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15:00
@R.MartinhoFernandes just checked, I don't think they do (other than perhaps reporting the accidents), but raised a concern about outlaws running away from the police :P
@thecoshman Point is that quite a few communities clearly regard them as investments. A few even institute policies specifically (and clearly) intended to cause people from outside that community to end up speeding (e.g., intentionally changing speed limits in places that visibility of the sign is limited).
and got numbers. The article mentioned a whopping 1.2 million drivers about half a year ago
fucking hell; I can't find the relation between normal distribution and why least square means (instead of some other exponent error adjusting) is used :-\ can anybody link something of interest perchance?
I use it when going to my parents :P
the road is so shitty there
@JerryCoffin oh I'm sure you get that.
15:01
and littered with the cameras
can't remember about every one
@BartekBanachewicz I grant you one valid 'accidental' speeding, when you have signs for usually low speed limits in rural areas where the signs get covered. You are doing 'what is ok' for the environment, but the hidden sign would take precedence.
@BartekBanachewicz you could just drive within the limit vOv crazy thought I know.
@thecoshman Or at least not speed on shitty roads.
inb4 that's all of Poland.
@R.MartinhoFernandes not all, nah. But the road to my hometown is shitty as fuck
@thecoshman :P
@R.MartinhoFernandes I don't speed at all when it's dangerous vOv
inb4 it's always dangerous
OMGOMG window blinds are there
finally
You use Windows?
I should head home
Xeo
Xeo
15:07
@BartekBanachewicz You're getting invaded by window blinds, they're crawling over your windows. Just thought you should know.
@fredoverflow of course
user1804599
@Xeo wait until you see the black ones in the living room :O
@BartekBanachewicz I would have thought you used your own operating system, called BarTuX or whatever.
being mounted at this very moment as my field reporter says
Xeo
Xeo
15:09
@BartekBanachewicz Sex with furniture is not advised.
user1804599
I... I'll never type mount -f again
@Xeo Well, a bed is often useful.
k
heading home hopefully w/o any accidental speeding :D
@BartekBanachewicz That, and the whole speeding thread, is tempting fate:(
15:12
we still talkin bout cars
Xeo
Xeo
no, about cats
My functions get too long /cc @Xeo
no, about cots
i want a dog
Xeo
Xeo
Speeding cats are a serious safety issue, you see.
15:13
..and other sexually-related furniture.
@Prismatic There you go, two dogs for the price of one!
@Xeo Only if thrown from third floor or higher.
@fredoverflow lol
I will never tire of animal gifs
user1804599
"If you don't use a condom, it's like you don't use a condom", said Fred Schoonhoven (37), father of fourteen children and proud owner of four STDs.
Xeo
Xeo
15:14
@MartinJames That's when they transform to flying cats
Ell
Ell
@Columbo you are writing a compile time parser?
@rightfold Four standards? C++98, C++03, C++11, C++14?
> Proud
@Xeo If you are going to drop the cat down the middle of a stairwell, (so a decent-size audience can watch), you should cone-off the floor area below to prevent accidents.
@Ell Partly, yes.
Ell
Ell
15:16
I restocked on jalapeños
@fredoverflow Is C++14 radioactive?
Xeo
Xeo
No, it's TV-inactive.
@Ell Still none here:(
Yes, hence std::decay
Ell
Ell
sainsburys :D
3 for 2
15:17
@Ell Meh.. no S. near here:(
why are gifs banned here
were they abused
Aren't gifs abuse by definition?
@Prismatic Telkitty.
Ell
Ell
Hmm there's still time to mow the front lawn...
I guess I ought to :(
@Ell You should take care with such decisions. Think about it for an hour. Have a beer.
15:22
> error C2631: 'range_t' : a class or enum cannot be defined in an alias template
@Ell Are you going out tonight?
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes lol
Ven
Ven
how can I have vlen strings in cobol, @rightfold?
Ell
Ell
@fredoverflow No
I'm staying in and having pizza with a friend :)
user1804599
@Ven I do not know.
Ell
Ell
15:25
(hence the earlier "who wouldn't want free pizza!?")
user1804599
> Strings of fixed length are normal for COBOL. In fact, until COBOL 2014, strings could only have a fixed length. And, as no compiler these days targets the standard, strings will remain of fixed length for years to come.
Ell
Ell
its buy one get one free from dominos
Ven
Ven
@rightfold I think I can get by using "occurs depending on" on a char field.
user1804599
I think you still have to specify a max size when doing that.
Ell
Ell
@MartinJames I did just get some of this:
15:27
@Ell 'Premier Cru'? On cider? lol
Ven
Ven
@rightfold yeah, you need to say x to y times
@Ell No point in "mowing your front lawn" then, is there?
user1804599
@Ven :p
Ell
Ell
@fredoverflow well, the garden recycling bin gets collected tomorrow, I figure I should make use of it...
but effort >.<
Ven
Ven
@rightfold LIFE IS HARD MATE.
15:28
@rightfold Where does that come from, does Cobol talk to databases a lot?
user1804599
@fredoverflow No idea. It's ancient.
Ell
Ell
@MartinJames yeah I'm not sure what that's about :p
user1804599
You can call malloc and free. :v
Ven
Ven
@fredoverflow well, cobol compiles to C, probably due to that
(or used to)
user1804599
COBOL is older than C, you fool.
15:29
@Ell Okay, I give up... "Mowing your front lawn" = "Shaving your junk". Get it?
Ell
Ell
@fredoverflow Oh hehe :P
user1804599
COBOL is from 1959 and C is from 1972.
Ell
Ell
I'm a bit slow on the uptake
@rightfold There were programming languages before C? kidding
@Ell Drink faster.
user1804599
15:30
Variable length strings were probably not deemed necessary for the applications they had in mind.
What's the point of Cobol? Managers can read programs?
user1804599
No idea! :D
Databases don't have variable length strings after all, so doesn't COBOL :P :P :P
user1804599
Even MySQL supports variable-length text.
15:32
That's why the ":P :P :P"
Does SQL standard have variable length strings?
MySQL is always a good reason to ":P :P :P"
user3790646
I finally asked a good question
@AndreyErick Nice question, indeed.
I was just playing agar.io. Russia pushed on Ukrain and it got divided, weird
user3790646
15:45
@SeçkinSavaÅŸçı Thanks
@khajvah USSR always gets divided
I'm starting to think that that's the whole reason that guy plays agar.io
agar.io has serious message to tell
kids can learn history with it
@EtiennedeMartel aw, that's no fun. But, I thought the bots that people made were cool.
@EtiennedeMartel Oh, now I can blame the cheaters when I lose
user3790646
15:53
@khajvah exactly! lol
Why do these cheats work anyway? If they work, agar.io is failing at networking.
Security checks on the client will never work.
Many large scale multiplayer games run client-side simulations
Which doesn't explain "invisibility hack" and "double speed hack"
user3790646
See Transformice for example, it handles all the collision and players' movement in the player's side, allowing fly hacks, speed, and that kind of thing to be done
Oh, I meant "double size hack"
16:05
@fredoverflow COBOL has no point. The intent was that you wouldn't need actual programmers--anybody would be able to write code. The effect has been more or less the opposite: nobody can write (good) code with it.
Ell
Ell
@MartinJames I said uptake, not intake :P
;)
@Ven By writing your own COBOL 2014 compiler.
@EtiennedeMartel that zoom hack is the only one that makes sense to me how they get away with it.
Surely server side validates size, movement and each client renders those blobs themselves.
> In 2006 and 2012, Computerworld surveys found that over 60% of organizations used COBOL
poor sods
im so tired of programming
16:18
fuck UPC bunch of incompetent assholes
they should burn burn burn now
user1804599
Hello.
woah the city is so clogged
@BartekBanachewicz needs a 200km/h plunger
I wish I had a faster bike vOv
but people were nice today
most of them made way for me to get through
except one elderl-ish couple who blocked the whole way
I was tempted to knock at their window
user3010322
16:23
Lexing is hard.
@ThePhD Isn't lexing the simplest part of compiling?
user1804599
No.
user1804599
Reading the file is.
Ell
Ell
@ThePhD how come?
what is your problem?
user1804599
16:27
@AndyProwl What'd they do
@ThePhD you're writing a parser by hand right?
you probably don't want to use a ready parsing library either knowing you vOv
user3010322
@BartekBanachewicz Yep.
user3010322
@BartekBanachewicz That'd take all the fun out of learning!
user3010322
@Ell I don't know how to do lookahead. Or if I should do look-ahead.
user3010322
Also my current approach feels too weird.
Ell
Ell
16:30
how long is your longest token?
besides a string
or comment
user3010322
Uh.
user1804599
Lexing is only hard when you're lexing a retarded language or when you're writing it as a state machine.
@ThePhD you are aware of the fact that hand-written lexers are just obsolete?
Ell
Ell
@BartekBanachewicz they are?
I'd compare it to manually compiling code into binary
Ell
Ell
16:31
that sounds incorrect
user3010322
@Ell Yeah, there's flex and yacc and ANTLR and stuff.
and Parsec vOv
Ell
Ell
still
which is the greatest thing on earth
Ell
Ell
you still have to write the parser/lexer with parsec
user1804599
16:31
with parsec you still write lexers by hand.
@Ell you just declare the grammar pretty much
"my language can have string here, semicolon here and that there'
user3010322
@rightfold I'm lexing a C-Like language, so, I guess it's sort of complicated.
and you get a parser/lexer back vOv
@Ell No, they're not. In fact, there's quite a bit of room for argument that relatively few languages justify lexer generators at all.
user1804599
Writing a lexer is the simplest thing ever.
16:32
@ThePhD you need at least type-1 parser
Ell
Ell
@ThePhD what is your approach currently?
you probably need to do look ahead
to the next character
or maybe more
user3010322
I think the problem with my current approach is that I'm not letting myself stick loops inside of loops.
@JerryCoffin but manual text lexing seems so... primitive
user3010322
That is, I set a bunch of state and flags and then go to the next iteration of the loop.
user3010322
So, I'm writing it like some kind of state machine I guess.
user1804599
16:34
Yes, you're a moron.
@ThePhD you should push state, not set it most probably
user3010322
Welp.
user3010322
Lemme start by doing that then.
Ell
Ell
@ThePhD all you need is a big switch(current_character)
or select
or whatever it's called
or maybe next_character, I always get off by one errors with this kinda thing
@Ell that's my general feeling about manual parsers
user1804599
16:36
IEnumerable<char> Lex(IEnumerable<char> input) {
    for (;;) {
        input = input.SkipWhile(c => c.IsSpace);
        if (input.IsEmpty) { yield break; }
        if (IsIdentifierStarter(input.Head)) {
            // ...
            continue;
        }
        switch (input.First) {
            case '(': yield return LeftParenthesis; break;
            case ')': yield return RightParenthesis; break;
            // ...
            default: goto endSwitch;
        }
        input = input.Tail;
        continue;
What is there to gain in writing it manually compared to generating it?
Ell
Ell
for some reason I find parsers fine
@BartekBanachewicz It ends up a bit like Prolog: in theory everything gets simpler because you only have to tell it what you want, not how to achieve that--but in reality, telling it what you want ends up essentially equivalent to telling it how to achieve it, and (with RE-based systems) sometimes even more difficult.
Ell
Ell
@BartekBanachewicz it might be easier
user1804599
Write it like that.
Ell
Ell
16:36
possibly better error messages
so you're saying that it might be easier to parse code manually than express it in parsec?
user3790646
while(true) is so much more better looking than for(;;)
I find this highly improbable
Ell
Ell
@BartekBanachewicz I didn't say parsec :)
I said easier than generating it
well parsec, spirit, whatever
Ell
Ell
16:37
Have you tried spirit?
it's just so tremendously easier to edit parsec code
@Ell Spirit looks way overcomplicated. It's C++, after all.
but I get the general idea in Qi and Parsec is pretty much the same
Ell
Ell
@BartekBanachewicz that doesn't change the fact that it may be easier to write a parser manually than with spirit
@Ell I don't consider C++ a good fit for parsers/lexers if that's what you mean
Ell
Ell
What is wrong with c++ for parsers/lexers ?
Isn't comparing spirit to parsec enough?
Ell
Ell
16:39
what is required for something to be a good fit for parsers/lexers?
@BartekBanachewicz I don't think so
@BartekBanachewicz Back up a second. We were talking about lexers, not parsers. But yes, for a sufficiently trivial language even parsing can be simpler. For one example, compare my answer to Loki's on this question.
Ell
Ell
a language doesn't need to be able to generate lexers/parsers with any kind of DSL for it to be good at parsing/lexing imho
Xeo
Xeo
Btw @Bartek, saw this yet? While we're on the topic.
@JerryCoffin IMHO his answer, despite lengthier and requiring more expertise, is more maintainable and easier to interpret
user1804599
what is ADO.NET
16:41
@Ell You're right. SNOBOL (for one example) doesn't need any help.
user1804599
> ADO.NET is a set of computer software components that programmers can use to access data and data services based on disconnected DataSets and XML.
@Xeo I'm not particularly rusty yet. I approve the name :)
chain !( key value <&[u8 ] , (& s t r ,& s t r )>,
key : parameter parser ˜
space? ˜
equal ˜
space? ˜
val : value parser ˜
space? ˜
comment body? ˜
line ending? ,
||{ ( key , val )}
) ;
this looks ok too
@BartekBanachewicz He disagrees: "After just doing it. I change my mind. If all I was doing was an expression parser I would write a recursive descent parser like "Jerry Coffin" did."
and then adds
> But if there was any chance that it would grow beyond just a simple expression parser (like having variables and state or any more complex functionality like functions) then I would use this technique.
that's what "more maintainable" means to me
I agree that there's a certain friction that for very simple parsers might outweight the benefits
but considering how error prone it is to guarantee that even a simple parser will always work correctly and never crash, I stand by my original statement
@BartekBanachewicz ...or for very complex ones. For the obvious example, gcc recently converted from a generated parser to a hand-written one, largely because it's impossible to fit a C++ grammar into LALR(1), and in a machine-generated parser, it's relatively difficult to "escape" from its model when needed. A pure recursive descent parser is limited to LR(0), but in a hand-written parser, it's much easier to do something that doesn't fit that model when you have no real choice.
16:47
@CatPlusPlus Long story short, their customer service is a joke and their technicians are a joke
@JerryCoffin I suppose you've too many facts on your side :)
Today the technician came to replace a set-top box. He left saying that it's absolutely normal that it keeps rebooting without even showing the welcome screen because they have to enable shit on their side and signal and handwaving. Two hours later same story, so I call them and they're like "whoops yeah then it's probably a faulty unit, the technician can come again tomorrow around 12, is it ok for you? if not, next week"
@AndyProwl nothing new
and last week it was this:
May 20 at 12:13, by Andy Prowl
bunch of unprofessional jerks I ordered this set-top box 20 days ago, and yesterday, the day the technician was supposed to come and install it, they sent me an sms saying "whoops sorry the thing you ordered is not available for purchase and we have no idea when it will be, but hey if you want you can rent it for <unreasonable price>"
and they keep raising the prices every year
I wish I could switch to another provider
now not only I lost 3 hours of work today, but I will lose 3 hours of work tomorrow too
Does it make sense to say that an algorithm is O(n^2) but also omega(n)?
I guess not.
16:54
Er, yes?
Well. I don't think it means what I want it to mean. And that's that the algorithm has a worst case complexity of theta(n^2) and a best case complexity of theta(n).
@Jefffrey Sure it does. Omega is asymptotic lower bound, O is asymptotic upper bound (i.e., worst case complexity).
@Jefffrey "Best case" and "worst case" are orthogonal to that notation. Just say it in prose.
Right. And when I talk about best/worst/average case it makes sense to only use theta, right? Like the worst time complexity of insertion sort is theta(n^2), the average is theta(n^2) and the best is theta(n).
@Jefffrey Just say "X case complexity", and ignore "theta" and such.
16:58
I see
Thanks
Ell
Ell
Are there any non asymptotic complexities?
I doubt that.
@Jefffrey It's what provides the most information, but not the only one that makes sense.
Sometimes it's hard to determine what a worst-cast input is. In such cases you can take a pessimistic approach and see what's the longest possible path through the algorithm. That gives you an upper bound that is at least as bad as the worst-case input, but may be worse. Big-oh is a better choice there.
@Ell Depends on your viewpoint--many of them aren't really meaningful asymptotically. For example, the complexities quoted for many sorts are based on an assumption of relatively few duplicates, and the ability to do comparisons in fixed time. If you had (for example) approximately super-K items, you'd have either a lot of duplicates, or multi-word comparisons (so time is longer fixed) or a machine with word size much larger than anything anybody's ever contemplated.
So, realistic applicability is often more like: "as the number of items gets large (but is still small enough to fit in available RAM...".
@R.MartinhoFernandes I see
17:24
@AndyProwl Sue them for the wasted time.
@MartinJames That would mean wasting even more time
@AndyProwl Put it on the bill.
@MartinJames I should ask for a refund yes but they're never going to give me one unless I sue them
or at least unless I have the lawyer send them a letter
I mean, they already admitted guilt in the SMS.
and both of these things require time and money
17:26
@AndyProwl Do you not have a small-claims court that doesn't need a lawyer?
@MartinJames I don't know how it works here. I don't think so
also they did not "admit guilt" they just said "we're sorry here are the alternatives let us know"
Having a hard time to decide, would you prefer a ugly interface (mEngine.mapCoords(x, y) vs mapCoords(x, y)) or having a static member variable where it doesn't make sense to have one (or even just making it a global)? This function will be used A LOT that's why I'm having a hard time to decide.
@AndyProwl Yeah - on the day of expected delivery!
yeah
jerks
@AndyProwl ..so you had already booked time off work.
17:28
I did but eventually I stayed at work so I did not lose that time
user1804599
Hi.
@AndyProwl Don't tell the court that!
:D
funny thing is, that they were supposed to do two things: 1) change the modem; 2) change the set-top box. When they wrote me the set-top box was not available I called them and cancelled the whole thing. Then they said ermagerd they will be available next week don't you want to wait? I said ok, but I'd rather have the technician do everything at once. Sure they said, and we agreed on installing everything today.
Except they forgot to tell the technician, who last week came here only with the model waiting for me
@HalfEvil Why is that ugly?
Of course I was at work so he wasted his time too. Bunch of idiots really
17:31
@R.MartinhoFernandes it's unnecessary long..
@AndyProwl I hate being treated like that. Fucking morons.
What's the short version?
@MartinJames Yeah it's really bad. Unfortunately they're the only ones servicing this area
(which is probably why they can afford being so sloppy)
@R.MartinhoFernandes mEngine.mapCoords(x, y) is the long version with the good code behind, mapCoords(x, y) is the short version with the arguably bad code behind.
17:32
Why is the first one good code?
@AndyProwl You should start a rival service.
I'll call the company Fuck UPC
"They fuck up? We fuck upc!"
@rightfold Today I discovered that this form of pattern usage already works in Kotlin:
for ((param, value) in parameters.zip(arguments))
user1804599
Cool.
I guess not long until we have full-blown pattern matching.
(By "we", I mean myself plus the other 11 Kotlin developers on the planet.)
17:35
@R.MartinhoFernandes Because the scaleFactor variable is located in the Engine class (which mapCoords(x, y) depend on). It would not really make any sense to have scaleFactor marked static. Although the game is not likely to ever have more than one Engine object
@fredoverflow Presumably that "11" is in binary?
I mean I could always just make the scaleFactor variable global.. but yeah I do not know really like globals
@JerryCoffin That's in base 15000 (dec)
@HalfEvil either make mapCoords a member function of Engine or let mapCoords take an Engine as an argument
the choice depends on how coupled mapCoords is with the private members of Engine
@HalfEvil Choose the first. If anyone cares for a shorter version, they'll do auto coord = [&](auto x, auto y){ return mEngine.mapCoords(x,y); }; in their functions.
17:37
@ScarletAmaranth There are 15001 Kotlin developers?
Don't make local state global.
@fredoverflow well, certainly more than 11 (dec) :)
Okay I see, I'll do that then (make it a member function)! Thanks for the help! :)
evening
What are "copyright notices"?
17:40
Oh look! The dog has dragged itself from its basket :)
@milleniumbug That moment when it dawns on you your dependencies come with strings attached.
I'm reading "Boost Software License 1.0"
Xeo
Xeo
She holds my router hostage!
@LucDanton You mean like Qt comes with QString? ;)
17:41
@Xeo But at least you've recovered your backpack.
@Xeo awesome cat
makes me feel like having one again
Xeo
Xeo
I realise the angle makes her look more fat than she really is
3.5kg or something
that’s a lotte of catte butte
@Xeo It's warm. Don't worry - it'll cool off after it fails from overheating and the PS shuts down.
Xeo
Xeo
17:44
@LucDanton *thatte
@Xeo Put it down to 'really thick fur' - that's what I do with Bailey.
> Why is the "disclaimer" paragraph of the license entirely in uppercase? Capitalization of these particular provisions is a US legal mandate for consumer protection. (Diane Cabell)
what
Xeo
Xeo
@AndyProwl You don't see the awesomest part - the extra fluffy tail!
@AndyProwl Was the first one involved in a teleportation-related incident?
@milleniumbug Quality legal advice.
17:46
@LucDanton These lawyer things are scary
@Xeo Not sure exactly why, but somehow reminded me of an ancient Dilbert:
> At first this seemed like a fairly simple project but in the end it turned out to be much more interesting than initially thought.
@Xeo aw man I want a cat
Xeo
Xeo
I wish I had something other than a potato to make photos with.
these cappelletti I bought are disgusting
today is a horrible day
17:48
@Xeo You can claim it's artsy.
I can't even get drunk because I'm supposed to do that tomorrow
Xeo
Xeo
lol
Can you give me a tutorial No... no...Borgleader 8 secs ago
@AndyProwl You obviously need to do a rehearsal tonight.
Xeo
Xeo
@AndyProwl But at least you get to enjoy cat pics!
17:49
@JerryCoffin Don't tempt me...
@JerryCoffin Yeah. Like a cache warmup!
Ven
Ven
@JerryCoffin ew
@AndyProwl Excuses
I usually find excuses for getting drunk, not for staying sober
My body sucks so I can't afford doing that two days in a row
How bad is it to have global primitive variables? Is it better to pass them around to every other function?
17:52
@AndyProwl my sister just got home from living abroad, so I'm spending time with her atm (and will for the next few hours) - but I will definitely get back to you about the thing. What Colum wrote is not what is going on (btw)
talk to ya later ploff
@Ven Much more fun that writing COBOL. Money in it too--MicroFocus is worth nearly $3B US...
@HalfEvil Are they const? Then it's fine.
@FilipRoséen-refp Sure man, take your time. Thanks
Ven
Ven
@JerryCoffin O.o
@milleniumbug No :(
Ven
Ven
17:52
@JerryCoffin I'd argue that a cobol-writing job pays a lot of $$$
has anyone seen Ex Machina?
@HalfEvil Make state as local as possible. Can a public method/variable be private instead? Make it private. Can a variable be declared lower down the function? Move it. Can you narrow the scope of the variable? Narrow it.
@Ven Yes and no--good C++ developers generally make more than good COBOL developers, but there are a lot more jobs for COBOL developers who are decent to fair, and many of those still pay pretty decently.
Xeo
Xeo
@AndyProwl I've only seen plenty of Deus Ex Machina - there are cameos everywhere!
@milleniumbug except when it comes to "friend" I guess... everyone seem to hate that
Ven
Ven
17:57
@JerryCoffin oh, that's interesting. really?
Xeo
Xeo
More artsy stuff.
@HalfEvil Friending does the opposite of narrowing.
@AndyProwl Not yet. The synopsis sounds pretty generic, so I'll need to hit some boredom low to go see it.
@LucDanton Well it makes for stronger encapsulation at least (if the alternative is making stuff public)
@HalfEvil friended functions are pretty much equivalent in this aspect to public methods, and nobody threw a pitchfork at public methods.
Also making friends tightens the relationship between classes.

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