« first day (1634 days earlier)      last day (3541 days later) » 

21:05
In the context of a dynamic ui library should I call my base class a Widget or an Item? I was gonna use Widget but then I also have things like a Sprite class or Image class... and those don't feel like they derive from 'widget' to me
> [In my opinion moderator should] have some reputation, but not really [thousands] of it - moderation is different than answering/asking questions
@Pris Entity! (semi-joke)
@FilipRoséen-refp Entities are something else in my lib lol
...also something else
21:07
@Pris Thing
(don't judge me)
@Pris lol having a base class
@milleniumbug IT MAKES SENSE IN MY LIB
@FilipRoséen-refp ks::gui::Thing
ehhhh
@Pris It probably doesn't, but carry on.
21:09
eh
UIs are inherently trees, and therefore having a "tree node" base seems inherently required.
@milleniumbug Them's fightin' words bub. Deriving from a base class gives each widget access to signals and slots and also certain properties that establish a parent/child relation.
even if you use distinct "node" bases in distinct places.
@Pris Widget...Item...Witem? Idget?
user3010322
Iijit?
I think I legitimately have brain problems, I literally can't decide. This is the kind of dumb shit I waste time on
It truly honestly doesn't matter at all but I can't move past it
21:12
Remember that nobody cares
@Pris Does the Sprite or Image get displayed in a window? If so, it's a widget like everything else.
or a Canvas widget
@milleniumbug Yeah it does. When I hear the word 'widget' though I automatically think something with forms and stuff
@LucDanton have you seen The Sunset Limited? either as the play, or the movie (with the same name).
@LucDanton that play is filled with awesome quotes, such as "They can't get what they want so what they really don't want, they can't get enough of."
@Pris Yeah, like an edit box, toggle button or something. Image is also one. Sprite - not necessarily, but the distinction (in meaning) between sprites and images is dependent on the framework, so I can't help you there.
I'm going with item... oh god
21:19
Another round of applause for SE devs. Thanks for not losing my answer text there.
@gha.st Hmm, that's not what happens with HDD
@Jefffrey You could look faster, but the walking (to load the next room) just takes too much time.
user image
2
^ This is still cracking me up hard.
@fredoverflow i thought only stage #2 was a thing
Have you never written Hello World in a new programming language and felt like a god?
21:23
No
@fredoverflow no
no, but I've been a dog before
What. No you haven't.
@fredoverflow We are all binary beings really :P
user3010322
Every time I've written hello world, the feeling was more like "This is dumb and I should never do it ever again."
user3010322
21:23
And then I sign up for a course and then WE'RE WRITING HELLO WORLD AGAIN.
@Jefffrey woof?
woof
Honestly, doesn't that f look like ƒ
@FilipRoséen-refp I haven’t.
f(x)
whoa math
4
@Jefffrey I have.
21:25
f : R
{1, 1} is ¬ A.set
This font thingy is awesome
Heads up, we will be spinning up the BGP session with our provider that had issues this morn. You may see some issues as routes re-converge
@Feeds "morn"
@StackedCrooked where's boost's installed location on coliru? I need libs/graph/src/read_graphviz_new.cpp
@sehe Not afraid of some dirty work are we
Certainly not. I'm really quite happy with my latest answer. Will post (as soon as I can get the coliru working)
21:35
@sehe it's not part of any lib?
I don't even...
@melak47 It would be, but compiled.
@sehe Give me a sec and I'll tell you.
if I can remember where this information lives.
:D (inb4 not accessible from jail)
oh wait, I actually think I didn't find out where Boost, specifically, lives.
21:38
Never mind I'm hacking the system
is hack a synonym for find?
Adjective: hacking (comparative more hacking, superlative most hacking)
  1. Short and interrupted, broken, jerky; hacky.
Noun: hacking (uncountable)
  1. (computing) Playful solving of technical work that requires deep understanding, especially of a computer system.
  2. (computing) Unauthorized attempts to bypass the security mechanisms of an information system or network. See also cracker.
Verb: hacking
  1. Present participle of hack.
@Blob Ad noun, 1.
I was referring to linux.die.net/man/1/find
I wasn't
and I've completely forgotten how, if at all, I ever did anything.
I should update Wide on Coliru at some point.
it's considerably out of date now
21:41
0
A: read_graphviz() in Boost::Graph, pass to constructor

seheFirst thing to realize is that Boost documentation samples almost always refer to/are generated from the actual samples: libs/graph/example/read_graphviz.cpp Second thing to realize is that BGL is highly generic. Highly. And it achieves much of this genericity on the concepts of Boost Property M...

There. The result of my hacking.
lol
He laughs. Me confused
> #include "/Archive2/45/a4410ef1bd3024/main.cpp" // alias <libs/graph/src/read_graphviz_new.cpp>
I call that a useful hack
@Rapptz I pushed fixes. Can you check if they work for you?
21:47
every damn mit openware course on interesting things requires math ;_;
like, real math
not trigonometry, which is all i've learned
@Fredo wip not gonna do web stuff :)
@R.MartinhoFernandes how do I invoke your single_include.py
@JohanLarsson Does your street name really start with "Random"? :)
@Blob you need some genghis grill in your life blob. I aint got no worries
@DonLarynx wtf is a genghis grill
21:52
ITT I order dessert before the main course
@R.MartinhoFernandes I'll try to fix it.
I'm not convinced this script works
@R.MartinhoFernandes So I finished Dune.
@fredoverflow the phone number is very symmetric for balance
alright
nested directories be damned
21:55
@sehe boost is installed in /usr/local.
@StackedCrooked hah. Lemme try. No clue how that works, #include </usr/local/boost/libs/graph/src/read_graphviz_new.cpp> doesn't appear to work. And I can't list it. Or. Well, you know maybe next time
@JohanLarsson If you looked at my SO account number, you might also (erroneously) think it wasn't real ;)
23:59. Hitting the sack early today. Night all
benchmarking to_string(42)
collecting 100 samples, 4 iterations each, in estimated 1564 μs
mean: 0 ns, lb 0 ns, ub 0 ns, ci 0.95
std dev: 0 ns, lb 0 ns, ub 0 ns, ci 0.95
found 0 outliers among 100 samples (0%)
variance is severely inflated by outliers
lol
cc @R.MartinhoFernandes
no more PANIC though
22:06
does anyone know of a proposal to add something as std::invoke (func, args...) to the standard library?
infinity of them
already added
it seems to be the "hello world" of proposals
you should make a proposal to make it conditional noexcept
@Rapptz already added?
22:07
because it's not atm
@FilipRoséen-refp C++17
@Rapptz They hate conditional noexcept.
I don't care.
@Rapptz really? shit, I didn't know that - and it should really be conditionally noexcept
std::invoke needs it
just like std::swap
a lot of stuff needs it
that doesn't mean it'll get through Committee
Xeo
Xeo
22:09
@Puppy Which makes the whole thing rather useless.
you'd need to convince LWG that they were total morons (which they were) when they adopted the policy of hating conditional noexcept and that they should reconsider the noexcept status of a great many Standard functions (which they should)
user3010322
Oh. Java doesn't have default arguments.
there are plenty of conditionally noexcept entities in the standard library though, why would this one be so hard to convince the LWG to accept?
some bullshit about wide contracts vs narrow contracts
@ThePhD what
even python has default arguments
22:10
I don't recall exactly, their explanation summed up as "We couldn't be bothered" or something like that I thought at the time.
Hell, even the language i was making but scrapped (GPSL) had default arguments (42).
user3010322
@Blob I can't do void thing (int x = 0). Perhaps there's an alternate syntax I'm missing.
@ThePhD Not so useful without named arguments.
@ThePhD There is- it's called "overloads".
22:11
honestly I'm not sure if it's a good thing that C++ allows default-arguments to be declared upon latter declarations (and that they are joined together at the time of the call), or not
@Blob Wow, even python
(It is a dumb sentence)
@ThePhD It doesn't exist. Make another overload (that's what you would probably do even in C++, because they suck there)
@CatPlusPlus you're a python person? sorry, i'll be more careful
user3010322
@milleniumbug Default arguments are bitchin' in C++.
No, it's just a dumb thing to say
user3010322
22:12
I hate overloads.
they only care about noexcept in containers
user3010322
C#'s default arguments are floppy, saggy, cancer-filled tits.
user3010322
(And you just end up having to use overloads anyways to do anything non-trivial.)
@FilipRoséen-refp Declarations are fucked up, and default arguments-or-not won't change that.
22:13
@ThePhD That's what I say about C++
seriously now, is this a blessing or a curse?
@FilipRoséen-refp Excellent tool for obfuscation
@milleniumbug certainly
@FilipRoséen-refp I found the paper that got accepted
user3010322
@milleniumbug That doesn't make sense, seeing as you can make anything a const object, and use it as part of that default argument. Or just default-construct stuff, right in the declaration, or use any constructor you want.
22:15
@FilipRoséen-refp wow what
as you can see
no conditional noexcept
@ThePhD Like everywhere else, what's your point
I mean, it gets even better having void func (int a, int b) { ... } struct A { friend void func (int = 9, int = 10); static void f () { func (); }};
hmmm
the same thing, of course, just that it is.. well, it's.. I'm not sure what to think it is
22:16
did I ever solve the problem of whether or not one OverloadResolvable could fully represent multiple OverloadResolvables?
no.
@Rapptz thanks
Xeo
Xeo
@FilipRoséen-refp I think that's UB?
@Xeo IIRC the standard only talks about the available declarations at the time of such
user3010322
@CatPlusPlus My point is that since I can do that in C++, it makes default arguments worth having. In C# you can only default arguments null/default(T), integer constants, and maybe a string constant. Everything else is unallowed, which makes them pathetic (or means you have to use null to signify the default option, which isn't really helpful).
Xeo
Xeo
@FilipRoséen-refp It's in the section on default args, IIRC.
Something about disagreeing default args in declarations
22:18
@Xeo ah yeah, you might be right actually
or wait, hold on
hmmm
how evil is overloading the '[]' operator? is it super evil or just annoying
HL2 has some fairly bitchin' tracks.
let me actually look this up before jumping into conclusions
user3010322
And Java just not having them is like back when I used C# 1.0 or 2.0 and it told me I couldn't have any default arguments, which was just such a big load of turd.
22:18
@ThePhD What makes default arguments worth having is just saving few characters which is ultimately irrelevant, and if you need complex default arguments you're probably doing something wrong anyway
@Pris lolwat
@Xeo "declarations in different scopes have completely distinct sets of default arguments"
@Xeo it is only UB if we are dealing with an inline function
Xeo
Xeo
@FilipRoséen-refp welp
it should be UB, then vOv
what does vOv imply? I never learn these things
Xeo
Xeo
it's a shrug
22:20
it's two arms and a head
@AndyProwl ;-) (in response to your removed message)
@Xeo Not in the C++ model of call-site-substitution default arguments.
permitting it makes perfect sense in that model.
it's the wrong model, but that's another question.
@FilipRoséen-refp Yeah, I was hesitating whether I should jump into the conversation and post the quote, and when I decided to do so it was late
@milleniumbug I want to overload the [] operator to do some weird init stuff, but I'm not sure if its a good idea. I've never overloaded it before and the general ambiance around operator overloading is don't do it
I want to write a proposal that would disjoint converting constructors and converting functions (operator T), so that the latter follows the rules on copy-initialization in cases such as A a = B {}; where B::operator A() is present, and A::A(A const&) being explicit (ie. A a = B {}; should not be allowed to call the explicit constructor)
oh erhm, that was written in a weird manner
22:23
@Pris "weird init stuff" - that's your clue. Don't do it.
@Pris It's only really used for indexing. If you're not using the argument to pick one value from a set of potential values, don't use [].
sure, the current wording allows for returning a copy of a type with an explicit copy-constructor, but it's a bloody weird thing (at least I think so)
struct A { A(); explicit A (A const&); }; struct hack { A const& ref; operator A const& () { return ref; }}; A func () { return hack { A {} }; }
(and gcc does the sensible thing of rejecting the snippet, even though the standard says it is legal.. why the standard says it's legal is probably due to someone thinking of using one term, but actually using another, while writing the relevant part that makes this possible)
and yes, I brought this up yesterday (or the day before that), but it still bugs me
Soo question
Hey @R.MartinhoFernandes could you tell me if this crashes for you? gist.github.com/Rapptz/3bd9b1bc5d02fa6f8bd4
It crashes for me but I don't know why.
The functions work locally :(, e.g.: coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/3f523bc62a31edc4
Is it possible to link to C++ libraries of both types from another language at the binary or linker level?
22:32
@Rapptz I'm at the pub right now.
It's np.
Just lemme know when you have time.
@Cinch AFAIK Wide does this.
But thanks for the effort.
ninja header invokes single_include btw
@EtiennedeMartel so what do you think of Dune?
Also, I command you to read The Mote in God's Eye next.
And then The City & The City.
DO IT
NOW
22:42
erhm, is struct A { static constexpr int f () { return 1; } enum { E1 = f () };}; really ill-formed, or is both gcc and clang wrong on this one? I doubt both of them are wrong, but I can't find the section that makes this ill-formed
Disclaimer: I'm actually sober.
both accept struct A { static constexpr int f () { return 1; }}; struct B : A { enum { E1 = f () }; };
hmm, I guess I should study the point of declaration section more carefully
because I guess it boils down to being equivalent to struct A { static constexpr int f () { return 1; } static constexpr int a = f (); };, which is also rejected - while struct A { static constexpr int f () { return 1;}}; struct B : A { static constexpr int a = f(); }; compiles
Xeo
Xeo
> Moons are now generated with solid cores to help avoid falling out the bottom
lol /cc @Puppy ^
> Removed the annoying levitation status from random status pods
oho
what the heck, I can't find where it is said to be ill-formed?
anyone have any hunches?
@Puppy you should also fix your wide tutorial :)
on some of the pages, none of the samples from the drop-down box thing load
23:00
@R.MartinhoFernandes rip
@R.MartinhoFernandes It was pretty good, to be honest. Although I liked the bits of political intrigue way more than the action/adventure parts.
@EtiennedeMartel Dune is awesome
so is Children of Dune
Also: Foundation
23:23
Also, Ruddles County.
..and SSD system disks.
..and black bean sauce.
how do i rename a variable? like i want to use variable outFile to be named cout
i forget :(
@DonLarynx you mean you want to redirect the file descriptor?
today I'm writing an annoying FSM
to parse a golf programming language
it has comments, strings, binary strings and regular input
@Borgleader yes thanks, just found the results on google
:)
23:30
@MartinJames it doesn't beat my gin tonic
such a great drink to have
@AlexM. Bathtub sewage
atlassian is retarded they sent me the same email 3 times in a row wtf
I don't wanna be dead.
Deaf.
why would you be deaf all of a sudden
@R.MartinhoFernandes OK, go werewolf instead before a vampire gets you.
23:34
I think it's harder to understand people on my left.
Maybe I'm just being paranoid but I'm scared.
deafness is one of the imparblahblah I'd live with
@R.MartinhoFernandes Soddin' republicans.
I'd rather die than go blind though
a world where I'd not be able to play games or program
is not a world I'd live in
I need to go to the doctor again. Like now.
@AlexM. Could be worse; you could go Bartek.
23:37
I don't know if I should dismiss this as paranoia or embrace it and be paranoid.
perhaps you should concentrate on going to the doctor
EST master time zone
so it's an emergency? when you said that you need to go to the doctor "like, now" I thought you had an appointment
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah. All the quacks are asleep or drunk.
23:41
I'm looking at the developer survey
It's not an emergency but I'm scared.
do you have any alcohol?
On the bright side, I don't believe that ear damage worsens if not treated immediately, as long as you don't keep listening to heavy noise and do not wet your ears
The good thing is that if I'm really losing hearing on my left ear I might actually get to experience silence again.
So I wouldn't call it an emergency
23:43
I was in the woods in the middle of night last Sunday and the distinct lack of silence made me cry.
lol 92% male
SO is a sausage fest
@R.MartinhoFernandes it sounds like you suffer from a severe case of soberness
I'm at the pub.
I don't drink alone.
yet sober
then put down your phone lol
@Rapptz SausageOverflow
23:45
@R.MartinhoFernandes well, pls share
> There are many ways to learn how to code. 48% of respondents never received a degree in computer science.
hey that's me
Share what?
That's me too.
@R.MartinhoFernandes gives you 40% alcohol
@R.MartinhoFernandes high five
Someone just said to me 'I have the feeling you're not drunk enough' haha
I'm leaking.
23:48
> Must be comfortable and/or proficient in:
> JAVA, C+/+, HTML
what the fuck
C+/+?
@Blob for electrodes
C?++?/////3#+#$&*+
my new programming language guys
@Rapptz thats not me =/
and i hope it's not me
MIT plis take me
noobs
23:49
I'll just get everyone a round of shots
RIP Wallet
See you later.
I call it C with C with C with C with classes classes classes classes
@Blob Hahahahaha
what syntax do you all prefer for public fields in a class (non methods)
23:52
@orlp s/my/Cinch's/
Ugh. I was browsing earplugs on Amazon but that means choosing the buzz over real sound :(
Being powerless is depressing.
hm. internship for 1 year of python/django open. gotta learn django overnight and apply
I want magic.
Wtf am I doing here I have to wake up in 5 hours aaaaaaa
guys wtf is wrong with this answer
2
A: Is math built on assumptions?

Don LarynxHINT: Assume everything isn't built on assumptions. This is a contradiction. Thus everything must be built on assumptions. (Why the down votes?)

in b4 downvotes
23:55
loool
i don't have enough rep on math.SE to downvote that
Thus not everything isn't built on assumptions. What about math though? — anon Nov 5 '13 at 17:01
This.
Something is built on assumptions != everything is built on assumptions.
everything within a mathematical system
Godel's theorem.
@R.MartinhoFernandes yep
Fuck Gödel.
This universe sucks.
23:57
so rude
also no one mentioned him except in a comment
@R.MartinhoFernandes damn sun what happened?
e^pi - pi = 20
cool
(hurr)
im so sleepy wtf
and it was just one drink
@orlp plis no
holy shit it's 3 in the morning
23:58
P is probably not NP. Gödel's theorem is a bitch. The 2nd law of thermodynamics is a cunt.
@R.MartinhoFernandes In a simpler universe, women wouldn't exist. Would you want that?
@R.MartinhoFernandes changes in entropy cant be negative. if you're metabolizing your drink then you're asking for more. and more. and yum

« first day (1634 days earlier)      last day (3541 days later) »