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21:00
@Pris Is that the internet version of ebola? eBola?
@Pris does't really look much like a clone at all. Looks like a proxy
yeah proxy indeed
@Nican Help! I caught e-bola and now data is leaking from all my ports!
i wish clang had N2965
@Veritas Hi.
21:06
just lurking around
@sehe Why did you screw up the formatting? It was so much better the way it was before. :D:D:D
hrmm?
21:09
@Mysticial Oh. I just wanted to know how bad it actually was - underneath the layers of fail. And I have this "OCD" principle that whenever I reduce entropy I cannot let it go to waste. No one will usefully see this anyways
OK, the local preservation society had a lecture in the club 'Lounge' tonite. 2 hrs about lichens. Yes, I kid you not.
@MartinJames Doesn't surprise me.
Nature has a lot of fascinating stuff.
@StackedCrooked Well you glossed over it, IIRC he mentions cache lines and such.
I'm fairly certain you can talk about lichens for 2 hours and not repeat yourself.
21:12
I don't even know which talk you mean.
But anyway, I've probably seen it. No worries :)
The standard "deviation" talk. It's about the mean
@EtiennedeMartel That is true, but this is a club for, essentially, farmers and JCB/RR engineers. Lichens don't seem harmonious with backhoe-loaders and gas turbines the size of a truck.
Do C++ proposals usually come with a sample implementation
@Pris Unless it's something that's really well known, they usually at least cite something (the committee is very shy about standardizing without at least some existing practice).
21:20
@Borgleader Thanks. I've seen it, but a second watch might be worthwhile.
@StackedCrooked Is the second half a lot better than the first? I watched part, but didn't find it compelling enough to finish...
I don't remember anything... sorry :(
Walter E. Brown and Jon Kalb's talks on cppcon were really great. Old fashioned stuff like templates and exceptions, but still interesting.
Hi folks. How can I contact an admin? Somebody should merge or link the tags move and move-semantics
@ManuelSchneid3r post on meta
@JerryCoffin Nah. Citeh have no chance. Good news: Suarez has not eaten anyone yet, 82 min.
21:29
damn.. why do people use "Run Snippet" with C++ code.. stackoverflow.com/questions/29133034/…
user1804599
Because they are complete morons?
user1804599
Downvote, closevote, ban and move on.
I know a lot of way to display an image in C++, what do you guys think is the easiest? I'm thinking Qt... ideally something like plt.imagesc(image), maybe pipe to gnuplot?
@Mikhail Drop C++, switch to WPF, enjoy life.
Xeo
Xeo
omg, finally
fooooooood
21:33
@EtiennedeMartel I would rather pipe to gnuplot
@StackedCrooked Now I feel old. But at my age, just having to climb stairs reminds me how old I am...
@JohanLarsson that's a weird way of driving a boat
never seen anyone doing it before
yeah not sure what the plan is there
looks expensive
they look experienced with motocross though
perhaps they're out of their expertise area..
21:37
@JohanLarsson breaking the ice
@JohanLarsson "When I grow up, I'm gonna be a nuclear ice breaker."
user1804599
@JohanLarsson What an idiot.
@JerryCoffin looks peaceful
user1804599
I don't get these "welcome to Stack Overflow" comments. Why would you welcome someone who is bad at asking questions?
21:40
to be nice?
@райтфолд I know, right? Hasn't he heard of flamethrowers?
@райтфолд We welcome them in the hopes of educating them. Many of the skills necessary to ask questions well are the same as or at least similar to the skills necessary to program well.
@Xeo Oh well. That's nothing:
0
A: How is it possible to pass attributes to child rules in boost spirit karma

seheOkay. The sample of output "parent parent whee -> parent 4 -> parent 5 -> parent 6 ahhhh -> parent 5 -> parent 6" actually made things /almost/ clear. I think there's an inconsistency, since either you would expect parent parent whee -> parent 4 -> parent 5 -> parent 6 parent ahhhh -> parent 5 ->

The actual question is /very/ rubbish. I still don't understand what he was thinking. The comments help a bit. But still. The guy is ... fuzzy
@райтфолд To make it clear they're not immediately sacked
user1804599
So I had this wonderful idea.
user1804599
Mutable variables and fields must be prefixed with a $ sigil. That way you always know when you're dealing with mutable variables and fields.
21:48
@JohanLarsson On second instance (after viewing the whole clip). I'd say, they're just aiming to get a viral vid by doing something "outrageous" like parking a boat on the ice. They're way too clumsy to make it look "cool" though, so it won't take of.
Had they taken a good lead-in cropped it to a single successful run, preferrably with a "Badass move" to finish it...
user1804599
I want chorizo.
@райтфолд To go with that, how about suffixes to signify types. I nominate $ for string, % for integer, and # for floating point, ...
We can eliminate all that nasty HN stuff in one fell swoop.
@JerryCoffin Type suffixes. Wonderful idea. I wonder why it hasn't been tried before and rejected as fucking insane.
user1804599
@Jefffrey hi
user1804599
Jefffrey Coffin
@MartinJames It is BASICally a wonderful idea, isn't it?
@райтфолд What
@JerryCoffin Absolutely marvellous. I can't wait for it to be implemented.
@MartinJames Sounds like a good job for Paul Allen.
21:58
@JerryCoffin lol
Fuck... the Tribute has died:((
I reverse engineered your question into proper form. I honestly think it'd be clearer if you remove the original "non-code" sample. I left it in for context now. — sehe 10 secs ago
@StackedCrooked It sucks! Especially with boost::container::map
I think node size is around 48 bytes? This deletes a lot of the cache-friendliness that allocators could provide.
@MartinJames How can it die? Beer starts out undead (too much of it eats your brain).
@orlp wtf
22:02
@JerryCoffin Bombardier on now.
@StackedCrooked Dunno about that. Actually, boost's map /does/ allocate objects of varying size:
1
A: Is there a BOOST pool fixed-sized allocator?

seheWhat you describe can actually only achieved with something like Boost Intrusive "Maps" (actually, sets then). However to get truly 1B - allocated elements you'd need to define a custom stateful value traits, so you can store the node-index metadata separately from the element payload. However,...

@JerryCoffin Beer is certainly not undead, well, not cask ale anyway.
user1804599
@StackedCrooked You want an array-based map.
@Blob Apparently. As you can see, the working version is 20L shorter, while solving his problem, being more readable, maintainable and adding debugging.
@райтфолд he's been talking about that for about 2 hours now
user1804599
Weird, Eiffel has ARRAYED_SET but not ARRAYED_TABLE.
22:06
@MartinJames Cool. They make nice airplanes.
user1804599
Meh, covariant parameters.
> Shortest code wins.
that's stupid
i could make a language that solves it and prints answer when it finds parses an "a"
1 byte. gg.
@sehe lol I thought that question was yours. It confused me because it seemed so simple.
user1804599
sehe wouldn't spell it "BOOST"
Modern C++ Design's chapter on small object allocation presents a nice little system as well.
22:12
@StackedCrooked it turns out not so simple anyways
@StackedCrooked I haven't opened that book in... 10 years minimum
user1804599
The hash table is the only data structure you need.
user1804599
They're isomorphic to arrays of bits, such as RAM.
@JerryCoffin Yeah, and crap trains.
user1804599
I had this wonderful idea.
22:17
Folly's IndexedMemPool looks interesting. (Esp in multithreaded code.)
@райтфолд no it's not
hmm.. to handle violated preconditions by throwing exception or to let it give a compiler error instead
WTF is new about an indexed mempool? I've been using indexed object arrays as pools since, like, 1985.
Everything old is new again :D
@MartinJames Who said it was something new?
user1804599
He never said that it's new.
user1804599
22:23
So your question is rather weird in this context.
@райтфолд You know I'm slaughterwd and on mobile, right?
@райтфолд Nah, it's ok. You on the other hand, are not ok.
user1804599
@StackedCrooked Ik hoorde dat de KKK ermee is gestopt.
@райтфолд Maar we hebben nu Maaskantje
user1804599
user1804599
What the fuck are you doing?
user1804599
Are you an idiot?
Are you binging rhetoricals?
WTH is this (removed)fest?
Also, brain hurts. I have just spent 2 hour writing a reply to some more legal/divorce related stuff.
user1804599
What a horrible question.
user1804599
It's vaguer than old pictures of Ceres.
user1804599
Closing as too broad.
@Blob now it's ~30 lines shorter and "even more" readable (91)
=o
22:35
@райтфолд Well, encryption is magic, after all.
Data goes in, data goes out, you can't explain that.
requirements would be nice
user1804599
Autovivification is good.
user1804599
I didn't vote for water boards today.
water boarding is so 2014
user1804599
watersports
user1804599
22:46
> The for loops in the following code dont get seem to be activated.
Can non-contiguous blocks of memory be made to behave as if contiguous by changing address mappings?
@wilx My sincere condolences.
user1804599
@StackedCrooked Only on page boundaries.
@StackedCrooked Yes, that's what virtual memory hardware does. Caveat: to do this, the whole has to be composed of pages. Each page is, for example, a 4K or 8K chunk.
user1804599
22:51
And you have to ask the kernel to do it for you.
user1804599
Because it defines the address mappings.
Oh, there are larger pages available as well (but they're mostly for special purposes, such as mapping the CPU-visible portion of GPU memory as a single page instead of using up thousands of page table entries.
user1804599
mmap takes a parameter that can be used to specify the address you want the page to be mapped to.
@райтфолд True (though in Windows (for example) you can still do that from normal user-mode code).
user1804599
22:53
It's merely a hint, though.
user1804599
> If addr is NULL, then the kernel chooses the address at which to create the mapping; this is the most portable method of creating a new mapping. If addr is not NULL, then the kernel takes it as a hint about where to place the mapping; on Linux, the mapping will be created at a nearby page boundary. The address of the new mapping is returned as the result of the call.
user1804599
Changing address mappings is silly if you have pointers that point into the memory, though.
user1804599
You'd have to update all the pointers.
user1804599
Unless you have two mappings into the same page, but I don't know whether that is possible.
@райтфолд I've never tried to implement it on Linux, but on Windows you can create a vector-like class that doesn't reallocate/copy/move when it needs to expand--it just allocates another page of memory, maps it to the address following the end of the existing pages, and off you go.
22:58
@JerryCoffin You would still need contiguous virtual memory, though.
@райтфолд Not sure if you're allowed to do that, but the kernel certain can (and does). for example, when you fork, it just creates a new set of mappings into the same pages.
@Puppy You need contiguous address space, yes. Especially on a 64-bit system, you can easily pre-allocate a ridiculously large chunk of address space though.
true.
@Puppy On Windows it's (mostly) done by allowing VirtualAlloc to allocate memory separately from address space.
well
when you start having 64EB arrays it'll bite you in the arse.
23:06
@Puppy Probably--I can certainly remember when that 4 GB address space seemed essentially infinite...
user1804599
@JerryCoffin breaks if that address is already occupied by another page.
@райтфолд Yes, that's what Puppy and I were just discussing. You basically pre-allocate a chunk of address space as large as you're going to allow, then allocate actual memory on demand.
holy crap coreclr's code is ugly
surprise
23:20
You're a wizard @sehe.
go to hogwarts
I guess I shouldn't be surprised that Microsoft uses a C style even when coding C++
What have I done now
@Mgetz :D
@райтфолд To put things in perspective: in 32-bit mode, one page table entry occupies 4 bytes, and maps 4K bytes of memory, so you have to allocate 1K of page table entries for every megabyte of vector space you want to support. You can map all the available address space using 4 megabytes of page tables.
Only knew there were dogs/werewolves @ hogwarts, do they accept bears now?
23:22
@DonLarynx what. That's not a comic. It's an animated infograph
@chmod711telkitty Not anymore :)
@sehe inheritance: an animated infograph is a web-comic. (Comics is a medium used to express ideas via images, often combined with text or other visual information.)
Okay. The alt text puts you in the "right" (too tired to figure out how not to botch this in English)
@DonLarynx I have a feeling that "A bright meteor is visible" is really biased, likely by counting each meteor in a swarm as one?
Also, people in Phoenix buy shoes more often than people in North Dakota have sex :/
A meteor or "shooting star" is the passage of a meteoroid or micrometeoroid into the Earth's atmosphere

P.S. I use wikipedia a lot. It's the benefit we get over English and Lib Arts majors.
Ah, for a second I thought North Dakota was a city.
The frequency is strong with this one
23:29
@Mgetz seems like he's learning C++ right now
with an actual teacher
@sehe This is one place that xkcd Sucks goes wrong. The purpose of a comic is not necessarily to be funny--it's to entertain. Being funny is a common way to entertain, but certainly not the only one.
@Blob Microsoft is a "He"?
@sehe ?
i was referring to a comment mgetz made
9 mins ago, by Mgetz
I guess I shouldn't be surprised that Microsoft uses a C style even when coding C++
@JerryCoffin gives sharpened pencil
23:30
@Blob You're replying to /something/, presumably
It might be helpful if you're new to c++ to read a book first c++ is a bit complicated — Mgetz 2 mins ago
@DonLarynx It's a state in the US--but one with a population smaller than anything that would qualify as a large city (well under a million).
@Blob Oh. But of course. No need to add any context. It's nicer to just baffle people in the lounge.
@Hitler I totally agree
@Goebbels roger that
23:34
@sehe No, Roger who? (to which the answer is obviously "Roger Ebert" or "Roger Rabbit")
there's this course i'm taking to raise my grade. i took a similar one by same teacher last semester and my highest grade was in that class.
but i realized
good, you'll recover
if i put in the work this class requires in any other class, i'd do just as well there
i regularly stay up to 3 because of this class ;_;
and tomorrow's another deadline. yay
it's known as motivation. or fascination
3 probably won't cut it this time
23:35
@Blob Question is: are you learning a lot (especially, a lot that's interesting and/or useful)?
@JerryCoffin yes, but it's genetics. not gonna use it in any way.
you think
last semester was more general. this semester's Human Genetics
It's about the learning. It's hard to fathom just how much the changed perspective will help you in the rest of your (professional) life
i doubt i'll use this one in particular
23:36
Honey, I'm home!
@sehe I have to agree. Learning is almost never wasted.
i wish i could take more cs courses, though
i needa take AP to take them, but AP's next year and urgh. i went to program coordinator requesting a class, he asked "have you taken AP?", i said "no", he said "no"
:22174794 If it's any consolation, I usually ignore most of what you say too. :-)
;_;
@JerryCoffin are you sure? I know someone who forgets faster than she learns
23:41
@JerryCoffin That's a relief. I have considered moderating my contributions on occasion, just because the responsibility implications were giving me anxiety attacks. Good to know that the great intellects know how shield themselves. Nothing surprising, really. But good to have the confirmation
@chmod711telkitty That doesn't sound like real learning. At least IMO, most cramming before a test, for one example, doesn't count as actual learning.
@sehe I knew it would come as a great relief to you.
@JerryCoffin i only do that for spanish
Great minds think alike
@sehe ...and ours do too.
The great minds are unique.
23:42
I saw that coming
@R.MartinhoFernandes You're unique (just like everybody else).
There are no great minds, there are only greater minds in comparison to tiny/narrow minds
@R.MartinhoFernandes that's a horrific version of dining philosophers... Ph.I: "Pass me the unique_ptr<great_mind> please" Ph.MCXDII: "Hold on"
holy shit guys
O(n) sorting algorithm
just remove all elements that are not in order :D
I have wondered, at times, how much of "great minds" really is a result of minds that were truly great, and how much was a result of situation, opportunity, etc. How many people who would have been capable of truly great thinking were born, lived, and died as (for example) slaves or serfs, and just never had a chance to show their capabilities?
23:46
@orlp "removing" usually has a significant cost (except in specialized data structures that don't perform well in general). Don't forget about the powerlessness of Big-O vs. CPU arch
@sehe linked list
@JerryCoffin Yeah. I wonder this too. Kinda crushing again, w.r.t. raising kids
@orlp That's one way. I once wrote an O(1) sorting algorithm. I was just told to ensure an entire array of random numbers was in order--so I always generated an array of exactly one random number.
@orlp That's the one
@JerryCoffin nice
@JerryCoffin A great many of them, I'd expect.
personally I currently believe that it's the combination of a great mind, like myself, and the right opportunity to learn and benefit from it.
23:48
@JerryCoffin I do think that the lost potential is likely vastly dominated by people just-not-caring or just-not-realizing the significance. And that may be good/natural/necessary.
If there are truly great minds & with a bit luck we would be travelling to Mars & have armies of robots doing mundane stuff by now ... & we don't lack luck in general ..
After all, how much effective innovation could a single leading thinking generate, if everybody innovated in a zillion (other) directions simultaneously
having a great mind is about as situational as having some chance to show off capabilities
so it all comes down to chance
I think leaders need to be followed by more followers, if only to validate the thoughts
@sehe Yes, probably--the amount of effort put into things like "what shoes did I wear on our first date?", or "who was the starting pitcher in the second game of the 1949 world series?" truly amazes me when I think about it.
23:52
This might all be required for humans to "feel human". And without identity all sense of purpose would become a bit... feeble. How do you find motivation to save/improve a world where you don't feel you "belong"...
@JerryCoffin Well, we didn't evolve to build fusion reactors, unfortunately.
if only i had been properly celebrated when i proved folders are files ;(
i might've been big today
I think these things were known. Like, on many old school UNIX you can still cat /some/dir/ (I know you know I know etc.)
pfft
Still better than wars or law suits on unimportant things or making illegal drugs .. I reckon there are too many people in the developed countries doing useless things ... although being useless is still better than being destructive to the human societies.
23:59
> The primitive types int, double, and boolean are part of the AP Java subset.
The other primitive types short, long, byte, char, and float are not in the subset. In particular, students need not be aware that strings are composed of char values. Introducing char does not increase the expressiveness of the subset. Students already need to understand string concatenation, String.substring, and String.equals. Not introducing char avoids complexities with the char/int conversions and confusion between "x" and'x'.

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