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12:01
@MartinJames Under theoretically perfect conditions, no. In practice, in some of the points disturbances will cause the object to leave the point, while in others disturbances will return the object to the point (so it ends up actually being an orbit around the point, and not just stationary there).
@R.MartinhoFernandes What?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Orite. I will try to not think about that too much. I've only had one coffee.
In orbital mechanics, a Lissajous orbit, pronounced: [li.sa.ʒu], named after Jules Antoine Lissajous, is a quasi-periodic orbital trajectory that an object can follow around a Lagrangian point of a three-body system without requiring any propulsion. Lyapunov orbits around a libration point are curved paths that lie entirely in the plane of the two primary bodies. In contrast, Lissajous orbits include components in this plane and perpendicular to it, and follow a Lissajous curve. Halo orbits also include components perpendicular to the plane, but they are periodic, while Lissajous orbits are not...
@R.MartinhoFernandes One day I might mentally plot the paths that from some vantage point make the sun go around the earth. For now I learn that I played with spirograph too little
I’m mostly confused by the multiple negations. No there doesn’t need to be? In theory? In practice?
12:03
this was the thing when we were doing oscopes
@R.MartinhoFernandes (a good thing)?
i mean, doing exercises on them
@R.MartinhoFernandes COFFEE!!!
@LucDanton Ah. Dunno about the negations. Might have messed up there. The in practice bit is because there will be perturbations from the other bodies in the solar system. In theory there are only three bodies and they are point masses, etc.
@Drop All of you forget the people who cannot use C++11 or higher standards yet. If the question is not tagged C++11 or higher, then you can't answer or comment with C++11 or higher. — Blacktempel 25 mins ago
lol
12:07
@orlp hahaha. Anyone not would lead to fewer people yelling
L4 and L5 (if I’m remembering right) still aren’t in a well of potential, theoretically speaking.
DAE think vim sucks balls and no one should use it?
@LucDanton Those are the ones that are dynamically stable under certain conditions (some mass ratios).
@R.MartinhoFernandes By the way, I was being a lactea-viacentrist if you will
@R.MartinhoFernandes 'No, there doesn’t need to be a well for stability to be achieved' then?
12:10
Oh, Lissajous orbits are the ones for the unstable ones. Ooops.
Maybe not that either.
It's the ones shaped like kidneys.
"Kidney orbit" doesn't give a lot of help.
There are 'halo orbits' connected to Lagrange points, no clue about them.
@BartekBanachewicz Nice pillow. So sleepy...
@R.MartinhoFernandes Horseshoe to kidney isn’t that much of a stretch
First Google hit for "kidney orbit" is Cruithne, which is co-orbital.
there you go
12:13
Maybe it's the same.
I think the kidney comes out if you exaggerate a drawing.
@orlp you will not make that mistake lightly in front of the Robot :)
@sehe he's merciless and doesn't sleep
@R.MartinhoFernandes aw
"add 15 and six" sounds like a thing only a Perl or javascript programmer would ask.
He's better off without her
12:15
Oh god who wrote that.
Put it away.
They really wrote "15 and six".
Horrible.
@R.MartinhoFernandes javascript programmers
Yup. I would answer NaN, ENOCOMPUT or similar
@orlp That'll be $0.05 for royalties
"Add 15 and [6] together with 'one' and you get {}"
> Last month, another bride in Uttar Pradesh married a guest at her wedding after her groom-to-be had a seizure and collapsed.
"NEXT!"
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Really? Thats shameful
12:17
Something's very wrong with these people.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I think it's to do with the fact that the parents want to get rid of the girl.
they're seen as burdens that you want to get rid of
@LightnessRacesinOrbit The real shame is that its the international news
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah I thought you'd like that :P
@R.MartinhoFernandes hence the dowry as well
@R.MartinhoFernandes \o/
12:18
I honestly don't get it...
user1804599
woooo
@Lankymart What don't you get?
@Lankymart You don't write "15 and six". You either write "15 and 6" or "fifteen and six". That simple.
BBC writing is always terrible, though, so no surprise there.
15 + 6 is in fact 21.
One and 1 makes II.
12:19
The sentence = paragraph style is the worst offender.
... so glad I corrected "11" before hitting <enter> ...
I lurk in [asp-classic] everyday and even top notch answers never get this kind of recognition and tbh it's a **** answer
Oh, it's the same.
14
A: asp classic replace <br> in section of output BBCode

Jen RIn classic ASP, all you need is a simple REPLACE. strString = REPLACE(strString, "<br>", vblf) If you want to do the replace only to a part of the string, it gets a little more complicated: 'grab the left chunk of text starting to the position just after [code startString = LEFT(bigString,...

@LightnessRacesinOrbit Where did you read this news?
12:20
@R.MartinhoFernandes Or "journalism"
@SmartDev The entire quote is a link to the source.
@orlp I noticed you had a variadic printf. That's all, for now :p
@SmartDev You lack the ability to follow links. 0/10 would not marry. Give me a guest.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Oops...Yes..didn't notice
12:21
@SmartDev wow so smart
@orlp yeah.
@orlp Yup. So now you're kicked and plonked by the majority here ¹
@Lankymart What do you mean by "this kind of recognition"?
¹ not actually, because Vim users are too damn broadminded
@orlp but also: your source files should also really contain the license header at least, no?
12:21
@rubenvb that's not necessary
@LucDanton So the kidney vs horseshoe is just a matter of how you look at the orbit: horseshoe upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/d6/…;, kidney en.wikipedia.org/wiki/3753_Cruithne#/media/….
14 score isn't that much.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit I mean 14 upvotes in asp-classic is a rarity even top notch answers are lucky to get 5 upvotes, I just don't get what makes this so special
makes sense
@orlp ok. I also now noticed you're just reusing an ostream for the formatting.
12:22
@R.MartinhoFernandes actually, links still broken
So that makes its use to me less than I hoped XD
dafuq
WTF are those ZWSPs doing there.
@rubenvb See it the other way around, op::format is a better interface for ostream rather than a seperate implementation.
@orlp yeah, that. I hoped for a bare metal implementation :p
morning
12:26
@LightnessRacesinOrbit in other tags I would agree but asp-classic isn't that popular and doesn't have the community of active members to gain that many upvotes, if that was the case then there're really good answers that should be averaging 14+ upvotes because this answer is ****.
I once had a side job in asp-classic
I ran, not walked
@orlp Well. Duh. What else :|
Error messages didn't gave line numbers
the guy I worked for had been using manually generated unique ids to keep track of stuff
@LightnessRacesinOrbit That kind of thing happens to me too. I think it's called Muphry's Law
@orlp you obviously weren't very good at it
12:28
@Lankymart I hear the sound of butthurt
Why do you care
@sehe Murphy's* Law (yes I'm aware)
Downvote it if you don't like it
@orlp No you're not. Because then you would've seen you misspelt awrae
@sehe Iͮ͐̀͋͑ͭ̊ͯ̔̆͐̃ͬ͏̶̨̞̭̤͎͕͎̮̰̻͞'̡̓̈́ͮͨͭ̌̈ͧ͌̽͛̓̿̍ͪ͗̄ͣ͘҉̞̭͍̲̱̣̝͔̙̠̫̥̥̹̗̠̗͞͞mͫ͋̈́ͤ͐͑͋ͬͣ̅͐‌​̟̻̻̺̗̤͍̀͒̏̍̉̅̔͆̀͟͡͠ͅ ̛͈̹̩̺̆ͫͥ͌͐ͧ͐̊͜͢s̒ͣ͊͂̋̿̈ͮ̒̇ͩͦͫ̾̇͢҉͏̺͓̦̲͚̯͎̘͞ơ̷̷̥͇̰̖̭̣̹̯̫͗̑ͮͣ̓̐ͨ͒ͭ̇ͣ́͋̀̄̿ͪͧͩ̕͡r͋̌‌​̵̴̭̪̲̻̲̪͓̻̳ͪ͆̓ͫ̾̈̑ͮ́͠͡r̷̶̳͎̮͚̼͎͎̫̼͉̫̫̔ͫ̌̔̑̂ͮ̑̀͘y̢̌̑̉̐̈ͬ͌ͩ͛͊̀̚͏̲̞̜͕̙̤
@R.MartinhoFernandes Fun fact: there was a rule that dictated you shouldn't use digits for numbers < 13 in German. So you had to write "15 und sechs".
Luckily, that rule has been lifted. Yay.
12:32
@LightnessRacesinOrbit I had written a few comments and they all vanished, then someone called @yms comments about the answer who doesn't have any activity in asp-classic prior to this (looking through their profile) and want to know what gives? I also despise the fact that myself and others slog our guts out providing well thought out answers and we just get **** on by this type of ****.
@Lankymart You know you can say fuck, shit here, right?
This is not kindergarten.
No this is even worse
@orlp Don't particularly want to offend anybody but still want to convey my frustration
@Lankymart I'm more offended by the fact that you think we're so immature we can't handle fucks/shits.
@orlp can't please everyone
12:36
@orlp I think it's more fun to fill those ****s in with other nouns
like Perl
@Lankymart Hahaha. The "No offense but..." anti-pattern. Frankly it does sound like butt hurt. I can't even find out which post you are talking about. Maybe raise it at Meta Stack Exchange where it belongs?
@sehe I posted it before
19 mins ago, by Lankymart
14
A: asp classic replace <br> in section of output BBCode

Jen RIn classic ASP, all you need is a simple REPLACE. strString = REPLACE(strString, "<br>", vblf) If you want to do the replace only to a part of the string, it gets a little more complicated: 'grab the left chunk of text starting to the position just after [code startString = LEFT(bigString,...

Is it real that apple's new watch costs $15k?
@khajvah who cares
@khajvah the gold one can yes
12:41
Guys, any feedback on my C++03 enum toolkit
Also please don't say "upgrade" we had that discussion yesterday
> Apple's smartwatch collection will range in price from $349 to $17,000 (£299 to £13,500 in the UK) depending on the metals they are made from and the straps they are bought with.
@Lankymart huh. I see zarroo link with the lounge. To Meta it is!
> toolkit
Turn-off achieved
Basically Apple is now a also jeweler.
@StackedCrooked I'm amused by the predictions of doom and gloom coming out of Switzerland
There are?
> Swatch Co-Inventor: Apple Will Succeed and an Ice Age Is Coming for Swiss Watches
Poor Swatch.
12:44
No offense, butt
@milleniumbug im triggered
@sehe It's just... I don't have a better word
@Mr.kbok well, if it's only one tool it's definitely not a tool kit
@Mr.kbok "hack"?
@Mr.kbok Nah. A fine is when you pay, and that's that. This will haunt you for some time.
@sehe a mortgage?
@sehe student loan?
@sehe contract with the devil?
nvm the contract with the devil is easier to get rid of than the other two
Any feedback, though
@Mr.kbok It does look pretty
I'll send this to my boss. He know nothing about code but at least he'll know I'm working on something
12:47
@Mr.kbok Is it header only?
(̲̬͎̣͙̃͆̿́ͨͅn̷͓͈͈̔o̐ĭ̚҉̯̬s̔҉̫̟͉̲e̷ ̯̗͇͍͓c̖͕͖͉̘̟̾̍̔̅a͕̻̳̣̫͜n͙̞͍̜̫̚c͕̯̳̜̹ͨ̋͌͂ͣ̄e̮̳̮̟l̺̏̔e̹̟̞͔͌͑ͯ́d̳ͮͤ͋)͓̰̬͙̇ͥ̏̑̔̌͂͟
@sehe Yes.
Did you test the system behaves well with duplicated string literals in many (many) TUs?
The macro provides enum metadata (string rep, values enum, etc.) provided via ADL
Ah. Better. It's gaining points now.
12:49
@sehe What do you mean?
transl: It's more interesting than I thought
Can you show a simple, full example of the typical extensions required to make this work (including the string conversions)? Is there a link to the ... erm... toolkit?
Enums are declared in a detail namespace, then brought back via a typedef to prevent pollution of the namespace they are declared in
This breaks in GCC -std=C++03
Which isn't an issue for me, though
@sehe I'll do it once variadics work
There's no extensions though, just include the header
user1804599
12:54
@FredOverflow nice:
user1804599
scala> class A[- +, + -](+ : +, - : -)
defined class A
How could I test that something doesn't compile?
user1804599
scala> object int { var x = 1 }
defined module int

scala> int x = 42
warning: there were 1 feature warning(s); re-run with -feature for details
int.x: Int = 42
@Mr.kbok Ah. I see now "the macro provides" - I focused on teh "via ADL" and assumed you required implementation of the "customization point" function (the one using ADL) outside the macro. In this case, again:
8 mins ago, by sehe
Did you test the system behaves well with duplicated string literals in many (many) TUs?
0
A: Cast a vector of std::string to char***

Jonathan MeeI'm going to go against the old guard and say: yes this is possible. You'll first need an rvalue which you can create a pointer to though: vector<string> foo{{"blee"}, {"bleck"}, {"blah"}}; auto temp = foo.data(); const auto bar = reinterpret_cast<char***>(&temp); for(auto i = 0; i < foo.size(...

2
12:57
(simple, have 20 TUs, all including a header that declares the same "EnumOnSteroids"; observe linker anomalies - binary size, debug info explosion, time taken etc)
holy undefined behavior batman
@sehe That's a very good question. I'll investigate.
This is complete nonsense. It might seem fun and rad to "go against the old guard", but when you translate that phrase to "do the wrong thing that experts would never dream of because they are experts" it puts a more accurate light on your approach. — Lightness Races in Orbit 7 secs ago
But as long as myFunction just inexplicably needed a pointer to an array of strings which it doesn't intend to modify, you're good**¹** ! (¹ you just implicitly sell your soul to the devil, is all) — sehe 11 secs ago
@Mgetz This unnerves me
@sehe the undefined behavior, the reference to robin in the classic 1960s batman, or both?
13:02
not the ISIS you are expecting to see ...
@LightnessRacesinOrbit I read that story about bride refused marry. Actually the groom side people hide the details that groom is illiterate. But just before some time of marriage bride came to know that groom is illiterate. So she just made a test and refused
@SmartDev please use the respond to arrow in the lower right corner of the post you're responding to to link your post to the post you're responding to. Right now it appears you're responding to undefined behavior and that just doesn't make sense at all.
@Mgetz just the answer and the fact that he has some rep and is seen defending this. Without being struck by lightning
it's hard to be completely illiterate nowadays
> I think This is just a personal preference option to Vald from Moscow's solution. I think it may be faster for dynamic arrays because there would be less branching. But I haven't gotten around to writing a timing test bench.
ITT Jonathan Mee is the Vlad Apprentice
2
13:05
@sehe I believe lightning or lightness... is beginning to strike
@chmod711telkitty Also not the osiris you expect. What the hell do you know about what we expect? Maybe we're not shallow
Nice one @orlp
@Mgetz "That's not how it works. That's not how any of this works."
13:08
@orlp wth?
> Last but not least the Infinity One was tuned in collaboration with Linkin Park!!! Hmm..., I really don't know who that is. I haven't heard a single song from them and I would be probably more impressed if it was tuned by Quincy Jones, or Herbie Hancock, therefore I really do hope Linkin Park know something about speaker tuning,
@NeilKirk a string contains a char[] which does know it's size. For example you can do this: const char foo[] = "foo"; cout << sizeof(foo); and you'll print 4. A char* doesn't know it's size, a char[] does. — Jonathan Mee 17 mins ago
lolno
> Thou Shall not allow an answer advocating unnecessary undefined behavior to live
@NathanOliver Nice find! — Borgleader 11 secs ago
top kek
@Mgetz needs a whole lot more stars. This one is EPIC
13:22
@sehe It's clear the answerer is a typical C/C++ programmer
char*** is not a pointer to char. Your premise for justifying this obscenity is wrong. Go back to the drawing board. Do not pass 'Compile'. Do not collect 200 dollars. — R. Martinho Fernandes 3 mins ago
Also classy
@orlp Not really. The typical C/C++ programmer would not use a std::vector
@sehe no they would using namespace std; int* p = &*auto_ptr<int>(new int[5]);
that physically hurt to write
@orlp I think you meant new std::allocator<int>[5]?
I think "C/C++" programmers after finding out new is evil will start writing std::make_unique<char[]>(50).release()
TIL empty watercooler bottles can be used as really nice percussive instruments
13:28
@sehe auto_ptr<int>(&(int)malloc(20));
@milleniumbug Isn't C++'s "garbage collection" slow?
@khajvah no
@khajvah You mean it's slow as it's non-existent?
@milleniumbug he's obviously referring to smart pointers
@khajvah nice troll
13:29
@milleniumbug have fun using make_* with private or protected constructors
I read an article about garbage collection in general, the guy claimed c++'s collector is not good
God damn I hate Android so much why can't Google make anything that doesn't suck
@Pris #define private public
@khajvah I read two articles where the guy claimed it is very good! I win.
Where's my croissant?
I will try to find it
13:30
@khajvah C++ doesn't have a builtin garbage collector
@khajvah we will point and laugh
@BartekBanachewicz Why would you laugh at a croissant?
More importantly, why would you not?
@R.MartinhoFernandes because the croissant is ugly and has no friends
Geography fail:
I have a website hosted on North Europe Azure server, which takes 3 seconds to load from most of the countries.
The website load speed from Australia takes 30 seconds. Why would that be a case only for Australia?
[location London, United Kingdom]
13:32
"You eat what you touch."
?!
@Pris Why do you have types with private constructors only?
so if I get poop on my hands while wiping, does that mean I have to eat the poop?
@orlp Wash your hands before eating.
Ok, I read the title.
13:33
@khajvah FYI std::unique_ptr is not reference counting
@khajvah it's fucking retarded. I want a croissant too.
@milleniumbug So only friend classes can build them? And yeah I know, pass key idiom etc
@milleniumbug I see, thank you
that being said, don't overuse shared_ptrs
13:34
@orlp oooh. Yet another ayreonaut here
@BartekBanachewicz Actually, it makes really good points and I'm mostly in agreement with the article.
@BartekBanachewicz ofc :D
The dude seems to be wanking at his own words
@orlp I've heard that live played by Anneke and Arjen <3
@Pris So they're relevant only to the friend classes and not anywhere else, and it means the friend classes can construct them at will
13:35
@khajvah Can you tell where it mentions that garbage collection is slow?
@BartekBanachewicz in the netherlands?
or in poland?
@milleniumbug Or maybe you wanna only let a factory function build them
@orlp in Poland
last show of the tour
the tickets were so cheap I don't even
I'd pay 5x as much
@R.MartinhoFernandes I didn't know the terminology, it was about "reference counting", which I referred to as garbage collection.
10 days until release of the album \o/.
13:37
@orlp and I'm coming for The Theather Equation to Rotterdam too
@orlp My friend got his signed CD already I think
anyway yeah Arjen's projects rock
@orlp makes way too much sense. Oh... I get it, you have this in bcc_cpp_compat.h: #define malloc std::allocator<int>
@Pris If a factory function doesn't return std::unique_ptr then it sucks
shit too bad I didn't take my speaker wimme to work
13:39
@milleniumbug Plot twist: the factory returns concrete instances with value semantics
@milleniumbug What does that have to do with anything? You can't call make_unique with your factory function if the constructor of the thing you're building is private.
@sehe #define malloc(n) void* malloc_result_##__LINE__; { char s[n]; malloc_result_##__LINE__ = s; } malloc_result_##__LINE__
@BartekBanachewicz when?
@orlp ah. I should upgrade!
@SmartDev Yes, that's what the story says.
oh you guys want a laugh?
let me dig up this university assignment boilerplate code
13:42
@sehe 18th September
Academic Approved (tm)
@BartekBanachewicz tickets still available? could meet up
char*** is not a pointer to char. Your premise for justifying this obscenity is wrong. Go back to the drawing board. Do not pass 'Compile'. Do not collect 200 dollars. — R. Martinho Fernandes 22 mins ago
mate
dollars? really?
@orlp Not in the official distribution, those went out in 20 minutes months ago
@LightnessRacesinOrbit It's how the saying goes.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Since when?
@R.MartinhoFernandes The phrase changes depending on the country in which you bought the game.
13:43
> See? That's not so hard! All the problems with memory management stem from not knowing when to free objects. If you don't know when to allocate your objects then you might want to get a knife and stab yourself because you have no business writing code; suicide is a valid option.
The guy has a point
@R.MartinhoFernandes It's entirely localised so your choice is arbitrary
@orlp we could meet up in the city though, we gonna stay for a day longer I think
@BartekBanachewicz sure
@LightnessRacesinOrbit So what do you have against it, then?
@R.MartinhoFernandes nothing really but I'm curious as to why you picked it when you are not an American
expected better
13:45
funny code
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Why would anything else be better?
Do not collect 200 zlotys
2
you know what time it is when people use .cc for c++ code
user1804599
Walter Kosters is a terrible programmer.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I know what you're trying to do
13:45
@райтфолд you know him?
I don't know what you are trying to do, though.
user1804599
No, but I saw his code.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Okay
Morning
13:47
Get that away
Are thsoe bananas
fucker
do not post cakes at work hours
The phrase "Do not collect 200 dollars" has about ten times more search hits on Google than "Do not collect 200 pounds". Monopoly was created in the United States. I don't know why "dollars" wouldn't less appropriate than anything else.
you cruel basterd
13:48
"Monopoly was created in the United States." are you sure about that?
Yes, I am. Bugger off.
@BartekBanachewicz this says otherwise? ntk.ticketmatic.com/…
@khajvah Inflated sense of self-importance was created in the United States.
Plus, there are several currencies that go by the name "dollar".
@orlp you mean the date? it's going to be on friday, saturday and sunday
> You realize that your comment doesn't make much sense. About all I got from it was something about not fixing stupid... which you definitely seem to know something about.
13:50
@BartekBanachewicz it says there are seats free through that website
@R.MartinhoFernandes Whatever it is that LRIO was trying to do, it seems it's working. Just point to "canonicals" and let god sort 'em out
@orlp which site? rsvps are not seats
@orlp mmmm. weird
Monopoly is a board game that originated in the United States in 1903 as a way to demonstrate the evils of land ownership. The current version was published by Parker Brothers in 1935. Subtitled "The Fast-Dealing Property Trading Game", the game is named after the economic concept of monopoly—the domination of a market by a single entity. It is now produced by the United States game and toy company Hasbro. Players move around the gameboard buying or trading properties, developing their properties with houses and hotels, and collecting rent from their opponents, with the goal being to drive them...
> Monopoly is a board game that originated in the United States in 1903 as a way to demonstrate the evils of land ownership.
the only thing monoply taught me is not to trust bankers
:D
13:52
@orlp Monopoly taught me that Risk wasn't that bad after all.
Furthermore, main always must return int and iostream.h hasn't existed for almost 20 years. I'm getting a little tired of having to say this on 80% of new Stack Overflow C++ questions. Does nobody read the existing material any more??? — Lightness Races in Orbit 55 secs ago
^ true story
I like using <iostream.h> and <stdio>
Still not working — Hashir Omer 1 min ago
ah fuck this guy
@LightnessRacesinOrbit That's what you get for trying to help help vampires.
user1804599
13:55
loop invariant
@R.MartinhoFernandes you have to be VLAD - UNEMPLOYED to do that
user1804599
can you check it by adding an assertion to the begin of the body of the loop
user1804599
or do you have to duplicate it to the end of the body as well?
@LightnessRacesinOrbit _·_
13:55
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Frankly, if a question references <conio.h> I just downvote and move on. No helping someone there.
@TheForestAndTheTrees oh god how could I forget about conio.h
@TheForestAndTheTrees Not telling them about it is about the worst thing you can do. Wait ten years and you have a whole subcontinent spreading this incontinence
conio.h is the ultimate noobtrap
system("pause")
@LightnessRacesinOrbit We already waited those ten years, right?
It's too late.
@R.MartinhoFernandes A shining endorsement.

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