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23:00
this'll be the first time I have to watch it weekly -.-
@LightningRacisinObrit excuse me
Ven
Ven
@райтфолд about what I said earlier... vtable and dtors. it's actually something with virtual destructors. writes to vpointers aren't atomic
@райтфолд youtube.com/watch?v=uvddFPavYZQ around 1:20:00. "1:22:46 the race is entering the [virtual] destructor"
"you can't enter a base class' virtual dtor in a non-racy way (1:22:52)"
@CatPlusPlus that was what I was talking about. I just barely remembered something vague from when I saw that talk, so what i said made no sense
So
user1804599
@Ven Well, using locks in methods that are supposed to have their base implementations called when overridden is a perfect recipe for nightmares anyway.
23:07
Dumb
Alright, it's time to roll Haven
user1804599
Also, it doesn't mean "don't use locks in destructors."
user1804599
It is first of all closer to "don't use locks in virtual destructors."
user1804599
And more so to "be careful when using locks in virtual destructors."
Evening
user1804599
23:09
And not so much about using locks as about concurrent access outside of them.
user1804599
It's about the lack of lock, not about the lock.
@Jefffrey Eventing
13
Q: Ignore 'E' when reading double with sscanf

lllookI have input such as "(50.1003781N, 14.3925125E)" .These are latitude and longitude. I want to parse this with sscanf(string,"(%lf%c, %lf%c)",&a,&b,&c,&d); but when %lf sees E after the number, it consumes it and stores it as number in exponential form. Is there way to disable this?

ouch
Does anybody know OCaml very well and wants to earn quite a bit of money?
user1804599
@Jefffrey No.
I was eating at a diner when suddenly...
No problem at all. I remember our ~1 hour conversation in chat about Learning Boost Graph (among other things). Re: "What examples?": Specifically this comment. For the rest, search: how provide a vertex_index property for my graph could help, this one shows how pass an index_map when using vecS; — sehe 31 secs ago
Time to hit the sack
@LightningRacisinObrit lol, that pic is awesome. :D
user1804599
@Nooble No <C++>; we win.
@райтфолд :P
everything about it is amazing
23:14
@райтфолд Having C++ is not a win by any measure
Ven
Ven
@райтфолд yeah, I got confused :), as I said
@Agostino You can flag the name-calling comment. I will too — sehe 16 mins ago
the fuck
@Nooble well. Took me too long. First: "cute ponytail?"... nah. "crummy ice-cream philosophy on the board?"... nah. Oooh. "Lounge". Well. Ok
last time I defend you
23:16
Thanks for the support mate. He has a point. My stance is just that I don't want to remove my comments, because I really didn't say anything outrageous
I will stay with you tonight
@sehe I supposed I could've zoomed...
Hold you close to the morning light
@Nooble Nah. We would have missed the ponytail
@LightningRacisinObrit Hehehe "I call it like it is" reminds me of good times in the lounge
user1804599
@sehe and glasses
23:18
@sehe I prefer unicorn horns.
@райтфолд Yup. They add a great deal to the cuteness
I get all the lady koalas.
Ahhh found it. I misremembered. It was "tell it like it it" obviously
Jul 16 '13 at 1:23, by Yatin Saraiya
I tell it like it is and expect to be told like it is.
who the fuck is that
23:25
Jul 18 '13 at 13:16, by Lightness Races in Orbit
> Yes, I really enjoyed that "chat room". I don't understand many of your words, such as "plonk", but we were clearly on different planets. I tell it like it is, and expect to be told like it is. You see, I live in the real world. That was my first time in a "chat room", and it will be my last. – Yatin Saraiya
Looong time ago
It made quite an impression on me, apparently
Jul 18 '13 at 13:16, by Lightness Races in Orbit
Though, to be fair, during his five minutes in the chat room you were all complete dicks.
ahem
What else is new :S
I'm pretty much in favour of calling it as it is. Which is precisely what I was doing in the comment thread. So, I kinda agree.
But that was indeed a strange little man
3
Q: Is it possible to declare a function type that uses itself as an argument in C++?

zneakFor instance, is there any legal equivalent to this? typedef void (*SelfReferencingFnPtr)(int, SelfReferencingFnPtr); With clang, this causes the error "unknown name SelfReferencingFnPtr". The best I was able to come up with is a functor whose operator() accepts its own type.

23:29
> Richard- "My name is long for dick."
@chmod711telkitty did I miss the pictures?
user1804599
@sehe Why is the name Richard always being used for example people who are dicks or idiots?
user1804599
aaaaaaaaa concurrent problems
@райтфолд Really?
user1804599
23:42
@sehe I see it all over the place.
Did you see it in google? First hit: todayifoundout.com/index.php/2012/04/…
user1804599
/// <summary>
/// Class used to work around Richard being a fucking idiot
/// </summary>
/// <remarks>
/// The point of this is to work around his poor design so that paging will
/// work on a mobile control. The main problem is the BindCompany() method,
/// which he hoped would be able to do everything. I hope he dies.
/// </remarks>
public abstract class RichardIsAFuckingIdiotControl : MobileBaseControl, ICompanyProfileControl
user1804599
One of the examples.
user1804599
Richard Stallman is another key example.
Actually, it is called this:
A hypocorism (/haɪˈpɒkərɪzəm/; from Greek ὑποκορίζεσθαι hypokorizesthai, "to use child-talk"), also known as a pet name or calling name, is a shorter or diminutive form of a word or given name, for example, when used in more intimate situations as a nickname or term of endearment. However, shortening of names is certainly not exclusive to terms of affection; indeed, in many cases, a shortened name can also be used to intimidate or humiliate. The ambiguity would need to be clarified by context. == Derivation == Hypocorisms are often generated as: a reduction (in English) of a longer word to a single...
23:44
my name is on that answer
@райтфолд We don't call Richard Stallman "Richard" because he's a dick. We call him "Richard" because that is his name.
@райтфолд I thought you knew how to google, Radeček, Ráďa, Radoušek
Sucks for you.
@Rapptz It is
user1804599
23:46
Is a richard somebody who's rich?
Always
And without fail
anyone know where i can download fibonacci numbers with hundreds of thousands of digits?
user1804599
Like a drunkard is somebody who's drunk?
Is Tomalak your real name
@Blob What's the budget?
user1804599
23:47
No it's "Elise".
Bed time, night!
user1804599
My name is $0 IYKWIM. :)
$0
> Thomas → Tom → Tommy
@sehe Nope, no "Rekktz" or "Rapptz" there
23:47
lolz; you can't really make that joke after you acknowledged the same as I did :)
@Rapptz There's no "Lightness → Lightning". Answer is out of date.
@Rapptz sure why not
@wilx bai
Night all
dang it's almost 8 PM here
user1804599
23:49
@sehe See you in a minute!
@райтфолд Oooh ... nugget:
Fun fact: a nickname comes from a misparsing of an ekename, where eke was a Middle English term for additional, also, or together. So saying a nickname is rather like saying a nothername. I've decided to bring the term ekename back, because it's cooler. Or hell, maybe I'll just use nothername. sighJon Purdy Jan 14 '11 at 8:06
user1804599
This slide deck (starting at the slide I link to) is nice: concur.rspace.googlecode.com/hg/talk/concur.html#slide-9
@sehe Would you like a norange?
norangev3

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