« first day (1800 days earlier)      last day (3378 days later) » 

09:03
4
Q: What does weak static typing/strong dynamic typing mean?

Louis RhysFor most of my career, I've been working with strong static typed languaged such as Java. For this reason, probably I've mixed up these two typing dimension (strongness and staticness). I came upon this link, which says that they are actually orthogonal dimension. I read it, but still can't under...

> The terms strongly typed and weakly typed dont have a agreed-upon definition. Therefore, unless you define what you mean by "strongly typed" and "weakly typed", it is impossible to answer your question. It makes a "great" argument in a flamewar, because whenever someone is proven wrong, they can just redefine the terms to mean whatever they want them to mean. Other than that, the terms serve no real purpose.
heh :)
that’s weakly commented
I should probably work on the doc-tool again.
I don't know how to make the Sphinx API though.
> strongly typed = my programming language / weakly typed = your programming language
best definition ever :)
I looked around and some people complain that autodoc isn't "auto" enough. Others want something else. etc.
It's a tough world out there.
As soon as you have more than 1 user, you're in trouble.
09:06
I didn't mind the fact that I had to do e.g. .. autoclass:: myclass or whatever.
This chat favicon pisses me off.
> strongly typed = what I understand / weakly typed = what I don't understand
lol
They marked it as fixed in meta.
But I still see the shitty white pixels.
> I saw Martin Odersky's "The Trouble with Types" presenstaion.
I want to see that presenstaion, too!
that’s weakly typed as well
@fredoverflow You make it sound like OO can't be pure.
09:13
@Puppy "Pure" is another one of those words that I learned to dismiss. I don't see any value in something being "pure".
@fredoverflow Well, strictly, you just said "no side-effects" which is basically what I currently understand as "pure", more or less.
Has anyone here used Sphinx autodoc before?
Yeah, typically people imply "OO = side-effects all over the place".
The only one I can think of is @LucDanton
09:14
@Rapptz yeah
What do you think about it etc?
I'm not sure how I should make the Sphinx directive work.
@fredoverflow IMO that's their fault ;p
Also I found out there's something called sphinx-summary.
It’s handy for quick-n-dirty docjobs.
09:16
although to be fair
shit's more complicated than I gave it credit to lol
@Rapptz doesn’t seem very sexy when put like that
it is true that my primary personal project is currently working in a domain where the basic principle is more or less a pure function
I might stick with .. autoclass and stuff.
Add .. autofile instead of .. automodule or something.
but the thing is that name is reserved by sphinx-autodoc so I need to come up with something else :v
.. automagic
09:20
heh
creativity dictates that I just prefix it with cpp :>
bloomin' power cuts... grumble grumble
@Rapptz I did, but it was a long time ago.
thoughts?
@Puppy no more wide?
@JohanLarsson That is what I am currently working on
09:32
ok
@Rapptz It worked quite well. I mean, it simply barfed a documentation from docstrings, but that's more or less what we'd expect it to do. At least it could be included somewhere in the free-style documentation to complete it.
user1804599
Oh cool new TempleOS release.
@Morwenn Yeah that's what I like about it too.
This is the first SO question you get when you google "sphinx autodoc":
77
Q: Sphinx autodoc is not automatic enough

Cory WalkerI'm trying to use Sphinx to document a 5,000+ line project in Python. It has about 7 base modules. As far as I know, In order to use autodoc I need to write code like this for each file in my project: .. automodule:: mods.set.tests :members: :show-inheritance: This is way too tedious b...

@Rapptz I kept using Sphinx since then, but I don't use autodoc anymore.
For Python?
09:34
For C++.
When markdown isn't enough.
Oh. Well. Autodoc for C++ doesn't exist.
:v
But if I had a serious Python project again, I would probably use Sphinx with autodoc again :p
@Rapptz Yeah I have some apidoc magic in the Makefile.
user1804599
Forever laughing at software that can't traverse directories recursively.
damn it m8 you're part of the problem
user1804599
09:36
lol @ many glob implementations
At least glob is fixed in Python 3.5.
user1804599
Python 3.4 already supported recursive glob.
eh, maybe I’ll switch away from it if/when I settle on the package structure—in the meantime it’s convenient to check my docstrings are correct enough
user1804599
But it's a separate function that allows that.
user1804599
09:37
Z shell globbing is so fucking nice.
user1804599
It can filter on file type, has a case-insensitive option, backreferences, negation, recursion, can filter on permissions, can sort, supports lots of modifiers
user1804599
I wonder if it's Turing-complete.
user1804599
@JohanLarsson lol
Hi guys! Can somebody please point me in the right direction with this problem I'm trying to solve?
user1804599
09:44
Sure.
Woohoo :D
user1804599
Go this direction: Stack Overflow.
I was thinking more like keywords I should use to find the solution
I wasn't
user1804599
'stack' and 'overflow'
09:49
@FredOverflow: In fact, I have a problem right now which is caused by having a small piece of code based around side effects.
user1804599
In Haskell you never have that problem. :3
everybody has legacy code
not rightfold, he always works on new stuff
I'd more say that that's mostly because he doesn't have code, therefore none of it can be legacy ;p
Is LLVM Roslyn for c++?
09:53
not a chance
watching a video about it
have read about it in so many places
user1804599
hey I'm writing a compiler for legacy code!
LLVM has little to do with C++
it's Clang that has all the C++ stuff in it
and I assure you that they are no Roslyn
TIL of undefined in Haskell.
user1804599
09:56
clang is Roslyn for C++, except without the Ros and without the lyn.
hmm
That makes no sense lol
if you have an import at module scope (which is not the global module), I parse the import, accept it, and then totally ignore it.
user1804599
I presume Roslyn's API is not incredibly shit.
user1804599
Although I cannot be sure until I take a look, which I should.
09:57
I have not used it much
@Rapptz I thought you knew some Haskell
I've never seen undefined be mentioned before.
user1804599
undefined is literally error "undefined".
Did you ever see weird _|_’s before?
It's bottom
user1804599
09:58
haha it even looks like a bottom if you squint hard enough
hardcore
@Rapptz like here, does that ring a bell?
Oh nah I get it.
> It is equivalent to (take n xs, drop n xs) when n is not _|_ (splitAt _|_ xs = _|_).
Nearly the same thing as undefined, although they come from different angles and are used in different contexts (although not always).
I forgot I don't have ghc
10:01
splitting _|_ sounds painful
user1804599
Bottom is a value that when evaluated doesn't halt.
Nowadays though I’d suggest using holes rather than undefined for prototyping (its typical purpose).
user1804599
so it always throws or loops forever
Well, I guess holes are different still and undefined has its place.
user1804599
Luc why aren't you a totality zealot?
10:05
I wonder if the new source location dynamic variable thingy will be used for undefined now, I’m sick of *** Prelude.undefined.
@Griwes Time to make a proposal.
Can’t recall or find a good tutorial on undefined, sad
wiki.haskell.org/Bottom I just read this
and made sense to me
It mentions (actual) bottom but barely glosses over its uses. I hope the equations above were helpful.
Another example is that bool 3 ⊥ False ==> 3.
(I had to lookup argument order lol)
hmm
kinda awkward to find unit testing stuff for C++ that covers all platforms and integrates with Visual Studio
10:18
undefined :: (?callStack :: CallStack) => a
undefined =  error "Prelude.undefined"
Apparently it’s a WIP
10:42
@R.MartinhoFernandes hey guy... I think I asked this before... but those screens, can I daisy chain them at all, or does each one need it's own power and video cable?
o_0 I'm feeling rather stupid right now... what's the pattern for having like an 'int' for some sort of ID type, but making it an actually 'ID' type?
just struct thing_id{ int id; };?
using thing_id = int; or typedef?
@Puppy yeah that's an awkward goal.
Cross platform ide rocks
@ScarletAmaranth that prevents fn_that_takes_foo_id(fn_that_returns_bar_id()) right?
@thecoshman you mean whether they're interchangeable? yes, typedefs are weak by default; they will "convert" implicitly
that's not true.
they are the same type, there is no conversion.
@ScarletAmaranth do you think the ideas here are worth the effort?
both using and typedef simply give the type a new name, there is no new type or type conversion going on.
@Puppy are yeah, that's what I sort of thought
user1804599
10:57
@fredoverflow :P
just not sure if simple giving the type another name is enough...
user1804599
yay my compiler can compile calls
nope
it's not enough and it's also fairly pointless
This is great, once you plonk 5 people, it just hits you that you really could plonk a few more. Then poof, you end up with 15 on your plonk list
integer IDs are only really useful if you want some more restricted requirements like binary interoperation between address spaces.
otherwise just use a pointer which does not have this problem.
10:58
well, it's nicer to have foo(x_id) opposed to foo(int) gives you some idea of what you want to pass to foo, just doesn't force you to do so.
@chmod711telkitty Is anybody not on your plonklist by now? :)
@thecoshman if you need a strong typedef of sorts, sure
@thecoshman It's nicer to just not have foo(integer_id) at all.
user1804599
Tool is great.
@Puppy well this is for a lookup
10:59
@fredoverflow is she not on anybodys plonklist? (she's missing from yours)
uh huh.
user1804599
@thecoshman use Go.
@elyse no
@fredoverflow you will be surprised by the amount of people on this chat ...
@ScarletAmaranth She's on my plonklist
@thecoshman Then it's not really an ID at all, is it?
it's a key.
user1804599
@fredoverflow lol
user1804599
Raw meat is del.icio.us.
11:01
Still wonder whether I should plonk more, like elyse. But I think I will stop right here before this chat becomes mute
@Puppy it's like a db table 'id'. I have a voxel grid of these IDs, and I'd use them to look up the properties.
then keep the ID as an implementation detail of your smart handle/pointer class
user1804599
Ænema is a great song.
Oh this is interesting.
libclang doesn't give you the value for non-static member initialisation
You just get a CursorKind.FIELD_DECL with no children cursors.
@Puppy ah true, if I query for the cube at a certain co-ord, it should just return me the properties of the cube, rather than the id that I then have to use to get the propoties
user1804599
11:04
that's nice :)
Seems like a pain lol.
user1804599
@thecoshman can you have multiple cubes at the same coords?
@elyse no
user1804599
can a cube move from one coord to another?
@elyse How is cuba formed?
user1804599
11:06
@fredoverflow In Soviet Russia, Cuba forms you!!
@elyse not really, I'd have you remove the cube at the old co-ord and then add it to the new location.
user1804599
Then remove IDs altogether; cubes can be uniquely identified by their coordinates.
What if there's two cubes at the exact same location?
user1804599
Unnecessary surrogate keys add unnecessary complexity making them confusing and difficult to work with (I know from experience).
user1804599
1 min ago, by thecoshman
@elyse no
11:07
sry
user1804599
       identification division.
       program-id. call1.

       procedure division.
           display "in call1"
           call call2
           display "back in call1"
           goback
           .
user1804599
this compiles now :D
Why would you want to compile COBOL? Are you suicidal?
@thecoshman For an integral type you can actually use a scoped enum for this, but yeah those dummy structs is what I typically go with.
user1804599
Because the only other FOSS COBOL implementation doesn't target JavaScript.
11:12
@elyse but the base type of 'stone' would have some properties, I don't want to store that over and over, so instead I have co-ord to 'cube type id'
I already have a 'get by co-ord'
user1804599
Now I've lost you.
but currently, for each co-ord I make a unique instance of a cube
I want to avoid that by just saying what type of cube it is, by a single id
> I believe Ray Kurzweil predicts the Singularity will hit around 2039-ish, and at that point computers will (theoretically) begin to invent ways of improving themselves. At that point, all bets are off. Most people, including Mr. Kurzweil, predict that when computers start to upgrade themselves, they will do so at a rate much faster than that of Moore's Law. Too fast, in fact, for a regular human to comprehend.
lol AI
there was this article about some guy who built an AI to come up with a circuit design that was efficient
and the circuit ended up being impossible to understand by the guy
removing seemingly unused things would make it not work anymore etc.
The good news is that we’re doing a good job of uploading all that pornography, so hopefully that will tilt the AI towards common interests.
3
11:16
lol imagine an AI tasked to create the most porn it can
enslaving all humans with the purpose of porn
Why did @fred link that
user1804599
@thecoshman like Minecraft does
Anyway I'm back in Poland
@BartekBanachewicz The Mr. Bean video? Because I saw you mention Steak tartare ;)
@thecoshman it's flyweight
11:17
@AlexM. Was it, in fact, substantially more efficient?
user1804599
But yes, that's not cube IDs. That's cube type IDs.
> star trek
> steak tartare
11:18
@elyse I think so
Anyway I had a nice trip
user1804599
Name your cube type type "cube_type" instead of "cube".
Nothing happens as a result of nothing. Computers will start to upgrade themselves after we taught them how to upgrade themselves.
user1804599
And then store pointers to cube_type objects in your 3D array.
@elyse yes yes, sorry
@elyse pointers you say?
user1804599
11:18
well why not?
Someone said pointers
Burn him
So basically they can not do what we can not do ourselves.
user1804599
class cube_type { ... };
cube_type* cubes[n][n][n];
well... to save/load I'd have to convert to a concrete ID... but for run time that makes sense I guesss
Lol triple array
user1804599
11:19
ooh serialisation, yeah then use IDs
Use the unordered maps
user1804599
but don't confuse cubes and cube types, that'll be confusing
@elyse well at save/load I just need to get the cube_type_pointer and work out a unique name for it,maybe like "core::stone" and store that
@BartekBanachewicz yeah, doing that
user1804599
@Morwenn I like her facial expression in the second pane.
user1804599
11:21
@thecoshman the nice thing about using cube_type pointers in memory is that you don't have stringly-typed/intly-typed APIs.
@elyse .______.
@elyse TIL: confusing things is confusing
> Collection nodes (sequences and maps) act somewhat like STL vectors and maps:
uh, can you be more vague
"act somewhat like"
@elyse that's true. though if I do like voxel_grid.get_cube_at(co_ord) I can just return the actual cube/cube_type itself. the whole 'id' 'pointer' thing is hidden in this voxel_grid class
user1804599
yes
11:23
@Mr.kbok Read "we implemented begin and end with some iterator-like stuff".
user1804599
that's fine too, as IDs are an implementation detail
user1804599
but don't pass IDs all over the place
@Morwenn lol that's not any better -_-
I know, right :D
@elyse yeah, I should be able to hide that
11:23
Why can't people just implement concepts?
because "act somewhat like" also means "act sometimes unlike"
but I think I'll use 'ids' still... as I think the idea of being able to have a class that can be like a registry makes sense too. You can use it to look up cube_types by certain properties
but again... that could have just pointers to cube_types too
that
sounds like LINQ but shittier
because ~effort~
Wait, there's seperate reddits for cprogramming and C_Programming?
user1804599
11:27
@fredoverflow Only C programmers could do this
And truecprogramming as well, no doubt
@elyse sort off yeah
user1804599
@thecoshman don't make things pointlessly dynamic if doing so is pointless.
lol a few decades late there
the post below that one is too good to post
> Help in a little lab! plz (self.C_Programming)
this is a great subreddit
noice
am I the only one to find that reddits website looks ... very childish - the graphic design that is
11:31
> The best free way for a beginner to learn C is have someone teach it to you for free that knows what they are talking about.
This is going to be a long Sunday...
(Why is a beginner writing a program with thousands of lines of code?)
> /*****************************************************************************
* Variable Dictionary:
Oh boi
Actually, I probably shouldn't mock them as they at least get something done
reminds me one of those dilbert strips where wally tells the boss that he could save some memory by saving all documents in smaller fonts
Just realized CppCon had already started.
@ʎǝɹɟɟɟǝſ that's js programmers. C programmers are hardly productive
C and especially embedded C world is 20 years behind the industry
I bet there are still c codebases versioned on ftp with excel issue tracking
11:46
hello all
user1804599
unversioned
user1804599
with no issue tracking
That's what I said
@BartekBanachewicz I can at least confirm that there are still excel issue tracking.
11:49
I guess I'm too unexperienced or young or both to know what excel issue tracking is.
user1804599
I excel at issue tracking.
It's probably not issue tracking with the Microsoft Excel program, which is what I thought initially.
@Morwenn excellent
@ʎǝɹɟɟɟǝſ It isn't? That's what I thought as well.
@fredoverflow Fortunately, I did not experience that (I had to deal with Jazz though), but a friend of mine did.
Hmm, this seems to be a nice lecture series on C.
user1804599
11:56
OK time to think of how to implement pass-by-reference when compiling to JS.
user1804599
class Reference<T> {
    constructor(public value: T) { }
}

function f(x: Reference<number>) {
    x.value += 2;
}

var x = 0;
var xRef = new Reference<number>(x);
f(xRef);
x = xRef.value;
user1804599
quite a boring video
@elyse Not really gonna work, since f could store the reference and mutate it again later
user1804599
12:10
No, it can't.
user1804599
I never generate code that does that.
well then that makes life easier ;p
I wonder what this string type is...
Probably a typedef for char*
@fredoverflow He looks like an awesome teacher
user1804599
He looks like the kind of guy who thinks TED talks are a "wonderful phenomenon".
12:24
wtf my program silently crashes when invoked normally, runs perfectly fine through gdb
Did not expect this..., but nice surprise I think?
@набиячлевэлиь UB
user1804599
I'll first implement BY VALUE. That's easier.
...or it's loading the wrong DLL
yep, it was loading the wrong DLL
The one bundled with GnuPG vs the one provided by the cimpoler
Lounge<FredOnReddit>
Freddit
user406009
@fredoverflow That's pretty darn correct though.
user406009
Scala is endless.
Scala is amazing.
user406009
@AlexM. You changed your gravatar!
@Lalaland no...
really?
user406009
12:47
Didn't you used to have one that looked exactly like Rapptz's avatar? Or was that someone eles?
i have yet to figure out some of the CS-theoretic descriptions in its spec thou, but it's certainly nicer than C++ IMO
user406009
@JohannesSchaub-litb Yeah, but you have to admit that Scala is a very complicated language.
user406009
user image
3
@Lalaland only if you use the more complicated features IMO. in C++ you are more or less forced to use them to be productive
12:49
I know less than 10% of English words therefore English sucks.
gj blizzard
user1804599
@StackedCrooked puppy
@Borgleader I guess you could say the news...
... broke the web view
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY
c'mon it was funny
breaking news, get it
you forgot to put on sunglasses, but bravo nonetheless :P
I think one possible plus of using C is that it does not allow you to create a clusterfuck of abstractions as quickly as C++ allows you to. So you are forced to think "smaller" and write more straightforward code.
12:54
No, you're forced to write error-checking code, which will be 90% of what you write
huh. nope, C also has longjmp
no need for error checking, just like with c++ exceptions
Or not simply skip the error checking code.
longjmp is a great way to create bugs yes
the problem with C isn't the code you did write; it's the code you didn't write
> sure, no problem. i'm probably pretty boring, but since
i don't read romanian, you can make things up...
@fredoverflow hehe.
12:55
type-safe code, error checking code, resource handling code, etc
I want to use longjmp now.
no, longjump can be a great way to create bugs, just like anything else can aswell. like c++ exceptions, danglign references, null pointers, etc
there's nothing inherently wrong with longjmp in C
longjmp is garbage and not a standard way to handle errors
Hi all.
Hi.
12:57
it's most probably not garbage, otherwise it would not have been standardized and not yet been deprecated
I wonder why my question was down voted. I edited it a bit now to make it better.
Also, you cannot be pedantic and store the result of setjmp.
stackoverflow.com/questions/32672313/cube-faces-get-overwritten-by-hidden-surfac‌​es
Oh for fuck's sake
It makes control flow much harder to determine, it doesn't allow you to destroy locals
besides me beeing a moron and running into a seemingly beginner trap - why is the question bad?
12:58
@Johannes Turn on depth testing.
The only correct way to handle errors in C is local goto
there's no need to destroy locals in C, because there are no destructors
Bullshit
destroying locals is a simple means of freeing memory
Bullshit also
free() is a destructor for malloc()
fclose is a destructor for fopen
user406009
12:59
^
@Nooble - i did sole it now, and i do understand the issue. But why is the question unworthy for stackoverflow. Should i delete it?
And you cannot fucking free memory when you longjmp out of the function
you can handle these perfectly with a chained longjump
Hahahahahahahahaha you have got to be fucking kidding me
user406009
@Johannes The main problem is that people want simple, isolated examples in StackOverflow questions.

« first day (1800 days earlier)      last day (3378 days later) »