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12:00
@AlexM. It's well known here. Just lookalike, all sweet and crispy.
yup, recipes in this area are pretty widespread
most likely every country has their own take on it
so, we can, in fact, imagine how good they are
well I was talking about
uh
LRiO
yeah!
now get off my case :A
Another variant we have here is "Kalter Hund"
@AlexM. I love that shit
12:02
@AlexM. what is the cocoa mass made of?
is it moist?
@BartekBanachewicz Depends
@AlexM. I suppose
@BartekBanachewicz yes/no/depends
Seriously though, what's with the sock puppets on this chat? They are multiplying!
it's semi-crumbly in most cases I've seen
you can break pieces off without breaking a lot of it
12:04
@chmod711telkitty Which ones?
@BartekBanachewicz the liquid bit in the recipe consists of milk and butter
you mix the cocoa powder and stuff with it
@πάνταῥεῖ I wish there is a private messaging function so I could tell you
A funny variation is to use oat flakes instead of biscuits
@chmod711telkitty Well, there are channels I'm reachable if you want. Though I'd guess you don't really have proof, but just suspicions?
no, I have no concrete proof
but it's kind of obvious if you pay enough attention
12:10
@chmod711telkitty Yeah, I'm not sticking on every conversation (even though I have the lounge tab open sideways)
My first time in this lounge and what I see. Salam de biscuiti. :-))
@Adrian That's cool eh :)
@Adrian ye, mancam acum, ii bun
@AlexM. that sounds like an incantation for a fireball
12:13
that doesn't change the fact that it sounds like an incantation for a fireball really
@ScarletAmaranth it's some somewhat broken Romanian meant to map onto the Transylvanian dialect
@AlexM. _Transylvanian _ So "Salam de biscuiti" is something like faked "Blutwurst" :)
vampires like sweets too
also that Blutwurst (Sangerete in Romanian) is the most disgusting thing to be made out of pigs
or w/e animal you use
I have no idea how people can eat that
12:18
Feb 18 at 13:29, by R. Martinho Fernandes
@BartekBanachewicz coagulated blood inside intestines.
nothing
you suck goat balls
I ate a lava cake two days ago
it was the most amazing experience
ever
with vanilla ice cream
12:20
hot stuff
I had no idea a cake could be so interesting
^only Sweden builds a Civ structure in real life
I heard Egypt has pyramids though.
maybe I was thinking of Sim City's Ecologies
not the wonders from Civ
I never liked Civ's way to mix up things regardless of history
I played this Civ 5 game where Gandhi was just killing everyone like crazy
12:22
@AlexM. You will pay for this in time.
yes, Gandhi is a warmonger in civ games :P
@LucDanton lol yeah and the diplomacy AI was just, ugh
@AlexM. ah undefined behavior turned into a feature...
really lame compared to more sophisticated systems like you can see in Europa Universalis
like, diplomacy in Civ 5 vanilla was really a sequence of
"Let's be friends."
That’s 5 though. 4 and 3 are okay, each in their own way. They don’t fit everyone’s playstyle admittedly.
12:23
5 minutes later...
they used a char to store hostility, and Ghandi was already very low... so if you made friends with him he wanted to nuke you
"HAHA I LIED YOU DIE NOW HAHA"
I guess that did teach me a lesson
every time I'd get an ally I'd start building up forces to fight him later on :A
I know some of the things from 4 carried over to 5. E.g. making a designated warmonger target.
My first and only Immortal win had a Shaka play that role, and there was another one to pick up the slack :v
12:27
@AlexM. "I have no idea how people can eat that" It needs to be fried to be digestible ;-). Best with potatoes and sauerkraut (:= "Gröstl")
I win deity for breakfast :)
@ScarletAmaranth Is it like 4 where you have to memorise/refer to aggro tables?
Diplomacy-wise that is.
@πάνταῥεῖ you spelled "gross" wrong
@LucDanton not sure; I've only ever played 5 and 6
Time travel is cheating.
12:28
6 is horrid tho
by 6 do you mean BE?
@AlexM. Nope, it's called "Gröst'l" in austria and bavaria
yeah, beyond earth
@πάνταῥεῖ whooosh
'horrid' was the hint I suppose
@ScarletAmaranth Winning 4’s Deity had a lot to do with knowing the AI playbook. E.g. knowing that Catharina won’t declare on you at X level of relation, and/or that she’s willing to be bribed into war against Y level of relation while you have X and so on. Felt too much like bookkeeping to me.
12:32
@LucDanton does sound like bookkeeping indeed; in 5 (mostly BNW), it's relatively easy to win deity
I just don't like the fact that AI cheats and gets bonuses
@LucDanton Why? Everybody does it
@πάνταῥεῖ whoosh means you didn't get the joke
By figuring out the most likely diplomacy field for the next 50 turns or so you can extract the utmost from your economy (e.g. let’s build universities, not units). At lower difficulties you don’t have to 'see' so far in advance because if/when you are caught by surprise you have time to react. Not so at Deity where you get a stack-of-doom™ too late to build/do anything.
and now you didn't get that you didn't get the joke
12:34
@AlexM. Oops, OK I have to admit I didn't get it :)
Whereas at my level you check (IIRC there are even add-ons to help with that) whether the AI is willing to be bribed for war or if they would answer with 'We Have Too Much On Our Hands Already', which is the signal that shit is about to go down. Which is when you prepare.
^why diplo in 4 is acceptable to some
so this Elite Dangerous game looks pretty cool
@BartekBanachewicz Not as cool as Sunless Sea
/me hooked on Sunless Sea :(
user1804599
I wonder if Maven Central would accept my package sexy.rightfold.
user1804599
12:48
Also, ugh, Clojure has no non-fatal?.
user1804599
Or non-fatal catch.
OMG it built
@BartekBanachewicz Wouldn't this even deserve a std::exception? :)
okay so
do I want stage1 or stage2 this is a serious q
@Fanael where are you when I need you
user1804599
(defmacro proc [params body]
  `(fn ~params (do ~@body nil)))
user1804599
12:50
This is great. I also want defproc.
@LucDanton that pattern is riddled with traps and annoyances. The only reprieve is (a) it's not enduser facing (b) it provides peace of mind for library devs with a requirement to support stable APIs... I guess.
I must say I dislike the amount of cruft involved so much that I'd hate to see it emplyed in standard libraries at larger scale
(OTOH whenever I cruise through stdlib sources nowadays, I feels similarly. So the point may be moot)
I feel like in a middle of the computer
those sources are scary
@sehe Yup. I’ve just this moment had to un-functor-ify a particular overload set because it’s called as both foo(args...) and foo<Arg>(args...). Can’t be done with a class template.
@sehe I actually find it lightweight. I wouldn’t be using it otherwise.
Keeping in mind that in a lot of cases, I want functor versions anyway.
Ok. This jibes with my hunch I might be over sensitive because it's new to me and "in my face"
@LucDanton That's a good point in general yes
Wow. This was upvoted? What is in the program?!? I mean, all you show is that indeed it loads boost_thread shared library correctly, and then it exits. What would you expect instead? And why? — sehe 10 secs ago
Part of the light weight (lightweightness?) is that static constexpr auto& foo = constant<functors::foo>; isn’t obnoxious to read. And I can write the name of each overload on its line and :'<,'>s my heart away.
13:06
I didn't consider editing efficiency relevant :)
I put the reading first :v The rest was an anecdote.
Okay
user1804599
Why?
0
Q: Initialize data members of class in C++ 11

meetI am curious to know that why class' data members can't be initialized using () syntax? Consider following example: #include <iostream> class test { public: void fun() { int a(3); std::cout<<a<<'\n'; } private: int s(3); // Compi...

Seeing as the other way around is struct overload { template<typename... Args> constexpr auto operator()(Args&&... args) const -> decltype( overload(std::forward<Args>(args)...) ) { return overload(std::forward<Args>(args)...); } };
^see what I mean? unreadable
@πάνταῥεῖ Vexing parses. The compiler may be able to figure out, but can the human?
I’m not writing an answer.
13:09
unsafeDupablePerformIO everywhere :/
but welp yeah I've found the md5 hash generation
@LucDanton So you mean to avoid introducing confusion (for a human reader) with a member function declaration essentially?
Did anyone try Nim for anything other than hello world?
also Fingerprint is stored as two Word64
data Fingerprint = Fingerprint {-# UNPACK #-} !Word64 {-# UNPACK #-} !Word64
seems like a weird way to store a 128-bit hash really
painful lack of std::array<uint8_t, 16> is apparent
@CatPlusPlus it has a shiny website
13:13
unless they had something weird in mind
@CatPlusPlus wasn't it called Nimrod like yesterday
> 2014-10-19 Version 0.9.6 released
oh well 4 months or one day
> parallel:
it...
IT HAS THE KEYWORD I THOUGHT ABOUT
everyone here said it was stupid
TAKE THAT LOUNGE
because it is
can't hear you over the sound of me typing in Nim
yeah you ceratinly should write a game in it on the next jam
What's dumb about it?
13:20
> This subset is checked to be free of data races at compile time. A sophisticated disjoint checker ensures that no data races are possible even though shared memory is extensively supported!
hm actually they seem to be approaching this quite reasonably
> Every array access has to be provably within bounds. This is called the bounds check.
@BartekBanachewicz I'll write a game in Nim as soon as I finish my current one in Unity
@BartekBanachewicz ergh... sort of... It's not the I find frameworks limiting... I just usually do not have the commitment to learn them.
@thecoshman learning love takes like 10 minutes
there's really hardly any commitment
@thecoshman But you have the commitment to reinvent the wheel? :v
@CatPlusPlus his wheel has a dream api
both @ThePhD and @thecoshman should write in Lisp
basically the whole community is based on reinventing wheels because Lisp makes it so easy and powerful
Xeo
Xeo
13:24
@notch look deeply oh Notch http://t.co/6E6IvJ0Vum
lol'd
@BartekBanachewicz Not really
@πάνταῥεῖ stackoverflow.com/posts/28679941/revisions Did it again /cc @AndyProwl
@CatPlusPlus isn't that what lisp curse is all about?
the lisp curse and recurse continuation
@BartekBanachewicz No, that's just loads of nonsense
13:31
@CatPlusPlus frankly, you sound like a lisp fanboy now
Most of the issues that were pointed out in that article apply to every fucking language ever
the fact that lisp so flexible being its greatest strenght and curse at the same time kind of seems like a real problem, if the community doesn't wish to fight it
dismissing it as "loads of nonsense" isn't really helping me straighten out my views
@CatPlusPlus I disagree
Same can be said about C++
13:33
@sehe Well sure there are better choices to edit than just put a blank line. But I'm sometimes just lazy.
@CatPlusPlus I don't think C++ APIs show that much variation (sans boost)
lol define API variation
because in boost they like to write whatever can compile
Every library will have its own API by definition
There's no golden API standard because that's impossible
yes. But not every library introduces currying.
13:34
And every Lisp library does?
Lisp allows you to flip the very idea of the api upside down and people utilize it
maybe not necessarily in libraries, actually
What does that even mean
that you can have pretty much 0 expectations about the code, since people redefine everything
Except they don't?
Have you even seen any Lisp code
yes. @Florian has shown me some recently
13:36
Because you kinda sound like Puppy
he wrote a domain specific macro for function definitions
That's not a redefinition
That's boilerplate reduction
@CatPlusPlus see, that's the kind of PoV that brings those things to life
In non-macroed languages you'd do the same with base classes and wrapper functions
Well, or you'd repeat yourself
@CatPlusPlus I consider it a fundamental difference whether a language allows you to treat such "boilerplate removal tool" as first-class something
13:37
> once i got the open MW engine replacer this game is actually a hidden gem
> Morrowind
> hidden gem
kids these days
@BartekBanachewicz Fundamental difference to what
@CatPlusPlus Some people dismiss the idea of control libraries altogether, while for a haskeller it's something natural. Same thing
It just makes it operate on compile time instead of runtime
Again, same shit can be said about C++ TMP
Rectangle r1 = Rectangle(34); Rectangle r2 = Rectangle(34); so r1, r2 refer to the same object. in java. which is why you use new.
-6
Q: Huge update for C++ FAQ

Marshall ClineI'm the original author and long-time maintainer of the C++ FAQ (AKA C++ FAQ Lite). I first wrote/published the thing in 1991 so you do the math - it's old enough to legally buy a beer, and you can figure out why it was originally published via Usenet News & Anonymous FTP rather than the Web. I'...

13:38
@CatPlusPlus and C++ TMP is unreadable clusterfuck, so no one really writes it
@πάνταῥεῖ that wasn't a blank line :) (also, isn't that too minor?)
That's beside the point
Also lol traits and SFINAE are also TMP
Come on. WTH flags feeds
Yeah nobody uses that
13:40
@sehe Yeah, of course that wasn't a blank line (I was talking about my notorious behavior)
Oh. That
@CatPlusPlus by analogy, nobody sane writes heavy C-macro code
despite the fact it could technically be much more powerful than regular C++
Irrelevant, not the same category of macros
that's the point
Template Haskell is the analogue you want
And oh look, every fucking lens library uses it
13:43
Lisp gives you way better macros so the cons of C macros stop applying
and as such, people are tempted to use... and overuse them a lot more
Define overuse
If it reduces boilerplate, it's not overuse
not really.
They're not used just for the sake of using macros
you can reduce boilerplate at the cost of completely changing regular language semantics
IOW you transform the language into an EDSL
Also in Lisp that's doubly not a problem because expanding and debugging macros is easier than in other environments
13:45
I simply don't think this should be a main point of a programming language vOv
@BartekBanachewicz Again, same thing happens with C++, Haskell, Rubby, etc
it really doesn't
and if you keep on insisting that it does, well, we can agree to disagree
Spirit
Monads
Everything written in Rubby ever
lol
Well I'm not sure why are we ever bringing rubby up in a discussion about language design frankly
13:46
@BartekBanachewicz lol you just go 'grr lisp' and don't see that it's not Lisp-specific and Lisp actually makes it less of a problem
stackoverflow.com/posts/28696352/revisions Bwahahaha. Yeah, right OP. That's what we meant...
@CatPlusPlus I understand what I have wrote. From looking at other frameworks, admittedly not a huge amount of time has been spent doing that, I can't make head nor tails of them.
@CatPlusPlus that's completely not what I'm trying to do
I don't know what you're trying to do
13:47
but sure, if you want to discuss it like that, lol you just go "aww lisp" and don't see that it's Lisp-specific and Lisp actually makes it more of a problem
Good argument
Ignore everything I said
@CatPlusPlus that was your argument, lol
"no u" was your best rebuttal in this discussion so
no u
Whatever
13:48
@CatPlusPlus well yes, if your only way of responding is attacking me instead of what I'm saying
@CatPlusPlus and, obviously, this has to be followed by an image of a duck holding its head in bewilderment. Might be helpful to remember that the actual psyduck had chronic headaches; if that's what's preventing you to actually thinking conciously about what I'm trying to say and understanding it, maybe take a painkiller or something.
@BartekBanachewicz what the psyduck!
@CatPlusPlus What's the article?
@thecoshman you're not supposed to read the implementations of frameworks you know
you're supposed to read the docs
@Jefffrey not the same thing
13:55
@BartekBanachewicz no shit
@thecoshman anyway, the only real difference between a framework and a library is "who calls who"
abstract classes and interfaces are very similar in java.
I don't think that makes frameworks fundamentally more complex/difficult to understand than libraries
@BartekBanachewicz same difference, I find most frameworks/libraries take a lot of effort to get using
user3010322
@DonLarynx Java ಠ_ಠ .
13:59
@thecoshman if you can't learn how to use a library quickly, you're a shitty programmer
@ThePhD :(
@DonLarynx more or less, except you can inherit from multiple interfaces, sorry, implement many

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