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16:00
viva la liberta
@Ven I suppose you meant Big Brother.
@Nisk English is the default if you're speaking English, yes.
You could pick a regional variant from some other place in the world to which you have no connection, but I don't see why you would wish to.
@Ven As opposed to the NSA's black boxes?
@Puppy oh no, them too, they are getting in line...
@LightningRacisinObrit lol
user1804599
16:13
morning
now just to write that clown computing app and sell it for millions
user1804599
@Ven I don't get the type inference masturbation.
user1804599
Having types in the interface explicitly is good.
user1804599
It serves perfectly as documentation.
@rightfold but where is your sense of adventure?
16:16
@R.MartinhoFernandes is that for "linking"? (colligĕre)
user1804599
Documentation is the main reason formalised concepts are #1 on my C++ killer feature wish list.
user1804599
Modules can go suck my dick. Concepts ftw.
Rather large false dichotomy
More like close cousins, really
@rightfold Ah. I get it. You want modules the most.
user1804599
No, definitely not.
I honestly never got Software Verification....If I'm capable of making a bloody mess of the body of the function - what makes them think for a moment that I can't do the same for the contract?
16:21
@Ven I suppose you meant sugar daddy.
Big brother, as has been pointed out
@Nisk Nice reasoning. Errors can still happen, so let's not verify a thing.
The more logic gets checked and can be formally reasoned about, the more amenable your design becomes to change
@Nisk Because contracts are usually simpler that the underlying logic
Without making it more brittle
Actually, that sounds like exactly the classic C programmer's argument against C++. "You should know what you're doing anyways"
I was joking more than anything, but okay.
Great.
I "honestly" think that's funny....
16:25
Great stupid vCloud instance I have to deal with doesn't allow media uploads
YOUR BASE IMAGES ARE SHIT I NEED A BETTER ONE
It does sound a lot like duplication of effort
@sehe ...and often equally importantly, the more you know when it actually needs to change.
user1804599
@Nisk if you want as little effort as possible in the short term, use a one-time code generator like Ruby on Rails.
user1804599
If you want to be able to change anything later, specify everything.
Hehe. ZFS 0.6.4 names two of its new features "spacemap_histogram" and "hole_birth".
16:27
@rightfold the language debate is years behind me, I wouldn't be sitting in a c lounge if I like ruby
@Nisk You get a different product. Of course you pay different effort
user1804599
Missing the point much.
@sehe Next up, the code for adding a new disk to the array, which is obviously a "virgin birth".
I'm eagerly awaiting the "red_dwarf" compression
user1804599
Alright, today it's time to implement code generation.
16:29
Can't see any PXE support either uggggh
@sehe Black Hole Sun compression.
user1804599
@Ven does Flow work well with generated code?
@rightfold point is people can make a mess in almost any language.
sure they can, but it's a lot harder in some than others.
user1804599
I never said anything about any language.
user1804599
16:31
I mentioned a code generator as an example of a shitty tool you can use to create shitty software in no-time.
<tomalak> << t.w, t.x, t.y, t.z; struct T { int w; union { std::array<int, 4> x; std::array<int, 10> y; }; int z; }; T t = { 1, {}, 4 };
<geordi> 1, {0, 0, 0, 0}, {0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0}, 4
kinda surprised
happily so
user1804599
But which one is irrelevant to the point, which is that you must specify contracts if you want to be able to make any sense of the code later.
user1804599
Especially if you are bad at implementing the functions.
I think I'm being trolled by a client
sigh
@rightfold I can see the idea of having them write contracts to at least have an idea as to what they were trying to do
but then I'd hire a guy who could actually just do it
16:38
Quote interesting stuff. Probably old for everybody else but me, though. :)
Why is GamerGate still a thing?
@Nican No idea. Probably because there is whole lot of shit going in games related world?
because feminists won't bloody shut up
and gamers won't bloody stop being tossers
inb4 flag on the first one but not the second one
sexists
why is feminism still a thing
@Nican Because the reactionary right can't stop crying.
16:42
going for a walk
later guys
discriminate based on intelligence, cover all the demographics :D
Be wary of the outside.
jk, well I'm out
best thing about working from home, I close the laptop lid and I'm home from work
@Puppy does wide support/work with debugging?
If I have a type struct T { int x; union { int y; bool z; }; }; and I wish to aggregate-initialise it, picking y or z as appropriate, how can I do that? Please no 'tricks' like setting y to 0 to represent z as false as my types are arrays in real life so that doesn't help me.
> [C++11: 8.5.1/15]: When a union is initialized with a brace-enclosed initializer, the braces shall only contain an initializer-clause for the first non-static data member of the union. [..]
Rats.
16:45
Demand inclusion of C99 designated initializers in C++ standard.
o_0 this computer is scary small...
you could snort that thing!
@Nisk because people still treat women like shit
heh
gosh that would be a terrible thing if you accidentally breathed in your £50,000 micro-PC
fuck, sorry
16:54
@LightningRacisinObrit reminds me of amy's cell phone in futurama
@LightningRacisinObrit You can sometimes use inheritance, with x in the base class, and y and z each in a separate derived class. This isn't a universal replacement for the union, but works fairly frequently.
user1804599
I want dependent types. :<
@Nican It seems to me that a lot (most?) is because virtually everybody involved does a lousy job of expressing what they really want, and spends a lot more effort on being negative about what they don't like than they do just stating their actual goal.
anyone heard of TeamConcert before
huh, so apparently MC is susceptible to zip bombs via block data
17:06
where can I find the correct syntax for using a char* with STL algorithms?
just use the char* as an iterator
char *x = something()
std::find(x, x + len, value);
how do I find the end iterator?
You need to know the size of your buffer
You're using nul-terminated strings right
Not sure, honestly. I'll check.
May I advise using std::string
17:09
I'm working with a VCL UnicodeString, so wchar_t*
yeah, I could just put it in a std::wstring I guess.
std::wstring then
The moment you don't know the size of your buffer is the moment you lose.
UnicodeString has a .Length() property
so I figured
sure, that would work
const wchar_t *const beg(str.c_str()); const wchar_t *const end(str.c_str()+((str.Length()-1)*sizeof(wchar_t)));
but it's not right.
17:11
nono
It wasn't right with str.Length()*sizeof(wchar_t) either
The type is wchar_t* so no need to multiply by sizeof
Don't multiply by sizeof when doing typed pointer arithmetic.
'\\' is one character, right?
@Mr.kbok Ah, thanks. That is much better.
17:14
'\\' is character literal representing backslash
@caps he's a riot
@Jeremy I am? Or '\\' is?
@milleniumbug Thanks. That's what I thought.
\ is a nice guy once you get to know him
17:17
@Mr.kbok We just need @JerryCoffin for Lounge<Puns>
@melak47 I do it all of the time. :(
Who wants to play "Spot the Gosling"?
17:34
14
Q: Program being compiled differently in 3 major C++ compilers. Which one is right?

PredelnikAs an interesting follow-up (not of big practical importance though) to my previous question: Why does C++ allow us to surround the variable name in parentheses when declaring a variable? I found out that combining the declaration in parentheses with injected class name feature may lead to surpr...

Pretty good, that.
Seymour nailed it
This does not provide an answer to the question. To critique or request clarification from an author, leave a comment below their post. — A. Donda 2 mins ago
user1804599
@Ven codegen works! Generated code looks like this: gist.github.com/rightfold/bb752208d927ccaef98f
these are pissing me off
gonna start flagging 'em as not constructive
@LightningRacisinObrit Sorry again for that nonsense earlier, so stupid
Btw., is there a desktop/web app that shows you new questions based on selectable tags?
@LightningRacisinObrit Tbh, the first thing I did when I saw that question was to jump to that very paragraph (I knew it from an older question on SO about using declarations and constructor names), only to find that Mike was there five minutes earlier :(((
@Columbo You click on stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/c%2b%2b?sort=newest or whatever tag and wait...
or you want it aggregated for multiple tags?
@milleniumbug I don't get desktop notifications of new questions. I have to go to the browser and see if a (n) was appended to the tab title
And that is simply inefficient,.
@milleniumbug That's how I'm doing it since months.
17:44
@Columbo #derp
@Columbo click on "newest c++ questions feed" at the bottom. import into your RSS reader
user1804599
@fredoverflow the leftmost candle.
@LightningRacisinObrit Don't know any good readers unfortunately
Suggestions?
dno man
do some research yo
@LightningRacisinObrit I'll compensate. The next language-lawyer question is mine.
@Columbo ok
0
Q: <command-line> error during make

hoktsI am working on a project where I have to compile large number of files. I am using Cmake for creating Makefiles, and then GNU Make 3.81. While building the project I get the following error. <command-line>:0:4: error: expected unqualified-id before numeric constant Make[2]: *** [xy/1234/CMakeF...

vtc plz
17:48
@LightningRacisinObrit Fuck your "ok". You make the message you replied to with that look like wankerish unimportant nonsense.
fucking lack of fucking testcase a fucking GAIN
@Columbo ok
@LightningRacisinObrit Anticipated but funny.
@LightningRacisinObrit Gets funnier still :D
Don't tease me
DON'T FUCKING TEASE ME
@JerryCoffin wow. trip down memory; also, I had no idea what I was looking at back then. The clip was so "out of this world" that it completely drowned out the good song.
17:51
@LightningRacisinObrit Wow, 3 different results on 3 different compilers and not related to UB. That's impressive.
@Mysticial yep
Some idiot deleted my comment. It asked you to provide a testcase. Without your code, how can we see what the problem is? Assuredly, since you have been debugging your issue, you have a minimal example that reproduces the error, so go ahead and post it now. stackoverflow.com/help/mcveLightning Racis in Obrit 2 mins ago
bet this gets nuked by the plod
user1804599
Bleh.
user1804599
+7 and Ƶ currently mangle to the same name.
user1804599
howtofix
user1804599
Ah, I know!
17:58
what the arse are you doing rightfold
@rightfold Really? I see him at the 4th candle from the left, right next to Duke.
Why is Ryan Gosling at Java's birthday party?
Ven
Ven
18:13
@R.MartinhoFernandes that was a stupid brainfart. mb.
yes, I did mean big brother. duh.
Ven
Ven
@rightfold it's mostly about being able to check more.
@rightfold i.e. constraints on "this". (also, I really need to try flow on some compiled LS files)
@rightfold (var predef = nok.predef might speed this up)
@sehe Over time I've come to believe that music videos are mostly a mistake in general--the video distracts more often than it contributes.
user1804599
@Ven Speeding it up is Google Closure's job.
Ven
Ven
@rightfold use closure's "type checking" then, also
user1804599
18:23
No.
@rightfold Have you ever tried to shrink Scala jars with proguard?
user1804599
No.
I just tried it with Kotlin Hello World, and proguard shrunk the completely self-contained jar from 1mb to 8kb :)
very impressive
user1804599
Cool, Epica covered The Imperial March.
Epica = Symphonic Epic Hollywood Metal?
user1804599
18:27
lol
user1804599
I'm not sure about recursion and shadowing.
user1804599
Currently, x <- x compiles to var x = x; of which I don't know the behaviour.
@fredoverflow lol 1mb hello world
user1804599
Instead, shadowing would be nice, but that makes recursive functions too difficult to write.
@rightfold They did a decent take on PotC, too
user1804599
18:29
F# solves this problem with the rec keyword, but I don't want any keywords.
user1804599
@LightningRacisinObrit lemme check
@LightningRacisinObrit Well, that contains the entire Kotlin runtime library.
Scala Hello World would be 6mb by that measure.
@rightfold Just don't bring x into scope until the next statement.
user1804599
@Puppy Then you can't write recursive functions like f <- { |x| if x {f false} {42} }.
@fredoverflow smh
18:32
I don't even know what you're trying to express with that syntax.
user1804599
A function that calls itself and is assigned to f.
well doesn't seem like a big loss to me
Ven
Ven
y combinator considered harmful
user1804599
@Ven because it's terrible, that's y
Ven
Ven
@rightfold your jokes are
user1804599
18:33
:D
user1804599
I can make same-scope redefinition an error.
user1804599
Then you have to use reassignment instead.
rightfold put an avatar back please
user1804599
No, I love this one.
user1804599
It's nice and purple.
18:36
> top 0.57% this year
Just looked at Radek's profile
user1804599
@fredoverflow here's a 1MB hello world program in PowerBASIC:
user1804599
#BLOAT 1000000
PRINT "Hello, world!"
user1804599
> #BLOAT allows the creation of artificially bloated program files on disk, in order to match or exceed that generated by competing "BloatWare" compilers.
user1804599
18:37
awesome
static char BLOAT[1000000];   // problem solved
user1804599
@fredoverflow optimised out!
user1804599
Make it non-static, and volatile to be extra sure!
guaranteed to blow your stack?
bloat overflow
He probably meant "Don't mark it with the static keyword."
18:40
oh wait you mean global
It's still going to be static without it.
I forgot global variables exist.
@LightningRacisinObrit while(!released) BeHyped();
@milleniumbug I once forgot inheritance existed :)
@LightningRacisinObrit Give me Thrawn instead :F
user1804599
18:43
Fix your design instead. — rightfold just now
user1804599
oh god
@rightfold But there's even a standard solution for that!
user1804599
In C++, if you have two integers a and b and you want to divide them to get a double, which of the two do you cast to double before dividing?
user1804599
I prefer to cast both.
user1804599
Even though casting only one is sufficient.
18:50
@rightfold I don't think that ever happened to me.
Either one of operands was floating point, or both were.
And if there's a literal there, I make it a double.
user1804599
Dividing integers should result in a rational, like in sane languages like Clojure and Perl 6.
Not if you're working in embedded...
> sane languages like Clojure and Perl
> sane languages like Perl
buahahahahhaha
18:53
> Clojure being sane
@ShotgunNinja He said rational, not floating point, and that is in fact rational.
Ok, fair enough
rational languages?
rational numbers
Yeah, rational like Clojure, Perl or Brainfuck.
18:54
Rational numbers are nice, more languages could have them.
Hmm, what was the language that looked like brainfuck but not really that I saw recently...
for a moment there I thought I was in the wrong room
user3010322
q<26,6>~
@AlexM. Because "sane" and "rational"?
@rightfold 1.0 * integer :)
18:55
@Griwes because shotty ninja
user1804599
In Perl 6, 1.0 is a rational.
user1804599
Throwing away data from literals is too retarded for words.
Ven
Ven
I'd consider Perl6 to be mostly sane, though on the "perl" side of sane...
(clojure is sane on the nil side of sane.)
I animated a ball today
and learned about how 11 and 1/2 of the 12 principles Disney came up with for 2D animation also work for 3D animation
user1804599
nil is so so bad.
Ven
Ven
whereas '() is great! oh, wait.
user1804599
Luckily Clojure has Java 8 and Java 8 has Optional!
Ven
Ven
clojure is "nil finding simulator 2015"
Which can be null.
user3010322
18:57
Also, if Length() does not include the null terminator in its size,
user3010322
... Oh wait, wrong conversation.
user1804599
@milleniumbug Luckily it can.
Also dependency manager for C++? Better write it in Python to show we don't really believe in the language.
user1804599
Imagine what a horrible special case that would be.
Oh, sorry, it's for "C/C++".
user1804599
18:58
It'd be like, C#'s Nullable.
@rightfold As in null, empty and non-empty.
user1804599
Yes, that's good.
user1804599
It's a class type so it should be consistent with all other class types.
That's terrible.
It just shows how terrible Java is.
user1804599
Suddenly making it impossible to have a null Optional would make it impossible to write or use any generic code.
18:59
An optional that is necessary a ternary logic thing is just wrong.
user1804599
It'd be, like, std::vector<bool>.
Reference types should have been non-nullable by default.
On the most fundamental level.
user1804599
@milleniumbug Yes, but you can't fix that anymore.

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