« first day (1903 days earlier)      last day (3274 days later) » 

Allright guys, I'm off. See y'all.
@Borgleader :P
I have an array (sorted increasing). I can add 1 to any element any number of times. I want to make the min steps to make the entire gcd >1. For this I have used this approach, is this fine? Generate all primes below first element of the array, then calculate (prime - A[i]%prime) (i is all elements of array) for all primes and add this. Finally find min of all these sums.
why the fuck are brainfarts like if (d.IsReady == true) on MSDN?
makes me really question whether the example on how to use their API is valid :-\
20:14
lol
@someone1 What if there are no primes below first element of the array ?
what if your face
That means there is a 1 in the array. I didn't think of that.
Can you think of what can be done? @sar
@SarvagyaAgarwal*
It seems that libc++ and libstdc++ don't allocate the same amount of memory for std::inplace_merge.
std::inplace_merge which isn't in-place, interesting
20:23
@someone1 I'm not sure I understand your approach . Can you explain it for this case -> 11 13 15
@milleniumbug Yeah, their definition of in-place is just that the result of the merge operation is in the original array.
The complexity depends on the available memory.
All primes below 11&incl 11 are: 11,7,5,3,2. if(Array element %11!=0) To the sum add, 11-(arr%11). Find all such sums for all primes below 11. Then find the min. @SarvagyaAgarwal
Apparently libstdc++ always tries to allocate memory for last - first objects while libc++ tries to allocate memory for min(last - middle, middle - first) objects.
@someone1 I dont think this would work
It will work for all cases unless there is a 1 in the array.
20:29
@someone1 for each element of the array -> find summation prime-(element mod prime) . minimum of all these summations is the answer ?
Yes. Try it for 11 13 15. You will get 3. For the case when the prime is 2.
@someone1 I misunderstood. I think you mean : for every prime -> find summation prime-element mod prime and then find min . did i get it now ?
Yes. And add to summation if element%prime!=0
do you guys use the default font size of 10 in VS
I seem to always bump it up to 11 or 12 regardless of monitor
10 looks just too small
@someone1 try this 12 13 13 you will get 2
20:38
right now I'm using a 13" laptop with 1366x768, EVERYTHING IS TOO SMALL
you need one of those fancy new tablets man
4k resolutions on 11"
@milleniumbug thats what she said
the second display has 1024x768 with 15", feels much better
@SarvagyaAgarwal start seeing the primes from the largest number. That will work now.
the home is where you have the biggest screens
20:40
Just an issue with the 1s.
in a way, even 1080p on my 24" feels little
I think I'd feel best with 1080p on a 26"+
I've got a pair of 1080p 24"
Me too, except I'm at my parents' home
@someone1 Why not change all 1's to 2
Will that always work?
@someone1 don't know ! I don't know the intuition behind your approach !
user1804599
Yummy.
If I have all 1s, it will not work @SarvagyaAgarwal
@SarvagyaAgarwal math.stackexchange.com/questions/1595964/… Read this. This is fine just that it doesn't explain the case when 1 is in the set.
cad
cad
20:50
Concering Winter Bash: do we actually get some reward for a certain number of hats? Or is it just for fun?
just fun
user1804599
% ./flagman grep -v
       -v, --invert-match
              Invert the sense of matching, to select non-matching lines.
no, you won't get rep for it
user1804599
Just wrote this wonderful tool.
cad
cad
@Borgleader No dough? I hate SO.
20:53
@Elyse In what language this time?
Anyone can help with the gcd question? math.stackexchange.com/questions/1595964/…
user1804599
@wilx Perl.
I can help get it downvoted, if that's what you wish
@Elyse A conservative choice then. :)
Did I do something wrong?
20:57
@someone1 Did you read the rules?
user1804599
@wilx Nothing beats Perl when it comes to parsing output of man.
Meanwhile my debugger just keeps crashing.
@someone1 if i have all 1's why wouldn't it work ?
@Morwenn attach the debugger to the debugger and debug while you debug :)
@Borgleader It seems that the workload is too high for the poor debugger.
If the debugger doesn't work I'll just printf my way out of that.
21:12
@someone1 What if the initial sequence is not non-decreasing ?
user1804599
WTF.
user1804599
My program behaves differently when its source is opened by Vim.
user1804599
Oh, has to do with terminal width.
user1804599
Interesting.
21:39
is using this a common way to hide away unnecessary params from the user in C++?
72
A: Can lambda functions be recursive?

Andy ProwlYes, they can. You can store it in a variable and reference that variable (although you cannot declare the type of that variable as auto, you would have to use an std::function object instead). For instance: std::function<int (int)> factorial = [&] (int i) { return (i == 1) ? 1 : i * facto...

similar to this, in Racket
(define (next-prime start)
  (define (search candidate)
    (if (prime? candidate)
        candidate
        (search (add1 candidate))))
  (search (add1 start)))
well not really a good example
it was the only code I had at hand
imagine that you're trying to recursively find the depth or something and you don't want the user to pass in the initial depth of 0 to your function
@AlexM. I wouldn’t call it common, no
I used to hide the implementation details in namespaces, although these days I lean towards putting them in the private bits of a class (what with Niebler-style functions etc.)
@AlexM. I write the function which forwards to the functionImpl which has more arguments
It's a common pattern
yea that's what I'm doing now, but the recursive lambda thing also came to mind
int CountLongestCommonPrefix(TrieNode& node, const std::string& word)
{
	return CountLongestCommonPrefixInternal(node, word, 0);
}
the namespace idea is good, I'll use it
@AlexM. it’s… not something worthy of attention
21:44
don't do the recursive lambda thing, it's silly
yea, I won't
user1804599
my $indentation = qr/\s*/;
while (<$man>) {
	next unless /^($indentation)(-.*?)(?:\s{2}|$)/;
	$indentation = $1;
user1804599
kinda obscure
user1804599
but very nice
@AlexM. you’ve never done the namespace detail or namespace foo_detail thing before?
21:45
I remember seeing it before here, but it didn't come to mind
I think it's mainly because I'm stuck with one file for this
it's one of those educational things with an online evaluator and crap
that makes sense
50 pts, TLE on the 2nd half of tests
this is where the beauty ends unfortunately :<
time to find out what makes it slow
and hack away
22:02
Baby penguin getting tickled /cc @Borgleader @ElimGarak @TonyTheLion @ThePhD @WGhost @набиячлэвэлиь
that's a rather odd list of loungers
@jaggedSpire sounds like its getting strangled though =/
@Borgleader Kind of like how deer can make cute noises... and also make the sounds of the spawn of the devil.
@Puppy It's whoever subscribed
@Puppy actualy its even
22:06
@Puppy it's the list of people that I believe want to be pinged when I post animal pics
@Borgleader The first pun of 2016.... I nearly chuckled.
Well done. <3
@Puppy It helps with my derp levels.
I add Xeo for Red Pandas specifically
22:23
@ThePhD <3
user4959035
May I ask here some question NOT about C++, but about Continuous Integration with Continuous Delivery/Deployment?
@user3886129 sucks at understanding stuff
@MatthewTipton You can ask me that, I'm not the worst at that
user1804599
> offensive No Let sudo print insults when the user types the wrong password.
user1804599
killer feature
user4959035
@набиячлэвэлиь than go to my profile and view my last question please at SO, don't want to spam here
user4959035
22:25
thanks, by the way
For an undirected, unweighted graph, minimum steps of flood fill is NP-complete?
@MatthewTipton Posted a comment, hope it helps. Hit me up in this room, if you'd like further explanations
22:40
@someone1 that approach worked :D
What did you do for the 1s?
@SarvagyaAgarwal Please tell me the exact thing you did too
actually it passes for 9/10 cases one case still gives a WA .
first i converted the array to non-decreasing (if it wasn't initially).
then checked whether the array was all 1's
if it was answer is simply the `N`
otherwise generate all primes and find minimum sum (the way you said).
I wonder if it is the converting part that is wrong :/ rest all seems fine
Instead of sorting, why not find the max and then go decreasing?
Uhm, I can debug it, send me your code?
Mine seems to work with all cases now, so I'd love to see how my logic fails with yours.
@someone1 i didn't sort because we aren't allowed to change the position of the elements , maybe you'll get the idea with the code
hang on
how will you send it?
@someone1 pastebin ?!
or you could give your email id !
Sure, I don't think that idents it though. Lets just try that
@StackedCrooked not at all
@SarvagyaAgarwal please god no
you and your tools
don't call me a tool
Beste wensen nog trouwens
22:49
@someone1 pastebin.com/iWnuthhu , not that readable though !
Inderdaad :)
@Elyse That's your mention for 2016 I take it?
user1804599
???
Ik kreeg zonet een gratis fles wijn van de nachtwinkel.
user1804599
what is a mention for 2016?
22:49
Best to get it over with soon
Apparently I'm a good customer.
Of ze willen echt heel graag van je af
FTR I wasn't born yesterday
Nor today, for that matter
i blame skype
22:51
@SarvagyaAgarwal what does auto prime: s mean?
@JohanLarsson :D I blame over curious web apps
@someone1 iterating through the set i created basically it's for(set<int>::iterator it=s.begin();it!=s.end();it++)
@someone1 stackoverflow.com/questions/388242/the-definitive-c-book-guide-and-list
Why not directly do this? Use Sieve before running test cases. Then find max element, check all primes below that.
or is there something wrong with that? @SarvagyaAgarwal
@someone1 Nothing wrong with that ! I guess we'll be checking unneccessary primes , that's all!
22:56
Wouldn't Sieve be faster than directly doing what you have and rebuilding the set?
for example if the elements are 1 100000 , you will check all primes from 1 to 100000 . I'll check only primes which divide 10000.
Right, that is better.
anyways the problem isn't speed , I am getting Wrong Answer for one of the cases . I am missing something .
user1804599
TESTS <3
23:00
What does that mean? @Elyse
@Elyse That's a dope project idea, yo
user1804599
@набиячлэвэлиь Yes, it's incredibly useful.
user1804599
The search command in less is suboptimal because it also finds mentions of the flag and other occurrences of the same character sequence.
> They say penis size is related to shoe size. Which makes the fear of being raped by a clown that much scarier.
:D
@someone1 Is the part about converting the sequence if it is not non-decreasing correct ?
23:09
I didn't quite get that part. Why is that needed and what are you doing with it?
user1804599
@wilx Rape jokes aren't funny.
user1804599
(Except this one really is haha!)
user1804599
</swj>
@Elyse done it this way most of time: superuser.com/q/441654/132604
@someone1 we need to satisfy two conditions : one is gcd>1 and the other is that the sequence should be non-decreasing .
23:11
Still, would be nice thing
Okay, so what is the change function doing?
@Elyse OK, you almost got me!
scans the array , if the current element is greater than the next element (increase the next element to the current element and add the difference to the answer )
No that seems fine.
23:15
testing on random cases isn't helping too(coz i dont know the correct answer :P)
hi @Morwenn I was reading some code of yours on your github and I have a question :)
@bitcode Go ahead.
why use auto here?
auto Function::args() const -> const std::vector<Arg>&
Because it's more beautiful.
And always consistent.
@Morwenn I'm a bit confused by the sorter interface. Is there a guide somehwere to how it rolls?
23:21
@bitcode It's a trailing return type
Not the runtime one. The template one,pertaining to the issue.
@ThePhD What do you mean? In which way(s) does it confuse you?
@someone1 Can you show me what you wrote ?
I will answer that question but brb something's happening
Oh, ok.
23:22
I just have that random algorithm, I didn't know exactly the format of input or anything, so
@milleniumbug yeah, after I read the code I did some research and understood how it works. however I was left wondering how @Morwenn 's implementation would be better that way. I was just curious
I thought this would be just fine: const std::vector<Arg>& Function::args() const;
user1804599
It's (semantically) equivalent in this case. The choice between them is done by "which one do you prefer" criterion.
@ThePhD Also, if you want an easy approach, there's a tutorial on how to write a bubble_sorter and another tutorial which describes the implicit rules followed when writing sorters. It's a bit redundant.
> Warning: The pickle module is not secure against erroneous or maliciously constructed data. Never unpickle data received from an untrusted or unauthenticated source.
lol, this makes it effectively useless
@bitcode I like that all of my functions names start on the same column. It makes it easier (at least for me) to know what's the return type and what's the function name.
Also, I often say "a function that takes something and returns some other thing", in that exact order.
And if your return type incudes a decltype involving the function parameters, writing it without a trailing return type is a real mess.
@KhaledAKhunaifer I just realised, this is flood fill, right?
@Morwenn good points. thanks for explaining.
No problem :)
@someone1 no, but it is similar to a 4-way flood fill. this solves the problem you asked about earlier
23:28
@Morwenn At my first job that was the coding style and I started to prefer it that way. At my second job the code style was to put them on the same line and after a while I started to prefer that.
True story :P
@KhaledAKhunaifer the putchar's are used for?
@someone1 for logging purposes, to keep record of which directions we went onto
@StackedCrooked I use heavily templated code, so the return types are often really long. That's partly why I prefered to have them on a separate line :p
@JerryCoffin What the going sacrificial rate for winning the lottery these days? tia.
But I think putting them on separate lines makes both visible on a surface that is small enough to be observed without having to move your eyes. So that might be the better one.
user1804599
23:29
@Morwenn You must love functions that return references to arrays: int (&f())[10] { ... }.
@Elyse I don't have those.
user1804599
Or obscure but correct Java syntax: int f() [] { ... }.
user1804599
Really works!
user1804599
Dennis, Bjarne, and James were all drunk.
@Elyse auto
23:31
template<typename Iterable, typename... Args>
auto operator()(Iterable& iterable, Args&&... args) const
    -> decltype(dispatch_sorter{}(
        choice<
            iterator_category_value<typename std::iterator_traits<
                decltype(std::begin(iterable))
            >::iterator_category> * categories_number
        >{},
        iterable,
        std::forward<Args>(args)...
    ))
Yeah, for some silly reason the int[] a and int a[] declarations are equivalent in Java
which is silly, because it's useless for everyone
I have some big return types like that too.
wth
int f() [] { ... } is considered like int[] f() { ... } in Java
@Morwenn I could never write such code.
Can't deal with so much meta.
@StackedCrooked I wish I didn't have to, but it was the only way.
23:35
yes, this is silly because it's not helpful for programmers with C background (the array declaration syntax is different anyway), neither it achieves anything
At first the return type was decltype(auto) but it didn't play well with SFINAE.
user1804599
Hmm, was Anders also drunk? No!
good job Anders
user1804599
@milleniumbug Actually, if C allowed returning arrays, the syntax would be int f() [] { ... }.
@Morwenn Praise decltype(auto), our lord and saviour
23:36
@набиячлэвэлиь It's great when it's sufficient.
user1804599
"Anders" is the Dutch word for "different". I think that's why C# differs in this regard.
@Elyse Well, it doesn't :D so it's not helpful (in case of local arrays, you still have to use new)
int (*f ()) [10] { return nullptr; }
user1804599
@milleniumbug ???
user1804599
C has no new.
23:37
@Elyse it was a follow up on
3 mins ago, by milleniumbug
yes, this is silly because it's not helpful for programmers with C background (the array declaration syntax is different anyway), neither it achieves anything
I want std::randint and std::shuffle without having to pass the RNG. Why can't we have them right now?
@Morwenn make a wrappr?
Put them in namespace std on your local machine.
user1804599
C++ has thread-locals and user-defined functions, so you can have them right now!
@Borgleader It's not bothersome enough for me to reimplement them, but it would be cool enough to have them right now.
23:40
@StackedCrooked typedef also
Also std::random_device is broken on MinGW -_-
user1804599
namespace morwenn {
    namespace std { void shuffle(...) { ... } /* not ub! */ }
}
namespace mylibrary {
namespace std {
void shuffle(..) //
} } // legal!
@Morwenn It's broken on Windows, yes. Not news
@Morwenn i didnt say reimplement, i sad wrapper :)
23:42
@набиячлэвэлиь Surprisingly it's not broken in VC++ (who could expect?)
@milleniumbug And it's not broken with Boost either.
Which makes me wonder why it's borken in the STL shipped with MinGW-w64.
@milleniumbug its the compiler that sucks, not the library, all hail STL \o/
Want portability? Use Boost :D
boost is the greatest thing invented in this century
was it invented in this century?
23:45
invented last century then
@bitcode lol so close
1999
user1804599
I want to write something in Fortran but I have no idea what.
boost was discovered not invented
user1804599
I don't really have anything that Fortran is a good tool for.
hangman lol
user1804599
23:45
XD
multiplying matrices not your thing?
That's Matlab's job (which, unsurprisingly, uses Fortran <-- hmm, does it really? not sure now)
@bitcode transistor
@Puppy this comes second
a @ b # matrix multiplication
23:49
python?
Yes.
hmm, with NumPy Python is quite usable for matrices too
user1804599
@bitcode the wheel
user1804599
In fact, wheel was invented in the 20th century. The user group in Unix systems, that is.
1/7 would laugh
23:52
@Elyse I was thinking about that one. I still think boost is better than the wheel.
Nooble's the worst
Even sleep's better than Nooble
he's great

« first day (1903 days earlier)      last day (3274 days later) »