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16:00
@AndyProwl They used them to make a calendar! How the hell is that opposition at all?
lol
@AndyProwl The problem is that the two are compatible and Galileo was a poor scientist in that respect.
@Ven I assumed you might have typoed your username as well on that question :)
As Jerry said, his theory was severely flawed (on top of all that, it predicted things that were not observed), and yet he held on to it because it was what he wanted to believe, I guess.
@thecoshman It's Esc for me, but that's not indicative of anything... What's your "Host" key?
16:04
Has a prof ever given you an unsolved problem as homework?
Can I get one or two more opinions on this before I suffer defeat?
1
Q: Should I initialize C structs via parameter, or by return value?

Trevor HickeyThe company I work at is initializing all of their data structures through an initialize function like so: //the structure typedef struct{ int a,b,c; } Foo; //the initialize function InitializeFoo(Foo* const foo){ foo->a = x; //derived here based on other data foo->b = y; //derived ...

@R.MartinhoFernandes How are they compatible? The Sun is not gravitating around the Earth
I'm sorry but what's wrong with a simple constructor? — Jefffrey 48 secs ago
@nabijaczleweli r-ctrl
@AndyProwl OH IT FUCKING IS
FFS
16:07
what?
oh yeah, it's just 'home'
This is what pisses me off here.
@AndyProwl Here's the thing: the geocentric model is right (to measurement accuracy).
0
Q: Determine if a graph contains a triangle?

Mohammad Ali BaydounThis problem has an easy solution if our target time complexity is O(|V| * |E|) or O(V^3) and the like. However, my professor recently gave us an assignment with the problem statement being: Let G = (V, E) be a connected undirected graph. Write an algorithm that determines if G contains a tri...

I swear, this is the second time my professor does this
Ven
Ven
@sehe ...what.
@AndyProwl Newton's third law.
FFS
16:08
lol
On his first exam, I had to explain how a question is unsolvable in the desired complexity
@R.MartinhoFernandes so the Sun and all the planets orbit around the Earth?
@AndyProwl it is, just very slightly
(My anger is not directed at you; just in general against "antigeos")
Because if it could, we could have comparison-based sorting in O(N)
16:09
@thecoshman You know that's not what I meant
@AndyProwl Yes, they do.
In the Hipparchian and Ptolemaic systems of astronomy, the epicycle (literally: on the circle in Greek) was a geometric model used to explain the variations in speed and direction of the apparent motion of the Moon, Sun, and planets. In particular it explained the apparent retrograde motion of the five planets known at the time. Secondarily, it also explained changes in the apparent distances of the planets from Earth. It was first proposed by Apollonius of Perga at the end of the 3rd century BC. It was developed by Apollonius of Perga and Hipparchus of Rhodes, who used it extensively, during the...
@thecoshman Seem to me that any key will do
Seriously, retrograde motion of the planets was known since fucking ever since you can observe it with your own eyes.
Xeo
Xeo
oh, VS'15 is out
@AndyProwl Call the geocentric model "accidentally right". Still works. :P
16:10
Any model would account for it.
@Xeo YESSSSSS
@Griwes It is not accidental.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I don't follow. I do understand that the geometric geocentric model, although ridiculously complicated, works. But what are the forces that make the planets and stars follow those trajectories?
It's quite elaborately designed to be precise (again, for standards of the time).
@R.MartinhoFernandes I mean the theocentric geocentric model.
16:11
@AndyProwl Gravity.
Newton's third law.
I thought Newton showed that gravity implies elliptical orbits
@nabijaczleweli may be
@AndyProwl No.
@AndyProwl Galilean (ha!) invariance.
I dunno, I feel like you're trolling me
well all stars/planets have mass, and anything with mass has a bit of gravitational pull
16:13
@AndyProwl I'm not, I swear.
and everything has an equal and opposite reaction and all that
he's not
@R.MartinhoFernandes Then you're not doing a good job at destroying everything I've been taught, ever
It annoys me that popular culture makes this belief so ingrained :(
@AndyProwl Do you understand Galilean invariance?
@R.MartinhoFernandes That motion is relative?
(Man, why did I not know it was actually Galileo who came up with it before? The irony is palpable)
@AndyProwl Yes.
16:14
I think I do
More importantly, that Newton's laws hold regardless of reference frame.
if the frame is inertial
like, not accelerating or decelerating or something
"Why are physicists bad at threesomes?"
"Because they can't solve the three-body problem"
16:16
For me it's a "No".
Hello there Jefffrey ;~;
jeffrey putting his foot down
@AndyProwl So, if you accept that, you don't even have to understand the complicated mathematics behind it (essentially epicycles and deferents and equants and fuck the geocentric model's insanity).
@Jefffrey I give it a "No", too
You just have to imagine what the planets' motion in the sky looks like from Earth.
Retrograde motion is the apparent motion of a planet to move in a direction opposite to that of other bodies within its system, as observed from a particular vantage point. Direct motion or prograde motion is motion in the same direction as other bodies. While the terms direct and prograde are equivalent in this context, the former is the traditional term in astronomy. The earliest recorded use of prograde was in the early 18th century, although the term is now less common. == Etymology == The term retrograde is from the Latin word retrogradus – "backward-step", the affix retro- meaning "backwards...
16:19
@R.MartinhoFernandes So by a similar account you're saying, that it's not me who is walking to the kitchen, but the universe who accelerates in the opposite direction?
This a better article for three-body problem I wanted: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lagrangian_point
@AndyProwl That's what Galilean invariance is about.
@R.MartinhoFernandes but there's acceleration involved
@AndyProwl depends on which frame of reference you use :)
@R.MartinhoFernandes is this basically the idea that if you have two bodies, with no other reference frame, that can only assume that it is the other that is moving?
Galilean invariance is for inertial systems
if your system is accelerating with respect to another one, then you can tell that you are moving
Just to be clear, I know you're more knowledgeable/clever than me and if I had to bet lots of money on who's right, I'd bet it on you - but I owe it to my own intellect to defend what I think makes sense until I get an understandable explanation of things being different from what I've been told by everyone, ever, all the time.
16:26
@AndyProwl We can treat it as such for this purpose. (There are no inertial frames of reference in the universe; it's all a matter of accuracy)
@AndyProwl nah, just believe every thing you are told, don't question it :{
@R.MartinhoFernandes How can we treat it as such? The earth is accelerating due to the Sun's attraction, just like all other planets. It's not an inertial frame
@thecoshman someone on the internet said it so it must be true
I know about Newton's 3rd law, and I know the Earth also exerts a force on the Sun, like all other planets, but that only slightly modifies its position
"only slightly"
16:28
(due to the disproportionate mass of that thing)
@AndyProwl Then how can you treat the Sun as such?
Same thing.
@AndyProwl What I mean is that the effects are not pronounced enough to matter. I.e. the model is still reasonably accurate if you do (especially when you consider 16th century accuracy)
@R.MartinhoFernandes I learnt f=ma (approximately, bear with me). Now if the same force is applied on one thing with a relatively huge mass and on one thing with a relatively small mass, the former will be subject to a relatively small acceleration, and the latter to a relatively big acceleration
Point being the Earth's position is affected by Sun's gravitational force more than vice versa
...which matters not for the sake of this discussion.
I don't understand what laws gravitation should obey to make it the other way round
@AndyProwl The same.
16:33
@Griwes thank you for not chiming in with a lol, at least
Also for the position to be affected you need a frame of reference.
Otherwise it doesn't make much sense to compare the difference in how they affect themselves.
Well, I'm trying to explain my point of view but I don't think I'm getting counter-explanations in return, just counter-statements. Might be me being stupid. I think I should get back to work
I'm not really sure what you guys are talking about to be honest
@AndyProwl Not enough to matter.
I.e. a terrible idea for space travel, but fine for pre-16th century astronomy.
@nick I'm trying to understand why it is correct to say that the Sun and all other planets orbits around the Earth, rather than vice versa
1 min ago, by Andy Prowl
Well, I'm trying to explain my point of view but I don't think I'm getting counter-explanations in return, just counter-statements. Might be me being stupid. I think I should get back to work
16:37
@AndyProwl How is that not an explanation?
"a terrible idea for space travel, but fine for pre-16th century astronomy."?
It's all about accuracy.
that might be an explanation for geniuses. I'm not one
@AndyProwl What I mean is that the inaccuracies of the model are not a lot if you an astronomer back in Galilean times. They're not a good choice if you want to sent a probe to Pluto, though.
@R.MartinhoFernandes The problem I have with this kind of "short statements" is that they sound like condensed truths that one can agree with after he has already understood it all, but fail to make that person understand what he hasn't understood yet.
16:39
@AndyProwl i guess it's not technically true to say planets orbit around the Earth or the Sun
@nick welcome to the conversation
they orbit around the overall center of mass if that makes sense
@nick I think people are trying to convince me that there are alternative ways of seeing things - up to some degree of accuracy - thanks to which the geocentric model is valid
(not just geometrically)
@AndyProwl Ok. Here then: it has been known since 1859 that Netwon's model cannot explain Mercury's orbit. Does that make it wrong? Who cares. It was useful to predict the positions of planets and goddammit we found Uranus because of that.
had to physically stop myself from making a uranus joke
16:42
@AndyProwl And FWIW, you can certainly make up a model with the Earth in the center that is more accurate; it's just not worth the effort.
am I really that immature
@R.MartinhoFernandes The difference between the Newtonian and the relativistic model sounds much subtler than the one where the Earth orbits around the Sun rather than vice versa
@AndyProwl Yes, but 16th century.
I'm not disputing the fact that the geocentric model allows for accurate predictions, but I don't understand how those weird trajectories can be generated by the laws of physics as I've learned them
@AndyProwl The heliocentric model of Copernicus and the like predicted star parallax. Yet it was not observed until the 19th century.
Things were quite rudimentary.
@AndyProwl How do you not consider the laws of physics broken, then?
@AndyProwl This is essentially a statement that the laws of physics do not match your observations.
(I don't know if you have observed the motion of the planets yourself, but it's actually something you can do with the naked eye)
Mars is quite easy to spot and shows those weird trajectories easy and often (once every two years)
16:45
@R.MartinhoFernandes if you have too much time on your hands yeah
lol that guy who did "performance improvement"
@nick Just a couple minutes every night. Or even less frequent, really.
Tomorrow (depends on timezone actually) is the 46th anniversary of the moon landing.
he switched an int with a std::string in a struct to spare 8 bytes
I want to go to the moon.
16:46
@Nooble Too expensive. Trying going to the moron instead. I can show you a few if you'd like
@R.MartinhoFernandes To be more specific: you can build a model with the earth at the center to an arbitrary level of accuracy--but the complexity increases rapidly.
Ell
Ell
@Mr.kbok lol wat
@Mr.kbok Yes please.
@Ell You know struct x { int a; std::string b; int c };
@Nooble @LighnessRacesInOrbit
3
Ell
Ell
and then stored his number as a string?
16:48
I'm laughing at my own joke it must be very funny
you are such a clever man
@Ell No, he replaced it with struct x { int a; int c; std::string b; };. Spared 8 bytes.
Ell
Ell
Oh I see
@Mr.kbok Mostly it's that you're funny (but a nice shower will take care of that).
@JerryCoffin There's probably a meaning I didn't catch
16:49
@Mr.kbok How does that spare 8 bytes.
@Nooble Presumably allows everything to align without padding being inserted.
8 byte alignment.
@Nooble structs are padded with emptyness
Ahh I see.
So uh our process is going to take up 8gigs of ram, but hey, 8 bytes
16:52
@R.MartinhoFernandes Let's try to rephrase my objection this way: the laws of gravitation imply that the Earth must be moving too, because it is subject to a force. But the geocentric model implies the Earth stands still in the center and everything moves around it. This must conflict with the way gravitation is formulated. Does this make sense?
I hate when people do that. Feels like trolling
It's not the worst though, he replaced an RVO with an out-parameter
@Mr.kbok 8 bytes could make the difference.
@AndyProwl well let's be honest, it just depends on what perspective you use
@Nooble It could, if you make a lot of those objects.
@AndyProwl Er, but so is the Sun.
Newton's gravitation is not biased towards any body.
The law is the same regardless.
16:54
@R.MartinhoFernandes Sure, the Sun also has its position modified by the gravitational attraction of the planets
but the Earth does not stand still in the center of the universe
Er, and neither does the Sun.
I'm not saying it does
@Nooble Funny thing is: the class is actually not used :o)
So why is one harder to accept than the other?
But who cares about dead code right. What matters is performance
16:55
@AndyProwl Although it wasn't really thoroughly codified until Einsten, all motion is relative. It's up to you to choose what you prefer as the "base" and what you prefer to think of as moving relative to it.
dead code performance
@JerryCoffin That was, ironically, Galileo, I just learned.
@Mr.kbok Even more memory saved! O->-<
@Nooble \o/
@JerryCoffin ...as long as the frame of reference is inertial (i.e. not subject to forces)
not the case when gravity is involved
16:56
@AndyProwl Yes, but there's no such thing in the universe.
@Nooble Well, actually, none. No memory saved. 0*8 bytes = 0 bytes saved.
@R.MartinhoFernandes because the position of the Sun is modified much less by the presence of the Earth than the position of the Earth by the presence of the Sun
@Mr.kbok (0<O)/
@AndyProwl Your intuition about the magnitudes involved is wrong.
@Nooble what... what's that
16:57
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yes, he said it too. That was (more or less) the point of the "thoroughly codified". He said it and codified it to some degree, but Einstein did it much more thoroughly.
His arm gets escaped.
I really don't think I can say more without pulling out formulae and doing calculations.
@Mr.kbok A penguin with only one flipper.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I don't get it. 1) f=ma; 2) f on earth = -f on Sun; 3) mass of sun much higher than mass of earth => acceleration of Earth much higher than acceleration of Sun. What's wrong here?
@Nooble You should make a drawing.
17:00
0
A: overloading operator<< for set

JefffreyAs per §5.3: Operator overloading shall not modify the rules for the built-in operators, that is, for operators applied to types for which they are defined by this Standard. So you are not allowed to overload operators where all the arguments are standard types.

@Mr.kbok Maybe when I get home.
amirite? amirong?
urboth
@AndyProwl True, but still only part of the story. It's true that the earth doesn't affect the sun all that much. It's also true that Jupiter (especially) does quite a bit more than most people realize--to the point that the overall center of mass often lies outside the sun, so we're all revolving around a point that's outside any one body (especially true when the planets happen to line up).
@Jefffrey Probably, but that's not the cause of the error.
17:01
@JerryCoffin I don't have problems understanding that, but I do have problems understanding the geocentric view.
@Mr.kbok The error is irrelevant when the code is not standard compliant.
@Jefffrey My point is that the code fails with non-standard types too
@AndyProwl probably because you think you're the center of the universe
heh someone posted the exact same answer
Ell
Ell
I can't remember why I switched from glfw to SDL o.O
17:08
do any high-reppers ask questions on this site?
@nick Come on, I'm not that silly. I'm aware that your mother in bed is the center of the universe
user1804599
let seq x y = func.strict (fun x y -> y) x y;
user1804599
so beautifuk
@AndyProwl ah true, that's where I was conceived
;)
17:09
time to head home
cheers guys
gnite m8
@nick Yes, of course. I've asked some. Johannes Schaub/litb has asked quite a few.
@Jefffrey looks like @NathanOliver tried the hardest so he gets my upvote
#pointsforeffort
wow 5k I can approve tag wiki edits
such privilege
I checked it
wow
i'll probably have that privilege in a few days
if only people stopped dicking around and started upvoting me
17:10
come on it's the exact same answer as mine :(
@nick Me too!
@Mr.kbok yeah but he's got a Live Example
@JerryCoffin is there any privilege you don't already have? :/
@nick If you think you're the center of the universe...you need to spend less time staring at the GPS while you're driving.
@nick Keep me updated
@nick I have no privileges at all--for me, they're rights! :-)
17:15
@Mr.kbok such privilege, much responsibility, wow
@AndyProwl Yeah, but that force is not constant. Does it help if you consider that such forces average out to null over the whole orbit?
Kind of if you think about it like this: the Sun rotates around fast enough that the effects of its gravity more or less end up keeping the Earth in the same place.
@JerryCoffin ...but my destination keeps moving around!
@MartinJames You need more certainty about your true destiny!
Watch a few kung fu movies. They have a lot about crap like that.
@JerryCoffin I think I deserve these rights too
unfortunately other people don't seem to recognize this
@nick There is no think or not think. There is only know with a certainty that precludes all doubt, or else lack the certitude necessary to deserve them.
17:24
@JerryCoffin I am destined for a cold, lonely corner of a country cemetery, with a gravestone inscribed 'This was one exception he couldn't catch'.
9
you're right, I need to work on my iron will
@MartinJames Starbait excepted accepted.
@MartinJames rip should've been a JS programmer
@Mr.kbok you're 4 rep over 5k
a couple downvotes could take it all away
Ell
Ell
hmm
17:30
mhm
Hmm, I thought you could not overload operators for standard types only.
Is this really true that std::ostream& operator<<(std::ostream&, std::vector<int> const&) is valid?
Would make sense for it to be, since The Standard doesn't define an operator<<() for std::vector<T> but it's The Standard, so...
@Jefffrey Even though it's in the standard library, std::vector<T> is a user-defined type, so you can define operator overloads that work on it. What you can't do is define an overload that works exclusively with built-in types, so trying define something like int operator+(int, int) would fail.
Venus' geocentric orbit :D
@MartinJames Catching is easy, handling is harder.
@fredoverflow whence
user1804599
@fredoverflow that while loop would be more clearly written with a label and gotos than with a mutable Boolean and continues.
@JerryCoffin Well, my overload was for std::vector<int>, which doesn't look like a user defined type.
@R.MartinhoFernandes oooh...
@Jefffrey ...but it is. First of all note that std::vector isn't a type in itself at all--it's just a template from which you can create types. It's only the instantiation that becomes an actual type.
Second, note that even if there was an instantiation in the standard library, it would still qualify as a user-defined type.
17:49
@rightfold You can do it without labels and continues. Before:
boolean again = true;
while (again)
{
    again = false;
    ...
    if (whatever)
        again = true;
}
After:
do
{
    ...
    if (whatever)
        continue;
} while (0);
user1804599
awful
I didn't say it was beautiful, I just said you could do it.
user1804599
Having a label named "retry" and gotos which jump to it much more clearly expresses your intent.
@fredoverflow are you fooking joking? do{ stuff(); } while(whatever());
user1804599
@fredoverflow I wrote a compiler last weekend.
17:53
@thecoshman Presumably there is more stuff between the if and the closing brace.
I call it the "continue while false" Design Pattern. Patent pending.
user1804599
struct T { };
try {
    for (;;) {
        if (whatever) {
            continue;
        }
        f();
        throw T();
    }
} catch (T) { }
What happens if some code besides the throw T() we see here throws a T?
@fredoverflow oh sure, move the goalposts why don't you! do{ some_stuff(); bool repeat = whatever(); more_stuff(); } (while(repeat);
user1804599
@fredoverflow it shouldn't.
user1804599
struct T { }; is local and its only purpose is ending the loop.
17:56
if (foo) bar = true; is extremely dumb.
So is if (foo) bar = false;.
@Griwes How about bar |= foo
...unless you want to pessimize the execution. lol
fuck morkdown
The more serious question is "WHY ISN'T THIS BRACED?!".
:P
{
    yourself
}
Since when does indenting require multiple lines?
Ell
Ell
18:02
I am a bad
Ell
Ell
lol the perl one
lol the javascript one
I liked the perl one
> Ruby is difficult to describe. It’s sleek, sexy, and very fun to drive. Here’s a picture. Very trendy.
> When C++ is your hammer, every problem looks like your thumb
@sehe Venus.
sehe-style necroing.
user1804599
> Erlang is a fleet of cars that all cooperate to get you where you want to go. It takes practice to be able to drive with one foot in each of several cars, but once you learn how you can drive over terrain that would be very hard to navigate any other way. In addition, because you're using so many cars, it doesn't matter if a few of them break down.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I realized that all reddit top comments are basically sehe-style jokes, so now when I read them, I hear them all in his voice, thanks to his livestream.
18:20
> COBOL probably seemed like a good idea at the time.
lol
> R is what scientists use when they can't afford MATLAB.
:D
About to try writing a class with Sean Parent -style member functions (i.e. all member functions as free standing friend functions). Wish me luck.
user1804599
No.
2
Trying to decide if this is even worth attempting.
18:28
Why does he do it anyway?
fun and giggles
@caps I have never seen anybody advocating free friends?
I need a haircut.
> Stornierung möglich bis 19 July 2015, 08:00.
lol, I paid nothing and that is yesterday.
I should go.
Here's Pluto, imaged by Cassini.
so where's pluto?
Blown up
18:41
@StackedCrooked Dot in the center.
user1804599
That's not Pluto.
user1804599
It's a picture of pluto.
Only way to see it with simple telescope is likely by detecting the planet's orbit differs from the signs
user1804599
@R.MartinhoFernandes I think this one would look good on you:
user1804599
18:45
that's not pluto
user1804599
that ear looks a bit off though
user1804599
it's either really small or it should be higher
Looks pretty normal to me
user1804599
I dunno
That's just the effect of "removing" the hair there
user1804599
18:47
I need different sunglasses.
user1804599
With the current ones the glasses are too close to my eyes and it's annoying when eyelashes touch them.
@fredoverflow many of these being accurate, I think it became more annoying that it got the crashability of C vs C++ wrong
@rightfold burn the eyelashes (seriously, I have very long lashes and I don't give a damn. Sometimes I need to manually straighten one out when it gets wedged. Is all)
user1804599
no, I won't burn my eyelashes
good
user1804599
that advice is so awful it could've come from me
2
18:51
> Haskell: Guinness. Dark and impenetrable, and beloved by its fans. Scarcely recognizeable as beer by many others.
@rightfold no way, because no one else would ever complain about his lashes interfering with his spectacles
user1804599
spectacular
user1804599
I'm bad at sunglasses.
user1804599
Ray-Ban is too expensive.
user1804599
109 bucks wtf
user1804599
18:54
must be indestructible
> Your Amazon.ca order of "Persuasive Games: The Expressive Power of Videogames" has shipped!
Boosh.

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