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13:00
That decision was literary based on terribly done simulations where marketing gurus deliberatelly ignored the technical personel - and the managers choosing weren't critical on the marketing department.
@paul23 And they would never have to know about the technicalities. They have their pilots, trainers, maintenance engineers and corresponding line management for this
@rightfold overflow: hidden :D
user1804599
XD.
> where marketing gurus deliberatelly ignored the technical personel
So. People wanna sell stuff to people that don't know shit.
@sehe Well then how would you prevent these mistakes (or the fyra debacle as a new example here).
13:02
@paul23 Mmmm. I dunno. What makes you think I know
@sehe Hmm I see the biggest problem in "choosing weren't critical on the marketing department."
I just said it's less than constructive to put blame and rant
@paul23 Yeah. Thing is, you don't want any marketing with some things.
Marketing is by definition not very relevant. Representation is enough
Actually, you don't want any marketing ever, if defined narrowly (it would always imply lying to the buyer or (ab)using their ignorance)
Ell
Ell
@BartekBanachewicz cool
@sehe Or you could define marketing as possitive; showing a critical overview of the main features.
I don't see how that ever "congrues" with marketing
That's journalism
13:07
Well you market yourself during a job interview. - And one of the major things is to show also that you can be critical of yourself and know your weaknesses?
@BartekBanachewicz How does network factorio works
user1804599
@paul23 I can easily memorise my set of weaknesses, since it's the empty set.
@rightfold I can add one to that already: bad memory.
;)
user1804599
?
@Mr.kbok you mean multi? Is fine.
wanna join us?
user1804599
13:10
I never said I can only memorise small sets.
@rightfold You couldn't remember the one weakness - you had - as that was forgotten since that is your weaknesss :P
user1804599
Logic seems to be your weakness.
said rightfold
cool people use ubuntu
@MarcoA. Debian...
13:13
@rightfold you should join the telkitty's club of "I'm flawless and need to tell everyone"
user406009
"My flaw is that I can't stand stupid interview questions" Then walk out of the building.
0
A: Chat suspension - does it work?

seheBans are not at intended to "notify" the banned user. They're to impress them, or make them feel bad. They're mostly there to protect the rest of the users. It's super cool that you prefer the "drive-by" style of trolling. And it's also fine if you crave the validation of a ban so much that you...

@BartekBanachewicz Sure
@BartekBanachewicz I had this fleeting idea yesterday. Just thought of it again and posted on Meta :) ^
k not sure when will the next session be
I should study perhaps
for The Exam
user1804599
13:15
@BartekBanachewicz Why?
user406009
Studying sucks. Just a pointless cram, exam, forget cycle.
@rightfold Not really. Your interpretation of his retort is more funny, but the boring interpretation makes more sense.
@rightfold i.e. "you just forgot all the other flaws"
user1804599
Why is Telkitty still a thing?
@Lalaland I think you missed the part where you should study to learn something, rather than study just for an exam.
@rightfold Good question.
user1804599
13:17
Nice.
sbi
sbi
@sehe Where do I find .git/config on Windows? Never mind. It's in my home dir.
@rightfold i miss you
user1804599
Who are you?
Pff tonight last quiz for the computational modelling course
the horror
you never come and visit any more
13:18
of having a 6.5 with 2 quizzes done
ooooookay nvm
@sbi No. There is one there too.
sbi
sbi
@sehe Oh, per repo?
user406009
@TonyTheLion It's just that I have yet to take a worthwhile university course (that wasn't open book).
@sbi Git has global, per-user and per-repo settings
13:19
@rightfold Why is badfold still a thing
sbi
sbi
@sehe And if there's none in the repo...
@sbi If you use TortoiseGit (I highly recommend it) it will actually make this quite intuitively visible in theUI
@sbi It cascades (in the order given)
sbi
sbi
@sehe I do use it, but there's things I can't make it do for me. ("Compare the head of this local branch with the head of this remote branch")
@sbi Mmm. That should be fine (Log, Show All Branches, ctrl-click, context menu "Diff"?)
I'm not on windows right now so can't look
I do use CLI a lot though
@rightfold armed and dangerous
user1804599
there was a spider on my arm
user1804599
13:22
inb4 spiderman
sbi
sbi
@sehe Oh, via Log? I didn't think of this. Lemme...
@sbi TortoiseGit/Log is my favourite entry point. When on Windows, I usually have it open (and use refresh)
sbi
sbi
@sehe I use Check for modifications, because that's what I did with SVN.
> How Does Bruce Schneier Protect His Laptop Data? With His Fists -- and PGP 2007
@sbi The beauty is that TortoiseGit/Log also shows these (as a revision 0000000 on top); Just double-click for a side-by-side
sbi
sbi
13:24
@sehe I Ctrl-Click on what? The revision? I thought Ctrl-Click is for comparing two revisions?
@sbi So, you click both heads (local / remote) and compare
If it's too many revisions, I believe there might be a Show Branches dialog (maaaybe hidden under "Manage Remotes") that I personally never use
sbi
sbi
@sehe Ah, but that's the local version of the remote branch, isn't it?
user1804599
watching law disobeying cyclists fall is super nice
@sbi Erm. Yes. Of course. I reckon you do git remote update (likely "fetch" in "manage remotes" dialog if you insist on UI) first. There is no way to compare stuff that you don't have
@rightfold cringe at engrish
user1804599
fix it
user1804599
13:28
Pointing out somebody is wrong does not help them if you do not tell them what they did wrong.
sbi
sbi
@sehe Yeah, that might well be. Sigh.
user1804599
> Shared-memory concurrency in C and C++ is pervasive
@sehe Looks fine to me
user1804599
Yay, it already points out the problem in the first sentence!
@rightfold you have totally nothing wrong done! It felt just a bit unnatural on. More wanted I not say
user1804599
13:29
:(
user1804599
> law disobeying cyclists
half an hour of work and I'm totally done
how does this "concentration" thing work
You mean, everything works
13:29
@sehe law breaking cyclists
user1804599
@AndyProwl a + b
@TonyTheLion better already
@sehe no I mean, I can't focus on it anymore
:(
Maybe it's the lounge.
sbi
sbi
Oh damn! Another meeting. That's been my day: fighting with git, and two meetings. I hate these days.
13:30
I feel you
user1804599
@AndyProwl delete everything and go home.
Apparently jimmies are being rustled
@sehe (watching (((law disobeying) cyclists) fall)) is super nice
Luckily we stopped doing sprint meetings after the acquisition
I don't have to go meetings anymore either
13:31
@rightfold I can't. I have to give a two-day workshop on Thu-Fri and I'm not even done with the slides
user1804599
@Mr.kbok there was no problem getting the intended meaning
user1804599
@AndyProwl cancel it
user1804599
refuse to do it
user1804599
delete the workshop
13:32
I'm afraid they'll cancel me
user1804599
it's part of everything
delete pWork;
@rightfold Right, phew, that one was close
@TonyTheLion pWork :/
delete pFffft;
13:36
the type information is in the variable, right before its name
don't duplicate information in the code that's informally tied together and unverified by the compiler
it's like programming 101
How to wind up Bartek:
1) Hungarian Notation
2) ?????
3) Profit
@BartekBanachewicz dynamic, weak typing languages!
@TonyTheLion you don't have to assume I'm "wound up" just because I pointed out an improvement to make
@paul23 go figure why they are so error-prone
< fell in love with python :P
sure, relying on informal structure can be faster and easier to develop apps
creating a formal structure is an overhead
user406009
13:41
I think weakly typed languages are decent for single person or small group teams.
and short development times.
@BartekBanachewicz Well I love dynamic coding (where code is reviewing itself to make interfaces etc)
user406009
Yeah.
the longer the project takes, the more likely you are to forget about all the implicit structural choices
@paul23 is doing what?
you mean dynamic object patching?
Where you actually develop -> results -> develop again within a day. (To say find/create the best algorithm to process camera data)
13:43
@paul23 this is not inherently tied to dynamic languages
user406009
What's your guys opinion on optional typing then? It claims to offer the benefits of both sides.
user406009
Quick prototyping and then simple type annotations once things are more set in stone.
@Lalaland static typing is a strict superset of dynamic typing
Like I write a function "analysis.add_guassian_blur()" and then the interface also starts showing a button etc which activates that.
you always have an option to go untyped in a static language
not the other way of course
@paul23 by interface you mean GUI?
13:44
well ye
then it's perfectly possible with static reflection as well
But way more convolving to set up.
based on what?
you'll need to back that one up.
esp. considering that you need a type to spawn a control
For projects that take like half a year to complete in total (and you don't have to deliver a program, you just have to process data) it is quite the wasted time to create those things.
e.g. see how django does Generic Views
@paul23 you seem to be under assumption that there are no libraries for statically typed languages.
13:46
We just had to deliver such a project (tomorrow we have to defend the research as a group)
I'm not trying to argue that you can't be productive on a small scale in a dynamic language
Hmm in python I really found it way easier to just write, and don't have to think about correct use of memoery etc.
I'm just pointing out that the perceived overhead of static typing isn't necessarily as big as people paint it
Half a year = small scale?
With 15 people that's quite some time to me
@paul23 correct use of memory is related to the level-ish-ness, not the typing discipline
@paul23 yes, I'd say it's still as a small project
assuming entirety of the code being written in the 6 months and not reused
13:48
@BartekBanachewicz Those two seem a bit correlated to me though. (Correlation doesn't imply causulation I know..)
@paul23 That's a wrong impression.
Not sure how many static languages with GC have you used then
Java? C#? Haskell?
OCaml?
Xeo
Xeo
@BartekBanachewicz C++ with UE ;__;
@BartekBanachewicz Well I've used java a bit in the past, and still need to study C# when I have time..
*out = (char *)malloc(data.size());
if (out == NULL)
Xeo
Xeo
lol
fail
13:49
Good job tibco, checking pointer after writing to it
@paul23 do you also need to think about correct use of memory in them?
@Mr.kbok it checks if the malloc failed?
But I found python to be much more relaxing to write in than java. Difficult to pinpoint exactly where though.
@BartekBanachewicz That was probably the intention yes
Xeo
Xeo
@BartekBanachewicz Look closer.
13:50
out is char**
@BartekBanachewicz I only used java "to learn programming" during highschool (over 10 years ago) so can't remember.
Xeo
Xeo
Either they wanted to check if out exists, which means they need to put the if before the assignment, or they want to check if malloc failed, which means they need to indirect through out.
@paul23 then I can't see how you've formed your perceived correlation
Well I wouldn't call java/C# particularly high level.
I'd call them now level nowadays.
Xeo
Xeo
> now level
user1804599
13:52
I like how the Go compiler used to do memory management when it was still written in C.
user1804599
Use malloc, never call free, terminate quickly, call it a day and go home.
Xeo
Xeo
lol
scrubs
Anyways I really got to study this stuff
user1804599
@Xeo Pragmatism!
user1804599
Some thoughts on Blatter v #Scala --> http://leastthing.blogspot.com/2015/06/blatter-vs-scala.html
user1804599
13:54
dat pun
@Xeo I stick to nigh-level programming. In fact, I almost wrote a program this morning!
Xeo
Xeo
heh
I'm currently doing sigh-level coding, thanks to UE.
Is that preferable to sow-level?
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton Also, I didn't get around to coding on the weekend for some reason :<
@Xeo It’s probably all that overrated 'sleep'.
Xeo
Xeo
13:59
I didn't actually get to sleep all that much
I thought I could spend Saturday coding, but then Saturday went by in a breeze, and Sunday was D&D...
@LucDanton ooh all nighters to make programs
fun stuff :P
Xeo
Xeo
I need to get back to coding that stuff fast, or it'll just accumulate dust for another 6 months.

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