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16:00
Can someone say "usability fail"?
Numbers everywhere!
@RMartinhoFernandes I embody usability fail!
Am I the only one that can use that thing?
@LucDanton Yes :-) If you want to be Alice, you reload the page, make a random a, then say (1), then submit (2) to me.
Then paste my return token to "input" and hit (6). At that stage we share a common secret.
@KerrekSB Alright, I challenge you to a duel.
16:01
@LucDanton I challenge your exponents!
If you want to be Alice, have a seat over there, a doctor will be with you in a minute.
@CatPlusPlus This will hurt me more than it'll hurt you.
@CatPlusPlus Do you want to challenge me too?
47159093359464211132608671725308637079911755308480204083514518919560126150587489069493117294379398382117813304699984188588503155824877150844068414437783741595627144465335120508397952789007146718942745094696522811699950670001439112830084932028987930299594349077999865296480072128055983837509409388707159219825
No, I use GPG.
Sekrit data, no man in the middle allowed!
16:01
what's with all the numbers...
> Premature optimization is like premature ejaculation – you don’t think it will happen to you, but then it feels good in the moment, and it just does. Afterwards you get terribly embarrassed, and you don’t want to talk about it when someone calls you out on it.
17
@LucDanton We don't talk about MitM!
Shush. The Problem Does Not Exist.
77752752549492557688545737673046860856181052661931290605506219246950434278025321726525741228506752984658275706765838030609281128293991889775875560525880996347559577457087019335987045616453370395394454954336240807184934332071416899545237545690027659294912722286120599591604322935787403487578737993567227992982
If you consider the chat as an 'authority' it's not that bad ;) Well, no SSL but...
Message:
2251839470409087915457699321692797335687799642560024202826183127736572345868350628060746274717415944610000291764234407151596962769919837342619189390290270832011383713141104512059443406453881047182541395196931680849155675317767350887360261325
@RMartinhoFernandes sigh... star
16:03
@LucDanton I believe someone implemented SSL-over-AJAX
Actually, there's nothing wrong with that -- if you're in a restricted place where ALL you have is HTTP, why not keep your own JavaScript SSL implementation around?
oh ¬_¬ your being very nerdy
Screw certificates, too, you could do something like convergence.
If you're in a restricted place where all you have is HTTP, run your SSHd over mod_proxy.
Seen that, it actually works.
@CatPlusPlus What if it's like an internet cafe or so?
2451773197497692216701797247494352737058829120417297646236078695109648077223787773211383447736391700427591790633864215241816502278365214208344988820729436189692212324035334056235560138861855573414642250685308742168678948626920707541221200024
16:06
@KerrekSB What's the difference?
what's an so?
@CatPlusPlus Hm.. don't you need special software for mod_proxy and SSH?
Most protocol limitations aren't really protocol limitations, anyway, but only port restrictions.
In that case, you could just run SSHd on 80.
@LucDanton That was unclear and cut short...
Maybe my masterful padding algorithm is buggy :-)
@KerrekSB so we have you to blame for this nonsense :¬)
16:08
I did feel that the encrypted text was really short compared to the plaintext.
@thecoshman No. I have a disclaimer: Whatever happens, I am not to blame.
I call it a "disblamer"
@LucDanton You can decrypt it yourself and see if the original comes back
huh... I wonder if I can use that in general life
2199651534443679707038309800552093512380259757093344552652900907357872356504851945064766833742575515617474717183060664392882290757085786249564844163553944079183997594191081907328366363133095675226631201830318341054132483792627451282925382088
@KerrekSB why don't you have that added in, so that you can see if your message is messed up before you try sending it
@thecoshman It also helps to pre-emptively distance yourself from everything you are about to say.
16:09
So, now it's broken?
And then instead of the user sending a completely bollocks message, he gets a warning: "This message was encrapted. Decryption may fail".
@KerrekSB genocide...
2243910551049169501243455573944818895598630874138661885342166814573134557437442077808114068518898125129019522110310437660076705495343947110001710875160185590358225393814827017253520185009249768629790609546296523242778758730024265398553114582
2225697549727454355255743060490275306894347344548269609749432936700432092910330172418180890774588509600775798719379981756381988141312672924614789795048240918937006543797364616487684895068198502300135510305410492258898258009194393442268109563
@thecoshman If you like to shout really long numbers at people.
@RMartinhoFernandes Yes. Please send it to my new UI engineer Xaade
@CatPlusPlus Come on, it's no different from any highschool maths club were sweaty teenage boys shout digits of Pi at girls to impress them.
Also, why is there a really long number in my clipboard.
IT'S SPREADING.
16:12
@CatPlusPlus Hehehe. The center must hold.
Oh, what was it again... <[^/]>
lol
No... d'oh, this should go on the FPAs
Oh crap, I seem to have precipitated a pointless series of comments...
I think that the centre of the planet is just one giant amazon warehouse
16:16
lol
@Dead what does the MG stand for?
Machine gun.
are we out of silly ideas?
It's obviously a Mega-prefixed SI unit. Since the only SI units starting with an uppercase symbol are those named after someone (K, Pa, N), It's Megagalileo.
@thecoshman I needed some time to lay out my reasoning.
16:19
stackoverflow.com/questions/8585110/… - 4 more for a close as dupe vote if people agree with my candidate?
@LucDanton The unit of social submissiveness?
> Conclusion: everything is fucked and i hate computers.
@LucDanton ¬_¬ are not the capitalised SI for things that are big... lower case for the small do-dads?
Yes, and mega is big.
@thecoshman That would be the prefixes. I'm talking about the units.
Mega is not a unit.
16:22
oh I see, right you are
@thecoshman Maybe it's parsed as "de-ad". Like, the opposite of advertising someone's genius. So it's a statement of humility
Bytes is not SI but is usually rendered as B, to distinguish it from bit (b). Food for thought.
@Luc not much food for thought there... barley a nibble
ah ha ha!
any hoops, time to go :D
@KerrekSB Or maybe it's like the name D'Eath, it's D'Ead. So he's from around Ead.
@LucDanton I actually know someone of that name. Scary
16:26
Well, the name is quite present in pop culture. I think it gets coopted as a 'dark' name quite often. Or used to.
@LucDanton I see. Mine was just a lecturer, but it added to the appeal of the course :-)
IIRC Terry Pratchett made a subversion of it, with someone with the name yet completely mundane.
(Not a major character or anything, no spoiler here.)
sbi
sbi
5
Q: Can the ship's captain really perform your wedding when in international waters?

hippietrailOn the question about whether you can get married while travelling, Mark Mayo posted a comment that any marriage has to be on dry land or close to it. But I'm sure all of us have heard of ships' captains marrying couples at sea. So is this fiction after all? If not how does it fit with Mark's c...

:)
holy shibnizzle, it's a bad thing to try and construct an unordered_map with a custom allocator argument
[re "emergency wedding"]: "Obviously, this is not something you can plan for." Hehehe...
Or do you?
16:29
Yeah, right.
Honey, would you sign this wonderful insurance policy I was just offered? And we get a free cruise, too!
lol
WTF. Twice in a single day?
Now someone posted this crap on the Haskell room chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/2169027#2169027.
It doesn't make sense. That room has very little activity.
do you think it would be OK if I said that all identifiers must be, say, 50 characters or less in length?
Xeo
Xeo
I should maybe flip my sleeping cycle.
16:43
@DeadMG Stop putting upper limits on my passwords!
Oh, wait.
50 characters may be hit easily.
Xeo
Xeo
Y'know, from waking up at 5pm and going to sleep at 7am, to waking up at 5am and going to sleep at 7pm.
well, I could make it 1000 characters intead
Xeo
Xeo
@DeadMG qualified or uniqualified id?
Whatever you do, make it an error.
unqualified
qualified identifiers are multiple tokens so there are no limits on them
16:45
Don't make it so that blahblahMorethanXcharacters and blahblahStillMorethanXcharactersButTheFirstXAretheSame are the same identifier.
I won't
now I come to think of it, it probably won't be necessary anyway
I think there is some language (or perhaps some silly implementation of it) that does that.
Xeo
Xeo
@RMartinhoFernandes Wasn't it a language, but rather early compiler implementations?
there's a required minimum I thought
@Xeo That's what I remarked in parentheses.
sbi
sbi
16:47
@RMartinhoFernandes In the 80s I programmed in a BASIC dialect that would only use the first three characters from any identifier.
@sbi Wut? Three? Ow.
pity the Standard allocator doesn't have a realloc style function
We need a renew operator.
sbi
sbi
@DeadMG We have. It's called std::vector.
I'd prefer one that could reallocate in-place
Xeo
Xeo
16:49
int* subscription = new int[5];
renew [10] subscription;
sbi
sbi
@DeadMG It can.
Xeo
Xeo
What would the syntax of renew be anyways?
std::vector can't reallocate in-place
it just reallocates by asking the allocator for a different, larger amount of memory
Xeo
Xeo
Don't you get a hint pointer for allocate or something?
yes, but that can only be used to improve locality, not reallocate in-place
16:51
I once saw this talk about the "Good, Bad and Ugly of Javascript". It said that one of the problems was that there are no good books, bar one.
Also, you can't control what vector passes.
Does anyone know what the "one" book is?
Crockford's?
That's the one I always hear mentioned. But you probably should ask in the JS room.
They should know.
sbi
sbi
@DeadMG What would renew do? It would ask the heap manager to extend the current size of a chunk of memory. std::vector does pretty much this, only it doesn't ask the heap manager. Instead it manages the memory itself.
the difference is that in some custom schemes, extending the current chunk is much, much more efficient
16:53
"The Good Parts"? No, I think it had a more general title. Addison-Wesley I think
@sbi Didn't we discuss this recently?
@KerrekSB You can designate anyone as beneficiary. No need to marry.

JavaScript

Topic: Anything JavaScript, ECMAScript including Node, React, ...
sbi
sbi
@DeadMG So now we're talking about something more efficient than std::vector?
well, the result would be, yes
I'm sorry for sending you off like that, but it's not about off-topicness.
16:53
@sbi Here.
in my memory arena allocator, I could extend the current chunk up to some fairly large predetermined size pretty much for free
@Xaade You seem to know a little bit too much for someone who claims to know too little about this topic.
It's about asking the right people :)
sbi
sbi
@KerrekSB I don't know. I certainly had it before. I thought the last time was in clc++m, about half a decade ago.
@KerrekSB I'm not aware that I claimed anything?
16:55
although it would still be easier if silly filestreams offered a size() member
I heard <filesystem> is in VC11.
Xeo
Xeo
It is
Preparation for TR2 it seems
@KerrekSB I think you got an error in that code, shouldn't the second loop go from old_size to new_size and not from old_size+1?
Xeo
Xeo
You could even throw out that else branch
If you allocated new memory, move the existing elements. default construct the new ones in any case
Snowman, go away, you've been there far too long. I don't need the same notification for 30 mins.... fine.... have at it..... I'mma chargin mah lazah.
17:06
Coming from ObjC where everything object related gets done thru pointers and where nil/null is used all over the place for returning if something goes wrong in a method with an object return type, I'm having some troubles getting my head around how some things are done in C++. For example:
Foo *foo;
if (x) {
foo = y;
} else {
foo = z;
}
Xeo
Xeo
@KerrekSB Recruiting close voters on that!
As foo is a pointer it's easy to do this. Without pointers in C++ however the first line would construct an instance of Foo in line 1, not only within the if/else blocks.
@Xeo Ah. duplicate.. fine
Xeo
Xeo
@Regexident boost::optional
@Xeo: I'm forced to use Qt. :(
Xeo
Xeo
17:09
And that stops you from using Boost in what way?
Boost is like the extended stantard library, use it.
@Xeo: Was asked to not mix libraries where possible. Will give it a look though, thanks. Kinda strange feeling though having to use a library for what feels like should be a language feature.
Xeo
Xeo
Other question: What do you even want to do with that? Why doesn't a pointer fit your problem?
0
Q: Does C++ support Variable Length Arrays?

Tomalak Geret'kalNo, wait, bear with me... VLAs were always a GCC extension, but they were adopted by C99: [C99: 6.7.5.2/4]: If the size is not present, the array type is an incomplete type. If the size is * instead of being an expression, the array type is a variable length array type of unspecified siz...

There, someone else is misinterpreting the abstract of the standard.
Xeo
Xeo
@RMartinhoFernandes No, jeopardy style FAQ
Someone thought it was worthy of upvotes
Funny thing is if someone else asked that question Tomalak would probably downvote it
17:21
yay no more compiler bugs!
Xeo
Xeo
Hm, I don't understand the downvote he received on the question now. It's a valid question, imho. And he even answered it himself, Johannes style question :D
@Xeo Some people just don't like self-answering. They're silly fools.
@Xeo: as in this? (sorry if these are utterly stupid questions)
Foo *pFoo;
if (x) {
*pFoo = Foo(...);
} else {
*pFoo = Foo(...);
}
Foo foo = *pFoo;
Xeo
Xeo
Wa? No!
damn visual studio, y u search sucks
I'm trying to find "struct { .* }* __this" as a regex
Xeo
Xeo
17:23
Foo* foo = 0;
if(x){
  foo = new Foo(...);
}else{
  foo = new Foo(...);
}

// use foo
delete foo;
to clean up all the workarounds for a compiler bug I no longer have
but it doesn't match anything! :(
@DeadMG {} is grouping, AFAIK
Xeo
Xeo
Also, better use a smart pointer
VS search regexes are a special flavour.
win
17:24
@Xeo: Thing is I need it to be returned from my function as an object, not a pointer.
Xeo
Xeo
if(x)
  return Foo(blah);
else
  return Foo(blub);
?
I escaped them and all was fine again
Xeo
Xeo
Best make an sscce.org out of it and present it here or on SO proper.
Can I use functions defined in a C file, without explicitly making a header for them?
17:25
no
Just declare them.
Xeo
Xeo
@TonyTheLion Depends on where you want to use them
not unless you're using a C compiler, I guess
Xeo
Xeo
lol. "Yes." "No." "Depends."
I think they tightened up their rules about that an awful lot, though
17:26
You don't need a header!
Why the fuck would you need a header?
It's just copy-pasting anyway.
@Xeo: Then: compiler excepts return value for non-void function (which exist, but get hidden from it in if/else).
tbh
I hate headers
but I'd rather have headers than no type safety
@Xeo:removing the else would do it, but feels somewhat dirty.
Xeo
Xeo
Like I said, make an sscce.org out of that.
@Regexident Wait, wut?
17:28
Headers don't give you type safety. There's no magic in the preprocessor.
Xeo
Xeo
I have no idea how your code actually looks or what you want to achieve.
@Xeo: something like this:
Foo bar() {
if (x) {
return Foo(...);
} else if (y) {
return Foo(...);
} else {
return Foo(.....);
}
}
As there is no default return expression it gived a warning, as expected.
It's not that expected.
Xeo
Xeo
It shouldn't, all branches return
What compiler are you using?
17:33
inb4 GCC 3.
Xeo
Xeo
@Regexident Also, please format your code snippets with that "fixed font" button when using multiline messages
Dammit, don't tell me you're using Dev-C++ or some similar abomination.
Xeo
Xeo
lol.
Thanks for the edit to my answer @RMartinhoFernandes! :O
I can't recall, is there a C++ algorithm that tells me if a container is sorted?
17:41
I have a mouse.
@MooingDuck If it's a set, then it is :-) da-dum-dish
I've been trying to trap it for days now.
Xeo
Xeo
One sec.
A mouse as in, a mouse?
If this "humane trap" crap doesn't work, it's time to wheel out the Seriously Inhumane traps
@RMartinhoFernandes Yes
The opposite of cheese.
Xeo
Xeo
17:43
@KerrekSB Oh, damn, you alread know that one
What's an humane trap?
@Xeo Don't get me started. I have japanese-made plastic traps all over the kitchen...
@KerrekSB peanut butter, that's worked for me in the past
@RMartinhoFernandes A live-catching trap
(Btw, if anyone knows about human traps, we robots have a use for them. Mail us.)
17:44
@Praetorian Intriguing. Alas, I have none.
@RMartinhoFernandes Suicide booths?
@KerrekSB What do you do with a live mouse after you catch it?
Step on it?
@RMartinhoFernandes We cross that bridge when we get there.
throw it in the dumpster to die of starvation
I was thinking electricity
You know, set up a hamster wheel with a generator. Put it to use. Make it pay for the rent it missed.
17:45
@Praetorian Yeah, right. A mouse in the dumpster will starve. Nice joke.
@KerrekSB a trap that snaps shut on it as humane as electrocution, don't you think?
Xeo
Xeo
Lol, I thought you'd have it electrocute itself with that
@MooingDuck std::is_sorted (and std::is_sorted_until), both introduced with C++11.
@Xeo Haha, love the Ackbar icon
@RMartinhoFernandes hehe, it might die of heat stroke though if it an enclosed dumpster
17:46
0
Q: Simple encryption and decryption of a txt document

user1110338I'm making an application that writes a small txt file containing 3 strings then loads them back into the application in a list widget. This all works fine, but now I want to make it so that the txt file is not in plain text. I don't need any complicated cipher or anything that needs a key to en...

@RMartinhoFernandes Yeah, good point!
Nah, it can go wherever it wants, just not here.
@RMartinhoFernandes Brilliant. Make the tag!
No. That's silly.
@LucDanton awesome, perfect!
17:48
I fought in the wars, you know.
I did a rather large refactor, and now my code compiles again, and thus I feel holy.
@KerrekSB If you XOR the bytes with themselves (as you said in the comments) how would you recover the data?
@Praetorian Shhhh
17:51
Ahh, got it, hence self-securing :)
Someone posted a XORing solution.
But it's actually ROT1.
@Praetorian And FAST!
0
A: Simple encryption and decryption of a txt document

John KaulSimple XOR'ing maybe? void cyptStr(char *str){ if(!str){ return; } char *end = str + (strlen(str) - 1); for(;str < end;str++){ if (*str != ' ') *str -= 1; } } void ucyptStr(char *str){ if(!str){ return; } char *end = str + (s...

how do you strikethrough in questions?
the triple-dash doesn't seem to work
<strike></strike>
Xeo
Xeo
17:58
Hm. I just thought about my cross-platform installer with llvm IR again... I can't use IR because of fucking preprocessing. :( #ifdef __WIN32 etc
@Xeo Ah, you're fucked. Pack the source.

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