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user1804599
my hat's better
I wonder what's the purpose of this weapon: youtube.com/watch?v=wrImp-ek3bI I mean, if you miss your shot, you'll be incapacitated and the thing you were shooting at will kill you.
Do you see the title? "577 Tyrannosaur T-rex Gun"
@bitcode you can google the name
The .577 Tyrannosaur or .577 T-Rex (14.9×76mm) is a very large and extremely powerful rifle cartridge developed by American A-Square in 1993 for professional guides that escort clients hunting dangerous game. The cartridge is designed for use in "stopping rifles": A rifle intended to stop the charge of dangerous game. The 577 contains a .585-inch (14.9 mm) diameter 750-grain (49 g) Monolithic Solid Projectile which when fired moves at 2,460 ft/s (750 m/s) producing 10,180 foot-pounds force (13,800 J) of muzzle energy. The production model from A-square is based on their Hannibal rifle platform...
it's obviously for hunting dinosaurs
4
when a hippo tries to attack you
this is supposed to stop it
00:07
if you miss the dinosaur, you'll have bigger problems anyway
@milleniumbug hahaha
The .950 JDJ is an extremely powerful very large caliber rifle cartridge developed by American gunsmith and weapon designer J. D. Jones of SSK Industries. == Cartridge == Loaded .950 JDJ cases are approximately the length of an empty .50 BMG casing (i.e., 4 in or 10 cm), and are based on a 20×102mm case shortened and necked up to accept the .950 in (24.1 mm) bullet. Projectiles are custom-made and most commonly weigh 3,600 grains (230 g) which is 8.2 ounces or over half a pound. == Rifles == As its name implies, rifles chambered for the cartridge have a groove diameter of 0.950 in (24.1 mm). SSK...
for some reason it doesn't look like it's recoil is as hard as the dinosaur one
user1804599
Blank Infinity is a great song.
apparently there is a counter weight on the bottom side of that rifle. which is why the recoil is more controlable @user3886129
00:14
Haha, John Skeet has alost as many bronze badges than I have reputation.
@sehe many thanks for showing me the path on Spirit, although your comment about being out of your depths debugging obscure errors does not sound very reassuring for the robustness of the library
Oh. It's ambivalent. It's testament to the library's robustness in the sense that I never have to know about it really.
if you were on spirit then showing you the path is a noble cause indeed
00:19
@TemplateRex What do you use spirit for if i might ask?
@Borgleader parsing simple game records / positions
@TemplateRex It's sad that this Qi bug re-appeared. It was the single most hated bug in Qi. It's a design issue, clearly, which is why I don't feel enticed to tackle it
@sehe is it also possible to write the ast::fen structure as one big nested type of tuple/vector/variant/optional etc., and just use get<> and friends? (instead of naming structs and members)
@TemplateRex Yes. I'd hate that though
00:21
@sehe ideally, one would be able to do some kind of decltype(fen) and be done with it
@TemplateRex Well, the modern ADAPT macros are nearly there. You can use BOOST_FUSION_DEFINE_STRUCT IIRC
Wait for language reflection features
@sehe I just checked the mailing list thread you posted in. Joel seems to have a solution for the single-element bug in x3? :)
@Borgleader link?
@Borgleader I'm not aware of it. I'll test it if he committed it
00:22
@TemplateRex Hang on
> Perhaps one solution is to *ONLY*
do the unwrapping if the single-element sequence comes from partitioning,
or is intended by the user.
@sehe so that you are using the same ID '_' for all the rules is not a problem?
@Borgleader Yeah, that's exactly what I described at one point. Only he translates it into proper Spirit domain jargom
@TemplateRex it's not the same (the lambda is a template!) There's a slight catch, if you use it with the same types.
and then he says:
> OK, the solution I mentioned above seems to be working fine! I'll go run the
full regression tests to make sure nothing is broken and push the fix to develop.
@TemplateRex I don't even think it's a problem then, because we're not using tagged parser types to "lookup" the parser class
@Borgleader Lemme see. Nothing new, at least
@Borgleader So I read that, but the ship hasn't come in yet
00:26
well he did post that right before xmas, so im not entirely surprised :)
anyway, im hopeful itll be fixed soonish now
I'm not expecting the fix will get it right immediately. It has got a long history. At the very least it sounds like the fix is in the right direction this time.
who knows, we might get lucky
This is for all you sysadmins out there
Having a practice on static type languages(C, Java) and 2 dynamic type languages(Python & Javacript), I have a next plan for preparation to crack the interviews in top4 companies. For this, am planning to take course1 and course2. Do you see this as a good plan?
static type languages: C, yeah... about that :P
00:32
I am already done with SICP online course from UoC, berkeley.
well, it has a type system, it's main purpose is that you don't have to cast as much
@overexchange nice. Personally I think this is the best asset you have for interviews: show that you are an achiever. And I don't mean that in the academic sense (grades only)
ok
Ideally how much time does a student take to complete course1 and course2(mentioned above)? with the above technical background?
@sehe btw, i'm thinking about getting rid of the optionals, so what I would like to have is an optional with a default. E.g. with syntax like x3::opt(value, default)
@TemplateRex Does that exist? I'd just write char_(BW) | attr(' ') etc.
You can trivially write it, I guess. auto opt = [](auto p, auto d) { return as_parser(p) | attr(d); };
00:42
@sehe ah ok. Then I'd write the -char_('K') as char_('K') | attr('P') and get rid of the optional dependency (I'd still have to check the type of piece when printing/post-processing), but then I could e.g. do a switch
Or you can make it a variant. Whatever is more convenient, for me
@sehe with a variant, the default value appears to users in their allowed strings, I don't want my internal notation for non-king pieces to leak
huh. The variant would just not have the optional part
@sehe sorry, my bad, so the variant<A,A> would be the internal storage, but then it would reduce to plain A as attribute, right?
anyway, it's way too late, kids duty tomorrow morning. thanks a bunch!
@TemplateRex Look here (simplified now):
    template <typename Tag, typename T> struct tagged { T datum; };

    using num_pc = variant<int, tagged<struct king, int> >;
@TemplateRex Me too actually :)
00:54
@sehe good night /cc @TemplateRex
Hickey on error handling.
Kinda interesting.
user1804599
The only thing that thought me a lot about error handling was Go.
user1804599
In Go, if you discard the errors, you feel bad. If you just mindlessly return them all the time, your code gets ugly. So you have to think about them.
@Elyse not erlang?
user1804599
Nope.
01:07
It's not about error handling anyways
It's about handling failure
@Elyse In C++ you just let them propagate.
and you feel good
user1804599
And then you have no idea whether a function is going to throw or not, and your user is pleasantly confronted with unhandled exceptions.
user1804599
Good job.
Stuff can happen. Suddenly your filesystem may be gone. And the next write will trigger the exception and propagate all the way to the UI. But what else should it do?
user1804599
Maybe you could have recovered from the error but you didn't think about it since you wasn't aware of an error possibly happening in the first place.
01:16
Go error handling is total garbage
You want to propagate most of the time
@Elyse The library should throw a few dummy exceptions when used for the first time. That should raise awareness of them.
@Elyse the point is, to have robust systems, it should not be an issue to let some processes fail
UIs are overrated. Just because a human is seeing it doesn't make it more important.
Yep crashes are preferable to ignored errors
In fact, in your car you should prefer if the dashboard failed. As long as the logic circuits self-correct/restart on failure, or falls back to a graceful failure mode
depends on the system really
01:21
Systems where this is not true will not be written without formal verification anyway
How?
Petri nets for metros.
user1804599
@sehe That's error handling in the large.
It's not what you meant though.
user1804599
Some errors may be dealt with in the small to get a more responsive system.
user1804599
01:25
For example, if the error happens very often but is easily recovered from.
@Morwenn Hm? How is related that error handling? I can see it being used to argue correctness of a logistic schedule (concurrent locking without deadlock)
@sehe It's related to formal verification.
yes. I thought it was making a point in the discussion :) I missed Cat's message apparently
For error handling material, there is P0157: Handling Disappointment in C++.
"P0157: Handling Disappointment", by Cat Plus Plus
01:29
Thinking about errors isn't productive anyway. Just release it.
If you get a bug report then you can make the customer feel important by fixing it for him.
I remember when my program crashes the first time somebody tried to run it on his computer. Apparently it had a dependency to a visual studio dll.
Instant crash makes a very bad impression. It's as if you never even tested it.
But I had tested in on my colleagues machine. Who also had VS installed../
user1804599
x(0:n) = [(i * dx, i=0, n)]
user1804599
Fortran had list comprehensions before they were cool.
which version is that?
Forlooptran
user1804599
Fortran 2003.
01:37
then it's not earlier then :/ I think
So much going on this pic of New Year in Manchester by the Evening News. Like a beautiful painting. https://t.co/szKKRM4U4i
bweeheheheep
user1804599
github IP changed and DNS lookup now fails
user1804599
ugh
user1804599
oh now it works
github changed IP? That should be visible in the object hashes
user1804599
01:49
bitbucket also changed IP recently
@StackedCrooked cough... :)
@Elyse inb4 you're being spoofed/poisoned
How / why do you know the address changed?
user1804599
Bitbucket told me.
user1804599
They had a large banner on their website.
@Elyse Interesting
user1804599
01:57
I never trust anything Erik 'Do Not Unit Test It; Instead Put It In Production And See What Happens' Meijer says.
/cc @Borgleader @ElimGarak @ThePhD @TonyTheLion @Xeo @WGhost @набиячлэвэлиь
Ven
Ven
RIP Scott, you magnificent bastard :'(
user1804599
Volledig de weg kwijt.
@Ven What happened
Unit testing is good. But high-level testing is more important than unit testing.
Ven
Ven
02:00
@sehe He left us!
Some time ago, right
Ven
Ven
Yesterday. Don't be so hipster-ish.
Oh. Link? Why not on starboard?
@Ven dammit what
@jaggedSpire :3
02:01
@Borgleader <3
@StackedCrooked automatic tests are nice
Ven
Ven
@sehe It is on the starboard
@Ven WHY!? T_T
@Ven Enlighten me
> No Star Wars spoilers until 15 Jan 2016, please
???
02:01
I've been over it sever times
@milleniumbug Yeah. Esp when refactoring.
Ven
Ven
@sehe scottmeyers.blogspot.com...
did he object to the uncon nomination poll
@Ven dammit man
@Ven Oh. That scott. Sorry. That's my brain not connecting the right dots.
thought you were talking about Scott
02:02
@Ven i thought you meant our Scott
@jaggedSpire the date of release on The Pirate Bay
@jaggedSpire Me too
Ven
Ven
Ah, no. Not one of the scott brothers
@milleniumbug didn't know that, was mostly implying searching the starboard in confusion for mentions of Scott leaving again. Thanks though.
user1804599
@StackedCrooked -1
user1804599
02:04
what a fool
@milleniumbug oh well I totally knew that. Yeah...
I am leaving you too.
@StackedCrooked that's ridiculously unnuanced
02:05
Have fun :D
@sehe Yeah. Typical dutch person :P
I distance myself
@StackedCrooked what really
02:07
He's wrong about OSI though.
@StackedCrooked uh..... "just put it into production because it will fail" 11/10 great advice
@Morwenn NIght.
Also I return.
He must have been somewhat sarcastic.
doesn't sound sarcastic though
02:09
Or not entirely serious.
hes basically saying "tests are useless because you cant predict failures, so yolo that shit and put it into production instead"
@ThePhD Oh, too bad that's when I leave :o
@Morwenn A bummer. But, I think I can read the code and figure things out.
Also break the code and see what explodes. :B
@Morwenn coincidence? nah
@ThePhD The testsuite should explode if you modify hybrid_adapter. Probably in strange ways. Have fun :D
02:11
@StackedCrooked yeah, it's much better than the catholic church
@milleniumbug it sounds only sarcastic continuously ever since the point it started at
Well, I still don't know how to do the part "write the tests beforehand" in TDD
Currently I write tests on demand, after every bug I discover
ARPANET identified the essential layers very early (link, network and transport). OSI came later and tried to add more layers and they basically failed.
I wish there was a std::unique_ptr<T[]> that kept hte size in the unique_ptr.
I think it woulda been nice.
Maybe can specialize it.
unique_arr_ptr<T> or something.
02:15
not allowed unless T is userdefined
Just so I can have that feature.
@sehe Not even in a subclass?
store it in the deleter, duh
@milleniumbug That's actually not a half bad idea, but then I'd want a method to do .size() on it...
@ThePhD where did that come from. Of course you can do whatever you want with your types
@ThePhD "but" is wrong in that sentence
Oh... I guess so. But yeah. Maybe a free function size overload would be good enough.
02:16
The derpstorm is affected by el Niño
well, that's a hacky solution, you can violate the invariant by doing reset() (among other things)
better create a dedicated class
(if it's not public then you shouldn't have a problem with storing the size separately)
std::unique_ptr<std::array<T, N> >
(I know it doesn't do operator[] and similar)
I think you'd like to have a lightweight dynarray-like class, but with heap allocation and .release() function
shrink_to_clear()
:P
@JohanLarsson "Let's see some typical team members" infoq.com/presentations/Developing-Expertise-Dave-Thomas
02:22
Otherwise you'd just use a std::vector
@milleniumbug what if the array comes from a library and you want to avoid the copy? (disclaimer: i didnt follow the conversation much)
You can use vector with a stack allocator.
But resizing isn't the goal right
@Borgleader array_view...?
@sehe afaik array_view doesnt deal with lifetimes.
Of course not. Separate yo' concerns
02:25
unique_array_ptr<T> would, or did that get solved and were talking about something else?
@Borgleader The constructor of this thingy would be just great: unique_array::unique_array(T* ptr, std::size_t size) - takes ownership of the pointer. if the size argument doesn't match the size of the pointed array, the behaviour is undefined
@milleniumbug why does unique_array_ptr need the size? I mean it might be convenient but as an ownership construct it really doesnt
It doesn't, it was more of a convenience thing.
14 mins ago, by ThePhD
I wish there was a std::unique_ptr<T[]> that kept hte size in the unique_ptr.
@milleniumbug god damnit, i started readin 2 messages after that one T_T
02:30
it's okay, we all make mistakes
@Borgleader pat pat there, there.
@milleniumbug not quite as bad :)
CNR
could not resist?
thats right, because resistance is futile :D
that's not really related. futile things are frequently the most feasible
@AlexM. We do a lot of calculations ourselves
02:41
Welcome to 2016, or 1620 as the Americans call it.
3
That's refreshingly funny
Gotta grab a png to loaad.
I didn't speak English at 3
I can pretty easily imagine just about any of my kids asking that at 3.
A simple 'No' will not suffice because the rules of this site dictate that my comment or answer has to be at least 14 characters long. Now that I've surpassed that limit, the answer is NO. — David Hammen 19 hours ago
03:05
I remember why I stopped programming in openGL.
The VS kept crashing and nothing would display to the screen when I didn't let VS crash.
Use the remote GDB debugging capabilities!
03:20
I woke up by a crow on the tree in front of my bedroom window that was talking to another crow further away
03:45
rofl wtf is this
"environmentally friendly" well its burning something... gas maybe? not sure thats so much better than wood then
@ThePhD Aww, that was just an innocuous suggestion.
it would look cool though, too bad its not a thing
@Borgleader If we have Star Wars-esque holograms then a much better alternative would be an electric stove plus holoflames.
Fire glass is tempered glass manufactured in various shapes and sizes and is used as a medium to retain and direct heat, usually in natural gas fireplaces and natural gas or propane fire pits. Fire glass does not burn, but retains heat and refracts light as a result of burning gas. Fire glass (like artificial logs and stones) is additionally used to obscure the gas plumbing inherent in gas fireplaces or stoves. Fire glass comes in quarter inch and half inch shards of tempered glass with smoothed edges to decrease risk of cuts. It is also available in other various shapes and sizes. == References... ==
Eh, it's actually gas as fuel.
@jaggedSpire :3 /cc @TonyTheLion
@MarkGarcia right, so... environmetally friendly claim is bullshit
04:15
@Borgleader :3
tiny warm floof :D
04:29
@Borgleader Friend says TOR isn't releasing new content for a while, and hasn't since October 20
:(
@jaggedSpire It'll prob take you at least 4 months to get through the content they have now, so thats not really an issue :P
Also:
> Knights of the Fallen Empire was launched on October 27, 2015, with new chapters delivered regularly following that.
Is it all single player?
chapter 10 of 16 releases in feb
He seems unhappy about the multiplayer content
and the burst damage nerfs?
eh idk, im super casual on this one and i took a break so i missed some changes
04:35
shrugs
Anyway, its F2P so the barrier to entry is very low :)
If you start playing enough a subscription might be worth it, but you can play for free
04:57
@Borgleader Burning wood makes more byproducts
@CatPlusPlus but is more easily renewable, so its questionable whether burning gas is better (i would argue it isnt)
Eh, renewability mostly matters once reserves are low
05:41
hello
06:08
Good Morning
06:44
@TheLittleNaruto Anime, eh ?
@Joe.Dc Yes ?
07:00
Morning all
@Zeta ro ?
@Joe.Dc ro ?
Sorry, I confused you.
I'am looking for a directx programmer. :D For a job, if someone want. :D
07:37
Morning
07:52
mawnin
08:09
morning
08:24
morning
08:41
14 flags?
@StackedCrooked Do I get write rights to the working directory (for temporary files) whilst running on Coliru?
I assume that they are deleted when the job has finished running?
okeydokey
I'll just dump some temporary files there then ;p
08:56
go ahead :P
don't dd the crap out of it though
nah
it's going to improve the efficiency I think, because I will make only one request for each action now, since I won't have to post each file individually.
and for the Wide files, I don't need to write them out at all because I was not a useless tit when writing my interfaces ;p
\@Puppy have you written a documentation on how to program in Wide yet?
09:20
It's interesting to hear what ideas have been tried in the past.
09:38
why is this an incomplete type using shader_filenames = std::tuple<const char*, const char*, const char*, const char*, const char*>; ;_;
am i having stroke
oh
@MichaelMitchell because you've included a header that indirectly includes a declaration of std::tuple, but no definition. ie. #include <tuple>.
so why does it matter if this statement is used in a class or not
wait, who do I have on ignore?
uh oh, i found a bug in intellisense
@MichaelMitchell Welcome to VS land
Make yourself comfortable and... oh! Don't touch that, it's incredibly buggy.
09:42
@StackedCrooked nice talk, "the goto statement is considered harmful, 1968"
@FilipRoséen-refp you were right about that, i was including utility instead of tuple, but it some how fixed itself when i put the using in a class then removed it :/
@MichaelMitchell I'm always right, I'm a bot.
oh noes a bot
Subroutines are rather nice compared to that :D
@StackedCrooked Is that Old Fortran?
09:45
I don't know actually.
Moar flags
23 now
what was flagged?
@StackedCrooked Certainly has the signs of it (.EQ.)
09:52
thanks
I'm not gonna have 10k anytime soon, 10 reps last week
I wonder
if in the future
history will have a subsection called 'memeology'
Just go to 4chan
@набиячлэвэлиь too many normies
@TonyTheLion satire
09:56
lol I knew there was something off
@TonyTheLion How about all the headlines in the sidebar?
@Zeta Didn't look at those
look at the footer
"Any references to events or individuals are satirical in nature."
> - REPORT: Grandma Doesn’t Trust “The Asians”
> - BREAKING: Jewish Mom Pesters Son
> - How to Celebrate a Non-Denominational Reading Week
> - Uncle A Little Too Interested In Your Hookups
> - Freshman Returns to Find Room has Been Turned into Sex Dungeon
Sorry bby's I missed it was satire, no need to rub it in any further :)
09:58
The last one is not that surprising
> Turman was confused when he first arrived home and found a bookshelf bolted into the floor, covering the space where the door to his room used to be. However, when the passionate CRU member tried to remove the Bible from the shelf for his daily prayer session, the bookshelf moved and revealed the secret sex dungeon in the room where he used to sleep.
> Free everywhere, $2.30 in Canada
That seem elaborate.

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