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14:00
nobody is talking about JS
@GregorMcGregor I don’t understand
js as a platform is becoming pretty decent
Now we are
take that bartek
the language not so much (imho)
WebAssembly isn't JS.
user1804599
14:00
@Mr.kbok No, it's still terrible.
I don't give jack shit about JS
but the platform is good.
@Elyse alternatives?
What I like about javascript is how it's consistently shit across platforms
user1804599
Still no green threads and weak references.
user1804599
There are no alternatives. That doesn't make it good.
14:01
clojurescript is not so bad
@Elyse Eco-friendly multithreading is reasonably new
user1804599
It is. You get the terribleness of Clojure combined with the terribleness of JavaScript.
user1804599
It's terribleness squared.
clojure as a language is sane though
user1804599
Just when you thought Clojure couldn't get any worse, you mixed JavaScript into it.
14:01
@LucDanton I know it's quite subtle
@GregorMcGregor it's also coming to webassembly eventually
eventually being "a few years", but still
Yes you know what else is coming eventually
So, is there any good Lisp dialect then?
that's right, your mom
user1804599
> BOSTON—According to a study published Monday in The New England Journal Of Medicine, getting smacked right across the mouth with a goddamn tree branch really fucking sucks, but after a minute or so, you're pretty much fine.
user1804599
14:03
de ui
user1804599
@Morwenn I know two lisps and they're both awful (Clojure and Emacs Lisp).
user1804599
I have heard good things about Racket.
If you guys want to learn proper french, you can train on this excellent magazine
@Mr.kbok Such good news there
I think it's time for two other coffees.
user1804599
14:07
However, Racket confuses a lack of value with the empty list, which already limits my enthusiasm to zero.
many LISPs have argued historically over that point, right?
I'm no expert, but wasn't that how certain families of LISP were differentiated
user1804599
Common Lisp uses different namespaces for values and functions, which is also horrible.
Too bad. Lisp doesn't look like a bad idea in the big picture.
LISP is a great idea! It's been used to do a bunch of foundational research into the nature of computation!
user1804599
Homoiconicity is great.
user1804599
14:13
XSLT is my favourite homoiconic programming language.
It has too many syllables.
TIL about homoiconicity
neat idea, imagine making C++ programs aware of the structure of a function. lole
probably wouldn't go great
@MaxDeLiso that's expression templates.
lel
@Mr.kbok i thought it was shellcode!
lule!
14:17
shellcodes?
yea, injected assembly to spawn a shell. the exploited program isn't aware of it being used to describe a function, but it is...
it's called compiling
@GregorMcGregor Some people got wasted this weekend
Never understood what's special about LISPs to be honest
Wohoo, code is data is code.
Wooop dee doo
14:23
@Jefffrey that's why it's special
metaprogramming is one thing LISPs are appreciated for
because you don't understand what's special about it
snowflakes are special
Only litel ones
no one said they were useful :D
14:23
and preesias
std::special_snoflek
Should I bring back presius Y/N
rings a bell
FY (Hint: Y = You)
can't remember
14:24
who's presius
whos that
lol memegenerator.com blocked as questionable fuck off company firewall
@GregorMcGregor no
I want to eat lemon sorbet.
14:25
memegenerator.com blocked reason: questionable fuck off company firewall
@Morwenn my favourite :D
but it's winter
fuck off you too onebox
@GregorMcGregor oh lol that was you
I missed one character damn
@Mr.kbok I don't care. I won't wait for good weather or high temperatures.
14:27
@Morwenn you can wait p long where your are :p
OK I've made a decision
@AndyProwl ummm there's been a lot
I don't even remember them all
HTML5 will be
I'm going to revisit Potato Empires
@GregorMcGregor need list
14:27
And rewrite its client in Haskell
Hate your padawan will be
I'll see if I get any gains by doing that
namely if additional build and api complexity won't outweigh language benefits
It's good that we have a working JS client as a ref implementation though
will be easier to compare
I want to hear someone that is against this.
This is the lounge FFS
"Sorry for the inconvenience caused, but cabal install doesn't work right now for whatever reason."
@MaxDeLiso excuse me?
actual error message perhaps?
14:30
i was just quoting that page here:
Why are you quoting barket
I honestly can't tell if that's an elaborate bit of sarcasm or not
It was not
@MaxDeLiso no, there was a bug IIRC in Cabal at that time
so you had to do all the steps separately
user1804599
14:33
BAR
TEK
kop tek
user1804599
hiLRiOus
@ElimGarak yum
14:34
Considering int x = 0;, can &x be considered an iterator?
@Jefffrey no, but both pointers and iterators can be considered references.
user1804599
Yes.
@Jefffrey yes
user1804599
And so can &x + 1.
@Elyse But that could cause UB
user1804599
14:35
No.
Or at least overflow
user1804599
It's allowed.
@Jefffrey Going one-past is ok
user1804599
No, it won't overflow.
@AnalPhabet Only in arrays
user1804599
14:35
No, always.
user1804599
54 mins ago, by Elyse
@Ell std::transform(&cond, &cond + 1, &cond, std::logical_not<>());
@Jefffrey normal verbibols are arrays, too
user1804599
Here, cond is a bool.
Quoting yourself is not... like... of any help whatsoever
user1804599
The behaviour of that statement is well-defined.
14:36
and that's how you write Traversable in C++
user1804599
See also the C++ standard.
> If both the pointer operand and the result point to elements of the same array object, or one past the last element of the array object, the evaluation shall not produce an overflow; otherwise, the behavior is undefined.
Raise
@Jefffrey Where
§5.7/4
14:39
@Jefffrey The International Standard doesn't use that format
lol [expr.add]/4
user1804599
12
Q: Is the "one-past-the-end" pointer of a non-array type a valid concept in C++?

Bernhard KauslerThe C++ standard [sec 5.7] says: If both the pointer operand and the result point to elements of the same array object, or one past the last element of the array object, the evaluation shall not produce an overflow; otherwise, the behavior is undefined. So, am I correct in assuming that...

It's 5.7.4
@Jefffrey See footnote 84
@AnalPhabet lol
Heee heee heee
> 84) An object that is not an array element is considered to belong to a single-element array for this purpose; see 5.3.1
You suck
14:44
enum class partial_ordering { less, unordered, greater };
enum class weak_ordering { less, equivalent, greater };
enum class total_ordering { less, equal, greater };
Okay, at least those are not integers.
user1804599
What is the difference between the latter two?
It's a matter of semantics I guess.
user1804599
> In mathematics, two objects, especially systems of axioms or semantics for them, are called cryptomorphic if they are equivalent but not obviously equivalent.
user1804599
awesome
So that we have to actually think before using a total or a weak order.
user1804599
14:46
What is a weak order and what is a total order?
Oh.
In a total order, you either have a > b, a < b or a = b.
user1804599
Is there also a bodybuilder order?
In a weak order, a and b may be equivalent wrt the comparison but not equal.
No, but there's an order to stop lame puns
user1804599
@Morwenn What is a common example of a weak ordering?
14:48
Like, you use 2 out of 3 fields of a structure to compare them. In the end, even if the instances end up being equivalent, they may not be equal.
it's like total ordering but "with ties"
(so it's not total ordering)
user1804599
@Morwenn Awesome1
Awesome!!1!!1!one
@Elyse I'm actually surprised you didn't know about that ._.
user1804599
Rust has only Ord and PartialOrd.
user1804599
14:49
fn partial_cmp(&self, other: &Rhs) -> Option<Ordering>;
user1804599
I think distinguishing between total and weak orders is hardly ever useful.
user1804599
In programs.
user1804599
When'd you use a weak ordering?
user1804599
Use a different equality comparison function.
In mathematics, especially order theory, a weak ordering is a mathematical formalization of the intuitive notion of a ranking of a set, some of whose members may be tied with each other. Weak orders are a generalization of totally ordered sets (rankings without ties) and are in turn generalized by partially ordered sets and preorders. There are several common ways of formalizing weak orderings, that are different from each other but cryptomorphic (interconvertable with no loss of information): they may be axiomatized as strict weak orderings (partially ordered sets in which incomparability is a...
user1804599
14:55
:(
From Lawrence Crowl's paper, it seems that weak ordering is needed for inconsistent normal sort, and I have no idea what it means.
Xeo
Xeo
AAAAAAH, stupid SO chat not autoscrolling
lol
You don't have a Gold Account?
Damn I'm so slacking off
15:09
same here
And I'm hungry
user1804599
@Mr.kbok fapfapfap
@Jefffrey in case you were really curious and didn't just drop that message stackoverflow.com/questions/267862/…
user1804599
Apparently Google has a tool called "oracle".
user1804599
15:12
inb4 lawsuit
holy crap
potato empires actually happened a year ago
time flies so fast
@Elyse didn't know you were into 2d.
user1804599
I amn't.
@Mr.kbok That's nothing. Now there's VR porn
@Rerito thats technically 3d
user1804599
15:18
HoloLens porn.
@Mr.kbok On steroids (wise wording here)
user1804599
YoloLens.
Haha, I just realized that vergesort actually relies on both merging, partition, selection and insertion. The only general sorting technique it doesn't rely on is exchanging.
user1804599
My compiler won't generate JavaScript code.
user1804599
15:22
I'm going with a VM again.
user1804599
Because I need TCO and threads.
lol there's a Spanish football team called Deportivo Moron
user1804599
XD
deported moron
user1804599
Flag of South Africa is really nice.
15:36
That one? :D
user1804599
No, the current one.
user1804599
This one is awful.
Yeah, this one just looks like they tried real-life flagception.
It would have been cool if recursive
the middle flag should have contained a rotated copy of the whole flag
user1804599
15:41
TIL errno is implemented using TLS.
user1804599
How else would it be implemented?
user1804599
#define errno (*__errno_location())
I didn't reaize that it could have thread problems. Probably because I never user it.
user1804599
Multiple threads can use errno concurrently.
@Elyse nice
15:44
It won't be a problem with floating point exceptions pragma, right? :D
user1804599
Unless it involves strtok, you're probably fine.
@AlexM. I see
meh
double d[n];
float f[n];
{
    #pragma STDC FENV_EXCEPT TRY FE_DIVBYZERO, FE_OVERFLOW
    for (i=0; i<n; i++) {
        f[i] = 1.0 / d[i];
    }
}
{
    #pragma STDC FENV_EXCEPT CATCH FE_DIVBYZERO
    printf("divide by zero \n");
}
Buttiful.
user1804599
cool
user406009
@Morwenn What happens when you try doing contexpr calculations inside that pragma?
15:51
So basically, C is adding #pragma-based floating-point specific exceptions to the language.
user406009
Actually, I guess that could work.
@Lalaland Compile-time error because C doesn't know constexpr :D
user1804599
#include __TIME__
@Elyse is this some kind of fixed point recursive joke?
user1804599
Yes.
15:56
To sum up: the C decimal TS adds many new floating-point types to the language, a shitload of new functions and a crapload of new floating point pragmas. Seems reasonable.
user1804599
Y combinator.
yeah
but why the MIT thing around?
user1804599
@Morwenn awesome decimals
user1804599
C > C++
@Morwenn what the
15:57
@Elyse C++ already has all the wording ready to adopt them as soon as C adopts them :D
Ell
Ell
@Morwenn c is an ugly POS

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