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I think parsing is much easier TBH
the linked code should explain how it works
@WGhost An updog
it also converts it
@sbi Oh, missed you. Sleep well
22:02
@BartekBanachewicz Parsing is pretty trivial.
it makes me sad to see people waste time on their parsers.
they should only be difficult if you add advanced features like live-typing error recovery.
@CatPlusPlus sup dog
good night guys
Ell
Ell
agh. enabling anonymous authe stops regular authe working :p
@Puppy declarative parser generators 4 life
22:17
@sbi It is, but (like many rules) was also routinely violated. For example, to keep the numbers on clock faces more symmetric looking, they often used IIII for 4, so you had IIII on the right side, and VIII on the left side, giving the same number of "digits" in both, whereas writing it normally would have been IV and VIII, which made the clock face look "unbalanced" to some people.
lol
maggie de block
Ell
Ell
@Puppy that entirely depends on what is being parsed
Parsing c++ is not trivial
Ell
Ell
I'm sure there are lots of things which aren't trivial to parse
22:19
yeah, but fortunately, I am not and nor should anyone else here be
@Ell They are.
unless you're a nutter.
@JerryCoffin oh god
you have to be an HTML/C++ style abomination to be hard to parse.
Yeah I agree with Puppy
vast majority of things can be parsed with an LL parser
@Puppy Fortran is an absolute bitch to parse. Makes C++ seem quite tame by comparison.
it's not TC though is it?
22:21
@Puppy HTML/C++
turing complete
@Puppy Are you trying to ask whether Fortran is Turing complete?
no, if parsing it is turing complete
Ell
Ell
There are languages where parsing is turing complete? :V
22:22
C++
Perl is undecidable
Perl, of course, is the other one that (if memory serves) has severe ugliness involved--to the point that it's actually been proved undecidable.
Oops--beaten to the punch by a second or so. Oh well.
Ell
Ell
c++ is err linear-bounded turing complete
(yes I wiki'd it)
which means it's not turing complete
right?
no.
you just said it's turing complete.
Ell
Ell
I lied
I meant that you need a Linear-bounded non-deterministic Turing machine to parse c++
and a "Linear-bounded non-deterministic Turing machine" cannot be used to simulate any single taped turing machine
which means that parsing c++ is not turing complete
it's trivially provable that parsing C++ is turing complete
Ell
Ell
22:26
go on then
simple
@Puppy The correct question with Fortran is whether it's NP-complete, and the answer is a qualified "Yes". Basically, you can run into situations where you have to either backtrack (almost?) arbitrarily, or else generate some arbitrary number of parses running in parallel, and after some arbitrary amount of input, decided which ones have hit dead ends, so they must have been wrong.
SIMPLE GODDAMNIT
let's go with int p; int main() { x<1>::ident* p; }.
Ell
Ell
okay
22:27
you may ask yourself, is p in main a pointless multiplication of the existing variable?
or is it a declaration of a pointer to a type named by x<1>::ident?
obviously you can answer this question by resolving x<1>::ident.
but unfortunately as you have noticed, x<1> is a template.
and since templates are Turing-Complete, instantiating x<1> is also Turing Complete.
which means that resolving x<1>::ident is also Turing Complete, since first you must instantiate x<1>.
Why wouldn't parsing C++ be turing complete?
Ell
Ell
doesn't the resolving happen post parsing?
@Puppy "potentially".
It can obviously be done
@Ell No.
that is why typename exists and is required in templates.
to tell the parser how to resolve this ambiguity, as it cannot instantiate x<1> since it doesn't have enough data.
user1804599
22:30
@StackedCrooked more like maggie boillonblok
@JerryCoffin Well, yes. In the general case, templates are turing complete, not necessarily in any specific case.
@Elyse jij bent een bullebak
@Jefery It can be done, but it's fairly easy to create templates that take essentially an arbitrary amount of time to compile. For any real compiler, the time will usually be bounded by the depth of the compiler's parsing stack, but we've played some games here in the lounge with template code that was <100 lines long, and could keep the compiler grinding for over an hour (and then crashing, in at least some cases).
If your butthole looks like that, you should consider changing your ways
user1804599
22:32
oh, it's Maggi, not Maggie
user1804599
@StackedCrooked my bad ^
@Ell In a way, the parsing is still trivial. It's the grammar that's convoluted. This is the principle that underlies parser generators/combinators
@JerryCoffin wow I didn't know it was that complicated
user1804599
@sehe Parsing C++ is not trivial.
22:34
@JerryCoffin that's nothing indeed. Abel Sinkovicz has examples that took a day to compile, if at all
user1804599
It requires pretty much a complete C++ type checker. Not to mention constexpr function interpretation.
@JerryCoffin People are crazy
Arguably, that's not the parsing
user1804599
You can't parse without doing that.
it's required to construct the parse tree, so I would normally consider it parsing
22:35
constepxr evaluation should only be required for instantiations. And no you don't need to do the instantiations during parsing
user1804599
You do.
Enlighten me
Oh look, Telkitty
@milleniumbug The classic example is DO 10 I = 1.10. It initially looks like a DO loop. But, when you get to the . and see that the right side is 1.10 instead of 1,10, you have to back up and re-parse, because it's really a simple assignment of the value 1.10 to a variable named DO 10 I (which is legal in Fortran).
user1804599
22:36
You can rewrite those helpers to use constexpr functions.
user1804599
If it's not prime, > is parsed as an operator.
@Elyse that's second pass
user1804599
How do you parse in two passes?
@Elyse wait. really. checking with my expectation
user1804599
Two-phase lookup is irrelevant. The reason you need template and typename is exactly because parsing happens in one pass.
22:44
@Elyse instantiations are second pass. It's called 2-phase for a reason, right
user1804599
Instantiatee bodies have to be parsed before you can instantiate them.
not in this context.
lookup in a non-template is strictly one-phase
@Elyse I know, and that underlines my expectation that not much else should be required (because, then the compiler could do with out the manual hinting, like MSVC already does)
@Puppy Yeah. That's my thinko
user1804599
I hate two-phase lookup. :(
@sehe Yeah, but it's not enough.
22:45
It's not 2phase in the spot where the template is used
this one phase still requires instantiating the template.
user1804599
Indeed. But the template is still instantiated because otherwise you can't parse what follows the instantiation.
@JerryCoffin Impressive misfeature (that explains the arbitrary backtracking).
@milleniumbug A few more....interesting points: variables don't have to be declared, and nothing is reserved. Another classic example runs something like if if .eq. then then then = else else else = endif endif (again, perfectly legal in Fortran).
oh my lawd.
that is impressively bad.
22:51
@Puppy Put them together, and you get true nastiness--something like: if then else = 1 (which is a simple assignment of 1 to a variable named if then else.
I just learned more about C
someone hug me
user1804599
/me shoots Bartek before it's too late.
Hugs haskell compiler
I'm afraid to use my bank account now
speaking of which, I need to transfer large sums of money.
@Puppy Transfer them to me.
no.
@Puppy large enough to warrant calling your bank upfront and warning them about it?
I am transferring them to me.
@BartekBanachewicz Probably, but it's 11pm. I'll just transfer and if they block it, call them up afterwards.
/me hugs bartek
/bartek no longer carries a wallet
22:56
@Puppy if it's less than 6 digits, they probably won't care
and I figure 5-digit sums are considered "large" by most people
@JerryCoffin The realisation that I can't even lex this properly drives the nail down
just 4 digits for me
at least, I'd like to transfer that money, but I can't currently load my bank's website.
@Puppy then they surely won't care
@BartekBanachewicz They blocked some 3-digit transfers.
22:59
they're pretty aggressive.
but that must be like 1/4 of your salary
that's... not a lot
50% of a monthly salary actually
@milleniumbug Yup--even lexing requires being prepared to try multiple possibilities if the first one you try doesn't work out.
@Puppy oh hey now I feel less bad about mine
user1804599
I just discovered that for help with my transgender issues, I have to wait four weeks to get an answer to my appointment request, instead of the actual appointment, and the actual appoinment will probably be somewhere around February.
user1804599
23:01
FML
@Puppy Are you back in the swap again, or something?
nah
Ell
Ell
@Elyse :(
Firefox inspector says their server is just not bothering to send the javascript
@Elyse yeah, they can't really rush these things along
23:02
Badlets at finance
I probably offended some people by saying that
I surely hope so, because that was completely inappropriate
or maybe both really
~~professionalism~~
yeah, what's the difference. Some metal bands equate to lobotomy
23:05
@sehe s/metal//
@JerryCoffin wow jerry you're so inappropriate again
@JerryCoffin you trying to get banned again :)
nope
@JerryCoffin international service orientation
@ElimGarak guess we'll find out :p
23:12
@sehe Yeah, I guess. Though part of the beauty of Brussels (and Belgium in general), at least for ignorant Murricans like me is not having to learn a new language, and I guess I shouldn't be surprised that it applies to more than just buying the best chocolate.
@ElimGarak HELL YEAH
ahaha lmao
if you use sqrt in C without including <math.h>
it will work, but treat it as a function returning int
> Take care to make a distinction between the proposal to C++ standards committe http://www.rrsd.com/software_development/safe_numerics/proposal.pdf (which is less ambitious aimed at whimpier programmers) and the proposal for Boost www.blincubator.com ( which is for glutons for punishment such as ourselves).

Robert Ramey
Wonder how much the yacht is going to cost
Brilliant post. (Not in the web archive yet, I see. Can't link)
23:14
@BartekBanachewicz Enable warnings
But yeah, it's pretty bad
The only thing warnings mean is "your language's type system is bad"
@BartekBanachewicz ...at least in older C, before prototypes (or at least declarations) for functions were required. Pretty sure C now requires at least declarations though.
Yeah, right, fine, sure, whatever
@JerryCoffin tell that to MSVC
We know
23:15
@milleniumbug Haskell has warnings as well
Two months later, I'm still listening to Shpongle almost everyday. I guess I like the band.
sup everyone
stop being an ass.
I have a funny joke
but I won't post it because it's not pc and the pc police will come after me
Let's have it before bartek gets the air time
23:16
@BartekBanachewicz I have. Well, I've told its maintainers, anyway. They seem to have started listening a tiny bit over the last couple of years.
@orlp ... sigh
hopefully CL will go the way of the dodo soon enough to be replaced with Clang/C2
microsoft needs ms-specific extensions
or does clang support them already?
Clang already supports a great deal of them
even some non-two-phase lookup compatibility.
> To me this is a 30 year festering carbuncle on the face of C++/C. For the language to permit the writing of an arithmetical expression and to permit it to fail silently, is a recipe for disaster which are are suffering from on a daily basis. The amazing thing to me is that all languages have have this problem - even those which are interpreted!!!
How have computer engineers been able to ignore/forget what the fundamental purpose is about - to provide correct answers. We're using C++ to write code for self driving cars - and no one cares about this. I can't express how disheartening to
23:18
"C++/C" lol
converges to 1
@BartekBanachewicz They definitely have a mode to support MS VCisms, but I'd be a bit surprised if it was sufficient to compile (for a couple obvious examples) Windows and Office.
but really
@sehe actually, it is always 1 except when C is 0
it's a lot simpler and more effective in the long run to extend Clang to support MSVC-isms, than it is to keep maintaining CL.
23:20
"C++/C" is obviously "++" for C /= 0
no series converge in a singular point. The whole idea of convergence focuses on the limits :)
@Puppy Might well be. Then again, I can just about imagine where it might not be either--or at least that "the long term" turned out to be far enough in the future that it never made sense to do it.
@sehe that's not true either
you can have a series that converges to some value
but that simply reaches that value at some point
Maybe if you supply an example I'll get why you think your suggestion is different from mine
23:23
@sehe f(x) = sin(x) if x < pi/2 else 1
@BartekBanachewicz It gets better (as in, as terrible as it can) - if you create a function with a name that already exists somewhere (for example, in glibc), linker won't detect this and will choose an arbitrary function
well, I feel better
well. you could have taken a step function without complicating :)
I still don't see how it's not about converging to a limit (otherwise, it's just application of the function)
Happened to my friend on "distributed computing" lab who defined a function named remove
@sehe I'm a bit confused what you mean
could you rephrase?
oh wait, I gave an example of a converging function
either way, summing f(x) = 0 from 0 to infinity is a series that converges to 0
23:27
whats up home skillet
in C, 33 mins ago, by Bartek Banachewicz
Seriously don't write code that kills people. It's really not funny. At all.
It passed by the compiler because it didn't see the declaration of the glibc remove function as relevant header wasn't included
CLASSES ARE OVER
@VermillionAzure So, you're getting a job at McDonald's?
@milleniumbug I don't know whether to laugh or cry
23:28
@ElimGarak No next are finals
@jaggedSpire glad to hear that :)
@jaggedSpire noice
@BartekBanachewicz :)
@VermillionAzure thanks
@orlp yeah, that's a good example.
user406009
@BartekBanachewicz For a second there I thought you were tirading against people who work at weapon companies. Like the people who code the software for missiles.
23:29
@jaggedSpire what happened?
@sehe obviously I'm being pedantic
but that's what I do best :)
how would you delete a folder that was created using mkdir -p? Will the leading directories also get deleted if I do rm {name}?
@orlp :) I like it
@DemCodeLines of course not. Dajum. Why would that happen
mkdir -p just creates directories, there's no such thing as path compression in a filesystem (well, not POSIX-ly)
@sehe Coming from a Windows background, I don't know if it will or will not. I don't think it will, but I can't figure out how to.
-p: will also create all directories leading up to the given directory that do not exist already
> I don't think it will, but I can't figure out how to.
This is a meaningless logic combination
23:31
what the heck does that mean?
@DemCodeLines It just means it might create more than 1 directory
@DemCodeLines "leading directories" like root directory?
@DemCodeLines try mkdir -pv {a..z}/{1..10}
@milleniumbug parents (can't "create" the root)
@Nooble my body decided tormenting me was fun/I caught some sort of bug at a really unfortunate time, with synergistic effects.
so if I did mkdir -p /data/db, is that simply telling the filesystem to create /data and then create a db folder inside that?
23:32
yeah.
@jaggedSpire Oh :c
Glad you feel better!
Also guys I found a really nice pickup line.
so then simply doing rm /data/db should reverse whatever I did
I only made it through half the day today, before I had to go home.
@Nooble Censorship alert
@Nooble oh?
23:33
@DemCodeLines ...why. it's not called unmkdir :p
@DemCodeLines of course not. That won't ever do anything. Can't rm a directory
@Nooble :)
@Nooble facepalm
oh you
how would rm know which directories in /path/to/stuff should be deleted?
I meant rmdir
Obviously it should remove everything
23:35
No! It will just remove the named directory, not anything else
> rmdir -p foo/bar/baz
> will first remove baz/, then bar/ and finally foo/ thus removing the entire directory tree specified in the command argument.
that's retarded
lol
Wait. Are you pulling my leg? I never knew rmdir had a corresponding -p flag :)
me neither
COOL
Now, post it on Super User @DemCodeLines
23:36
it kinda makes sense, but it's hardly an "undo" of mkdir -p
Yeah, it's not
@sehe Let's make rm simpler and more predictable. Make all invocations (regardless of parameters) equivalent to rm -rf * (without anything extra to protect people from themselves).
I suggest a nice alias/builtin for this. alias do_eet="rm -rf *"
Does /data/db actually exist by default?
FFS. Formulate a question that makes sense, will you. Super User will be happy to mould your question into something palatable
23:40
is there a rm -mf?
@DemCodeLines On a webserver? In Suse Linux? In Linux FHS? In MSDOS 1.1? On your android phone?
@JohanLarsson Better question: where is he?
Ell
Ell
hmm
@sehe :P
Ell
Ell
it appears my thing has a unicode problem or sthng :V
@sehe Apple Macintosh OS X El Capitan
23:41
@sehe above my windoze head
Does that help?
@Ell There's a {pile of poo|smiley|hovering businessperson} on your ... thing?
oh man someone filed an issue on one of my github repos and I only just now noticed it lol
rip
Ell
Ell
Or even worse, my emacs has a unicode problem :3
@DemCodeLines Why do you ask. Can you not reason about basic computer usage for yourself?
@DemCodeLines I think /Data is a thing on OSX. But I don't own any Macs. Again. Super User is your platform. It's precisely for people who need reassurance on how computers work and how to work with them
23:43
12 mins ago, by DemCodeLines
@sehe Coming from a Windows background, I don't know if it will or will not. I don't think it will, but I can't figure out how to.
The solution to ignorance is (self) education.
@LucDanton Nah it was a coliru
Laziness doesn't help you. You can read that man page. And you can try things out (it's really really not that complicated). And yes you can vent in the lounge if you think the man page was more confusing than it needed to be. You're more than welcome to
Ell
Ell
ah nope got it, it was a (lack of) charset="utf-8" problem :)
But no, you can't ask underspecified questions and not try things for yourself because ~lazy~.
For all we know, our answer will be similarly incomprehensible to you as the man-page you quoted.
Don't waste your time. And ours.
@Ell oh noes. XML detected
Ell
Ell
23:46
Not quite
HTML
@sehe [askdifferent.stackexchange]
Ell
Ell
even worse
Adventures of Elliotte in webdev land: Part 2 - basics of HTML
We'll start calling you Bratekke
lol
23:47
inb4 elyse
bukkake
thanks jefery
complete
ness
23:48
my cat demands my attention
wat do
kill it
don't concede
Or feed it. Whatever is most convenient
he's pure though
Pet it harder.
23:49
@BartekBanachewicz tell us more about it while doing nothing
would be interesting with flir images of idle computers running different operating systems
wait what
you ain't telkitty
@BartekBanachewicz 1. start playlist of cat videos on youtube and full screen 2. place cat near screen
23:50
wow
did you know
@BartekBanachewicz meowise it then
that salvador dali
is actually called Salvador Domingo Felipe Jacinto Dalí i Domènech, Marqués de Dalí de Pubol
Reminds me of Pippi Longstocking
Pippi Långstrump
@orlp Marquis de Sade is shorter and simpler, therefore obviously superior in all possible ways.
23:51
Pippilotta Delicatessa Windowshade Mackrelmint Efraim's Daughter Longstocking
@JohanLarsson Pippilotta Viktualia Rullgardina Krusmynta Efraimsdotter Långstrump
پیپی جوراببلنده
inb4 flag
'sehe is posting terrorist messages'
Pipi das Meias Altas /cc rm -mf
23:53
@Prismatic lmao he actually digs it
my stepsister is from iceland
i have a cat watching cat telly
she taught me how to pronounce Eyjafjallajökull
פּיפּפּי לאָנגסטאָקקינג
all this unicode is triggering me
23:55
The French had to go and corrupt the meaning, naturally (Fifi Brindacier)
hey bart
@Prismatic There's a solution to that
@orlp Is it hard to pronounce?
@orlp can she pronounce orlp?
@Nooble hey stud
23:56
@Morwenn It's pronounced something like 'Eja Fjatla J<see below> Kuth'
the sound after the J doesn't exist in english
and the final th is a bit different as well
the sound after the J is 'eu' in dutch
neuk me
In French it'd be close to eyafyalayeukul
no no
the double ll is not an l
it's something like thl
Oh, that one is tricky, but the rest is hardly surprising.
@Morwenn the dutch 'eu' is a bit like your eu in deux
23:59
Yes, the german ö.
or the german schön
hi nightmare

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