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17:03
what's string? — Karoly Horvath 14 mins ago
...
my "auto insert trailing zero-width spaces" script doesn't take into account the occasions on which the leading "@nick:" is removed by the server
so not enough were being added
I keep forgetting that
17:08
didn't get past the first screen
we already have enough food to feed 9 billion
if the rest of the "read" says that, awesome! no need for me to continue.
if it does not, then it's wrong.
Do you always skip anything that doesn't perfectly fit with what you already believe?
@EtiennedeMartel Fuck web designers. This fancy bullshit scroll thingy means that on my resized window I can't read the text.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah, it's obviously designed for full screen use.
Nah, it's obviously designed for fancy.
17:10
@EtiennedeMartel you completely misread what I just said, but that's okay
I skip anything that I already know, and I skip other things that are wrong
(I don't really)
(lern2hyperbole)
@LightnessRacesinOrbit (never)
@Ell heh
> By 2050 the world’s population will likely increase by more than 35 percent. To feed that population, crop production will need to double. Why? Production will have to far outpace population growth as the developing world grows prosperous enough to eat more meat.
Wow, way to misunderstand economics.
They've got themselves into some sort of supply and demand and supply recursion mess
user1804599
car y u hit me
Ell
Ell
17:21
@EtiennedeMartel indoor farming is best farming
user1804599
@JohanLarsson ew
Xeo
Xeo
But $20 shirt and ~$12 shipping :<
user1804599
@Xeo "How does the glowing work? It sciences!"
carma for jokes like that
user1804599
I had a delicious baguette today.
Xeo
Xeo
17:25
But I've already exhausted my clothing budget this month.
Guess I'll just get those two and the Cogito Ergo Nom one next month
user1804599
How about "could you comment your code?"
user1804599
My mouth smells like onion.
user1804599
Because I ate a whole raw red onion today.
Ell
Ell
@райтфолд jesus
how? :P
user1804599
17:30
I put a tenth of it on my baguette.
user1804599
And ate the other pieces through the day.
Ell
Ell
I imagined you eating it like an apple
user1804599
lol
user1804599
no that's too fucking hot
user1804599
that's like drinking pepper spray
Ell
Ell
17:31
yeap
@Puppy I'm a programmer--I can't count past two (dependably). Thanks for pointing it out though...
user1804599
But my bike is borked, so I probably need an inferior substitute tomorrow.
Okay the thing I cooked is definitely not the thing I wanted to cook
user1804599
We have no other bikes with derailleur gears so I'll probably get exhausted.
It is a disastrosity
user1804599
17:34
And they have no brakes.
I was thinking about buying a compiler book today.
But then I remembered that I already have one :)
user1804599
Which one?
user1804599
FredOverflow help me design instruction set.
Disobeying the recipe has grave consequences
user1804599
17:36
@FredOverflow Does it assume C-like languages and global symbol tables?
@райтфолд Are you sure you want help from the guy you named his conditional branch instructions j0mp and j1mp? ;)
user1804599
No.
@райтфолд Erm, I don't think so, but I'm not sure. Haven't read it in a while.
user1804599
I'd call mine jump_if_true, jump_if_false, jump_if_zero, jump_if_not_zero and unconditional_jump.
Today I noticed that recursive-descent parsers have an O(n) time complexity for every operator, where n is the number of operator precedence levels. That feels very inefficient.
17:38
@FredOverflow So you obviously still need at least one more (by strong preference, the Dragon Book).
The Dragon Book is kinda dry. And expensive. But yeah, that's what amazon recommends :)
user1804599
@FredOverflow They are typically O(fast enough).
Ell
Ell
LR parser best parser
user1804599
I want recursive decent parsers.
user1804599
I should write my parser in Mill bytecode.
17:39
@FredOverflow Advocates of bottom-up parsing have noted this for quite some time--but I've yet to see a significant speed advantage to bottom-up parsers.
user1804599
@FredOverflow I don't like it.
Parsing deals with tiny n
$200 for an 18 year old compiler book lol
@FredOverflow I also like Compiler Design in C, but Allen Holub, but it's been out of print for quite a while, so it's hard to recommend.
user1804599
Bison is horrible to get working with C++.
user1804599
17:41
#define union struct makes it a little easier.
@райтфолд s/ to get working with C++//
@JerryCoffin $20 used
user1804599
@FredOverflow what did you use to parse Karel code?
user1804599
Scala parser combinators?
@FredOverflow I'd go for it. Heck, given its size even if you really hate it, it's almost worth $20 just as fuel... :-)
user1804599
17:42
Is ANTLR good for C++?
homer@marge ~/karel2014 $ ls
bin.zip              runme-linux.sh     scala-parser-combinators.jar
font.png             runme-windows.bat  scala-swing.jar
rsyntaxtextarea.jar  scala-library.jar  tiles
@райтфолд yes
@xeo WTF man! 7.5!
Xeo
Xeo
hehe
@райтфолд s/ for C++//. Decent, but not great, IMO.
user1804599
17:45
Lemon looks good, I should try that.
user1804599
It doesn't use globals and unions and shit.
I think globals are just fine in generated parser code.
@CatPlusPlus oooh no, not another web comic to distract me
user1804599
@FredOverflow No, of course not.
user1804599
17:47
There isn't a single reason a parser shouldn't be thread-safe.
Ah, you want to parse multiple translation units in parallel?
Ell
Ell
Oh I'm nub
user1804599
I don't necessarily want it, but I don't want a thread-unsafe parser.
Ell
Ell
frickin coincidences giving me false confidence :'(
Then use thread-static globals ;) Is there such a thing? D uses them by default, right?
user1804599
17:48
I could for example expose the parser as an API.
user1804599
Yes mutable module-level variables are thread-local by default in D.
Is there a way to tell if -pthread was passed to GCC from C++? Like a macro or something?
Prelude> :m Data.List
Prelude Data.List> :t nub
nub :: Eq a => [a] -> [a]
user1804599
Immutable ones and shared ones are shared.
17:49
@райтфолд Byacc is the real program for which Bison was basically a beta test (both written by Robert Corbett, who openly states that when he was writing Bison he really didn't know what he was doing yet). Byacc isn't particularly glamorous, but it's fast, produces output that runs fast, and is pretty solid and dependable. I don't try to generate C++ from it though, only C. It can generate C++, but it's mid-1990's C++.
This is the first time I hear about it.
Mozilla is doing some pretty nice things.
@райтфолд What would be the equivalent declaration in C++? Does it have/allow std::thread_local<int> my_global_counter;?
@R.MartinhoFernandes I don't think so. Why does it matter?
user1804599
@FredOverflow thread_local int my_global_counter;.
Ah, it's a keyword?
user1804599
17:51
Yes.
@JerryCoffin The book is from 1989. Does it use ANSI C?
@wilx I want to streamline the usage of my benchmark framework.
Ell
Ell
@R.MartinhoFernandes _REENTRANT is defined I think
As is, since the analysis is multithreaded I require that you use -pthread in addition to whatever flags your code needs.
@Ell I do not think that is true for all GCCs and all systems...
IIRC some BSDs do not even have -pthread switch in their GCC.
17:53
The thing is, there's no strong reason to require that: the analysis can just as easily be performed single-threaded; it just takes longer.
@FredOverflow If memory serves, he discusses ANSI C to some extent, but the actual code is K&R. IMO, the code matters less than the theory though.
Ell
Ell
@R.MartinhoFernandes coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/8b00964b446531eb not sure how reliable this is
Being header-only is one of my design goals, and my definition of header-only is more along the lines of "build transparent" than the fact that it is in headers.
user1804599
> Lucrative New Oil Extraction Method Involves Drilling Directly Into Gas Stations
@JerryCoffin So...
main(argc, argv)
int argc; char**argv;
{
    puts("lol K&R C");
}
It looks so silly :)
Ell
Ell
17:55
@райтфолд lol
user1804599
@FredOverflow you should return zero explicitly.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Shift this to the user. Document a NONIUS_THREADED define or some such and use it to parallelize.
@райтфолд In K&R C, I can return nothing whenever I please.
how do i nicely show code in LaTeX? I'm enclosing it in $ and it's ugly
17:56
@Blob Listings module.
user1804599
@FredOverflow You can't in rightfold K&R C because -Wall -Wextra -Werror.
user1804599
@Blob lol $ is for mathematics
@FredOverflow Yup, it is a bit strange looking, but not all that hard to get used to when/if you need/want to.
@райтфолд Does the R in K&R stand for rightfold?
user1804599
eh ok so how to make parser
17:57
@Blob \[ and \] are nice
@райтфолд Already said: byacc.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Also, I would turn the threading on by default and just gave users an option to disable it.
user1804599
@JerryCoffin how is it better than Bison?
@FredOverflow Doing a bit of looking, you can actually download it for free: holub.com/software/compiler.design.in.c.html
@wilx But that requires everyone to change the build (either to add -pthread or -DNONIUS_NO_THREADS), and then there's no point in having the option to disable them (the threads don't interfere with the measurements; it's all done a posteriori).
17:59
it's not letting me put code in enumerate because \end{lstlisting} conflicts with it somehow
-.-
Ell
Ell
did you see my solution yet? :(
yay for HTTP/2 being official standard!
@thecoshman No, it will be an RFC.
@R.MartinhoFernandes IME with log4cplus most people do not care. Some people however do care that their single threaded applications/tools are really not depending on threading libraries, etc. E.g., the simple linking with threading libraries causes libc to initialize some of its internal mutexes, etc., making, e.g., IO slower.
@R.MartinhoFernandes well IETF approved, which is a good step at least
18:01
ASCII is an official Internet Standard since last month. HTTP/1.1 isn't as of today.
@JerryCoffin Thank. 1000 pages? Wow.
This is still funny.
user1804599
I should just use Bison.
user1804599
And Flex.
@FredOverflow I did mention that it was worth $20, even if only as fuel.
18:02
Oh, 44 pages of that are errata at the end :)
@райтфолд By being cleanly written and working well (neither of which is true of Bison).
'weeks' away now, so 'they' say
18:17
> Eine neue Herleitung des Exponentialgesetzes in der Wahrscheinlichkeitsrechnung
Wokay
@R.MartinhoFernandes Wait, ASCII is still official internet standard? Where have you read that?
I didn't know there was a standard encoding for internet.
HTTP supports UTF-8 as well, and AFAIK W3C actually recommends that.
I'm making a fool of myself by not understanding the whole thing, am I not?
Oh well, time to eat.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Are you talking about RFC 20 or something else?
user3010322
@JerryCoffin Seems like it.
Ell
Ell
@Jefffrey it's only just an official internet standard
not still
That doesn't mean it's the recommended encoding
user3010322
Is Unicode just an RFC or is it an internet standard?
@Jefffrey It was "unknown" until mid Jan 2015. Mostly because it predates the IETF and nobody had gotten around to it yet
now it's finally "internet standard"
which makes no blind bit of difference besides making some people a little happier
@Jefffrey Yes.
18:23
@Jefffrey "Still"? It's one of the few and has only been since last month. More like "already".
@ThePhD It's an ISO standard. Or, at least, it's mirrored as one.
user3010322
Ah.
user3010322
The Unicode Consortium doesn't answer to the IETF?
user3010322
... Or maybe they're part of it.
I may be missing some subtleties of it because I literally just Googled it and took 30 seconds decoding the conveniently-returned information on the topic
18:24
@ThePhD No. Why would it?
@ThePhD There are some RFCs that specify things like how to use Unicode in certain situations (some of them pretty general), but Unicode itself is produced by the Unicode Consortium, not IETF.
user3010322
@R.MartinhoFernandes I dunno, I just thought it might've been part of that.
user3010322
@JerryCoffin That makes sense!
user3010322
I wonder why ASCII had to be standardized by the IETF, though.
@ThePhD It didn't have to be.
user3010322
18:26
@R.MartinhoFernandes Oh. So it was just a "well, why the hell not" deal?
ASCII has been an ANSI standard since... well a long time ago.
The IETF adopted it as an Internet Standard last month.
No version of HTTP is an Internet Standard.
@JerryCoffin Yes. It's now STD 80.
user3010322
Does that mean they can adopt UTF8 or Unicode and the like as Internet Standards if they so choose?
user3010322
.... Lol
To me it means that "Internet Standard" is a joke.
user3010322
18:28
LOL
user3010322
So, uh.
user3010322
My Java solutions
user3010322
are apparently SO good
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Not exactly. Unicode and ISO 10646 are similar, but not exactly the same--Unicode includes a fair amount of "stuff" that's not present in the ISO standard (to quote from the Unicode FAQ: "...an extensive set of functional character specifications, character data, algorithms and substantial background material that is not in ISO/IEC 10646.")
user3010322
That the Professor is inviting me to do research with him. <_>
Ell
Ell
@ThePhD lol srs?
research into what?
@ThePhD One day you are gonna be "Prof. ThePhD, PhD."
user3010322
@Ell Fucking serious. I just got the e-mail. I don't even know what to do.
Ell
Ell
ask him what research first
user3010322
18:29
They're like trivial Java problems. I'm so confused.
@ThePhD Do the research..?
lol
Research is codename for slacking off hth
Perhaps he's doing research into how people react in unexpected social situations when faced with confusing offers.
And he wants your help.
And he's getting it.
> Guten Tag, Emperor. I have heard that your court loves to get their mouths around German sausages, so please accept the gift of bratwurst and mettwurst.
user3010322
q_q you're so mean Lightness.
18:30
Sometimes I get the weirdest alliance proposals.
@ThePhD Hmm...invited to immerse yourself in Java. I'd consider immersing myself in something that would kill me quickly and relatively painlessly instead.
Professor Derpstorm.
user3010322
The research isn't, but the homework is trivial Java problems, so I'm not sure why he's impressed with the homework. Nothing about this makes me think I'm a good research candidate.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Kinky.
@ThePhD "[Y]ou just have to wonder... What in the world was James Gosling thinking? Look at the syntax above. It's horrific. Whoever thought 'you know what, there's no need for any other individual to enjoy the agreed-upon meaning for operators in mathematics for math types: let's just ignore all of their potential needs' is an exceedingly bad person and should not design a language I have to use ever again."
Seems worthwhile enough to me (better than most research on Java produces anyway).
18:38
@JerryCoffin Immerse yourself in lava
Ell
Ell
Research isn't paid well
user3010322
.... I think he thinks that I understand Java. This is the first time I'm using Java, but most of the language is similar to what I know because it's a C family language. I think he thinks I'm like somewhat of an expert. ... How do I even begin to explain to him I don't use Java ever, that this is new to me... that I'm pretty sure if he gave me his actually-hard research problems... I'd fail them all. Pretty miserably.
user3010322
@Ell (He specifically mentioned it's unpaid.)
Your solutions being "SO good" isn't necessarily an indicator of high quality, if I parsed that phrase properly. :P
> somewhat of
-.-
@CatPlusPlus Seems like a reasonable alternative (or so Gollum told me, anyway).
user3010322
18:39
I don't know what phrase I'd use in place of "somewhat of"
user3010322
Or is "somewhat" not a word altogether?
user3010322
Is it one of those, uh, bad things like "alot" ?
@ThePhD Nothing wrong with "somewhat".
This is what poor JavaDoc reads like.
18:41
> // If I can just spend a moment to say that this was a lot of work
// just to support REALLY HUGE NUMBERS
Oh really. So import java.math.BigInteger; is a lot of work :)
@ThePhD You're somewhat of a douche in that respect
@sehe Importing it is easy. Using it is painful, because something like a = b + c turns into a mess something like a.Assign(b); a.Add(c);
Painful != a lot of work
@FredOverflow I don't trust those authors to write decent proposals if they can't think up a useful summary.
@ThePhD It's "something of", or "somewhat".
@LightnessRacesinOrbit The summary is not from the original authors.
> I have something of a headache right now :(
18:45
@JerryCoffin If you understand what your code is achieving it should be about the same effort. Of course, it's still painful
> My head hurts somewhat right now :(
@LightnessRacesinOrbit That's what your SO said
@FredOverflow curators, whoever
hah, whoops
well that gave the game away didn't it
@sehe Needless rudeness. Would you stop? Thanks.
user3010322
@sehe Hey! ;~;
user3010322
@sehe Agreed, I guess. My wording is bad.
@sehe Analyzing the understanding the problem clearly isn't affected, but the actual translation into code ends up closer to writing assembly language than a higher-level language.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit hehe. I'm guessing you're using inordinate amounts of humour here
seriously, clean the lens
> LATEST:Boy, 16, in Greater Manchester charged with attempting to acquire biological toxin or agent, anti-terror police say
wot
WOT
user1804599
eh ok so
user3010322
18:53
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Alien star?
What stars aren't alien?
@FredOverflow Ours.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit I've always wanted to go there when its frozen over... been there in winter a couple of times but its never been like that
user1804599
@FredOverflow swastika locomotion is most inefficient.
18:56
> Grand theft Oort-o?
Nice touch. :)
user1804599
@FredOverflow holywood stars
user3010322
@CatPlusPlus So Phabricator is a storage platform for... projects?
You know what amuses me about C programmers: they are all stuck in c89... I can count on 1 finger the number of c11 questions I've seen on SO.
user3010322
Oooh, it's like code review and stuff.
user3010322
That's pretty cool.
18:58
@Mgetz What about C99?
> An Indian bride has married a guest at her wedding after her groom-to-be had a seizure and collapsed. Reports said the groom, Jugal Kishore, was epileptic and he had kept the information from the bride, Indira, and her family. While Mr Kishore was taken to hospital, the angry bride decided to switch husbands. She asked a member of her brother-in-law's family, who was a guest, to step in and marry her instead. He agreed.
Charming.
@wilx you do see a bit more of that, but by and large... still c89 with parts of c99 tacked on for fun
@LightnessRacesinOrbit you do realize that was the point of the "best man" in a western wedding?

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