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20:00
No. My position is that the vocative does not matter.
In "Jerry, you're wrong" the subject is introduced twice.
The vocative doesn't change the structure of the other clause.
Okay. We’re using 'subject' with two different meanings here.
I really can’t follow.
@LucDanton That's all right--robot doesn't either (the difference is that you realize it).
@Cinch You must still be relatively new here
@Cinch Don't you dare disagree here
@R.MartinhoFernandes You've just said it though: the subject is introduced twice. That doesn't stop the subject from being the subject.
What are the two meanings?
@Jerry yes, but the subject of the second clause is the one introduced in the second clause.
20:04
@R.MartinhoFernandes Grammatical and philosophical.
It's not "Jerry", it's "you". :P
Actually, it only happens that "Jerry" is the same as the subject because the second clause is in the second person.
In "Jerry, I'm right" it has nothing to do with it.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I'm pretty sure what a grammarian would say is that in "You, go to the store." another word has actually been omitted. The real sentence is something like: "You shall go to the store." or "You must go to the store." The "you" is not (and never was) an appositive--it really is the subject, and always was. The punctuation happens to make it look a little like an appositive, but it really isn't and never was.
Those are different sentences.
I concede I misidentified it as an appositive.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Not really. They're the same sentence, just fully expressed.
No. They express something different.
20:09
@R.MartinhoFernandes "downy"?
"You must go to the store" states the fact that you have an obligation. "Go to the store" gives an order or suggestion.
@sehe what
@Cinch Hi. You can't google this one. Well. Turns out you can
Therefore I am now Master
@JerryCoffin wouldn't that use an apostrophe rather than a comma?
20:11
OuO
user1804599
Cheese
   Wensleydale(SwissHello WorldSwiss)Brie
NoCheese
user1804599
dat programming language
I English good
@R.MartinhoFernandes "Go to the store" is an imperative sentence. Unless specified otherwise, the subject is "You". See, for example, grammar.about.com/od/il/g/impersent09.htm.
20:12
@rightfold ends on such a sad note
You cannot specify it otherwise.
That's my point.
Yes you can....
@rightfold I hope the language has no move semantics
@Cinch Thanks, Obama
Sally, go the store."
@Cinch ("No, I shall not")
20:13
That just establishes who you're addressing.
Well... That was a D Bag move if I ever saw one!
@R.MartinhoFernandes you mean the SUBJECT?
No
Not the same at all.
...
"Subject is not subject" k
Cinch, I explained above.
(The subject here is "I")
20:14
when you are making genetic algorithems, and the computer tells you, deal with it
Go to the store is imperative I think
It's a command
Never a suggestion
@R.MartinhoFernandes Offhand I'm not sure whether you can specify otherwise or not, but that doesn't change either the fact that "You" is an implied subject, or that you can state the "You" explicitly, and when you do so it is the subject of the sentence.
In context, it can be
I'm a bit late on the subject but the new profile page is sickkkkkk
@Jerry can't agree with the last part.
It's a vocative.
(And I actually showed above how you can make it explicit if it's a negation)
20:17
Oh I see what u mean
You mean that X, COMMAND doesn't always mean the same
But the catch is that COMMAND splits into two categories based on syntax and composition (am I doing this right?)
I mean that that X has a different gramatical function than the implied second person of the imperative mood.
Yes, it is context sensitive
I agree
@R.MartinhoFernandes It's your privilege to believe what you choose.
The subject is often left out in English or extended by pronouns
20:20
The DIRECT subject
To the point that you make fake subjects.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yay!
We don't restate peoples name every time we need to mention them
"It is raining"
It is not a direct or specified subject
20:21
A what?
17 mins ago, by Luc Danton
@R.MartinhoFernandes Grammatical and philosophical.
Don't confuse with direct objects.
so erm... the topic has gone from slowly decaying to food... Surströmming?
apparently my average evening meal from mcdonalds totals 1940 kcal
that's probably a lot
damn it I have to Google all this stuff
20:24
@JerryCoffin I wish I could participate in the discussion more fully but I can’t seem to free myself from what I’m doing. To keep it short, regardless of whether English can or cannot drop subjects, I think a sentence involving the imperative mood is simply the wrong example. For one, the imperative mood is not very English-specific.
If you think about it the internet is our extended and collective storage
Is this Lounge<English> or Lounge<C++>
@Cinch Yes.
That was such a gimme. Especially in context
@LucDanton It doesn't have to be English specific to apply. To not apply, it would basically have to be prohibited (or at least discouraged) in English. But, I'm pretty sure I've said what I had to say, so I'll stop.
@JerryCoffin Well, what did you mean by 'English can easily drop subjects' (paraphrasing, can’t quote right).
I can use the imperative mood in many languages :v
20:32
@AlexM. A normal diet (i.e., one that's not intended to help you gain or lose weight) will normally be around 2000 kcal per day.
@LucDanton I didn't mean the possibility was unique to English. I just meant there are grammatical sentences in English in which the subject is implied, not stated explicitly.
user1804599
I'm not fat.
@rightfold I'm not (all) fat either.
@JerryCoffin That’s the philosophical subject ;) Can’t object (hah) to that.
20:37
@JerryCoffin I'm at least 2% calcium
I wish EA gave the first sims some HD textures and made it work on W8
user3010322
We're doing pointers and arrays today.
user3010322
"Arrays are pointers".
@ThePhD how's it going?
@ThePhD bad, i see
user3010322
char* ptr = "my constant string";
user1804599
20:39
need const
@ThePhD tssk
@StackedCrooked lol
@JerryCoffin yes, but you shouldn't have it in basically one meal
Use -Wall -pedantic .
user3010322
I don't think anyone compiles with -Wall -pedantic in this class..
20:40
@AlexM. but then you wouldn't by the next version
@ThePhD It would be better if they did.
user3010322
char*** What is going on. ;~;
@thecoshman I wouldn't anyway :( I just liked the original
maybe I'll get all of it on ebay or sth
but it probably doesn't run on w8
unless fanmade patches most likely
@ThePhD 2D array of strings?
user3010322
@Cinch Nightmares.
user3010322
20:46
I'm an idiot.
user3010322
I should have never agreed to take these classes just for the sake of getting credit.
user3010322
One hour and fifteen minutes of mind bending torture.
@ThePhD At least you'll be better in C
Just be glad you're not being shoved in with D.
user3010322
I'm already good at C. :l
user3010322
I'd prefer D, it's new and I'd learn something.
20:47
Meh.
New profile page!
user3010322
@StackedCrooked Are you gonna drop QtCreator for CLion?
speaking of D
I should go and work some more on that AI stuff
forgot it's also my graduation project now
@Cicada Ohhhhhhhhhhhhh
I just noticed
@ThePhD If it is better than QtCreator I might. I haven't tried it since the first alpha release though.
20:48
@AlexM. I wanted to do AI as my project too for senior year
@MehdiRostami Well, if that is the actual error, then I think avr_CODE\atmega_16.h(16): is indicating that it's line 16 of the file that it's complaining about, which, no matter how you count it, isn't the uart_print declaration. If I count correctly, and your paste of the file is correct, that would be the usart_send_string declaration. Is your compiler old/non-standard enough that it's not happy about const? — twalberg 13 mins ago
@JerryCoffin It’s funny but reflecting on this, if I would consider Standard English only I couldn’t disagree more. It feels very 'rigid' and relatively boring. Drilling down to the vernacular or dialects though it gets very interesting very fast.
Funny thing happened earlier. I got a drive-by by a serial downvoter. I feel kinda special now =)
It may have been Nicholas Cage, it was all done and gone in 60 seconds.
That’s what she said.
20:54
Nick is a she?
> If automatic login fails, please visit the GlobalAuth test & help page to check for common problems.
I wish you'd just let me do a manual log in
@R.MartinhoFernandes So you think Nicholas Cage refers to himself/herself in the third person? I guess that is likely.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I think Luc is implying either me or Nic left a sexual partner unsatisfied. I think the probability for both branches are quite high. :s/implied/said/g. Goddamit :s/said/ is saying/ Oh for craps sake :s/implying/saying/. Phew.
That’s what I said!
The first resume rejection of the history
21:00
I think I ate too much.
user1804599
Spit it out.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Of course, u+0083 much.
@Griwes HELLOO
s/OO/NO/
user1804599
Hmm, the only FALSE implementation is apparently not compatible with x86-64.
user1804599
Luckily the language is very easy to implement.
21:01
@rightfold what is false
is it true that it's a programming language?
;)
user1804599
Absolutely.
user3010322
What was that online JS compiler?
user3010322
JSfiddle?
user1804599
Here's a cat program in FALSE: [^$1_=~][,]#.
user1804599
Pretty straightforward.
user3010322
21:03
Fucking.
user3010322
Javascript and its stupid immutable strings.
user1804599
Immutable strings are good.
user1804599
You are stupid.
user3010322
Immutable strings are stupid.
@rightfold Does that really concatenate or just print a file? {{amazon listing for aloe vera +10%}}
user1804599
21:06
@CaptainGiraffe it reads stdin and writes it to stdout.
user1804599
So you can do cat file1 file2 | false -e '[^$1_=~][,]#' to concatenate files. :P
I'm stumped.
user3010322
@BartekBanachewicz I'm going to install WebStorm for Javascript/Typescript. Any recommendations before I keep going?
user1804599
You can do [ß^$1_=~][,ß]# if you want to be really sure it works (ß flushes I/O buffers)!
void usart_send_string ( const char* data )
{
    for( ; *data; data ++ )
        usart_putch ( *data );
}
That's an infinite loop right?
user1804599
21:10
No.
I think that's that random guy's problem
user1804599
It says *data right there.
user1804599
It loops until !*data.
@rightfold Shouldn't I check if *data == '\0'?
user3010322
@rightfold What's javascript's "main" ?
user1804599
21:10
'\0' is false.
@rightfold So it autodetects character encodings? That sounds stable like a free neutron.
user3010322
Is it just an HTML doc that calls the function you're writing?
@ThePhD On node?
user3010322
@CaptainGiraffe I guess?
user1804599
The code is better written as follows:
user1804599
21:12
void usart_send_string(char const* data) {
    for (size_t i = 0; i < strlen(data); ++i) {
        usart_putch(data[i]);
    }
}
user3010322
That's going to call strlen strlen(data) times.
@ThePhD Well it is different for the different runtimes. In a browser the closest you get is head. In node it executes pretty much everything by order of exploration.
not really
user1804599
Unless usart_putch mutates the data pointed to by data, which would be incredibly stupid.
@ThePhD I found this stackoverflow.com/questions/9015836/… for your perusal.
user3010322
21:14
What about window.onload ?
@ThePhD That would be when the window is rendering, after all the important stuff has been done.
A lot of JS can be executed before the onload.
@rightfold yeah...
user1804599
Use restrict if you're worried about purrrformance.
user3010322
@CaptainGiraffe Ah... well, that question clears up a lot.
user3010322
How... ... strange.
21:18
@LucDanton I guess I'm quite uncertain about what you're disagreeing with. I can't see where I said anything about the degree to which different varieties of English are interesting.
@thecoshman Yeah, that was pretty much my point--that's the entire days' caloric intake, in just one meal.
@sehe
0
Q: Borland C++ builder presentation

Piotr BródkaI have to make a presentation about Borland C++ Builder (classes on studies). But I don't know much about this environment. Questions for more experienced: Could you write, what interesting is to tell about this thing? What, as a listeners, would you like to hear? What distinguishes Borland Bu...

Wanna drop a wise Master statement here?
@ThePhD I find it neat and inspiring to some level. The jQuery folks uses an object/namespace $, the yahoo (Crockford) guys used a Y. So a lot of html javascript syntax looks like $[myIntroElement].fade("500ms");
@Cinch Yes!
Here goes: "Uggggh".
Hope that helps.
@sehe ...
@ThePhD Not necessarily. Recent iterations of gcc can (and do) mark some library functions as "pure", so it knows they only have to call it once, as long as you don't modify their argument (but mostly, yeah, you're right).
@JerryCoffin Poor choice of words on my part. It was an idle thought on English interestingness re: subject dropping, elisions, and whatnots.
Grammar flexibility I guess.
@LucDanton Okay--just left me wondering if I'd said something ambiguous or for whatever other reason been horribly misunderstood.
@Cinch Wise master say: Builder of Borland more destructive than constructive.
user1804599
hahahahaha
Borland was sold in 2009 for a few yearly salaries. It is unfortunate that Borland TurboPascal (where I groked OO =) is no longer dominating.
hm
Borland is now some weird Embarocadabrabra brand name or something
21:28
wth is this reddit about reddit.com/r/niceguys
and is there a reddit for everything
Ven
Ven
@ThePhD why do you want to write typescript :b
reddit as a platform for people to communicate still amazes me
user1804599
TypeScript is terrible.
user1804599
It doesn't let you import modules that don't export anything.
@AlexM. I never managed to get into it. Much like with Slashdot.
21:39
@Cinch Embarcadero. Except that some of Borland was bought out by Microfocus (previously know primarily for a COBOL compiler). Oh, and I think Borland's office products went to Corel.
Ven
Ven
@rightfold get infernu instead of TS
also, a Regexp used to be of type function in some old mozilla :)
@JerryCoffin sounds good to me :D
damn, this hasn't been fixed yet
that's why I was getting nonsense
@ThePhD did you get enough dick jokes?
21:54
Good night good sirs, may the stability of MSVC walk along with you
> While most will struggle to get Project Cars running at 4K resolution with a smooth frame rate on high settings, the game will also support 12K resolution, Slightly Mad Studios has confirmed. That's great, except 12K monitors don't exist yet. The only way you'll be able to take advantage of the resolution is with three 4K monitors. If you can afford that, can I email you my resume?
12K lol
@MarcoA. Burn him at the stake! He's placing curses on us!
in Stack Overflow 2015 Moderator Election Chat, 5 hours ago, by Second Rikudo
@JasonC We're at an exciting age when we can land a probe on a meteor 500 million km from earth, but can't stream it without flash.
> On this holiest of days, devotees have descended on the village of Lamakara from all over the island to honor a ghostly American messiah, John Frum. “John promised he’ll bring planeloads and shiploads of cargo to us from America if we pray to him,” a village elder tells me as he salutes the Stars and Stripes. “Radios, TVs, trucks, boats, watches, iceboxes, medicine, Coca-Cola and many other wonderful things.”
http://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/in-john-they-trust-109294882/?no-ist
this is interesting
WW2 guy goes to some primitive tribe and essentially becomes a god
someone should go there and bring them stuff while saying they're John's kid
their new god
template <class... F>
struct overload : F... {
overload(F... f) : F(f)... {}
using F...::operator();
};
how do I do the using statement correctly?
Xeo
Xeo
22:09
manual recursive inheritance and usings.
@Xeo Sorry what?
the error is expected nested-name modifier beore F
Xeo
Xeo
yes, you can't unpack usings
@R.MartinhoFernandes [email protected]. I believe we twittered each other last time.
@Xeo aw.
Xeo
Xeo
search SO, there's a bunch of questions on this
22:10
@Xeo This IS a question
Xeo
Xeo
so?
the info you want is on SO. find it.
@Cinch The oracle has already expounded on the knowledge you seek. You have only to seek out the oracle, and your grief wisdom will increase greatly.
@JerryCoffin ugh
can't find it oh bother
Oh my god template recursion is mind-bendingly interesting
@thecoshman Funny how train driver, cattle farmer, etc., are trying to argue with an actual scientist. I know, argument from authority is not a good one. But hell, seriously, cattle farmers?
22:18
So if I get this right--we can define a pattern to receive template lists, and then have the template list template call a specific template instatantiation for the concrete template pattern arguments we have
and in that specific implementation of the template instantization using concrete template arguments we can then use general templated calls to stuff like using
@Cinch I think you are close. Use the specialization to make the recursion stop.
@CaptainGiraffe So in other words:
template <typename FIRST, typename ALL_THE_REST>
then template <typename FIRST>
@Cinch In templates you have ifs and fors.
@CaptainGiraffe what no i'm not ready for this yet my soul would disintegrate
In other words, if I had a template <class ONE, class TWO, class ALL_THE_REST> class Foo
that means I can't have template <A,B,C> class Foo
because the pattern cannot recursively close correctly
@wilx Come on, why can't cattle farmers reason?
22:22
Yes but why make it so complex?
@CaptainGiraffe But that's the deal, right?
That would depend on the other types.
Like, if I wanted to, I could create a static-typed map such that int => Foo, and double => bar with a template <class ONE, class TWO, class ALL_THE_REST> class Diddle
and then pairing ONE to TWO
> Google’s affection for our canine friends is an integral facet of our corporate culture. We like cats, but we’re a dog company, so as a general rule we feel cats visiting our offices would be fairly stressed out.
22:24
that way I could use template <int, Foo, double, bar> Diddle;
TIL Puppy would be a better Google employee than Cat
@AlexM. Cat is not Cat. Cat is CatPlusPlus and therefore superior to all Feline kind
@R.MartinhoFernandes Sure they can, to a certain degree. But reasoning is not enough. You need education/data to be able to reason...reasonably. :) First part of the discussion shows that the people are cherrypicking bits and posing them as if they disprove the whole thing.
@wilx Or they are posing them expecting an explanation of why they don't disprove the whole thing.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Well, they same pretty set on to that they consider this bit or that bit alone as disproving global warming or human involvement in it.
22:28
@wilx The mofos spouting in that video has not measured any meaningful quantity in their entire life. Measuring is knowing. Sometimes it is hard to know what you measured, this is not one of those cases.
@CaptainGiraffe Who cares what they measured?
Who cares who measured anything?
So far, the lawyer in the red dress is the best. She simply says I do not know.
I'd prefer if experts at measuring stuff gets to do the measuring.
@CaptainGiraffe And how does that relate to the mofos's ability to spout such quantities?
@R.MartinhoFernandes In no appreciable way. 18 years ago I was a measuring scientist, my shit was not spouted.
22:35
What the hell are you on about?
I have no idea what you are trying to say.
I found it odd that ...
Should I just delete all this?
I have no idea how having measured or not having measured anything is in any way relevant.
@wilx Seems you're not watching the same video I did. Some of them actually explicitly requested the guest to explain (even to the point of using that word!) certain aspects.
@R.MartinhoFernandes It is extremely relevant when you get a few data points thrown your way.
@R.MartinhoFernandes: I have finished it. Well, at least at the start of the discussions some of the audience have pointed out some cherry-picked reasons against it. Later it was different. I liked it was very civil. Usually this kind of formats spirals into shouting against the guest.
I.e. you have a temp record since 1938.
22:39
@CaptainGiraffe Once obtained, the data stands by itself.
Not that people should not make their own mind.
@R.MartinhoFernandes No plenty of people in the audience are misrepresenting data points.
@wilx Yeah, the host chose a weird way to open.
But since I do not believe in any world wide conspiracies and such, I think I can defer to scientists, especially when there is so wide consensus.
@wilx There are scientists in the audience.
@CaptainGiraffe And so did the guest!
People make mistakes. Grats.
22:41
@R.MartinhoFernandes I did not notice any...I was not watching the picture all the time though.
At least one was an environmentalist.
@thecoshman Also, those people seem surprisingly not ignorant at all.
I think this show showed the problem with highly complex and technical problems there are.
@CaptainGiraffe Actually, at some point the guest was called on it.
@wilx I would posit that there's little (if anything) in the way of meaningful consensus. Consensus among those who've actually examined the raw data at least stands some chance of meaning something. The simple fact is that the full data set is only released to a minuscule number of people. The vast majority of people forming the "consensus" lack any real basis for drawing any conclusion at all.
People hear or read about one aspect without actually understanding the whole thing. This one bit stays with them and then they build their opinion around it.
22:44
mawnin
This is much like with vaccination, homeopathy, etc.
those are completely different matters.
@JerryCoffin I meant consensus between climatologists.
it's trivial for a few studies to effectively consider the entire matter.
or some statisticians.
That leads to a strange irony in climate debate: those who claim to be on the side of science are almost entirely accepting arguments from authority. Those who are accused of ignoring science are the ones showing skepticism until or unless they can see actual evidence--in other words, they the ones who are actually acting in a scientific manner.
22:45
but nobody understands the climate.
@Puppy But the mechanism of general public's scepticism is the same, IMHO.
anyway I gotta go
user3010322
@Ven It's either Typescript, Javascript, or C++. I looked at coffeescript and it's "we won't truly enforce scope because you should never shadow variables" approach is.... kind've a shitty approach to function and programming to me, especially in a language where everything being hodge-podged in globals and in global-object is the norm.
so let me just say that I disagree wth you Jerry
@wilx I think scepticism is a fair default stance and that's the stance of the audience. I also think it's perfectly fine to wonder how those little aspects are misunderstood. Note how the audience isn't so much posing arguments against the guest's stance but they are more posing questions.
@JerryCoffin This, a thousand times.
22:47
@JerryCoffin Superficially it seems that way. But the reason I, for one, defer to scientists is that I know enough of math and physics, etc., that I know I have no way of actually understanding it in detail. Much like I do not expect people to understand CS matters.
@wilx Same applies--last time I checked, fewer than a dozen climatologists get to see the raw data. The rest are either accepting an argument from authority, or else simply drawing a foregone conclusion, without real evidence to support it.
@JerryCoffin Dozen? I have hard time believing such low numbers, given how long is this studied.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Well, you can be sceptic. But why does the default has to be "I am sceptic and I am not sure it happens," instead of "I am sceptic but I think it probably happens."
Anyway.
Pointless now. Time to go to bed.
@wilx That's not scepticism.
Night.
Oh boy
22:51
@wilx A dozen per year. Actually, if memory serves, even that's high--if I recall correctly, one year that I looked pretty carefully, it turned out that 5 people had actually been allowed to see the real data. Worse, it looked like they were people who were so completely convinced of the "right" conclusion that if you'd shown them data from the last ice age, they'd still have found a way to conclude it was global warming.
Why is the data gated so hard?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Scepticism is IMHO wariness. You can tentatively accept some conclusion and work with it and still want more evidence. Or you can reject it for now until you get more evidence.
@wilx No, it's not about either.
@wilx highly complex problems being... following a moderated discussion on television? Yeah. That's fraught with danger
It's not about accepting or rejecting.
It's about questioning.
22:53
@sehe What? You make no sense.
Hi to you too. Were you going to read that, and perhaps make a point?
> You make no sense.
Awesome.
@Cinch That's an excellent question. The UN web site simply says they can't release it (but the last time I looked didn't cite actual laws or regulations that prevent it). Much (if not most) is based on data that starts out public--but when aggregated, is no longer available.
@sehe I do not understand your point. What is your comment about? Try less sarcasm next time.
@JerryCoffin They seem to evaluate and correct the raw data. Maybe they do not want laymen misinterpreting the uncorrected data? Dunno. No idea.
Open is better for everyone
@wilx That sounds so wrong.
22:56
Especially with science
(And CS)
@sehe: My point was that climatology/climate change is a complex matter. And medicine is a complex matter, too, both vaccination and normal medication.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Well, dunno. I see it as a possible reason. If somebody actually searched for it, maybe they could find some official explanation.
I really hope that's not the reason.
If you hide the data, "misinterpretation" here pretty much means "any interpretation that differs from ours".
And that's not scientific at all.
(Refer to scepticism)

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