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20:01
@VermillionAzure 21.4.5.1 & 21.4.5.2 of N4296 & N4140
does your mic have adjustable gain
does your toothbrush come with replaceable bristles
@nabijaczleweli okay found it
but what happens if we access s[s.size()] really
user1804599
yay rain
@VermillionAzure "reference to an object of type charT with value charT()" but if you modify it, you get nasal daemons
user1804599
20:04
// Some constants in the form of bytes, to avoid string overhead.
// Needlessly fastidious, I suppose.
user1804599
> fastidious
@nick culprit: wrong driver
ah
@nabijaczleweli so... how does it require pos = s.size() if it turns out to be undefined
@rightfold its like 90 degrees here man
user1804599
20:05
90 degrees is very hot.
user1804599
Water boils at 100 degrees. Go figure.
I mean at(s.size()) will throw
@rightfold you prefer frugal? make a pull-request
user1804599
@sehe what do you mean?
> fastidious
20:06
@VermillionAzure It requires pos <= size(), modifying str[str.size()] is UB.
@nabijaczleweli But why even expose the element at s[s.size()]
@VermillionAzure It isn't exposed.
@rightfold What an amazing coincidence that water boils at exactly 100 degrees!
@nabijaczleweli so it can take pos = s.size() but it's useless
20:07
@rightfold what would be a better word if fastidious doesnt work?
going one past the end of an array is legal. using it is UB
@VermillionAzure Yes
@NathanOliver well duh
@NathanOliver You may only go one past it. Two is already UB.
@fredoverflow yeah I think the illuminati was involved
20:08
@fredoverflow Why one?
void stuff appearing massively here again. I'll look up later again OFB folks ...
Because the standard says so. Allows sane loop conditions with pointers.
user1804599
@NathanOliver int xs[2]; int *p = xs + 9; is UB.
int x;
&x + 1;   // ok
&x + 2;   // UB
I can assure you that a table (with no hash function) is a map, and a map is an associative array.
20:09
@fredoverflow but why
@rightfold Yes. int xs[2]; int * p = xs + 2; is not.
user1804599
@fredoverflow C++ is like Perl 6.
user1804599
Perl 6 also treats values as single-element lists!
@VermillionAzure Because The International Standard says so
@VermillionAzure Because &x + 2 may not even be a valid address. Some CPUs trap if you compute invalid addresses.
20:10
nice troll
We didn't need assurance. And stop talking about javascript
@fredoverflow right
@sehe I can't reply to your other message, but a table includes elements such that the element's key references its data - just like a map.
@VermillionAzure because you need some sort of sentinal value and one past the end of an array makes sense. How else do you say you reached the end of an int array without using its size?
@NathanOliver I thought this was just a string thing.
oh god
@VermillionAzure its used everywhere. this is why the end() function returns an iterator to one past the end of the container.
20:13
@NathanOliver i guess we could do it that way
But I thought they just store size anyways
@DonLarynx keep telling them!
an array does. Once you pass it to a function as a pointer you lose the size information.
@NathanOliver right
but we're talking about C++ strings here. I thought that was a leftover from C
Are you drunk? What are you saying to whom? Because equating a map with a table with an associative array is... slightly less than useful
Certainly in the context of c++, which has neither tables nor associative arrays
And maps in c++ standard library are most definitely not similar to associative arrays
20:16
I mean in general, and I guess you're right. A difference is that tables don't implement the operator[] overload.
guys how come nobody is talking about dictionaries?
@DonLarynx ? std::table is in c++17?
> Dictionary Synonym for Table
@nick lol
@DonLarynx Which §?
what's going on in this thread
deja vu
20:17
Wait. std::dictionary - also not found. I should definitely update my standard to py++
4
someone here had a discussion about dictionaries vs hash tables vs maps yesterday
@AlexM. what was the answer
aren't they all very similar
maps implemented using hash tables and dictionaries are maps right?
nope theyre associative arrays
@VermillionAzure that's not even a sentence
@nick nice :)
@BartekBanachewicz Welps, I'm here if you want to play some Factorio
20:22
@nick didn't we just go over that std::map is implemented using linked lists
ha. It's getting worse and worse.
Why the hell are people this bored
@VermillionAzure hah I have no idea, they're all the same to me
Here's a hint: don't use C++. If it's all the same to you
@VermillionAzure lol no, you mean RB trees.
@nick And here I was thinking you were derailing on purpose
20:24
what about quadtrees though?
@sehe i was sorta :)
Phew. You almost had me there
my ignorance is my protection
@nick why
why even mention this
LOLWUT
Why suddenly critical of the noise? We couldn't even hear ourselves think due to all the rambling
@sehe it's a shame playful starkness can't be conveyed over the internet through words :(
20:27
where's cicada been btw?
. @YouTubeGaming Welcome Player 2. Add me on Google+. #kappa
:O
@Jefffrey yes
I think someone is confused
totally
man
i was so thinking about it
20:29
@BartekBanachewicz alright
Are you being sarcastic or...?
nah
will you be more talkative today?
@VermillionAzure no it's implemented using std::map
Get out. Unless you have a reason to talk out of your necks. But at least, ask more then
wut
@Jefffrey get on ts
@BartekBanachewicz I think you missed the epic self-derailing lead in
22 mins ago, by Don Larynx
I can assure you that a table (with no hash function) is a map, and a map is an associative array.
20:32
@nick It's me!!!
^ out of the blue
9 mins ago, by sehe
Why the hell are people this bored
@VermillionAzure my love, i thought you had left me
i am a bit confus
bye
@nick she has.
@BartekBanachewicz best to waste time playing games
I'll be scanning some sheet music
Are you ok sehe?
20:34
I don't think he's in a mood for that question
brb gonna cry over a bowl of porridge
@nick Hanging up at some super-massive gravity attractor probably :-P ...
I guess not
what's going on
@BartekBanachewicz Is your server up?
I can't connect
20:34
let's get out jeff
hwat?
@Jefffrey try again
There we go
stop having a pause goddamnit
i am going to risk it and ask if you're alright @sehe
@Jefffrey ts
20:36
@Jefffrey don't you want to talk to me :/
you can represent so many things with numbers between 0.0 and 1.0
it's fascinating
oh ts is team speak
20:37
literally everything.
alright
define 0.25 as 0 and 0.75 as 1 -> binary, therefore you can represent pretty much everything it's possible to represent.
[0.0, 1.0] confirmed turing complete
5
the question is whether doing so actually makes sense
@BartekBanachewicz woof?
@BartekBanachewicz That's normal state for haskell programmers it seems ;-) ...
20:39
@Puppy digitization? runs away
the whole of everything, in fact.
I should be scanning
Tables should be implemented using random access and not sequential access.
@BartekBanachewicz the fuck
@DonLarynx That's very... random. And also highly depends on the kind of table.
20:46
@Jefffrey pc issues as well :/
great
@Jefffrey server back online
should all be fine now sorry
god statistics is scary
greek letters everywhere
Your mathematical maturity level is 1.
@DonLarynx ...
let me enlighten you
20:49
@VermillionAzure Yup :-D ...
@Puppy You should scroll up a bit just for fun. It's a fractal of misinformation
@DonLarynx Parameter values used in the simulations. ¼ D ( ¼ A , ¼ C , ¼ G , ¼ T ) describes base frequencies at equilibrium and has three free parameters, because of the constraint that 6¼ X D 1. ’ -( ’ A - C , ’ A - G , ’ A - T , ’ C - G , ’ C - T , ’ G - T ) describes the substitution rates among bases; it has Ž ve free parameters because substitution rates are expressed relative to ’ G - T which is set up equal to 1.
It's even worse because they reference models from other papers about analysis models I barely grasp and in a field I have no prior experience in
It's all in your head.
@DonLarynx No you're wrong
It's all outside of my head and I'm trying to shove it in
inb4 that's what she said
no. she knows better than to get inside your head
20:53
Your attitude is all wrong. It's average.
no pun intended.
@DonLarynx I don't understand this
did you think sehe was a master graspler overnight?
it takes time
deal with it /rant
5 hours ago, by rightfold
There should've been operator[]=.
I tend to agree with you right now
@AlexM. ?????
I'd like to be able to do set[something] = something else where something else is not inside [0.0, 1.0]
and have it autoclamped
20:55
@AlexM. the hell?
Isn't this something closer to something you might do in R?
Or Mathematica or Matlab
@AlexM. Boost Interval Container (interval_map). Thank me later. Just intersect with [0,1] later
Oh wait. something_else
Mmm. Reparsing
What's wrong with set[something] = clam(something_else)?
I'd rather not do clamping outside the set, especially since [0, 1] is an invariant for it
can't throw via [] either
something like this would've been awesome
public T this[int i]
{
   get { return arr[i]; }
   set { arr[i] = value; }
}
^ C#
wait, clamping is hardly throwing. And yeah you can totally throw for a UDT mapped type
@AlexM. where's the clamping/validation there
@sehe there isn't
so
20:59
it's just a language feature
but if you want, you can indeed clamp value in the setter
+to do _what_+
user1804599
@sehe indexing arrays does bounds checking.
@rightfold he doesn't want to clamp i though. He wants to clamp the value
@sehe to keep the values between 0 and 1, I'm implementing this en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fuzzy_set
user1804599
xD:3:P:><3
21:01
I could iterate through each thing in the map I guess and clamp it if it's not a correct value, but to do that every time I use [] is a bit meh
@AlexM. So, make a type set_weight that stores a double but clamps/validates on assignment
Then std::map<key, set_weight> done
hmm
that could work
SRP
The problem is jumping to implementation details. Think in abstract datatypes first (I thought of this because I immediately formulated the requirement as a set of (key,weight)
user1804599
How can I make scp -r t u@d:/a/b/c replace c instead of making a copy of t a file inside the existing c?
user1804599
t and c are both directories.
21:03
As soon as you "drop" the logical notion of the weight and replace it by a double, you might as well be programming in C
@rightfold I think scp -r t/ u@d:/a/b/c/ works (but I might confuse it with rsync behaviour)
user1804599
Nope. :P
Otherwise, just use rsync already :)
user1804599
How?
rsync -r t/ u@d:/a/b/c/
(oh the marvels)
user1804599
oh wow
user1804599
21:05
that's nice
rsync is nice.
user1804599
It works. :D
so many programs. so little time. so little guidance. none of it mine.
May I suggest my standard spell rsync -hxDPavilWH t/ u@d:/a/b/c/ --stats (optionally add --delete).
And on subsequent copies rsync -hxDPavilyz ...
For very very large files add --inplace
I still have to expose the normalized thing to the user though
21:08
How is that a problem. Are you really making me do this for you? :)
nope
but if I wrap the doubles in something else
operator[] needs to return a ref to something else
yesh. not a problem
I guess the return value could be implicitly converted to a double
but then
yesh.
map[something] = 0.5;
would this still work
user1804599
21:10
Thank you @sehe.
since I'm assigning a const double or w/e to a wrapped double ref
why not. You're the programmer, make it work
@rightfold cheers
it works
hmm
right
it only stops working if I make the NormalizedDouble(double) ctor explicit
Well, duh
You decide where the abstraction ends, and how well it's guarded.
has there ever been a proposal for something like operator[]= or C# style indexers?
21:14
Implcit conversions are literally rightfold.
It's more general. It's about properties (setters/getters). Indexers are just a special case of that
user1804599
% time (curl rightfold.sexy &> /dev/null)
( curl rightfold.sexy &> /dev/null; )  0.01s user 0.01s system 12% cpu 0.126 total
user1804599
Beat that, WordPress.
no cheating with user agents pls
user1804599
I need a favicon.
21:16
user1804599
XD
user1804599
Looks like origami.
user1804599
Which is all about folding.
user1804599
HA I WIN
you do
21:18
@rightfold Looks like Tangram to me.
The tangram (Chinese: 七巧板; pinyin: qī qiǎo bǎn; literally: "seven boards of skill") is a dissection puzzle consisting of seven flat shapes, called tans, which are put together to form shapes. The objective of the puzzle is to form a specific shape (given only an outline or silhouette) using all seven pieces, which may not overlap. It is reputed to have been invented in China during the Song Dynasty, and then carried over to Europe by trading ships in the early 19th century. It became very popular in Europe for a time then, and then again during World War I. It is one of the most popular dissection...
user1804599
Ah, I have a nice favicon.
ok great, I have my fuzzy set
now I have to use it
gotta build up some lots of data
where pass-by-value overrides pass-by-reference.
user1804599
@sehe rsync doesn't delete files on the server.
user1804599
If they don't exist locally.
21:26
Good evening.
19 mins ago, by sehe
May I suggest my standard spell rsync -hxDPavilWH t/ u@d:/a/b/c/ --stats (optionally add --delete).
user1804599
Nice.
21 mins ago, by sehe
rsync is nice.
@Nooble Hi nephew
@sehe But bears and koalas aren't nearly close enough as a species.
... far relative then
21:30
Let's say in a templated function with classes K, D, P, I had the line of code shown below. If D doesn't have a constructor with zero parameters, am I f00ked?
	Node * resultNode = NewNode(k, D());
gosh. the edit slightly fixed things
@sehe :P
thanks.
@Nooble Close enough for what? Would one of them just explode?
@DonLarynx Not per se. It could be value-initialization for primitve types
21:31
@MartinJames Of course. Koalas are made out of antimatter.
then the templated function would only be useful for primitive types and would throw a compiler error if D did not implement a constructor with no parameters
Yes. But if it's a member function and (the default) shallow instation is triggered then it's only a problem when the specific member is called
user1804599
C++ is bad.
How hard is C++?
user1804599
21:38
Harder than the dick of my boyfriend when I push my boobs into his face.
I always regret unplonking you
user1804599
Why?
it's like an invariant
is it really necessary to make those jokes
like that time with the back inserter
user1804599
Yes.
was it necessary
user1804599
21:39
What time with what back inserter?
Your BF have a Dick?
user1804599
Jan 12 at 13:16, by рытфолд
@Xeo my boyfriend has a back inserter.
user1804599
oh XD
We haz teh Gavin Sutherland as guest guitar/vocals tonite:)
user1804599
21:40
@BrianS I have no boyfriend. :(
You have tits? @rightfold
Lounge<ASLPLS> in a few mins
lol I started working on this but then realized I have no idea how I want it to work
Property pRound("round");
Property pElastic("elastic");
Thing t("Ball template");
t.Properties[pRound] = 0.8;
t.Properties[pElastic] = 0.6;
o yea this looks like a good starting point
user1804599
> Thing
I didn't know what to call it
user1804599
Then it's a bad design.
21:45
the goal is to have these thing templates, and the AI getting random things with properties
and then trying to see in which template they fit best in an attempt to guess what those things are exactly
user1804599
Have Schema and Sample.
and when it knows it's wrong, it should re-adapt the template properties to accommodate what was thought to be an improper guess
@BrianS NP hard
@rightfold I'll stick with ThingTemplate and Thing, it seems more natural to me :<
I'm really excited about extending the properties later on, it seems like an interesting problem
e.g. something that's spherical should also match round
@AlexM. Call it PrettyMuchThingamajig and Thingamajig
21:51
same for ovoid

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