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03:00
@Prismatic But in video games, ooh baby.
It's all C++.
My sister just told me that my 3 y-o nephew watches Big Bang Theory, and happily repeats just my lines. Including "live long and suck it." 😕
haha
@EtiennedeMartel Maybe for AAA custom engine dev
But even big dev houses use things like UE now
@Prismatic Which uses C++.
I don't know where you're looking, but in Montreal at least any game dev position will require C++.
@EtiennedeMartel Don't I recall you using C# for a fair number of tools and such, or is my memory playing tricks on me again?
@JerryCoffin Oh, sure, for tooling. But engine and gameplay? That's C++.
03:12
@JerryCoffin The editor will use C#, the game itself is C++
UI in C++ is a pita. Long live WPF
user406009
@EtiennedeMartel You are telling me they don't program games in the purest of Haskell? /s
@EtiennedeMartel Okay--that's pretty much what I expected/thought I remembered.
WPF sucks
XAML sucks
03:14
not as much as XAML
or WPF
user406009
@EtiennedeMartel In all seriousness, why C++? Legacy code/libraries? Lack of a GC? Slight speed advantages from native compilation?
@Rapptz The question is not "does it suck?" The question is: "does it suck less than MFC or Qt?" The answer to that is pretty simple: definitely less than MFC, and probably less than Qt, unless you honestly need to support other platforms and such.
low latency and deterministic destruction of objects
Qt doesn't suck though.
and MFC is garbage
WinForms was actually not that terrible.
@Prismatic ayy lmao
user406009
@Rapptz So the GC stuff.
03:17
become dedicated jabbascript dev
embrace it
user406009
Come to the dark side.
user406009
We have cookies.
@Prismatic As if learning Unity is even remotely hard.
and jobs
@Lalaland Consoles ship limited tooling too. I heard the wii shipped a modified version of gcc
user406009
03:17
@nick Well, some of those jobs come with free cookies.
@Lalaland Do you have Wookie Cookies?
@Lalaland Platform support. Deterministic resource management. Availability of libraries.
@Lalaland fuckin entitled js hipster tech workers
user406009
Yeah, I forget about the limited platform support.
i cannot into words again
user406009
03:18
I really wonder if Bartek and I are going to run into GC difficulties with our little game project.
what are you using?
user406009
Those functional programming techniques result in a heck a ton of garbage.
user406009
@nick Haskell.
looool
dude use OCaml
@Lalaland Not unless you push the machine really hard
03:20
@Lalaland If it all (or at least most of it) is created, and then abandoned quickly, chances are that won't be a problem. With most modern GC, the real problem is with objects that live quite a while.
is your game resource intensive?
user406009
@nick Nah. 2d stuff.
alright
user406009
It will probably be perfectly fine.
yup
even if you do have memory leaks because bad programmers, just tell your users to install more RAM
03:21
@nick Tell them to download more RAM!
user406009
Well, Haskell does have these really annoying thunk leaks that show up a lot.
user406009
And they always go away when you switch back and forth from debug mode and whatnot.
@JerryCoffin I do that on a regular basis
keeps my windows vista install running smooth
@Lalaland thunk leaks?
user406009
@nick Also called space leaks.
user406009
They are an artifact of lazy evaluation.
user406009
03:26
You deal with them by switching to strict evaluation.
user406009
It's one of the costs of having a lazy language.
user406009
(There are benefits of course, but nothing comes for free)
user406009
Thankfully they usually don't show up that often.
lazy evaluation? what is this
03:28
Alright done
user406009
@nick Most programming languages are strict.
I'm somehow less sleepy though
user406009
Your code is stepped through line by line and called in order.
user406009
In lazy evaulation, things only get called when necessary.
user406009
For example, you have the following code:
user406009
03:30
var foo = blah();
var darn = wow();
var ok = wonderful(foo);
user406009
In a strict language, blah() will be called, then wow() and then wonderful(). (Assuming a compiler can't prove that they are independent)
user406009
In a lazy language things only get evaluated when they are needed.
user406009
So the call to blah will only get performed when foo is actually used inside wonderful, and wonderful itself will only get invoked when ok is actually used.
ah
user406009
That's the rough gist of an explanation.
03:32
wait so if you declare a new variable, it doesn't actually exist until it gets used for the first time?
user406009
@nick Yep.
interesting
user406009
It has a couple of interesting benefits.
curious- what's the point of that?
ah go on
user406009
For one thing, you can sorta stream data and have infinite lists.
user406009
03:33
Like in haskell you can say:
user406009
var natural_numbers = [1..]
var primes = filter(natural_numbers, is_prime);
print(primes.first(10)) //print first 10 primes.
user406009
That's not Haskell syntax, but you get the idea.
interesting
user406009
You can also use lazy evaluation to generate immutable cyclic structures.
broke my brain a little bit
03:35
@nick variables are the same, it’s the value behind it (if any) that may or may not be there (yet)
this feels very computer science-y and academic
user406009
Another benefit is that you can sorta use it for control flow as well. If you don't want something to be evaluated, simply ignore the value.
i mean
@nick strict semantics are also very computer science-y and academic :)
does this bring any performance benefits? or code readability?
just curious
user406009
03:38
Like for instance, you can write a && operator that never evaluates/executes the second argument, etc, etc.
@nick it’s hard to boil it down to a by-line, they’re really different approaches
user406009
@nick One thing that's sorta cool is you can stream values through.
i thought the second argument after && never gets evaluated if the first is false?
in most languages anyhow
user406009
Yeah, but you could implement that as a normal function in Haskell.
user406009
Yourself, without any language support or macros because of lazy evaluation.
03:43
D:
user406009
@nick If you want to get really confused, look into Haskell's fix function.
nope.jpg
i'm going to go do some java now
some nice relaxing Java
user406009
03:59
The main thing is that the Haskell people chose the most confusing way to express things.
user406009
Like their documenation for fixed point talks endless about fixed points.
user406009
When they don't tell you what it actually does.
user406009
It allows you to express recursive functions without direct recursion.
user406009
It's like a y combinator or whatever it's called.
user406009
Or in simple language: "You pass it a function. It calls that function with itself as the first argument." It's that simple.
user406009
04:02
They just chose the worst ways to express these concepts.
user406009
They have the same problem with monads imho as well.
just overly academic
Fixed point numbers FTW indeed
Fuck floating point really
q \o/
user406009
Nah, floating point is legit. It does what you want 99% of the time.
user406009
04:07
It only misses the mark for the remaining .989810%
yeah well it failed me
@Lalaland Doesn't seem to be that
lala you remember that algorithm me and nooble were working on?
the C++ vs javascript thing
@Rapptz WinForms masterrace \o/
user406009
Oh yeah.
user406009
04:08
I remember you got all sorts of funny stuff from floating point for that.
we switched to doubles because integers were "too slow"
for the C++ version obviously, js is all doubles
then we switched to double precision floats in the C++ implementation and it was amazing
delivers like 3k results in a minute
user406009
But most of those results were wrong.
user406009
You passed the accuracy limit of the floating point numbers.
user406009
We verified this with u64 integers.
turns out its because after maybe the 7th or 8th solution, we break the uint64 limit
yes
user406009
04:10
The double limit is 2^53 or something IIRC.
user406009
Always a useful number to know.
very useful
user406009
Because things get really screwy when you get past that.
Program options, oh boy \o/
Write "\o/" one more time
I dare you
04:12
i'll fokin stomp u m8
phd lives
/o\
wait a sec where did phd come from
i thought you deleted your account again
Nah. I've just been doing school.
All my finals next week are going to put me in the dirt.
of course
04:13
I like it when you are dirty
what field are you studying again? CS?
do you like math and algorithms and money
and functional languages
I like algorithms and solving problems. The math is just a tool to do those things and... I'm not making any money.
but do you like
04:15
@ThePhD oh you're alive
not for long
user406009
@ThePhD welcome back!
@Rapptz Sure am!
@Lalaland Thanks.
good luck on your finals m8
lol wait you have final exams on the week of christmas?
@AngryLettuce raise your budget to 17500 pls
user406009
@nick Are you going to throw mad parties with Cicada?
04:26
of course
user406009
Live the high life?
probably not his budget is not that high
i'm used to not saving money though
user406009
Just get him to moonlight as a stand up comedian
@nick Yeah
his humor would probably not be appreciated by most
@ThePhD i feel bad for you m8
 
1 hour later…
05:47
Mango, prawn & cherry ... yum yum!
Healthy too!
and ... java, I mean android studio on mac ~_~
i think robert graves is cyber bullying that poor fellow
06:23
Why is abalone so expensive when mussels are so cheap, they taste pretty much the same ...
06:42
Is the building tools revision same as sdk version or are they different?
07:33
1 hour later…
07:46
@Telkitty :O
yes, I have a sense for adorable animal pictures being posted in the Lounge, why do you ask?
@orlp oh god that other guy has to be a troll. I refuse to believe someone can actually be that thick
> your comment suggests your family has a background rich in biodiversity
I want to be that good at wit one day
@jaggedSpire Nice.
I'm assuming the album is the product of a fake facebook post generating service, because really
@ThePhD :)
08:06
@jaggedSpire I could imagine that going on, though I don't know someone who'd tolerate that for that long in real life.
@ThePhD I refuse to believe people like that exist
@jaggedSpire So that's how you ended up in the faith of the Cat...
Past a certain point I assume they're fucking with me
@ThePhD Praise Cat
:3
@Telkitty do they yawn ?
08:44
@KhaledAKhunaifer I think so
I know chickens do
@jaggedSpire PHYSICS AND LINEAR ALGEBRA STUDYING YEEEAAAAAAH
Headbangs.
Question
is there a swap_elements for C++
That swaps the elements of an array?
Or, like
For a pointer + a size
I can't really find something
std::swap_ranges?
Write it yourself, bby :D
Also, good morning. It's cold outside
Good morning :)
The morning isn't good at all.
08:56
@bluefog That's an exchange between two containers, bby. Given how @ThePhD expressed it, isn't likely.
I need to go back to Irish Cream cappuccinos.
@melak47 bby, you alive?
@BartekBanachewicz it has potential
It shall prove itself!
I think I'm going to stay at home this Christmas and chill. Everyone is planning parties and shit. IIRC, all I do at these parties is think how I'd love to be home. So let's try the other way around.
yep, stay home and chat, nobrainer
I declined 2 carol invites by friends already
@Johan there was a death in my family last night
I mean I love my friends, but I prefer just be with them instead of being with them and 10,000 other people too
@BartekBanachewicz :( Not too personal, I hope. :/
@BartekBanachewicz ouch, sorry to hear
So I suppose it can't get much worse
@Elim unfortunately, very close.
Oh, shit :( So sorry, man.
09:04
sry 4 your loss
I don't know what to think. My head is empty.
think of nice memories
Yeah, it's pretty shitty. Lost a really great cousin a few months ago, at 25. Just reading your message brought me right back to it.
It's hell of a way to start Christmas
Sorry @elim
I'm not thinking straight
Well, you've got us, for whatever the fuck that's worth. <3
09:08
It helps. It's a glimpse of reality outside my screen
make something useful in the name of your loved one?
Something that still moves on.
My biggest problem with deaths in the family is the delivery of the news. A few days ago, I had a near heart attack, a police car parked and two police officers knocked on my door. For a second there, I thought something happened. Turns out, they were looking for a schmuck neighbor of mine who hasn't renewed his ID.
Also it may be a good idea to spend some time with family now.
spend time with loved ones or travel if you are into that
09:12
Spending time with family is pretty grim, at least IME. Everyone has a dark cloud over them and it just resonates.
@BartekBanachewicz I'm sorry for your loss :(
When my friend's mom died, we actually went over to his house and took him for a night out. Drinks, being silly and stupid. Called his father first, naturally.
Staring into the abyss seldom helps.
09:55
In other news, Facebook continues down the rabbit hole of being a shitty company
Now they threaten security researchers by calling their bosses
What happened?
Xeo
Xeo
That's not the whole story
The security lead at Facebook actually posted about that incident
10:09
Hello!
If I have an int* ptr, pointing to int[n], can I access each element by using ptr[x] WITHOUT changing the address ptr is pointing to?
*ptr[x]
@TorbenC If you don't change the pointer, than it doesn't change the address the ptr is pointing to. You can access the element in array a at x+1 by using a[x]
Fantastic @Tel
@Telkitty (Thought autocomplete would handle that) Thank you!
helo
10:17
whatup
saturdaying, you
preparing xmasy stuff
@Xeo ye, he essentially made it clear how much of a dick he is
also I'm bleeding and it won't stop
Xeo
Xeo
@BartekBanachewicz Err
cut three patches of skin off my finger on some plate remains that my cat knocked off. amazin
@Xeo Contacting wes' ceo was completely uncalled for and absolutely unprofessional
and if they value of all their customer data at $2500...
I wonder how much could their potentially lose if Wes turned against them
but i guess dozens of millions is a fairly low estimate
10:29
@TorbenC int arr[4]={1,2,3,4};int * ptr=arr;for(int i=0;i<(sizeof(arr)/sizeof(arr[0]));i++)printf("%d ", *(ptr+i));
Thank you @KhaledAKhunaifer, that makes a lot of sense.
@TorbenC this (sizeof(arr)/sizeof(arr[0])) only works with arrays that are not dynamically allocated.
Okay, good to know :) Thank you again!
@BartekBanachewicz "The hybrid corn seeds Monsanto has donated to Haiti are treated with the fungicide Maxim XO, and the calypso tomato seeds are treated with thiram.[3] Thiram belongs to a highly toxic class of chemicals called ethylene bisdithiocarbamates (EBDCs)."
10:39
@Columbo Awesome, you're welcome! Chances are you would have to do this on Debian too, so good you didn't go for the reinstall :)
@ElimGarak sup
@KhaledAKhunaifer that's one way to put it
the other is "the seeds donated by monsanto after Haiti tragedy were all burned in the fear of GMO"
Not good enough for my master. He wants me to draw oval with glusphere () function :( — Farshid.M 1 min ago
ITT programmers work as slaves
@BartekBanachewicz that's the journalist twist, to utilize this against GMO, which is not the reason
I think I broke it
Lounge ate the freenode
10:44
@BartekBanachewicz but it's good that farmers care about seeds not being toxic, imagine if our farmers don't care if you end up with an inherently toxic vegetable stew at home, I wouldn't remain in such a place for living
> Great news everyone: Bo, Steve's mirrored JEM that went missing this past weekend, has been found left in the bushes at the gate on Steve's property.
what the fuck
morning
template <typename It11, typename It12, typename It21, typename It22>
void swap_elements( It11 first, It12 last, It21 otherfirst, It22 otherlast ) {
	while ( first != last && otherfirst != otherlast ) {
		std::swap( *first, *otherfirst );
		++first;
		++otherfirst;
	}
}
Awwwww yeah.
It's so good to write code.
Uhhn. Just. Finally, after writing so many things for so long.
Just code.
I am watching Deep Space 9. I am happy.
10:48
@ThePhD This is the bad.
@ElimGarak I'm watching TNG atm
@Puppy Well, aside from It21 last, I don't see what's wrong with it?
@ThePhD It's just a foreach over a zip. It's another custom job where it should be a trivial composure of existing pieces.
@Puppy I don't have a zip available to me right now... I could go get some boost maybe.
@ThePhD std::swap_ranges
10:51
well if you want to write your own algos that are basically just zips, then start with zip perhaps
@Morwenn That doesn't exist, does it?
@ThePhD It does, don't you read notifications? :P
Xeo
Xeo
@ThePhD Boost.Range's zip (named combine) is disgusting
10:51
lol
I'm the dumbs.
Know your standard library :p
@ThePhD that's not news
burn
@ThePhD It's okay <3 Read notifications next time bby
Xeo
Xeo
10:52
tbh, I wouldn't have expected that to exist.
Also your code didn't look up swap with ADL as it should.
@Xeo inb4 swap_ranges_if
@Xeo There's even iter_swap.
This shit's cray.
Xeo
Xeo
@ThePhD That I knew of
Xeo
Xeo
10:53
cuz it does ADL swap
C++ stdlib is a clusterfuck of bad ideas
@ThePhD That one is a bit useless but will be made useful again in a near future.
Xeo
Xeo
std::iter_swap(&a, &b) -> ADL swap!
Bartekscussion inbound
the only way to fix it is to kick out C part, then kick out the C++ part, put in concepts in the language and write a new range version
then it might be clean and usable
also modules
10:54
#modules2375
but that won't happen and C++noobs are apparently happy that it won't so w/e
I just need to write a wrapper version
that swaps with just 2 arguments and automatically forwards begin/end
Hey, the Ranges TS will be there soon, so: concepts, range algorithms, sentinel parameters, projections and maybe fix for std::vector<bool> and friends vs. algorithms.
While still being backwards-compatible.
@Morwenn soon
alongside the variant with empty state
10:57
@BartekBanachewicz It's already implemented, it already works and everybody wants them, and people generally agree on the design, so there's not really anything blocking it.
there wasn't really anything blocking C++ tooling for the past 20 years either
everyone agreed that it was necessary
@BartekBanachewicz And did you contribute to tooling?
Bartek contributed to being a tool :D <3
@Morwenn no, because at the point where I could contribute anything I stopped caring about that language
but I can say that iff ranges, modules and concepts hit standard, I am willing to give it another try
that being said, I suspect it will take at least 8 years
10:59
so no next major, but the major after that
Watch out, 2025. Here comes Bartek!

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