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07:02
i got an access violation error again, caught by the VS debugger. Unfortunately, it's breakpoint was at 'free.c'.
@Rapptz Okay, just did a quick test. Put together a trivial grep-like thing where you can specify a regex and a specification for some files. Using it to search for `"^#include" *.cpp", it searched through ~1.4 megabytes of files and found 2823 matches in ~0.13 seconds. Gnu grep did the same in 0.10 seconds (but I'd guess most of the difference is in I/O, not regex matching). I/O could be covering up a larger difference in matching speed, but it seems reasonably usable in any case.
that's so much faster than libstdc++'s implementation
which is abysmal
thanks for testing
my last test was comparing Python to libstdc++ and libstdc++'s <regex> was ~157x slower.
@Rapptz Ouch! I'm almost tempted to look through it to figure out what they did to make it perform that badly. That's truly horrible.
any ideas?
07:08
well the compile time being slow seems fairly obvious at first inspection
the <regex> header includes fucking everything and its mother
not sure why
some make sense obviously but the containers, functional, etc not so much
@Rapptz I was thinking about the run-time speed. Slow compile is annoying, but may be bearable. That slow of execution makes the result unusable, regardless of how patient you are when compiling.
yeah I was just looking at the implementation to see and upon first look I realised why compile times may be slow.
Makes sense.
Well, it's late. I think I'm off to bed. Later.
these regex headers are gigantic :v
Night.
RIP jerry coffin
07:22
Hi there
Great weather here today (finally)
Also got a fucked up wrist (dunno how I screwed it)
Gonna be annoying for my workout
07:47
@Rerito hehehehehehehe
@ParkYoung-Bae Huhuhu
oh uh maybe nsfw
not sure
no nudity
@Rapptz wtf where is that
looks like UK
that'd be my guess too
07:56
Not UK, the car is on the right side
Russia.
St. Petersburg.
@Rerito Yes, because he's passing the current driver? I would say
@Rapptz Oh carry on then
No one died.
Look at the background, there are several cars on the right side :)
@Rapptz That's...frankly a miracle
07:59
ikr
08:23
why did they run to be smashed by the car?
"we're losing our suicide chance, hurry up damnit!"
@MarcoA. hahahahaha
Xeo
Xeo
mornin
@Jefffrey tonight
oh oh oh, I am in England next week, meetup anyone?
iow, please spare me from my family, I'm there an entire week!
@Puppy @MartinJames vOv
@Rapptz how do you know?
video description
oh well that's never wrong :P
we are talking about the the mum and child who try to run across the road but end up getting launched?
08:33
yes
@Rapptz I don't understand how a driver can not notice people in front of their car.
they were definitely speeding
good thing kids more resilient to this kind of collision
and they ran out infront
kids are bouncy :D
adult wouldn't survive that probably
@thecoshman yeah :)
08:39
@ThePhD actually, it's just a matter of including clang's intrin.h over MSVCs, then stuff works :D
user1804599
should try that
@thecoshman It's quite obvious the girl made it and the woman is alive too. That leaves two of them being alive. The only ambiguous case is the baby which you can see is still in the stroller which typically is very safe for a baby so the baby would have survived too leaving all 3 alive.
I think you could have figured it out even if the description didn't say so.
@BartekBanachewicz Is it something more than git?
08:45
> Distributed Version Control for Big* Software
> if you’re building large scale software, involved on a project that is critical to your company, you’ve to handle huge files or need to run complex merges, then Plastic SCM can help you keeping things under control. and for GAME developers...
> Plastic is the only DVCS designed from the ground up for companies, while all the others come from an open source background.
Thank god, I was in real need of a web scale SCM
lol
lol
08:45
I like these implications!
Gamedev SCM!
> and for GAME developers...
Ctrl+W
@SmartDev duh, obviously
> Work with teams with hundreds of developers on the same project.
Oh my god! Teams of hundreds are unheard of
it has features git doesn't btw
08:46
> Develop projects with huge binaries and unmergeable contents
Is it better than Perforce
@ParkYoung-Bae no idea
@BartekBanachewicz like what?
Gluon looks cool for artists
@Rapptz like handling binaries sanely
@Rapptz It is web scale
like GUIs for artists
08:47
> We’ll revisit anew the spectrum between strongly-typed Smalltalk and weakly-typed C++, and compare the original goals of object-orientation — to capture fluid operational models of human volition — with the more strongly data-centric and software-engineering focus of C++.
'sanely'?
like allowing two different flows in the same repo
strongly-typed Smalltalk?
@BartekBanachewicz Like branches?
and a GUI isn't really a feature that git aims to do
08:47
@Rapptz have you ever tried to work with large binaries in git?
I don't see why I'd version control binaries.
by binaries I mean assets.
@Rapptz I only watched it the once, didn't see the mom move. only saw girl move a little, could have easily died soon after. Baby being in stroller doesn't mean much really.
I don't see why I'd version control assets.
@Rapptz Obviously Plastic aims to do different things that git
08:48
@Rapptz if they are build outputs, obviously not...
@thecoshman baby in a stroller means a lot lmao
@Rapptz then I can see how you might not realize what plastic brings to the table vOv
The only thing git needs is a pluggable diff and then it would be able handle p much everything
@ParkYoung-Bae not really, no.
Yes really, yes.
08:49
you can even try it yourself
@Rapptz means it was potentially strapped in fairly well
throw a baby that is currently in a stroller and the baby will probably be fine
3
@Rapptz why wouldn't you o_0
@ParkYoung-Bae ah I forgot you have years of experience in using git to handle binaries
but get the parent's permission obviously.
08:49
they are part of the project
@BartekBanachewicz Yes that's what you're forgetting (no, I think you didn't read/understand my comment)
@Rapptz you monster!
I suppose my company should hire you to set up our SCMs
@thecoshman Because they can be .7z'd away and then downloaded by anyone and everyone?
sigh
whatever
08:50
@BartekBanachewicz what? yes!
Why does it belong in my repository?
@Rapptz o_0 that's not why you but shit in version control...
yeah right guys git is greatest go back to work
@Rapptz I'm not talking about build out put... shit that is actually part of your project.
And @Rapptz is clearly an expert in version control
08:51
That fight was short
I didn't mention 'git'.
like graphics for the gui...
@Rapptz no, you just spewed out some, no offence, uneducated BS
kek
but then again it's how the lounge reacts to things mostly
08:51
For GUI version control you can use guit anyway
see ya
what, you expect me to download the code repo, then go off any download the right version of images to get the gui to display properly?
Whoah someone is on their Banaperiod
@thecoshman Honestly still not really seeing the point tbh.
08:52
@thecoshman Or have scripts/hooks do it for you
Why do I need to keep track of asset changes in the repository?
Why is it helpful for me?
For artists it is
@ParkYoung-Bae Maybe for the intermediate formats like .psd etc?
@Rapptz it's part of the project...
@Rapptz so you have the right version of those assets with a given version of your code...
@Rapptz you would store things like 3dsmax files, just like you would store the code, not the compiled binary.
I was talking about .png/.jpg/etc etc.
I can understand .psd and such.
08:55
@Bartek What I meant by my earlier message is that if git were able to have a custom comparator plugged (instead of just diff for text), it could calculate delta(asset.v1, asset.v2) and handle anything regardless of underlying format (.psd, .wav, .obj, you name it). This kind of pluggable delta function is what is needed, not yet another SCM. Cheers. Don't be pissed.
i.e. things for which having an history is pointless
exactly
@Rapptz even then, it can be easier to store them rather than have to build them/export them.
@LucDanton it's not just about history though.
version control is about history
it's about having the right version of everything at a given time.
08:57
@thecoshman i.e, history. lol
if it's static it doesn't belong in version control.
Xeo
Xeo
So, "why do you version stuff for which versioning is pointless"? That doesn't single out assets, but it also doesn't imply that assets don't need versioning at times.
@Rapptz I was assuming they do evolve over time.
safe to clear these pointless 1-star messages?
@Rapptz unless it is there from the very start, and you never want to get ever be able to get rid of it, it is dynamic.
Xeo
Xeo
08:58
FWIW, we have quite a few .pngs in our repo - raw files for assets, as an example. In case somebody else (or the same person on a new PC) needs to touch said asset again
@Rapptz go on
It's also helpful sometimes to store build output if said thing is relatively small, takes ages to build, and rarely needs to be rebuilt
but I admit that's a bit of a rare case
wtf
ccache dude
still, the main thing I want from a repo is to have it have everything.
I'll keep the baby comment
09:00
I don't want to be reliant on some other sever to download resources from.
8 mins ago, by Luc Danton
@thecoshman Or have scripts/hooks do it for you
see above :P
…instead of some remote repo? wtf
yeah not seeing it
oh well, using multiple repos and then have git modules is a fine solution too
09:02
literally wot m8
@Rapptz you starwhore
you’re just looking for convenience
that’s what hooks are for
@ParkYoung-Bae :3
@LucDanton isn't that the point?
@thecoshman n-no..
09:02
@Rapptz "It is too late to undo this operation" fuck
will you blame/merge/diff the file? no => not for VCS
o_0 who the fuck is staring this benign shit?
example: compiler output
simple no?
and what outputs an image?
@LucDanton missing one more: checking out a specific version.
09:04
I assume that’s desirable in our case, but yes
I crashed sublime again
how do you do that?
I've only crashed it twice and both times were from Package Control.
Repro: open file A. Move file somewhere else. Open it again (through explorer shell extension). It jumps to 100% cpu usage on one core. End.
this will be fun
lemme try
Second time today
09:08
no repro
lemme try again
Um I can't repro it either anymore. Must be something else.
yeah no go for me
Ah, there
Wait, I'll try again to make sure
Yep.
@ParkYoung-Bae fairly sure it's fine with that. if you have a file open in sublime, then rename/delete it, it simply keeps track of what the file name should be when it goes to save it.
Whatis it?
09:11
fairly sure you are doing something else to fuck it up
@thecoshman Yeah that's what happened.
It keeps the buffer but deassociates it with the file itself.
Have /folder/file, open with sublime. move file to / and delete folder. reopen file. hang.
I can repro every time
I do that a lot though
And by open I mean through windows explorer context menu
nvm
09:12
@park what platform you running?
linux obv
lmao
yeah... I don't have any problem doing that short of shit
he's on Windows (windows explorer context menu...)
@Rapptz you need to sort your ass out boy, falls of far to easily.
09:13
> sublime_text.exe cicada 13%
so yeah it hangs on 1 core
yeah I can repro that on ST3
ST3 has been getting updates a lot since end of January
the dev is improving on build systems
funny enough as I was checking the new versions I see that @ParkYoung-Bae's bug is fixed.
> Fixed a crash that could occur in directory scanning when directories are being rapidly deleted and recreated
or well I think it'd be this bug
Probably
Solution: delete slowly.
rm --no-hurry
hm..
> Build Systems: Renamed "keyfile" to "keyfiles", now accepting a list of files that can trigger the build system (e.g., ["Makefile", "makefile"])
what are these changes :v
Neat.
09:24
Is there semantic completion for C++ in ST?
yeah there are a few libclang based plugins
also since you like visual debugging I should recommend SublimeGDB
though I've honestly been meaning to fork it and make it a bit more usable.
looks like this though
Oh my
That looks very useable
I can click on stuff!
yeah if you click on the callstack it actually takes you to the function
I recall having issues with prettyprinters before though and the usability issue stems from how you actually set up the debugging which involves editing the working_dir variable in the preferences and then the command for the executable. I don't know how to fix it though due to the nature of GDB.
works fine for project files though, my complaint is mainly for single files
09:34
Is it actively developed
no
The developer has moved on to the Glorious Go Programming Language.
And he's making that lime text editor
> Elegant Free Open-Source
:cringe:
source?
I'd totally help but >Go
what a blunder ._.
09:37
You're not a real developer if you don't use a monokai code highlighting
@ParkYoung-Bae Sat there for 5 minutes looking for it.
There it was, straight in my face.
I'm conditioned to ignore fancy icons and text under it.
Are you not struck by its elegance
what exactly is the appeal of Go btw?
honestly wondering
It was made by Google therefore it must be superior to everything
The overall experience, not the language itself.
09:42
@LucDanton Whatcha mean?
Is it the sexy gopher thing
Everything but the language, really. E.g. getting started seems really easy & convenient.
@Rapptz nowai, can’t compete against the >λ=!
@LucDanton Is it really?
@Rapptz No first hand experience. But I do think everything else is pretty crummy.
09:45
What's hard about C++ set up? Honest question.
so that sets the bar very low
Setting up Haskell or Python was easy for me too.
(I admit to not attempting to set up Haskell on Linux)
@Rapptz Figuring out a build set up, then figuring out the debugger once you mess up.
then you have a dependency and you have to figure more things!
I don't even know how to debug python code
or anything besides C++ for that matter
hm
@Rapptz Nowadays with sandboxes maybe for Haskell. But you have to find the right tutorial! Starting from scratch means you can’t find an old guide (again, no first hand experience so maybe there is Go junk—not very unlikely tbh).
@Rapptz Yeah, but do you need it as much as with C++?
09:48
I debug Python code a lot more than C++
@ParkYoung-Bae also cache. also automatic shallow clones. And actually, tooling!
We have a git + git-fat + SVN setup right now
I do print statements on the former
but the times I've actually booted up gdb are not that common tbh
but it feels kinda painful and I'd really like to try out plastic or perforce in prod
usually I can figure things out without resorting to that
Plastic is free for OSS tho
09:49
command line gdb to debug C++ (with heavily templated code plz), that's the way of the warrior
been there done that
I feel like an Orc grunt doing that
@BartekBanachewicz But did you understand my comment and do you see what I meant
@BartekBanachewicz Nobody's perfect
@Rapptz It’s a matter of occurrence and severity. I don’t fire it up too often either, but the things it helps me solve are awful to figure out on your own.
09:50
@ParkYoung-Bae he answered
I'm interested in what we're discussing and I'm bored.
@ParkYoung-Bae kinda
So I'm going to see how easy it is to debug Go and get started.
If I hate it I'll uninstall.
> Minimum requirements:
> 20GB RAM
> 2 x Intel Xeon X5570
> 4 core per processor (2 threads per core) (2.7Ghz) – 16 logical cores – Amazon server running Windows Server 2012 + SQL Server 2012
wtf
09:51
hi Rapptzfold
@ParkYoung-Bae wot
I'm kidding
#lelabound
#GDC15 Slides about Tomorrow Children tech and their implem. of Voxel Cone Tracing are online (via @selfresonating) http://fumufumu.q-games.com/archives/000942.php
@ParkYoung-Bae Who is Lela and do you have pics?
@ThePhD @thecoshman @melak47 @Borgleader ^
09:52
@LucDanton Nice
Crassin is such an amazing guy
He's just a bit dirty #french-joke
Go has been downloaded.
It's being extracted.
suspenseful build-up
I’m on the edge of my seat
This thing is destroying NTFS.
09:54
Go
Away
GoGo
mm
"Go away" is a trademark of Cat
Should I go full immersion mode and pretend to be a total noob?
meh it's another imperative language
> Under Windows, you may set environment variables through the "Environment Variables" button on the "Advanced" tab of the "System" control panel. Some versions of Windows provide this control panel through the "Advanced System Settings" option inside the "System" control panel.
HELPFUL.
no sarcasm
albeit they should specify I should be editing Path
@Rapptz It’s probably time to cover my ass: I was mostly assuming from hearing about the nice (or so it looked) tools that come with Go distribs and the constant bashing the language proper has received (deservedly).
@Rapptz heh yeah, some devenvs are not kind to Windows users are they?
@LucDanton It's alright. I'm bored and will probably uninstall soon.
You're just giving it a go, ah ah
inb4 let it Go
Luc hyped it up!
I couldn't resist.
If the package manager thingy doesn’t do local or sandbox installs by default though then it’s no better than many languages e.g. Python.
hahaha
λ go run hello.go
go: cannot find GOROOT directory: c:\go
09:58
welp
does Go have HM?
Hardcoded paths? :s
I have the go binary in D:\Programs\Go\bin.
And it sets the environment, but not to the right value?
Almost reads like a sentence
09:59
> Download the zip file and extract it into the directory of your choice (we suggest c:\Go).
I thought "suggest" wasn't a hard requirement.
@ParkYoung-Bae Today is not about D!
Hum, what's the difference between defaulted and not declared (and between not declared and deleted). (context)
@Rapptz Maybe you missed the 'or else!'?
Maybe I need to actually add a GOROOT environment variable

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