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08:05
I have never given any serious look at Boost Spirit but now I'm thinking of it. Any word of advice if it's worth investing time?
@ParkYoung-Bae
It's for Boost.Spirit you Jefffrey
You just broke what could have been an original and genius combo
@Jefffrey
08:17
@Jefffrey I think I'll write a lens library
user1804599
@FredOverflow I thought up another way of finding logical inconsistencies statically, based on constant folding.
@BartekBanachewicz Why?
@Jefffrey because records are FUBAR
and original lens is big
user1804599
assert(x > 5); // from now on, assume x to be some value greater than 5, such as 6
assert(x == 2); // constant folds to false since 6 != 2: DIAGNOSTIC!
user1804599
08:19
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user1804599
Thanks, GitHub.
@Jefffrey yeah something like that
user1804599
@Rapptz need a JSON parser? perlmonks.org/?node_id=995856
user1804599
@Rapptz no. goto is unconditional.
08:27
I was making a joke.
CONTEXT YOUNGIN.
user1804599
Unless you use GNU C++, in which case you can make a "conditional goto".
user1804599
By storing an array of two label addresses and indexing it with a Boolean cast to an integer. :p
@MarcoA. (a) the learning curve (b) shines for RAPID development, don't twist and turn to do exactly what you want (the first 90% take 10% effort, the last 10% will kill your productivity, introduce subtle bugs and generally make you less happy)
/cc @ParkYoung-Bae ^
I always wonder @райтфолд why you didn't get more involved in algorithmic competitions
they constantly use hacks like that
weird data structures, complicated calculations, bit shifts
@sehe doesn't sound great written like that :P
user1804599
08:28
Because I am incredibly bad at algorithms used in such competitions.
well you're bad at life but I'm not suggesting you stop living either
@MarcoA. I'm actively managing your expectations. When I say "it shines", I mean it too
user1804599
The only data structures I can implement are arrays, immutable linked lists and tuples.
could've become better
@райтфолд have you tried implementing something else?
like, you know, with a book
that's right, it could be worth it
08:29
reading about things you don't know
@райтфолд besides projects there are very short and noone scoffs at you for dumping one and starting another
user1804599
This is interesting.
Does travis have gcc >= 4.8 yet
why don't their docs say anything important
user1804599
For ADTs you can calculate how many values there are of the type.
user1804599
08:32
This could be interesting in static analysis.
user1804599
For small ADTs you could bruteforce preconditions, postconditions and assertions to find values that fail the contracts and perhaps emit reports or optimise based on that.
@райтфолд Man...that looks...awesome. :D
user1804599
@ThePhD boost::optional or std::unique_ptr.
boostd::unique_optional_ptr
std::experimental::optional
Or, if you are me, namespace stdexp = std::experimental; and stdexp::optional :P
user1804599
08:39
namespace std {
    using namespace boost;
    using namespace std::experimental;
}
using namespace std;
user1804599
Today's Boost is tomorrow's today's standard library!
@sehe What is one to do if they need some of the 10% to actually parse what they want to parse? Ask on SO? Ask you?
@LucDanton That's the spirit!
@Rapptz inb4 travis is teri-bad
08:42
@райтфолд lol
@park I must have missed the memo, is this now your merged account?
What do you mean?
is that most majestic overgrown guinea pig a thing of the past?
Who is that
guinea pig is spelt really odd...
@ParkYoung-Bae the person you MURDERED!!!!
08:44
it was a capybara dude
it's like 5 times bigger than a guinea pig
> overgrown
Most Majestic Overgrown Guinea Pig is kind of fitting though
user1804599
I AM DISAPPOINT
08:44
they are more or less the same creature. just a tiny matter of one being huge compared to the other.
user1804599
Google Closure doesn't optimise !(a || b) to !a && !b.
oh, tonight peeps, you get to help me workout some very strange behaviour :P
I've somehow engineered a map that doesn't like to remove the last thing you added to it unless you remove something else first :\
and guess what! when I write a sscce that does the same, it works just as it should!
If we are too attached to riches, we are not free. We are slaves.
what a fucking bullshit
he's getting worse lately
08:49
@BartekBanachewicz vOv what... that's actually something not-evil. "don't be obsessed with getting wealth".
Is that Pope John Paul Banachewicz
At least he didn't finish it like "We are just as bad as those nigas back in the 60s"
inb4 ban
@BartekBanachewicz I agree with him
> If we are too attached to freedom, we are not free. We are slaves.
@BartekBanachewicz lol
08:52
> I pretend people say something else so I can mock them how I want - Fartek Bananawanker
@thecoshman Well, obsession is bad. Being rich is not. Wealth gives you a lot of freedom.
> If we are too attached [...]
@Griwes OK. Then I consider it too obvious and not worth mentioning by the Pope. :)
I'm pretty sure that Jesus guy wasn't very approving of the rich either.
> too attached
> too
Way to miss the point
09:01
@LucDanton God no. They can ask if they get >80%. Above the 90% I'm just going to point them at "don't do that". I'll show them the "downstream" way of doing things the Spirit way.
If that's not okay (frequently that is just not efficient) then they need to buckle up and either (a) write their own parser (b) extend Spirit (custom traits/parser directives... gasp)
@TheForestAndTheTrees the rich didn't need his approval and they both knew it
"Render unto Caesar" is the beginning of a phrase attributed to Jesus in the synoptic gospels, which reads in full, "Render unto Caesar the things that are Caesar's, and unto God the things that are God's" (Ἀπόδοτε οὖν τὰ Καίσαρος Καίσαρι καὶ τὰ τοῦ Θεοῦ τῷ Θεῷ).[Matthew 22:21] This phrase has become a widely quoted summary of the relationship between Christianity and secular authority. The original message, coming in response to a question of whether it was lawful for Jews to pay taxes to Caesar, gives rise to multiple possible interpretations about the circumstances under which it is desirable...
Oh, that’s quite a narrow 10% then. Good, good.
And I've kinda sorta just bought my first car.
I was considering the threshold of real pain. Not the Pareto principle (which is why I didn't use 80%/20%)
user1804599
ok so
@wilx It frakkin' twitter, what do you expect
@Rerito lel
user1804599
09:05
How to represent CFG.
user1804599
I know how!
user1804599
But it's difficult to implement SSA in such a way it can be trivially modified.
user1804599
E.g. you need algorithms for finding out whether variables are used.
user1804599
Just have to loop over the instructions though.
> you need algorithms
Oh no!
09:08
@райтфолд What?! That's heinous. /cc @wilx
> Doesn't handle unicode yet, but that wasn't a client requirement.
Even my Spirit JSON doodles have more features and are far more readable. FAR more readable. Not to mention actually statically typed.
user1804599
I like how you take this as a serious program.
How can you tell?
user1804599
How can you tell I'm not lying?
well so it's a bit embarrasing
I'm buying a car and I've yet to pass my driving test
fucking tests :D
@BartekBanachewicz Ahah it's the other way around for me, I got the license but still no car (and still not planning to buy one)
09:16
@Rerito well my GF was supposed to receive her license this week, so I suppose she'll be able to drive it in a few days
anyway I just saved myself hours of looking for car offers
Yeaaaaah you'll be chauffeured!
@Rerito a-ha! :)
@BartekBanachewicz that's just "precocious"
2
@sehe what a nice word
@wilx he is clearly referring to being too attached, not just being rich.
09:19
@BartekBanachewicz you bought a Koenigsegg, I presume
@sehe Dude, that is awesome! :D
@sehe hahaha
No, I bought drum roll a 2004 Renault Thalia
with the dCi
@wilx I don't share humour with perlists
2
@BartekBanachewicz \o/
@thecoshman Clearly he just loosely paraphrased Matthew 6:19-21
09:20
@sehe oh contrair... it's lucifer 9:11
I didn't read the apocrypha
@BartekBanachewicz Only the driving test or also the written test?
inb4 oral test
Oh dear, now bartek is going to drive to london 4 da unconference
09:37
@chmod711telkitty no worries, the risk of him dying along the way is less, on average, than that of you perishing on one of your hiking trips :)
:(
I am going hiking/bushwalking this weekend
thanks for the reassurance
(if only because weeds don't die easily)
@chmod711telkitty You keep mentioning this fact yourself :)
@sehe Lol you got an instant star!
(Not by me btw)
> "a bad sixpence always turns up"
Apparently would have been a more natural translataion mapping
I was actually worried about you guys
if he brings the car along, there is a greater chance something wrong would happen between you, bartek & the car
09:40
@chmod711telkitty no way
might think about that if I had actually bought a Koenigsegg
but flight is cheap and faster so vOv
user1804599
I wish I had a cock up my butt.
it might just happen ...
user1804599
I had this wonderful idea.
be careful what you wish for
@райтфолд Again
user1804599
09:47
sealed abstract class Instruction {
    def operands: Set[InstructionID]
    def swapOperand(old: InstructionID, new: InstructionID): Instruction
}
case class Block(instructions: Vector[(InstructionID, Instruction)])
case class CFG(blocks: Map[BlockID, Block])
user1804599
This should be easy to manipulate.
user1804599
Especially with some lenses.
user1804599
swapOperand might not even be needed, since instruction IDs are used instead of pointers.
@MarcoA. well - what do you know:
0
A: C++ boost::spirit parsing embedded languages

seheSpirit Qi can be used with a scanner (Spirit Lex) or without. In my humble opinion, Spirit shines when using it scanner-less, though. The reason is mainly that Spirit shines when you avoid complexity, and using Spirit Lex acts like a complexity multiplier for your Spirit Qi grammar definition. ...

@chmod711telkitty are you so desperate to get rid of your chooks now
user1804599
def incomingBlockIDs(cfg: CFG, target: BlockID) =
    cfg.blocks.filter(_._2.instructions.exists(_.blockOperands.contains(target))).map(_._1).toSet
user1804599
09:55
So awesome!
@sehe I don't have roosters anymore
Aw
user1804599
kinda
I have 2 lovely girls, and they are cute & huggable
@thecoshman Bartek likes objectivism.
09:56
> I want to learn as much as possible about my concurrence
wut
@sehe Oh hey, the trick you mention there is really neat.
@sehe I recommend a gynecologist.
lol. took me 37s and a trip to merriam-webster to get it :)
Woot. This must be the first time I've ever written a Spirit answer that was a fast rep-earner.
And it doesn't even contain any code :(
I was doing it wrong all along
2
in the land of the blind, one eyed dwarf is the queen
You gotta do it western style
user1804599
10:00
27
A: Immutable Scala Map implementation that preserves insertion order

missingfaktorListMap implements an immutable map using a list-based data structure, and thus preserves insertion order. scala> import collection.immutable.ListMap import collection.immutable.ListMap scala> ListMap(1 -> 2) + (3 -> 4) res31: scala.collection.immutable.ListMap[Int,Int] = Map(1 -> 2, 3 -> 4) s...

user1804599
awesome
> Production-ready v0.9.0 is coming
This is right when they introduce the rule that std::numeric_limit<double>::max() will converge to ∞
user1804599
10:18
I'm so happy.
Did you get the cock?
You speak Dutch more than you know
Implying my choice of words was a coincidence
10:34
@VladfromMoscow And it doesn't have to. By avoiding the complicated, low-level solution, the OP can solve his problem more easily, in an understandable way, and only go back to the primitive concepts if he really wants or needs to. I found it unnecessary to expand too much on the legacy parts of the language that don't get much use in modern C++ anyway. — Bartek Banachewicz 5 secs ago
I feel a disturbance in the force
@BartekBanachewicz lol that's our Vlad
@AndyProwl IKR
damn he's catching up on my rep
s/catching up on/repwhoring his way up to/
He is not asking about other solutions. He is asking why his program does not compile, what is wrong with his program. If the author does not use std;:string it does not mean that his program is wrong. — Vlad from Moscow 1 min ago
Is he trolling, or does he really believe in what he is saying here? :/
10:39
He believes it
Moreover it would be wrong for such a simple program to use class std::string. In fact all what he need is a pointer to a string literal. — Vlad from Moscow 12 secs ago
@AndyProwl I refuse to accept an idea that anyone can be this stupid :/
This is a pretty cool video, regardless of whatever message it tries to convey.
@Griwes I don't think he's stupid, rather "evil-minded"
in a metaphoric sense of course
10:40
@ParkYoung-Bae Oh. Let me get my poker face mask... jessasec
"This program is too simple for std::string" is a plainly stupid statement :/
well, he's uneducated
I still don't think he's stupid
"This program is too simple for this utility, so I'll use this more complicated utility to make the program more complicated." :/
@AndyProwl He refuses to accept any kind of arguments, he doesn't listen, he doesn't want to learn.
@Griwes Yeah that's bad. Part of the evilness I guess. Perhaps we mean different things by "stupid"
How many C++ developers use C++11 ?
10:43
hard to tell
I mean in percentage
@AndyProwl I consider people who specifically don't listen and don't want to learn to be stupid. Not wanting to learn is stupid.
@SmartDev 37.3594023847325894025784329548329075687196243785217483549302754725%
@Griwes lol...asking something here is just like making a crime...lol
10:44
Asking silly questions is.
The real answer is: how the hell would^Wcould we know?
@Griwes I don't find it silly...Yes you are right...from here we can see how many people in group use C++11?
@Griwes Maybe. I take stupidity as something you cannot change - brain limitation. This seems more like attitude-related: something he could change if he were more mature (which he'll hopefully become at some point).
Sorry for my broad question
@SmartDev what group?
You mean here?
This Lounge
10:46
You could make a survey
That's an entirely different question.
@AndyProwl Thanks Andy..Yes I will be at some point
One that suddenly starts making sense.
You post does not answer what is wrong with the original program. — Vlad from Moscow 15 mins ago
I think he has a point here.
Everyone +1 his comment
10:47
What is wrong is that OP tries to use a legacy misfeature called "using char arrays as strings".
@SmartDev No prob. (I think you answered the wrong message)
@RvdK actually, more like strncpy(str, "C", sizeof(str)); or maaaaybe int err = strncpy_s(str, sizeof(str), "C++", 3); if (err!=0) { /*handle error*/ } (reference) — sehe 57 secs ago
@AndyProwl Yes..I answered wrong message
@R.MartinhoFernandes i agree it doesnt. Do you find my justification of why it doesn't unsatisfactory?
"blah blah cannot assign to arrays, arrays are messy, you should probably use std::string instead which doesn't have any such problems" is a lot better than "THOU SHALL USE STD::STRING"
10:48
@SmartDev yes
Downvoted for not being Haskell
@BartekBanachewicz There's no justification.
@sehe lol
Just more dogma.
@BartekBanachewicz You could argue that giving the alternative is not useless. And potentially more useful than answering the question. That depends on context though
@R.MartinhoFernandes SHALT*
10:50
Explain the problem, present std::string as a solution. Feel free to skip solutions that don't use std::string. But explaining the problem is important IMO.
Urgh why are all text serialization formats terrible
Yes
@ParkYoung-Bae Because "text" and "serialization" and "format".
How many developers here use C++11 ?
I want a simple config file
10:50
Mmm "legacy obsolete c feature" sounded like enough in my head. I'll edit it in a sec
@ParkYoung-Bae data and meta data. I'm sure it's somehow related to Gödel but I'm not in the mood to find out why
@SmartDev 2 of them, this is a Haskell room
2 mins ago, by sehe
@SmartDev yes
[config]
complexity_level = 0
10:51
I NEED ARRAYS
> I want a simple config file
I NEED ARRAYS
> bc it doesn know it's type
Consistency isn't your strength.
@ParkYoung-Bae Then you should change Lounge<C++> to Lounge<Haskel>
My definition of simplicity includes basic repetition of elements
10:52
@ParkYoung-Bae I think .ini do have some weird way to define arrays.
room topic changed to Haskell<C++>: By popular request [c++] [c++11] [c++14] [c++-faq]
5
@SmartDev My minions have obeyed
@Griwes Just comma separated values?
@ParkYoung-Bae Yes I see
I have a hard time trying to understand what it is you're trying to say, "bc" of the broken English. (And no that's not unfair, "bc" "u" "cn" just "tri" to spell normal words in full, for a start.) And then I get this feeling that if I did understand this, it would turn out to be horribly wrong. — sehe 7 secs ago
10:53
@R.MartinhoFernandes I think there was something else, like using [], but I am not sure.
Starboard acne
Also not sure how "standard" it was.
Lounge<Haskell<C++>>?
@ParkYoung-Bae Didn't we have this dicsuction before? I'm pretty sure I have a déja-vu. Best to search the transcript for a few hours, now
Fuck this I'll just use XML
10:54
@AndyProwl That's a very high error density. Props!
@Griwes There's something that passes as an .ini standard?
@ParkYoung-Bae sanity restored
@R.MartinhoFernandes Hence "standard" not standard.
@sehe I don't think so (ICBW)
@sehe and I even left out "tris to build lambda object"
10:55
@ParkYoung-Bae silly girl. Define you're own standard
Standard as in "some parsers understand it" :D
@ParkYoung-Bae It might have been someone else, but it was deffo ~2 months ago, and eerily similar. Perhaps @Ell?
@AndyProwl See my comment
@sehe Thanks for confusing me with someone else, moreover Ell. Oh well, at least it's not Bartek.
@thecoshman I wheel
@ParkYoung-Bae pop your hood baby
7 pm time to go! everything compiles weeee
maybe because I commented out everything!
10:57
@ParkYoung-Bae There's no conclusive evidence one way or the other. FWIW you could have made me start confusing Ell with you, FCOL!
@sehe ah alrigh sry i dnd't c dat
wut y u no rd bttr
@sehe Oh well
user1804599
I love my program.
@Bartek string literals have type const char[N] where N is one plus their length.
10:58
Isn't it its length + 1?
This is obviously not "a problem that can no longer be reproduced". 4 close votes cast that way. What is wrong with you people? — Lightness Races in Orbit 2 mins ago

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