« first day (1875 days earlier)      last day (3303 days later) » 

10:02
@BartekBanachewicz What did you do?
Look, I wasn't banned!
@Mr.kbok three stars is not a lot
He's a cheap starwhore
@sehe where do you see three stars?
Il en faut pour toutes les bourses @Mr.kbok
@Mr.kbok is pretty obvious. Follow the arrows
10:05
So, can anyone fill me up on what I missed? Shit always goes down when I'm asleep.
If you need more explanation, maybe later. Note that you can't blame me of you received more than the stars in the mean time.
@R.MartinhoFernandes you slept 2.5 days straight?
@sehe I saw rumours that serious stuff happened last night.
Yeah please make a tl;dr of lounge drama. I'll make an ebook out of it. Profit goes into paying for the IRC server.
@R.MartinhoFernandes That would be ere-yesterday then
Yup:
2 days ago, by sehe
So far we've established that Jerry made a gendered joke that - out of context - was picked up and cracked down upon. Strange, weird, but no biggie (nothing to barge in for and make threats /cc @Jon @Mysticial).
And then there was Nooble's meta-mistake meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/311540/…
@sehe No, that's not it.
Don't waste time on that.
user1804599
10:08
I got b& yesterday.
You get that all the time.
user1804599
And my account got deleted.
(You never learn, though)
> Having a PHD is CS and not understanding functional programing can make you anxious.
lol
@R.MartinhoFernandes yesterday was nothing "spectacular". It was two members impersonating Brad and someone else (Madara?)
10:09
@Elyse What does "getting b&" mean? Is b& a derivative of C#?
It's a dumbspeak for banned
@sehe If you call this nothing "spectacular" stackoverflow.com/users/155407/user155407
He wanted his account deleted
he asked SO to delete his account after he was banned
Mmm. Talk about sock puppets though
user1804599
10:11
@fredoverflow banned
in Tavern on the Meta on Meta Stack Exchange Chat, 9 hours ago, by chmod 666 telkitty
I don't even know one person who gets perm ban unless they themselves don't want to come here anymore. YCS, vlad & evan, all of them seem to be running free sooner than they get banned for.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Wait. Is the real Robert Harvey banned? I'm sceptic and surprised I would havbe missed that
@sehe How is that even possible? Invisible whitespace?
@fredoverflow Names are not unique
@fredoverflow invisible white space is possible, I have seen it before
10:12
@sehe No, that's the still smouldering remains of an impersonator.
Ok, the linked in checked out, I'm dumb
It's Scott's account
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yes, I consider that nothing spectacular
user1804599
Skon Jeet
16 hours ago, by sehe
@TonyTheLion boredom meets bad taste I suppose
I mean, it's immature and counterproductive. Yawn
Can certain individuals please stop being stupid?
Finally people realize how useless these operators are in somewhat modern languages :)
You're not going to make anything better by throwing dung.
They weren't trying to make anything better hth
X++ = X + X;
10:14
The lounge is not welcome in its current state on SO, and impersonating mods, screaming everywhere and throwing a tantrum doesn't help.
Apparently I forgot to say it yesterday, so spelling it out:
I would prefer that people, if they truly don't give a shit, just leave it. No need to derail things with boring pranks
@orlp ^
Just keep it professional from now.
10:15
You can take the dank memes to #loungecpp or mumble.
@orlp s/doesn't help/is behaving like a teenage idiot/
@orlp "its current state"
@orlp Okay, that'll be 10 bucks, sir.
Ven
Ven
@fredoverflow doesn't matter, swift has user-defined operators :P
@orlp Shush mom
@CatPlusPlus Well, then they're not welcome.
10:16
@Ven ew
@Ven Can I user-define operators on built-in types?
Ven
Ven
oh, @Rapptz is back. how are you doing?
ok
I was always here
@Rapptz hi
hi
> I used to think that until I encountered other languages. C++ programming idioms just takes things too far. e.g. overriding () or = is ridiculous IMO. The worst part is that it's encouraged in the language (e.g. for comparators).

In comparison, languages like ruby don't really abuse it and keep things at a happy medium.
Ven
Ven
10:17
@fredoverflow prefix func ++ (inout n: Int): Int ...
@Rapptz I find comparators one of the few useful cases of operator overloading...
@Ven At least it returns an Int by value and not by reference :)
@orlp I don't see how operator overloading makes a difference there.
(Can you return by reference in Swift?)
@R.MartinhoFernandes Could you elaborate?
10:19
It's just a syntactic shortcut that the code that uses comparators won't even use.
Ven
Ven
@fredoverflow not safely.
but you actually have access to stuff like UnsafeMutablePointer
@R.MartinhoFernandes Huh?
@R.MartinhoFernandes tried to charge up the battery. Ended with glow plug light missing and the thing not starting
Because the comparator won't necessarily be in the form of an overloaded operator, so you need to call some function.
== is used throughout the standard library, and so is <
10:20
@BartekBanachewicz It's a diesel?
@orlp No, they're not.
@fredoverflow Zing
@R.MartinhoFernandes Besides, I like it when objects implement == and < if they're relevant
@orlp The standard library goes out of its way to not use them throughout.
10:21
@R.MartinhoFernandes it provides alternatives
@orlp Or everywhere else. I mean, I don't even survive in the other chat rooms for sheer noise and banter overload
but the default is to use ==
@orlp But that has nothing to do with comparators. By their very nature, supporting comparators means you won't use the operator overloads.
Unless specialised, invokes operator== on type T.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I don't see how you reach that conclusion.
@orlp Doesn't that sentence make it clear that there really is no overriding reason to have overloaded operators?
10:22
I charged the battery again
If it won't start I'm taking the bike
@orlp You will call the comparators, which are just functions.
Fuck winter
user1804599
@Ven insanity
@Rapptz that would be languages with firstclass functions, right. No comparison there. C++ is just more explicit then (statically typed has a bit to do with it, and I rather like that)
> Programming languages are a religion. Read one language flame war on r/programming or hacker news and tell me it's not a religion. Rails vs Node, Java vs well, the world. Scala vs Haskell, Clojure. Go vs Rust. People like to camp and bash the other like college students, because, well, some of them are. It's immature, silly, and wastes a lot of people's time for arguing on the internet, where subjective opinion is stronger than any fact. So what part of it is not like a religion? :)
10:23
@orlp I.e. that in itself gives you a mechanism to have the same behaviour without overloading syntax.
Ven
Ven
@Elyse it works so well in scala g
You end up defining a function either way, the only difference is that one has a special name that gives you special syntax.
The library, though, will not use that special syntax.
Ven
Ven
@Rapptz as a rubyist: lol
@R.MartinhoFernandes I'd much rather write a == b for some user-defined objects than std::equal_to<T>()(a, b)
It only uses it in the one place to abstract it away.
@orlp That's not about comparators, though. It's about writing comparison expressions.
10:25
@fredoverflow or sports team or whatever really
> > [Lifelock's] CEO having the hubris to publicly share his Social Security number, claiming LifeLock would prevent him from identity theft… only to have his identity stolen at least 13 times.
hahahaha
that's a dumb comparison
The whole point of supporting comparators is giving the flexibility of not having to use the operators.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Ohhh
In this context a comparator is a function object to pass around that is a generic comparison interface.
@Mr.kbok Oh yeah? Fuck your favourite programming language! Neeeeerd!
10:26
I thought they were talking about the very fact that you can overload comparators.
Also ... tired ... coz got up at 6ish & 1st day during that time of the months .. afk
@fredoverflow lol
kitty triggering people
@orlp What does "overloading comparators" even mean?
@fredoverflow Overloading them for user-defined classes so you can write a < b.
10:30
Ah, by comparators you mean comparing operators?
I thought comparators are functions that return negative, 0 or positive.
@fredoverflow Yes.
@fredoverflow Oh, just a communication failure \o/
@fredoverflow They're predicates in C++.
Predicates return true or false.
@fredoverflow And that's enough.
Man. asyncio sure makes my code fast
Obvious yeah but it's way faster.
10:31
@fredoverflow Not all birds can fly
@orlp But that means you have to overload 6 operators :( I would rather provide one function to rule them all.
@fredoverflow true
@fredoverflow No, you don't.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Well, at least 2 plus some compiler or library magic.
just implementing < gives you > (swap arguments), == (both < and > are false), != (either < or > is true), <=` (not >) and >= (not <)
10:32
No.
Well, you do if you want to use the comparison operators, but you don't if you want to define a comparator.
@Rapptz Until it blocks on something and stops everything for 10 seconds :v
@R.MartinhoFernandes Please define comparator.
I'm using orlp's definition from above.
And in C++, they're just predicates.
How is true/false enough to distinguish between smaller, equals and greater?
7 mins ago, by orlp
In this context a comparator is a function object to pass around that is a generic comparison interface.
@fredoverflow A single predicate that fulfills certain conditions is enough to define a total order.
In mathematics, a linear order, total order, simple order, or (non-strict) ordering is a binary relation on some set X, which is transitive, antisymmetric, and total (this relation is denoted here by infix ≤). A set paired with a total order is called a totally ordered set, a linearly ordered set, a simply ordered set, or a chain. If X is totally ordered under ≤, then the following statements hold for all a, b and c in X: If a ≤ b and b ≤ a then a = b (antisymmetry); If a ≤ b and b ≤ c then a ≤ c (transitivity); a ≤ b or b ≤ a (totality). Antisymmetry eliminates uncertain cases when both a precedes...
10:34
@fredoverflow I just showed you
2 mins ago, by orlp
just implementing < gives you > (swap arguments), == (both < and > are false), != (either < or > is true), <=` (not >) and >= (not <)
< and > for == is not very efficient, is it?
Maybe that's just my perverted C++ mind speaking...
@fredoverflow that's correct
the only reason to overload the others is performance
@fredoverflow Works well for cases where you have to check < anyway, like doing binary search.
@fredoverflow but it depends on the context
for example, std::sort (and thus pdqsort) are not allowed to use ==
Anyway, I prefer a comparator that returns LESS, EQUAL, GREATER, like in Haskell or C.
10:37
so to check for == std::sort actually checks !(< || >)
I think there's even a language that uses the <=> operator for that :)
@fredoverflow But that cannot deal with partial orders.
@orlp Because they support partial orders.
116
Q: What is the Ruby <=> (spaceship) operator?

Justin EthierWhat is the Ruby <=> (spaceship) operator? Is the operator implemented by any other languages?

It the same as Perl's
@R.MartinhoFernandes Useful example for partial orders?
user1804599
10:39
def abs(x)
    x * (x <=> 0)
end
@fredoverflow Btw, since you bring up Ord, the minimal complete definition of the class is either compare or <=.
3
Q: What is <=> (the 'Spaceship' Operator) in PHP 7?

Deepak MankotiaPHP 7, which will come out in November this year will introduce the Spaceship (<=>) operator. What is it and how does it work?

@sehe Even PHP has it now :)
@R.MartinhoFernandes They don't.
PHP has always been a Perl rip-off
user1804599
Can't wait to use PHP 7.
10:39
@orlp Yes they do (what makes you think they do not)
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...
Yes, they do.
Calling std::sort with an object only supporting partial ordering is UB.
user1804599
Finally return type declarations.
"The term strict refers to the requirement of an irreflexive relation (!comp(x, x) for all x), and the term weak to requirements that are not as strong as those for a total ordering, but stronger than those for a partial ordering."
Granted, they have to be strict, but that's it.
10:40
What is a useful example for partial orderings?
straight from the standard
C++14
25.4.4
user1804599
Also anonymous inner classes. <3
@orlp Yes, it doesn't support any partial orders, but they have to support some.
@Elyse So PHP has finally caught up with Java? ;)
@fredoverflow Any set with incomparable elements, like floats.
user1804599
10:41
@fredoverflow :v
@R.MartinhoFernandes How are floats incomparable? NaN?
Are you saying NaN is useful? :)
@R.MartinhoFernandes Rather useless distinction.
Any total ordering is also partial.
@fredoverflow Points in the plane, ordered by their azimuth. (The odd one out here is the origin)
10:43
But C++ std::sort only allows strict total ordering.
@orlp Ok, I should have said non-total.
It is infact UB to std::sort an array with NaNs.
@orlp Er, no. The very quote you gave says otherwise.
Ven
Ven
@sehe well, so is ruby in a lot of ways
user1804599
@Ven should I generate PHP 5.6 or PHP 7 code?
user1804599
10:45
I think the latter.
Ven
Ven
@Elyse PHP7! think of ...!
Woodruff and the Schnibble of Azimuth, Alternativtitel The Bizarre Adventures of Woodruff and the Schnibble ist ein von der französischen Firma Cocktel Vision entwickeltes „Point-and-Click“-Adventurespiel aus dem Jahre 1995. == Handlung == === Vorgeschichte === Nachdem es auf der Erde zu einem verheerenden Atomkrieg gekommen war, mussten sich die meisten Überlebenden wegen der radioaktiven Verseuchung tief in das Erdinnere zurückziehen. Während sie dort über mehrere Jahrhunderte blieben entwickelte sich auf der Erdoberfläche eine neue Rasse von Mutanten, die Buzuks. Diese humanoiden Wes...
user1804599
@Ven Does Zend Engine perform optimisations under the assumption that type hint disobedience causes nontermination?
@fredoverflow Azimuth is the angle coordinate in polar coordinates.
> Woodruff and the Schnibble of Azimuth, Alternativtitel The Bizarre Adventures of Woodruff and the Schnibble ist ein von der französischen Firma Cocktel Vision entwickeltes „Point-and-Click“-Adventurespiel aus dem Jahre 1995.
too much gibberish
10:47
@R.MartinhoFernandes Hrm, the section is a bit confusing.
Give me a second.
@Mr.kbok Why do English games sometimes have alternative English titles in Germany?!?
user1804599
It doesn't. :'( 3v4l.org/OQoIi/vld
@orlp It requires a strict weak order, which is not a total order.
> and the term weak [refers] to requirements that are not as strong as those for a total ordering
@R.MartinhoFernandes It says in a note that the combined requirements are though.
That makes it clear it doesn't require total.
10:48
what a great day of 1998 today is
@fredoverflow they get translated into "simple english"
@orlp That sounds wrong.
> Arrêté du 4 décembre 1998 relatif à la surveillance en exploitation des soupapes de sûreté des appareils à pression de vapeur ou de gaz
@LucDanton?
There, now everyone has the relevant portion of the standard.
@Ven sigils maybe, don't recall anything else particularly perly (but was in ~2004? I tried a little RoR and didn't really catch on)
10:49
People posting screenshots of the C++ standard? Shit just got real!
@fredoverflow In particular, look at the lastmost note
@orlp You're confusing the fact that equiv is not passed anywhere.
Ven
Ven
@sehe it inherited all the magic. $., $; and some other craziness :)
@orlp missing that footnote that you just referred to
Any strict weak order can be used to define a total order.
10:50
@Ven I never knew
@fredoverflow inb4 c++ standard gifs
@sehe No, not footnote.
@sehe No, I referred to the note, not footnote.
@Mr.kbok I’m going to use this STL thing
Oh. Disregard
10:50
@orlp The relation passed in doesn't have to be a total order.
@LucDanton which?
@Mr.kbok someone pls make sparkly standard
equiv is, but that's an internal construct; used for specification, I suppose.
equiv is a total order, comp isn't.
@R.MartinhoFernandes How can equiv be a total order?
user1804599
@Ven $<
10:52
If f(a, b) is a total order, then f(a, b) || f(b, a) must always be true.
That can't be for equiv.
Ven
Ven
I remember, Acme.PHP in Hoogle used to alias <> to getLines, when it's php, it's actually != (as in SQL)
@R.MartinhoFernandes The totality requirement fails on equiv.
@orlp Oh, you're right. Not equiv. But the order you can define with it. Sorry.
@R.MartinhoFernandes So... it is required to be a strict total order?
Because I don't see how that note can refer to equiv.
10:53
No.
@orlp equiv is an internal construct.
If it doesn't refer to equiv, what does the note refer to?
std::sort takes comp.
@orlp Read the wikipedia text on total preorders. It explains how to derive one from a strict weak order.
The note specifies that something is a strict total ordering, no?
If it's not referring to equiv (since equiv can obviously not be a total order), then what is it referring to?
@orlp I thought it was equiv, but misread. It's some unnamed relation.
equiv is the equivalence relation derived from comp.
Oh...
It's referring to the line right above.
The equivalence classes form a strict total ordering under comp.
10:55
Right.
Just unpacked 11 bookzors.
However.
Floats with NaNs do not form a strict weak ordering.
It's still UB to std::sort anything containing a NaN.
You must partition those first.
Nah, just define a proper order.
@R.MartinhoFernandes How?
10:59
Put all NaNs in the same equivalence class, and pick an order for it.
Ah
This would work, right?

« first day (1875 days earlier)      last day (3303 days later) »