now. It has triple pepperoni, chillies and habanero sauce. It should be OK:)
@Ell Most laptops are portable.
Ell
Ell
This is true
I can't stop FFXIII from updating
wtf steam
there used to be a "never update" option there
so the options are
"Always try to stop working with my save files when I least expect it."
"Only try to stop working with my save files when it hurts the most."
"Try very hard to stop working with my save files, I love getting fucked."
lol
select B and never launch the game
I don't trust developers who took a month to come with 1080p support, when a random guy did it in a day
on the same game?
00:36
yes
they took a whole month to add 1080p support
and a quit y/n message
which was really a windows messagebox
I'm serious these were the only changes
or maybe I'm wrong, it could've been 2 months
I forgot
I definitely do not trust developers whose idea of a quit confirmation dialog in a game is a windows messagebox
(that also crashes the game if you press Esc in the intro, something's probably not there until the main menu, so the message can't be shown lol)
\o/ all day, it's been 'pizza'. Now, I HAVE TEH PIZZA!
user1804599
eh ok so
user1804599
uh
@MartinJames Save some for me!
user1804599
So this guy is eating burning nachos.
user1804599
00:43
As in they are literally on fire.
@AlexM. TRWTF is buying FX13 in the first place
I wanted Pizza for lunch, but got voted down and had Korean barbecue instead. Not bad, but I really wanted pizza.
@Rapptz Never had any issue
@EtiennedeMartel it's a great game
user1804599
What is that bright star.
user1804599
00:53
ooh wait
user1804599
It's Jupiter.
user1804599
Fucking awesome.
@рытфолд A gas giant. Is it time for a 'your mom' joke?
user1804599
No.
@рытфолд OK, I'll go outside with binoculars,
user1804599
01:00
Goodbye.
@AlexM. (false) humility?
@MartinJames Enjoy.
user1804599
You are horrible.
My binoculars froze up.
user1804599
01:11
OK.
It's fucking cold out there. The grass makes cracking noises as I walked on it. There is also some mist so not much chance of spotting the planet anyway, esp. as my hands were shaking with the cold. It was a bad plan:(
user1804599
@рытфолд looks great. I wish I can buy a telescope.
user1804599
You cannot see that with a telescope unless you are more nearby.
user1804599
01:15
They sent a spacecraft there for a reason.
@рытфолд Oh.
I heard the US government will start funding for a Titan mission.
The voyagers got better pics than a white blob.
user1804599
inb4 life on ceres
Ell
Ell
01:31
I wonder how I can look at different portage profiles online
I thought it was Europa, not Titan
user1804599
They're also visiting Pluto in July.
have you seen that project where some dude is combining a bunch of images taken by cassini
and making like a movie of saturn or something
user1804599
The probe already made some beautiful pictures of Io and Ganymede.
one of saturn's moons
user1804599
01:38
Awesome.
Ell
Ell
ebuilds are bash scripts. That seems like a bad idea
user1804599
@Ell Why?
Its bad because you can export something nasty, but its also good because you can export something
Ell
Ell
Because bash is shit
As a language
:P idk really, just seems weird
01:41
@Pris Yes. You are correct. My mistake. It was Europa :)
user1804599
@Ell Bash makes it trivial to call any interpreter.
user1804599
Wikipedia is slow today.
Ell
Ell
I guess. Though I wonder how youd specify that
Specify that the instructions to build something depends on something
any of you seen europa report?
user1804599
Yes.
user1804599
01:45
Io looks like a tasty cheese ball.
user1804599
Must be spicy with all those volcanos.
user1804599
I like imperative programming.
@MartinJames Your plan was bad and you should feel bad have a drink.
user1804599
Let's swap Io and the Moon.
@рытфолд Maybe we should swap Europe and Europa?
01:51
in gui libs, how do events get sent to the right widget?
think of like a list view where each list element can receive mouse events... but the whole list can too
@Pris Carefully.
@Pris Yup. To give some idea: microsoft.com/msj/0795/dilascia/dilascia.aspx (note this is written about MFC, but a lot of the general ideas are a lot more ... general).
Ell
Ell
@рытфолд I bet you could write a better package manager than portage
user1804599
No. Portage was released.
user1804599
Also, Portage works just fine.
user1804599
Apart from a few things, like not integrating with cpan, gem and pip.
Ell
Ell
01:55
I wonder how that could be accomplished
user1804599
Ell
Ell
I was looking for this talk
@Ell Seems like the obvious choice would be a plug-in architecture, where you define an interface the rest of the program uses, and a plug-in has to implement that interface to talk to a particular type of...repository (for lack of a better term).
02:08
@JerryCoffin that article is... long
02:29
@Pris Closely reflects the complexity of the question you asked.
saw "Lounge<>", joined, thought "oh crap, pizza, not c++, exited, noticed "Jerry Coffin" before it loaded other screen, rejoined
@JerryCoffin You're good with software copyright law right?
@Mysticial A little. I know quite a bit about patents, but less about copyrights.
@Blob Well thank you (I think, anyway).
@Mysticial Why--what's up?
02:38
I was trying to find out if system libraries like libc, libc++, and libpthread allow static linking with closed sourced software.
Since I'm trying to decide whether or not to pull the Linux binaries from my website.
I'm guessing the answer is "no" which means I need to pull the binaries. But I keep reading random references here and there that "some" system libraries have exceptions for static linking.
@Mysticial I'd have to spend some time in individual licenses to be sure about all of them. The GNU standard libraries do have an exception that you can include the GPL library code in non-GPL binaries if (and only if) you used a "compatible compiling process", which basically means all the compilation was done with open-source tools (mostly, gcc). Otherwise, you can't (so, for example, statically linking libstdc++ to a binary produced with Intel's compiler wouldn't be allowed).
@JerryCoffin Interesting... And I'm using unmodified GCC with unmodified system libs.
Copyright law is complicated.
Ell
Ell
Iirc there are exceptions for some system libs, as you said
cant you use clang/its cppstdlib implementation/permissive C lib?
@Ell That would make sense. Because if I wasn't allowed to use system libs, then I'd me "fuck it" with Linux support - then there's no software at all. And that's why FSF has LGPL in the first place.
02:50
libc++ (normally used with Clang, not gcc) is dual-licensed (MIT or UIUC license) but both licenses are quite liberal (you're mostly just required to retain their notice/disclaimer).
Why are you statically linking anyway?
@Pris I haven't really played around much. I've only been using what GCC provides out-of-the-box.
@Rapptz Because I get a lot of complaints of incompatibilities when I first released with dynamic.
From who?
Everyone uses dynamic linking on Windows and Linux.
does clang on linux typically use glibc?
@Rapptz The people who run it? Some are overclockers. Some are professors/researchers...
02:53
I'm still not seeing the issue.
@Rapptz Windows doesn't have this incompatibility problem. Or at least it's all fixed by installing a redistributable package.
@Rapptz The point is, they try to run it, they don't have the correct version of libc installed and they complain about it.
@Mysticial The dirty secret of Linux: the only way to avoid (an analog of) DLL hell is to either build for specific combinations of versions/distros, or distribute source (and let the user or distro handle compiling its special version).
@JerryCoffin only the second option seems feasible tbh
no one maintains different packages beyond a few of the most popular distros
Ell
Ell
> When you use GCC to compile a program, GCC may combine portions of
certain GCC header files and runtime libraries with the compiled
program. The purpose of this Exception is to allow compilation of
non-GPL (including proprietary) programs to use, in this way, the
header files and runtime libraries covered by this Exception.
Hmmm
@Pris ...and it's only feasible if you're willing to distribute source (which I'm pretty sure @Mysticial isn't).
02:56
There's this solution:
13
Q: Linking Statically with glibc and libstdc++

themoondothshineI'm writing a cross-platform application which is not GNU GPL compatible. The major problem I'm currently facing is that the application is linked dynamically with glibc and libstdc++, and almost every new major update to the libraries are not backwards compatible. Hence, random crashes are seen ...

@Ell interesting
Ell
Ell
Worst comes to worst, ship your own dynamically linked libstdc++ with your programme
And link to it manually with LD_PRELOAD or something such
@Mysticial Yup--Microsoft caught hell (pardon the pun) for DLL Hell for years, but the reality is that Linux didn't really provide a better solution--it just tried to avoid the situation (and carefully ignore the problem itself).
@Ell Yeah, that's what the answer to the question I linked is suggesting. Most other proprietary software on Linux do that.
Ell
Ell
Which appears to be what that answer says pretty much
Yeah
That's why I didn't see the issue.
02:59
I just need to figure out how. Even if I just copy the .so files from my system, I need to find out where their source code is since I need to include it (among other things) in the package that I distribute.
Software on Windows distributes their own DLLs
Why can't you just do the same on Linux?
@Mysticial No you don't need to include the source in the distribution, just point in a text file where you /can/ download it.
Ell
Ell
To me though, the exception implies static linking is allowed
@Rapptz That's what I mean. I don't know where it's coming from. All I know is that I pulled it from /usr/libraries/bullshit path whatever.
Ell
Ell
> When you use GCC to compile a program, GCC may combine portions of
certain GCC header files and runtime libraries with the compiled
program.
"Combine portions"
Sounds like static linking to me
Dynamic linking doesn't but libraries inside your programme
@Mysticial If you're compiling with gcc and linking with the GNU library, then the terms I alluded to earlier apply:
You have permission to propagate a work of Target Code formed by
combining the Runtime Library with Independent Modules, even if such
propagation would otherwise violate the terms of GPLv3, provided that
all Target Code was generated by Eligible Compilation Processes. You
may then convey such a combination under terms of your choice,
consistent with the licensing of the Independent Modules.
03:03
@JerryCoffin Ah. Good enough for me.
The Linux version won't die tonight. :)
@Mysticial Literally hundreds dozens of a few users will be relieved.
:-)
I think it's single digit. :)
Proportionally speaking, my app is one of the more used stress-testers on Linux since it's one of the only ones.
Ell
Ell
I'm quite sure you can statically link
I think that will answer your questuons
Looks like Jerry already linked it
Its 03:07 so I'm sleeping. Night all!
@Ell G'night.
night
03:07
@Mysticial Phrases about big fish and small ponds come to mind.
I'm not even doing any fancy. All I'm doing is a single module compile of 300k lines of code using: g++ Main.cpp (some flags) And then running strip on the binary to remove the symbols.
That's it.
I'm not advanced enough to do anything else.
It's only on Windows do I have anything fancy.
yes, please
fail
FAIL
sounds like my RAID0 setup
03:24
Back on Facebook please.
:3
I must confess, in the past I was a rep miser. But no longer. I'm down-voting all bad answers wherever I see them.
It's only -1.
Yeah, I was really stingy
I'll probably relapse. I need a support group. I should start a chat room for down-voters and we can all propose things to down-vote into oblivion.
Nah, that would probably be against the rules. Ok, so I hereby resolve to down vote with impunity.
03:59
@AaronHall I only rarely downvote. If a question is crappy, I usually either edit to improve it, or else (if there's no way to save it) vote to close/delete.
Do you improve answers too?
@AaronHall Yes (though substantially less often). There I'll usually just write another answer I think is better (and when I've written an answer, I almost never downvote a "competing" answer unless it's really bad).
Well conflict of interest be darned. I'm the expert, they wrote a bad answer, they're getting it.
@JerryCoffin Thanks for the advice on the GPL thingy.
@AaronHall I guess that's all right if you're a real expert. I'm not sure I'm that knowledgeable.
@Mysticial Oh, certainly.
04:07
lol
But now I'm doing the next evil. Which is to statically link the entire pthread library so that std::thread doesn't crash. At least that should be a temporary solution until I can figure how to do the dynamic library route.
@Mysticial You're just a glutton for punishment, aren't you?
@JerryCoffin :)
My updated build file now has this in it:
gccflags="-std=c++0x -static -Wl,--whole-archive -lpthread -Wl,--no-whole-archive -fno-rtti -Wall -Wno-unused-function -save-temps -O2"
Lounge<Pizza>?
It's terrible.
04:12
@Descrip Thanks for reminding me. I need to go have supper. TTYAL.
user3010322
Mmm.
user3010322
I should eat too.
user3010322
Also, a long time ago in here, there was a link to a github comment
user3010322
where someone had to remove comments from their function to prevent the Javascript intepreter from refusing to inline because of the AST size of the function
04:36
Not even AST size :P
@AlexM. self-deprecation? closest I can get in my current state
It is very bad manners to ask a pure mathematician "what are the applications of your work"! :p — Federico Poloni 8 hours ago
and that's it for tonight
no one more thing
@StackedCrooked Give me an anime to watch this weekend. :D
A struct with no modifiers or methods is called a POD struct, which exists as a backwards compatible interface with C libraries as it is (supposedly) guaranteed to be laid out as though it were a C struct. Apart from this one exception though, the only difference is as stated. — workmad3 Sep 18 '08 at 14:22
wtgf
04:54
@LightnessRacesinOrbit It's not common, from what I know.
Most people just use LGBT.
I also sometimes see LGBTQ (where the Q stands for queer)
@LightnessRacesinOrbit isnt it night there? U r still here?
user1881400
05:11
@Nican hmm, depends. What animes do you prefer? Genre? Plot type? (Edit: didn't see it was to a particular user, oh well)
@FizzledOut Some favorites are Kill La Kill, Guereen Lagan, Bleach (Only the fights, not the lloong monologs)
user1881400
Have you heard any of the following? Dennou Coil, Darker than Black, Noein, or Angel Beats?
I only of Darker than Black.
Angel Beats and Noein looks interesting.
user1881400
I haven't personally seen Kill La Kill or Guereen Lagan, so I can't judge well based off of those. If you like action and such, Claymore and Soul Eater are good. Oh, add Kurokami to that list
I am going to need more than 48 hours in a weekend to watch all of these now.
user1881400
05:20
My top favs from those are Kurokami, Dennou Coil, and Noein. Probably in that order. Hope you enjoy.
Thanks!
user1881400
Your welcome. So I was wondering... twiddles thumbs and casually looks around if anybody could answer my simple C++ question waits for people to ask what it's about
just ask it
if someone wants to reply they will
user1881400
Can anybody tell me why include <vector> is used to access the vector class instead of #include stdio since I thought vector was a class and not a namespace (so it should be imported with stdio)?
@FizzledOut #include<vector> basically copy-and-pastes the file at gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/libstdc++/libstdc++-html-USERS-4.0/… int your source code
05:35
stdio is a C (not c++) header for input/output
<vector> is a c++ templated class for storage in a contiguous list (like a resizeable array)
stdio has nothing to do with vector
@FizzledOut Yes. That is correct, because the compiler does not know how std::vector is defined. You need #include<vector>, so that the compiler reads the vector definition, and knows how to use it.
user1881400
I come from C#, where only namespaces are used like that. Is the vector class in its own namespace then?
yes it is in the 'std' namespace.
05:44
@FizzledOut The compiler only knows what you import.
user1881400
I'm sorry, but I'm confused. This is what I currently think: the std namespace is not implicitly included in files, on account that std::cout and such will only work after it's added. The vector class resides within std namespace, just like cout and cin classes, such that the structure looks like this:
> std namespace
> cout
> cin
> vector

Then why doesn't `using namespace std;` allow std::vector to work if it allows cout and cin to work?
I guess the confusion comes from is that namespaces can have static variables.
You got std::cout and std::cin from #include <iostream>.
using namespace x; just makes it so you don't type x:: all the time.
It's bad practice to do this though.
user1881400
Here's an inconsistency, then. I have not yet imported the std namespace. The compiler will not yet recognize it. Why does using namespace std; work without the std namespace being included, and why can't we include it with include <std> or something?
05:54
#include <iostream>
// gets you:
namespace std {
   class cout;
}

#include <vector>
// gets you:
namespace std {
   class vector;
}
you can't 'import' the entire std namespace. In C and C++ you 'include' headers, which simply include other source code files in your own code. There is no 'import'
@FizzledOut Ohh.. No, this is not like C#, where you import the whole namespace at once when you say "Using System.IO". Here you just import the parts you want
C# and C++ are different bub.
user1881400
Thank you for solving that. @Nican and Pris, I was just about to ask if that was the difference. You guys are life savers!
06:24
Hi bots
Invalid input.
you can use what you need only with using std::cout;
@FizzledOut If you want to be specific by using a datastructure from inside a namespace you can do it like this
06:48
I'm trying to figure out if there can be a structure in which to call a base method but from the derived class without calling it from the derived class, after the base class conststructor gets called.
06:59
I know it is achieved only with polymorphism since there aren't virtual constructors in C++. Abstract Factories seem to suit well to provide a public api for implementations and hiding internal aspects.
 
2 hours later…
08:40
@Nican parasyte (still airing though)
09:02
Well, I guess everyone must be eating pizza right now.
@VictorLopez Sadly, no--the pizza is gone. It was really good though (and the waitress was gorgeous too).
@JerryCoffin Where is the pizza?
09:50
Good moaning
@StackedCrooked ?? lol
Is '4500J' the energy required to fix the fountain?
10:05
Nice Engrish
Talking of repairs, I don't understand this: 'A class assignment is asking me to create a program that will calculate the half life of a radiation leak and print the results into a table'.

Is the prof. asking for the half-life of the leak, (which would depend on things like detection time, availability of repair crews and complexity of repair), or the half-life of the radiation, (which would be very short outside of a vacuum, 'cos high speeds)? Maybe some gammas would escape into space and travel on for a long time.
@MartinJames it's the money that will be awarded to the person that completes the job
@StackedCrooked Oh,, I hope it gets fixed soon:)
You can find out by downloading Fairy Tail S2 44
^^
fairy tail > hairy tail IMHO
thought you would be missing your common enemy but it seems that I have been too lenient here
Xeo
Xeo
10:45
Assassination Classroom is fuuun
rip server, we're moving to a VPS
@CatPlusPlus No flowers by request.
Rest in pieces.
Xeo
Xeo
6 mins ago, by Xeo
Assassination Classroom is fuuun
I caught up with the manga after episode 2
I just couldn't stop myself
user1804599
10:59
Hello.
Xeo
Xeo
Hmm. Death Parade is also quite good
lolz
user1804599
@Nican and then you implicitly get other crap as well, depending on the implementation.
user1804599
11:30
Is there some trick to guarantee a tail call to be optimised?
user1804599
And if it can't be optimised to give an error?
Every tail call can be optimised
user1804599
Right.
user1804599
lol
Hmm... Implementing a thread pool isn't easy. Getting all the synchronization right is one thing. But keeping the pool from deadlocking when every single thread is running a task that blocks is more fundamental. Now I understand why the Windows thread pool will create many more threads than what you'd expect.
11:33
Creating standby threads is fairly cheap
My current (and first) attempt uses a fixed sized circular buffer queue and a fixed number of threads. All tasks are processed first-come-first-served.
But that will deadlock if I try to feed it recursive divide and conquer.
Because at some point, every single thread will be trying to join some other work unit that hasn't been issued yet.
IOW, the moment that a thread blocks, it will need to go back to the queue to get more work. But then the size of the queue becomes unbounded.
Anything beyond that and I'm basically reinventing work-stealing.
Spawning new threads when existing ones get blocked basically reimplements what the Windows thread pool does and has an unbounded # of threads.
11:50
@рытфолд In what language?
user1804599
C++.
then no.
user1804599
OK.
user1804599
range y u no forward range
if you're using Clang you could in theory output to LLVM IR first and then write a program that inspects the IR.
11:56
@Mysticial I think if your asynchronous jobs need to create other asynchronous jobs that they post to the same thread pool and then wait for their completion, then you are indeed at risk of deadlock, intrinsically.
Perhaps you could consider returning a future back to the client, rather than having the job wait. IOW, when job 1 spawns job 2 and job 3 and gets futures for job 2 and job 3, it does not call .get() on them, but rather returns a future for a computation that waits on job 2 and job 3, then does what it needs to do. This way the blocking calls only happen after all jobs have been posted and are triggered by the client.
I think await would make all of this much simpler
@Mysticial Yeah. When a task issues two more and then needs to wait for their completion before it can continue, (as in many sorts), it should not wait by blocking else you get that problem:( IIRC, I handled this by means of an atomic 'completion count' in the parent task that got set to X before creating X children. The child tasks would call back on completion and decrement the count. When the cound got to zero, the parent task would put itself back onto the work queue again.

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