« first day (1874 days earlier)      last day (3303 days later) » 

user406009
02:00
@StackedCrooked I guess better explanation is that there are two main uses of threads. One use is to achieve parallelization, ie to run the same algorithm faster by using multiple computing units. The other main use is concurrency. You want to run multiple tasks at the same time.
user406009
Huge amounts of threads are not useful for parallelization as the extra threads do not help add any efficiency.
@jaggedSpire Optimal parallelism is obtained if number of threads == number of cores. And each thread running at 100% cpu usage. If you have a million threads, the reason should not be parallelism LD
user406009
However, they can be useful for concurrency as you can simply spawn one thread per task and the OS will take care of letting them run in parallel.
hello everyone
user406009
@Nathan Welcome to the Lounge!
02:02
@user155407 rekt
@StackedCrooked makes sense
I just heard an ad that used 'plumbing' & 'romance' in the same sentence (from a hardware store), it's so weird.
@Lalaland Yeah, but another use case could be preserving stack frame, registers etc..
@Nathan hello. As you can see, we're extending the drama as much as possible
@Lalaland suuuuup
Ah well.
02:03
@jaggedSpire I can see that obviously... im not suprised
user406009
@Nathan We are all just waiting in here for the ban hammer to finally fall.
sigh
Don't y'all have an RO who could kickban them for moderator impersonation, before it got escalated to staff?
@Lalaland oh boy that sounds fun. :P
so unprofessional guys. :P
user406009
@JeremyBanks That's what we should do.
user406009
02:05
It's sorta like government regulations. They step in when industries fail to regulate themselves.
It's pretty explicitly against the rules of this and most communities.
user406009
@user155407 Some rules are more important than others.
Threads are an illusion is interesting (by Chris Asio Kohlhoff)
but that wasn't really my point -- I just figured you'd do it for the pragmatic reason of avoiding negative attention.
user406009
The no impersonating mods rule is pretty important.
02:06
Pity that the video is bad quality.
@StackedCrooked thanks!
sigh.. Its like I'm in any REGULAR chat room. :P
user406009
@Nathan Most chat rooms are pretty strict about that rule.
user406009
Simply because otherwise you get chaos.
why is your name no longer blue
user406009
02:07
@Prismatic Sockpuppets by fellow Loungers.
@Prismatic troll is troll
also sockpuppet
@Prismatic just flee, flee and return in like a week
3
@Lalaland trolololol
jk
user406009
@jaggedSpire We will either all be banned or the drama will be over.
user406009
Win, win either way.
02:10
I'm back from dinner. What's happened?
user406009
@Nooble Some idiots pretended they were mods.
user406009
Which is always a bad idea.
@Lalaland Horrible.
@Lalaland I dont know about it being a win-win situation per se.
@Lalaland looks like the drama has ended...
user406009
02:12
There is a very important distinction between useful disagreement about moderator action and stupid mud slinging.
user406009
Like, discussions on whether Jerry's post was actually misogynistic are useful.
@Mgetz yay now lets talk about c++ finally. :P
bed time
nn
user406009
Saying "please ban me" doesn't achieve anything.
> But I am le tired
02:14
@Nathan what about C++? How it is a shining example to all those that believe that life is pain?
@jaggedSpire eh... depends old C++ was major hemorrhoids, new C++ is minor itch
@Mgetz okay, MSVC2013's "C++" then :P
@jaggedSpire .... because I'm a comp science student studying c++ :P duh.
@jaggedSpire still mostly ok, it supports most of the C++11 stdlib. Not fun.... but still better than VC08
@Mgetz but muh SFINAE
02:17
@Nathan go learn RAII
RAII is deliciousness personified, true enough
@jaggedSpire kind of an advanced feature there.... just sayin'
Ell
Ell
@lala It was not misogynistic
@Mgetz lies it's basic stuff
it totally didn't take me a while to understand
@jaggedSpire then explain it and monads to @Nathan and see which one he gets first
user406009
02:18
@Ell Yeah. But some people aren't convinced of that.
@Mgetz but I dunno monads
oooh something to do besides waiting for the room to be banhammered
@JerryCoffin I think I figured it out, I was missing a const for the delimiter lols
wow, that's a lot of diamond mods
user406009
I actually learned something very interesting in a philosophy class today.
user406009
Monads actually predate their modern definition.
user406009
02:20
They used to have an interesting, but different definition in philosophy.
user406009
Monad (from Greek μονάς monas, "unit" in turn from μόνος monos, "alone"), refers in cosmogony (creation theories) to the first being, divinity, or the totality of all beings. The concept was reportedly conceived by the Pythagoreans and may refer variously to a single source acting alone and/or an indivisible origin. The concept was later adopted by other philosophers, such as Leibniz, who referred to the monad as an elementary particle. It had a geometric counterpart, which was debated and discussed contemporaneously by the same groups of people. == Historical backgroundEdit == According ...
@Lalaland actually the computer science definition is patterned after that...
Guys, writing code in bed is really difficult. How do I position myself?
@ElimGarak on your head
user406009
@Mgetz Yep. And it's sorta interesting how they compare.
02:21
sorry, I felt the need for rhyming
@Mgetz is html or javascript any good to learn? I saw a few of those programming books at barnes and noble on sale this past monday.
I’m reasonably sure they’re homonyms arising from a similar construction
i.e. it’s a coincidence
@Nathan if you want to do web frontend work yes
i.e. mon- + whatever -ad is for
@ElimGarak fold your pillow behind your back, and make like you're on a really big recliner
user406009
02:22
@Nathan I would pick up JavaScript. It's a very popular language nowadays and a useful tool to know if you want to work with people who like working in JavaScript.
user406009
Make sure your book isn't too outdated though.
you know, like how a ring is not ring shaped
or a field is not out there being plowed
user406009
You want a book that hopefully either uses or touches upon ES6.
how2words
user406009
@Nathan Ignore HTML though unless you want to do web stuff.
user406009
02:24
HTML is just a markup language. It's not a programming language.
@Lalaland it's off topic... but that standards committee keeps trying to change that
user406009
@Mgetz Nothing is off topic in here. Except sex now I guess.
user406009
@Mgetz What programming language constructs are they trying to add to HTML?
@Lalaland last I checked this wasn't Lounge</b>
@Lalaland barnesandnoble.com/w/… these were the books that were on sale the other day. What do you guys think?
02:26
@Lalaland templating and some programmatic bits that have gotten correctly rejected
its the html and javascript books
user406009
@Nathan Those books are more oriented towards designers.
user406009
I would find a book more oriented towards software development.
user406009
The JavaScript room probably has better book recommendations.
^
kinda surprised to be honest that there is no
user406009
02:28
@Mgetz Supposedly SO doesn't like the book questions.
user406009
Not on topic or whatever.
@Lalaland would any of you recommend fortran, cobol, or C? My university offers programming classes in those languages. WHich makes me wonder. How are they useful?
user406009
I personally think they are useful.
@Nathan Fortran definitely.
user406009
@Nathan Generic "programming classes"? Or is there some sort of topic?
02:28
is useful for doing numerics, I wouldn't use it for much else
@Nooble fortran is like... 50 years old. who would use it anymore?
@Lalaland odd considering the knowledge base proposals on meta
Scientific community
@Nathan I was joking :P
user406009
@Nathan I would probably choose C if only for the fact that some of the knowledge would transfer to C like languages like C++.
02:29
@Nathan anyone doing numerics, because its 50 years old the compilers are super optimized
They're big on numerical performance and Fortran has shitload of mature tools for that
@Nooble the sarcasm is strong with you.
@Nathan C is so horrible.
I admit personal bias against
@Nooble why may I ask?
user406009
02:31
@Nathan Also C is useful in general to know. Many API's and libraries are written in C.
@Nathan It just lacks a lot of features that modern languages have.
So are you guys just gonna loom in the corner, @BoltClock?
user406009
Whatever programming language you use, you will probably need to interact with some C code.
@Nooble Its more like an introduction to those languages. :P
Yeah Lala is correct, it's useful to know.
But I hate it a lot.
user406009
02:32
Which becomes important when you want to write native extensions like JNI for Java or whatever it's called for CPython, etc, etc.
I dislike C because I have to do EVERYTHING, which is also why it's so powerful. That said I can pretty much do everything I can do in C in C++... so I do
@Nathan Whatever you do, don't bring C programming philosophies into C++. Next thing you know we're going to end up with std::istream***.
@Lalaland CPython hates me.
@Nooble ha
Beh, learn C only if you want to do some extreme embedded nonsense
9 hours ago, by BoltClock
I regret to inform that I can no longer offer any new shitposts at this time
02:33
For everything else C++ and Rust cover literally the same area but better
@BoltClock oh darn
@BoltClock apologies for the random highlight
user406009
@CatPlusPlus I would just say that C is the most useful of the three options Nathan presented.
There's a fourth option, don't waste your time with either of them
@CatPlusPlus Very extreme resource-limited stuff. In which case, why are you even working with those things 0_o
Sounds painful.
02:34
embedded: X-treme edition
eh... is apparently paying well, but you get very pigon-holed
user406009
@Nooble Low-resource chips are cheaper.
@Nooble You can also use FORTH there anyway :v
@Nooble My university apparently offers classes in the languages I mentioned about. :P I was curious
BTW SO need a visual basic tag. :P I really wanna answer some visual basic questions one day...
@Nathan AGH VISUAL BASIC
02:37
@Nathan curiosity is good, just don't let it hurt you
lol
@Nathan exists
@Nooble did you die long ago in a Visual Basic accident?
@Mgetz ok. :P never mind then
@jaggedSpire Plenty of times.
02:37
@Nathan but if you want real fun
But koalas can respawn, takes a few seconds though.
@jaggedSpire nope. I just enjoy vb for its simplicity as a good beginner programming language
@Nathan misreply?
@user155407 yo
welcome to Stack Overflow Chat!
@jaggedSpire your memory is short padawan
@Mgetz like a goldfish, Master
02:40
that user was previously the sockpuppet pretending to be Mr. Harvey
or Grandmaster Yoda
@jaggedSpire nope. I answered your sarcastic question about dying in a visual basic accident. :)
lol
@Nathan ah. :)
How is java?
user406009
@Nathan Fine. It's useful.
user406009
02:42
They did a good job of preventing the language from becoming that complicated.
Use C++ and have fun with dependencies.
java = minecraft :)
@Nathan despite Oracle's best efforts it's not dead yet
user406009
The tooling is done wonderfully.
I don't know, I was kidnapped and raised by C++ers until I got a case of stockholm syndrome
16
02:43
okay another question after doing getline do I need to use cout to see the data in the consol?
user406009
There are a couple of minor issues with the language, but overall it's pretty good.
minecraft = Epic!!!
@CMS_95 clog and cerr are usually tied to cout (unless either you or the end-user bind to something different), so no. Also, printf is a thing
Ell
Ell
@CatPlusPlus or legacy code maintenence right?
If you're a masochist
Don't volunteer for maintenance
Esp legacy C
02:45
@CatPlusPlus wait what if I'm not a masochist?
@jaggedSpire printf don't tell me it prints the file as seen in the text editor?
@jaggedSpire Then... don't learn things with a goal of maintaining shit code?
@CatPlusPlus brilliant.
so C it is then, for me. :3
Hey, anybody ever see a bug where a string passed to a library function is garbage within said library function?
@jaggedSpire rip
02:46
@Filipq sounds like UB
user406009
@Filipq Sounds like a use after free.
Sounds like a bad case of Fridays
It's a more common thing than you'd expect
Because this is software
This is normal
well, it doesn't seem like it is to me, I've tried making an overload that takes a string pointer instead
02:48
There's like a thousand reasons why this might be happening
sorry for multiple pings, @CMS_95
@jaggedSpire murkdown success!
and explicitly sticking the string on the heap and never taking it off
@melak47 I am murkdwn master of ultimate skill
@Filipq either pass by value or const &
user406009
02:48
@Filipq You should probably show us a code sample if you want more detailed help.
that was my next step ;)
Suure
you're just saying that now :p
well of course I am
Microservices: a separate service for history of operations, or not
we can't prove anything about intentions
02:49
yay or nay
horse or not
@CMS_95 you know the docs are super clear most times, and faster than straight up asking us, once you get familiar with them. Sure it's a slight time investment on your part initially, but it's faster in the long run
especially considering my 1337 linking skillz with markdown
it also stops people from telling you to RTFM
that is a major bonus
Eh, I'll make it a part of the orchestrator, since it needs to report current state anyway
if you use duckduckgo, you can even search there directly with !cppref <query>
02:51
@jaggedSpire the trouble is, sometimes I can't fully understand the documentations.
If you use a web browser, you can search almost anything directly with a keyword
@melak47 they actually have a search provider for firefox
So.. If I wanna make an app for apple or android, what language should I use?
user406009
I don't know what I would do without cppreference.com
user406009
That site is a godsend.
02:51
@CMS_95 Ah, but searching cppreference.com for "printf" gives "prints results to stdout" in the first link
read the standard :v
user406009
@Nathan Use Java for Android.
user406009
It's the best supported language for that platform.
@Nathan ios: swift, android: java
Caller:
sceneNode->addTextureSourceName("renderwindow", 0,
Ogre::TextureDefinitionBase::TEXTURE_INPUT);
~~~ Callee, prints garbage:
IdString TextureDefinitionBase::addTextureSourceName(String name, size_t index,
TextureSource textureSource )
{
std::cout << "aTSN: " << name << " success!" << std::endl;
...
ugh, that's ugly
02:52
lolgre
Well you're using Ogre why are you surprised
@CMS_95 it's always worth a try, and for every attempt, you'll benefit more and more because you'll have better odds of knowing related items. ;)
You see, I have this hate for anything that contains ->.
lol, ogre
What is String
@Filipq 1) wth is String
user406009
02:52
@Filipq What's the String class?
Also is that a shared library
@Nathan for android I thinks its java as for apple it might be more linux based, not sure.
it's a typedef or something on std::string
@ElimGarak Icicle > Ogre.
@Filipq why
@Nooble fie upon you, reference heathen! The way of unique pointer to pointer pointer inline conversion is the only true way!
02:53
@Filipq I suspect it's not, I would verify the type
shrug
rogerwilco
user406009
Cat has a good point here actually. It might be due to incompatible std::string implementations.
@CMS_95 Lets just say... I have an Iphone and an Ipad. But If you make an app that sells your set for life.
@Nathan Yeah... No.
user406009
@Nathan Not really.
02:54
@jaggedSpire I needed pointer to pointer support for unique_ptrs once :)
@Lalaland that's the first explanation that makes any sense
user406009
Most apps make really marginal profit, if not a net loss with the cost of the apple store developer account.
I've been bashing my head against this for quite a while
@ElimGarak I was joking :P
It doesn't have to be a shared library, really
02:54
@melak47 I had a coworker who asked me, and then used COM pointers. :P
@Filipq Have you considered botany?
it is, and that is probably part of the problem
I have
If you're linking objects produced by different compilers or different versions of the same compiler, you fucked up
didn't help
Shared or not
02:54
@jaggedSpire CComPpttrrr
nope, both GCC 4.8.4
@Nathan apple devices are for the simple minded users, make a computer app :)
@Filipq same options?
@Filipq y u no update gcc
Is that Windows
02:55
especially optimization level
@melak47 comptr_t
hmmshit not sure what cmake set
@StackedCrooked such confusion in translation
lol, cmake
02:56
@jaggedSpire He's trying to remember his password.
But it sounds funny out of context :D
@ElimGarak well, if it's what I gotta work with, it's what I gotta work with
@StackedCrooked :P
@CatPlusPlus oh yeah, no, linux
ub14
(04)
Are libgcc and libstdc++ linked shared
You know, it makes sense to me that a size optimized build would leave out the SSO in strings. But is it true? To google!
02:58
@CMS_95 yeah, Ive had an Iphone 4s for almost 3 years now. Its cracked, slow and now im just generally tired of these "SmartPhones". :P
Also just run GDB on it and trace it through
hmm...is this a non-deducible context? coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/1a015e650784b7ca
@jaggedSpire GCC 4.8 still has COW strings I think
@Nathan the windows phone is not too bad, it could be better though.
02:59
@jaggedSpire trying to figure out if this could be useful for...anything :p

« first day (1874 days earlier)      last day (3303 days later) »