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user3010322
17:00
Found the line that's generating the compiler error.
user3010322
//threadpool.Queue( &ThreadedTileTracer<n, m>::Patch, std::ref( *this ), tile );
user3010322
Now I need to figure out why it's behaving like titterbuckets.
user3010322
Is there a way to capture a lambda by copy?
[lambda] { ... }?
user3010322
Oh, right. It's just no labels, got it.
17:02
what labels?
user3010322
Like & and stuff.
user3010322
How do you capture explicitly by move?
user3010322
&& ?
[x = std::move(x)] { ... }
user3010322
Or is it that wonkified x = std::move(x) ?
17:03
but only works on C++14 compilers
@AndyProwl Right on the money.
user3010322
Oh, ew. They couldn't even just do &&.
@ThePhD They could, but decided to generalize
best thing about being CEO of Stack Overflow? If I want to know what anybody's doing, I can just read Hacker News http://blog.serverfault.com/2015/03/05/how-we-upgrade-a-live-data-center/
so you can have any expression on the rhs
user3010322
17:04
@AndyProwl They should have done both.
wait what
What what
The sum is 102%
Inaccurate division
Also I literally earn 0-1000 because it's hourly
17:06
Apr 16 '14 at 22:42, by R. Martinho Fernandes
It appears that in 2005, Canada had 100.1% pre-school enrolment rate among children aged 3-5 years.
@Jefffrey Prolly using some rounding algorithm that doesn't even out.
So a website entirely about polls, sucks at doing polls. Nice.
It's not that important
It's you
You're the nerd
@Jefffrey It's clearly rounding 12.5% to 13% three times, plus 37.5% to 38%.
@BartekBanachewicz yes. The difference is that in your personal case it is not a case of systemic discrimination, and it doesn't affect half the world's population. Oh, and also, one person accepting worse pay for their work doesn't somehow invalidate other people pointing out the same and calling it problematic.
17:09
@Jefffrey I think it's a problem that has no completely satisfying solution.
(Also, you did feel the need to shout to this chat how unfairly you're treated)
Maybe allowing 2 digits decimals is a good idea for percentages.
In this case it would fix it to just show more significant digits, but it still fails in general.
That's what I'd do
I.e.: 1/3 + 1/3 + 1/3 = 0.3333 + 0.3333 + 0.3333 = 99.99%
17:10
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah, but failing of 0.2% is not as bad as failing of 2%
With enough options you can probably still fail at 2% even with 2 decimal digits, but still.
It stops being a problem with larger samples, I guess.
@R.MartinhoFernandes is 0.9999 really 99.99%? Isn't that % more just an interpretation of that value?
what even is a number?
@thecoshman What.
Drugs are bad
@R.MartinhoFernandes what?
17:22
@thecoshman what?!?
@SamDeHaan what!
@AlexM. what...
17:24
You can stop now
@CatPlusPlus what?!
inb4 what
w00t
@thecoshman 2
Is both even and a number
user3010322
Lol...
user3010322
Don't tell me std::result_of is crashing my code...
Xeo
Xeo
17:31
wat
user3010322
Crashing VC++'s compiler**
@ThePhD Doesn't sound surprising at all.
user3010322
It seems... to be crashing around __Invoke_function_pmf
user3010322
So maybe it's not result_of, but one of the internal bits.
user3010322
Changing std::result_of<TFx( Tn... )>::type
user3010322
17:34
to void
user3010322
makes the code work.
so ok, I come at you with the sscce to start with. That all looks legit right? So in my 'real' code, I detect when I collide with on of these cubes and then tell it be removed from the map. The detection works just fine, it prints to console when it detects the collision. But it seems to struggle to remove items sometimes... seemingly if the first thing I try to remove was last thing I added. :\ I can't even
user3010322
Lmao.
user3010322
Fuck VC++.
user3010322
@thecoshman You're mutating a collection you're iterating over.
user3010322
17:35
That's a gigantic "No no".
@ThePhD except I stop iterating it once I've muted it.
user3010322
Oh, righty-o then.
@thecoshman Doesn't matter.
@R.MartinhoFernandes really? ergh... fine <kicks the poor kid in the corner>
Oh. You stop by breaking.
Nevermind.
17:40
grrr
I thought you stopped by killing everything.
@R.MartinhoFernandes oh right... well... then I wouldn't care about much at all would I :\
user1804599
Charlie Hebdo.
user1804599
28
Q: Does DNA have the equivalent of IF-statements, WHILE loops, or function calls? How about GOTO?

coderworksDoes DNA have anything like IF-statements, GOTO-jumps, or WHILE loops? In software development, these constructs have the following functions: IF-statements: An IF statement executes the code in a subsequent code block if some specific condition is met. WHILE-loops: The code in a subsequent co...

user1804599
:(
17:42
@райтфолд is that a no?
user1804599
No.
user1804599
> Logic gates have been constructed using synthetic biological circuits.
user1804599
Shiny.
user3010322
TODO: Find out how to get INVOKE semantics and not have VC++ crash on me.
17:45
probably not "shiny", no
@ThePhD ha. Haha. Mwhahahahahaha
user3010322
@R.MartinhoFernandes I can do it!!
user1804599
Lol, i is a postfix operator in Perl 6, so you can say 4i for four times the imaginary unit, and ($a)i for $a times the imaginary unit.
Xeo
Xeo
@ThePhD good luc... scratch that, you're screwed
user1804599
Custom circumfix operators is nice.
17:49
Colleague creates shell script, with an independent version numbering system in its comments. Commits it to VCS.

Makes very first update just two days later... doesn't increment version number.

Facepalm.
@райтфолд that is going to earn someone soo much rep :P
He did manage to update the datestamp in the same comments. It's just a shame he got the date wrong.
removes date and version number
user1804599
@thecoshman Why?
@райтфолд i is used in loops normally... isn't that going to cause problems?
user1804599
17:51
No.
user1804599
$i is a variable, and i is a postfix operator.
user1804599
However, you can define a constant or a type named i (without sigil) and it won't conflict with the postfix operator since it's used differently syntactically.
@райтфолд So Perl does not have imaginary dollars?
user1804599
> my constant i = 42;
42
> (i)i
0+42i
user1804599
Constants don't have sigils.
17:54
@райтфолд Impressive. I'll use Perl 6 next time I need to use complex numbers.
@Mgetz Overloading, yes
@milleniumbug does it fix any of the issues of ADL? or is it just as bad?
user1804599
> my constant i = 1i;
> my constant negative-one = (i)i;
> negative-one;
-1+0i
user1804599
:D :D :D :D :D
@Mgetz I don't understand how ADL is related to this. There are no namespaces.
17:57
@milleniumbug type promotion etc, I'll go into it after I get back with lunch
@Mgetz It's just call-site overloading.
@Mgetz It's overloading, except even shittier (as if C++ overloading wasn't shitty enough)
That sounds weird, but it's an accurate description somehow.
> For example, their are 6 different arc cosine functions
> their
> their
lol..
Generic selection is implemented with a new keyword: _Generic.
great name for a keyword. fuck you and your backwards compatibility
good god that is horrible
Why? What? It doesn't break anything.
18:02
switch for types. in a single expression. with a silly name.
it breaks my brain by being silly
something isn't good just because it doesn't "break" anything
@milleniumbug that was kinda my point, as you can have type promotion without realizing it
_Generic prefers exact matches afair
Can you define a unique constraint only on rows that have a certain boolean to true/false in SQL?
Maybe I'm doing something wrong.
Your model is crap
Yeah, thought so.
user1804599
18:13
@Jefffrey You can create a unique index on a subset of a table.
@райтфолд You can?
would you still call a member function append on a static size vector, which returns a copied vector of N+1 size with the "appended" value at the end?
How?
user1804599
CREATE UNIQUE INDEX name ON table (column) WHERE condition;
I was thinking of having an "access tokens" table that stores the session tokens after a correct login. Each token has a value field that must be unique in the valid tokens, has an expiration date and a boolean that checks if the token has been invalidated or not.
18:16
int x;
std::cout >> x;
char bytes[3];
std::cout.read(bytes, sizeof(bytes));
user1804599
Delete the token if it is invalidated.
This is horrible, right?
@райтфолд Nice
@райтфолд But then the constraint of uniqueness fails, no?
user1804599
Or do you want to prevent the token from being used twice?
You can't have a unique constraint on a nullable field
user1804599
18:17
You can.
Oh
I guess I could do that.
user1804599
And NULL values are always unique, since NULL <> NULL.
Say you have a file with some XML-ish structure, but it also happens to have some binary crap embedded in it. How do you read that?
XML has CDATA markers for that
@райтфолд Tokens are also a way to keep logs of accesses
So deleting them would be a problem in that regard.
18:18
@CatPlusPlus I have no control over the data.
It's horrible.
And I would still need to check uniqueness only for those that are not expired
user1804599
What do you need an access log for?
To check weird access patterns
@R.MartinhoFernandes Did you mean std::cin >> x;?
@Jefffrey Sure you can
18:19
Like someone logging in 30 times in a minute
@AndyProwl Oh, yeah.
Same below, right?
user1804599
If it's logging just for logging purposes I'd store it in a log file instead of in the database.
I'm mostly concerned about the reading of textual data "over-reading" into the binary data.
@AndyProwl Of course.
@Jefffrey If you need that then you can't reuse expired ones anyway
18:20
@райтфолд But I'd like to like block logging for 15 minutes if someone logs too many times or something like that.
So you need uniqueness on all of them
@CatPlusPlus How so?
user1804599
@Jefffrey Configure rate limiting in Nginx.
user1804599
It's two lines of configuration.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Binary/text mix sounds like nightmare
18:21
@райтфолд I'm on Openshift
user1804599
Much easier than implementing the crap yourself.
So no idea how to access that.
@AndyProwl It certainly is. This is actually to be solved in Java (helping a friend), but I'm wondering how I would actually go about it in C++.
user1804599
Openshit, then.
Shit, BBL
18:22
"mixing formatted unformatted input c++" doesn't give good results.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Are the sections marked somehow?
Like, is there any way of telling where a binary section ends?
@AndyProwl Yes, start and end of binary data is known as soon as you read the text immediately preceding it.
user1804599
Use an XML parser.
@райтфолд It's not XML.
user1804599
Good luck, my friend.
18:26
@R.MartinhoFernandes From the top of my head I'm not able to find a better alternative than what you wrote already
but I'm not an I/O expert either
@CatPlusPlus Also, CDATA is not for binary blobs. You can't put invalid UTF-8 sequences in CDATA.
@AndyProwl Sadly I don't think what I wrote would work in Java, because you use different objects to read textual and to read binary data.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Well, the idea of marking things that parser should ignore
@AndyProwl I think he'll have to open the file twice, attach a binary reader to one and a textual reader to the other, and read and seek around between the two.
Sounds horrible.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I was thinking of something along these lines, too. I also thought it sounds horrible
But if you can't get binary data when reading in text mode, there isn't much of a choice I'm afraid
user1804599
In Go it would be trivial.
18:34
Text/binary mode is not very relevant here
Parsers shouldn't use text mode ever anyway
The problem is with differentiating structural elements and the data
Why parsers shouldn't use text mode?
(genuine question)
@R.MartinhoFernandes Meh, just read bytes and decode them
user1804599
Text mode shouldn't exist.
user1804599
Files contain nothing but bytes.
Plus two readers on top of a single stream will advance the stream with whatever they read
user1804599
18:38
If you want to decode the bytes, read the bytes and pass them to a decoding function.
@CatPlusPlus That's a lot of trouble, though. You need to read them and then feed them to the parser, and then get feedback about whether the binary data starts there.
user1804599
Don't bake it into the stream. It's not its job.
Yes
It's not that much trouble though
@CatPlusPlus Won't the readers over-read? Like to find terminators and such?
I don't know, that's the problem.
For all I know, the reader pointer can be different from the stream pointer.
I wouldn't bother with two readers anyway
user1804599
18:39
Backtrack.
You would do what then?
State machine and a buffer
@CatPlusPlus Oh yes, it is, because you basically have to stand somewhere before the parser and at the same time out of it.
user1804599
HTTP does this. The problem was solved. Look at how HTTP implementations do it.
@CatPlusPlus You mean, a parser?
18:40
Yes
:v
2 mins ago, by Cat Plus Plus
It's not that much trouble though
Reimplementing existing bits of functionality sounds like more trouble to me.
The only problem I could see is exiting the data mode to go back to structure
The existing parser doesn't tell you where it is in the stream. (Java sucks)
Dunno how your thing looks like
scanner.nextLong(); // reads a textual integer
// skip a space
// now read a 64-bit blob somehow
18:42
@AndyProwl The file open modes are a giant useless hack
@CatPlusPlus It's not file open modes.
user1804599
Get rid of the scanner.
lol Scanner is useless for anything non-trivial
@райтфолд Not gonna implement float parsing and whatnot.
user1804599
Write a function that takes an InputStream, decodes text and returns a long.
user1804599
18:43
It can use a scanner internally. Use a buffered input stream so you can undo reads.
@райтфолд How do you parse the long?
I'd parse in two stages if you want to reuse Scanner
@райтфолд (Also all that functionality exists)
@CatPlusPlus It's really just ints and floats and blobs.
@райтфолд You can't undo reads of unknown size.
@AndyProwl Because it just makes life harder having to dick around worrying about the conversions that you don't need. Also, file open mode considerations are for lexers, not parsers. Peasant.
user1804599
Optional<Long> readLong(stream) throws IOException {
    int offset = whereami(stream);
    parse text
    if parsing failed { seek(stream, offset); return new Optional<Long>(); }
    return new Optional<Long>(result);
}
18:45
Scanner is just a bunch of regexes
@райтфолд The problem is that parsing may succeed and the stream is not where the scanner is.
You can use scanner.match() to get the position of the last match
user1804599
@R.MartinhoFernandes Seek to offset + size of parsed text. If the scanner cannot tell you how much text it read for parsing the long, then top kek.
@райтфолд I just want that token to not be picked up for uniqueness after it's done doing its purpose.
What for
Don't reuse tokens
18:47
@райтфолд And what's the size of the parsed text, you say? If you parse a 3, it could be anything from one to ten thousand.
Because then I have less possible values for the random generation of new tokens
Out of 2^128 oh no
I guess that doesn't matter with an high number of bits
@CatPlusPlus Oh, I didn't notice MatchResult had that info. Thanks.
I MIGHT RUN OUT OF UUIDS
18:47
@Puppy Yes, I guessed it's the lexer's job, but I used the word "parser" because Cat did, and I didn't feel like being pedantic.
Wide uses binary mode
Is it the good old Lounge <C++>?
you simply don't need textmode conversions and it makes actually reasoning about the file harder.
Python's universal newline handling is more useful than libc-like file modes
@CatPlusPlus I'm using 32 bytes, so slightly more than that ;)
user1804599
18:49
Then don't use scanner.
user1804599
Read the integer manually it's literally a single line of code, then call Integer.parseInt on the resulting string.
@райтфолд Reading the integer manually needs some parsing.
if you're unlucky enough to be using Java
8 hours ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
room topic changed to Haskell<C++>: By popular request [c++] [c++11] [c++14] [c++-faq]
Ok, maybe I should just keep uniqueness everywhere.
18:50
amg I didn't notice
somebody fix the room.
@FredOverflow Thanks)
user1804599
Yes, that's what I said.
I want to find out a tiny useful library for C++ with classes, methods, external functions and etc (of course with adequate code).
If you seen such library, please write its name.
Try "any library ever"
I mean, it was a terribly specific question.
Boost! Definitely tiny.
18:53
@CatPlusPlus Hmm, nah, that still requires a guarantee that the scanner doesn't buffer anything (like the terminators it read), which I don't have. I guess he's stuck with doing some parsing manually somewhere.
It works in C++ because the buffer for formatted and unformatted reads is the same.
user1804599
@QueueOverflow Boost.
@QueueOverflow LLVM and Clang.
user1804599
@QueueOverflow POCO
user1804599
@QueueOverflow WPF
user1804599
ok so
Guys, did you not see a word 'tiny'? Or is it humor?
@QueueOverflow Boost.Random
user1804599
f()
g()
// translates into
f(function() {
    g(function() { });
});
Get a subset of a larger library
18:58
@QueueOverflow you want a tiny library that's useful....for what?
user1804599
But gotos are more tricky.
@QueueOverflow Personally in that case I might take the BCL
user1804599
if x { f() } else { g() } z()
// translates to
var endif = function() { z(function() { }); };
if (x) {
    f(endif);
} else {
    g(endif);
}
user1804599
Something like this should work!

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