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16:00
@AngryLettuce M&M's
a million you twit
fucking freetards and their silly abbreviations
to raise 50 M&M's, just throw them in the air
I concur
@sehe there was this F# programmer whom I trolled just a little bit and he went full retarded; then the bosnian guy who felt compelled to end each of his messages with a smiley face and / or "haha" and asked some trivial questions of which most were (to my surprise) replied to... the Joe I don't even remember having plonked and from the people who have recently launged, there is also some "Andrey" there whom I don't remember having plonked
16:01
AMURICAAAAAAAAA
50M to make a jabbascript app seems kinda overpriced
I mean I'd rather spend 50M on drugs and hookers than on a JS app
@Joe.Dc not sure what project that really is
a business is about product, language is pretty irrelevant
no
fact: javascript sucks donkey balls
6
@nick it is relevant; you're not gonna write a bank app in PHP
16:03
and that donkey is dying of terminal testicular cancer
er i guess
javascript is always irrelevant
@ScarletAmaranth theyre all written in COBOL or some shit
^ hh
I wish that was less funny but the fact that it's still true in 2016 makes it hilarious
@Mr.kbok irrelevant if you don't enjoy money
16:04
@nick I guess
but soon rust will be the highest paid language!!!
(yes, except for no)
well, we'll see
we will, except for we will not
>2016
>caring about money
wake up sheeple
@Felix MMORPG Game . It's almost finished. It's in test, When the server reaches 3000 player starts to appear lag
16:05
it could have some potential server-side but if nodejs falls out of favor it will probably be due to Go
oh well
I'am expecting 30.000 players
cloudinary does not support dnx core
official open.
@AngryLettuce fuck youre right man
16:07
the most reliable way of getting money that requires little to no qualification is politics
you need connections for that
and you can't really do shit with the money you raise
I have an ethernet connection
would that work
besides fly in nice planes
@Joe.Dc so do you have a link to a website, beta, ...?
@AngryLettuce depends, is it gigabit?
16:09
@Not really. ro.avenor2.org
lol that reminds me
we might not be moving to the office in Central after all
cheap fucks
it's totally cool, top floor, lots of space, lots of light, but internet is crap
to get fiber up there it would cost 100k
internet is crap in HK in general
its pretty decent
16:10
no
its far better than what you can find in the US imo
not a good comparison
and compare to EU standards its utter shite
meh
Comparing HK internet to the US's is like comparing HK water quality to Ethiopia's
16:11
lots of old crappy buildings here
anyway off to bread
make a nazi joke before you go to sleep
Too tired for that, I need to concentrate
nn then
16:16
@AngryLettuce apparently not yet
@Mr.kbok not true
@Mr.kbok it won't
@ScarletAmaranth exactly
@AngryLettuce good point
i'm joking guys chill
@Joe.Dc it's not
@Mr.kbok fuck you combo breaker
fite me irl kid
no one's here to see it anyway
16:18
@nick no way
rite cuz id kick ur head in m8
go is shit and it has a fraction of nodejs momentum anyway
Is this kid retarded?
@Columbo You are confusing different template instantiations with ODR violation. — Maxim Egorushkin 1 min ago
@Columbo You do, but I am sorry to let you know that you miss the point. — Maxim Egorushkin 41 secs ago
16:21
@BartekBanachewicz it has a tiny fraction of the market compared to node but i think it could gain some traction in certain areas
Most of the infrastructure/distributed system stuff is in Go these days
I don't remember last time I've even seen Node used anywhere
hi nooble
@ScarletAmaranth I know preðoisely which person you mean hahaha
Even if it wasn't then fuck jebbascript and node
@Joe.Dc so, in ten days you go live, and then you want to rewrite the IO layer. You can hire me. I'll offer you an amount to look at things and make a plan. There's a very big chance the plan doesn't fit in the required -2 days
user406009
16:27
@CatPlusPlus In many cases, JS is better than the other options.
user406009
For instance, JS > C++
user406009
And, with the correct tooling, many of the "flaws" of JS are somewhat solvable.
by not being retarded
user406009
"use strict;"
user406009
16:28
ES6 array functions and let.
user406009
Enforce triple equals using a linter.
What do I do
@Columbo This is exactly where you go wrong way. The parameter initializer does not involve any names, ODR does not apply here. — Maxim Egorushkin 26 secs ago
What do I say
Now we all must act surprised: Malware hijacks mandatory European Cookie Law popups https://blog.malwarebytes.org/fraud-scam/2016/01/clickjacking-campaign-plays-on-european-cookie-law/ https://t.co/khcmNMLpFF
I wondered whether that was news worthy. The pain is, of course, that people have been conditioned to mindlessly click these away. But the same goes for all these fake dialogs and "inbox notifications"
Plus Go has Google behind it, Node has a mess of people who can't work together
Also deploying Node is a pain in the ass
For all the niches Node occupies there are better choices
user406009
Google is also supporting Dart.
user406009
16:33
And look how that's going.
i'd get into dart if they offered out of the box support in the browser
Dart targets client-side, and that goes about as well as anything other client-side related
@CatPlusPlus how do you not mind Go not having generics :-\
I don't use Go
user406009
Dart is not even on the map compared to its competition of Typescript and ES6.
16:36
Cool story but irrelevant
Server-side Google has its own cloud platform and Kubernetes that's going rather strong
we tried kubernetes and it didn't work out
but then again we were trying to use it for local dev
Client-side squabbles really don't matter (they also have Angular with TS there so not like they're throwing much care into that market)
lol why would you use it locally
The only reason to do that is to learn how to deploy it
@JerryCoffin Ahahahaha, that's fucking Karma, right?... :D
lol
then we tried to use vagrant to launch a local cluster for dev
that didn't work
well it did it was just terrible
so now we're just doing standard CI w/ a staging server
docker containers and shit can also be hosted locally for quick debugging
That's not really an equivalent technology
16:39
it's not
Kube is a building block anyway, if you're going with that you probably want something building upon it like OpenShift
what we really need is DBaaS that isn't shit
avoid compose.io like the plague they're pretty much garbage
@CatPlusPlus ha ha I'd totally like to see you writing in C++
and saying how much more productive you are
16:42
Wot
I'm not using jebbascript either
u fockin wot m8 ill rek u m8
That's not really relevant
With all the shit JS has in it, C++ is still worse
Go is better for networking, C++ is better for compute
There's really no place in my stack for jebbascript
user406009
@BartekBanachewicz Well that's also because C++ is trying to solve a harder problem than JS.
16:43
true
JS is not solving any problems it's just herpy derpy
it sorta exists
nobody really knows why
it just happened
and then san francisco became gentrified
thanks jebbescript
altough frankly
user406009
JS has a couple of important qualities. It's easy to sandbox. It's safe.
given that C++ had thousands of hours of design put into it, and JS had like 4
it still has a better quality per effort rating
user406009
It has somewhat familiar semantics to other popular languages.
16:45
"Safe" for what
also Lala are you still up for continuing work on Harvest or are you out
@CatPlusPlus memory-safe.
@Lalaland more importantly, it's expressive and is compatible across a wide variety of platforms
user406009
@BartekBanachewicz Have to say, I am sorta out.
user406009
Sorry.
Sandboxing really only matters for browsers
user406009
16:46
@CatPlusPlus And surprise! That's what JS is for.
Well have fun with that
I don't deal with browsers
@Columbo To claim ODR violation you must state the name that violates ODR. What is that name here please? (Don't parrot me, that make you look like a petty 12-year old). — Maxim Egorushkin 1 min ago
srsly
SO at its best
the one thing that truly bugs me on C++ are the compile times vOv
user406009
@CatPlusPlus Do you at least acknowledge that web applications provide some value to users?
user406009
Easy distribution, good security guarantees to end users, pseudo cross-platform, etc, etc.
16:51
I'd say I'm not sure why you even bring them up in a server thread but that's Lounge so
user406009
Well, node's value comes from being able to share code on both the client and the server.
user406009
So JS's use as a client is important to the sucess of node.
@ScarletAmaranth Embrace modules.
In 2023.
2017!
fucking hell, 2017
I just can't... work well... when I have to wait 2 minutes on every compilation
You almost never share code between client and the server
"Success" is a strong word for Node but even then it's that JS was ubiquitous, not about sharing anything
It's a completely irrelevant non-use-case
user406009
Yeah, a lot of people probably use Node because they are too dumb/lazy to learn another language.
17:09
Bluh.
My arms hurt.
JS has a decent amount of value on the server due to async, makes it super simple to(safely) do concurrency
@ThePhD poor babby
What did you do
Ell
Ell
my brain hertz
@nick hahaha no JS is garbage at that
Hence why Go has been steadily taking over
(That and easier deployments)
For single threaded apps I don't see how you can beat JS really
and deployments are cake
@nick Carried a dead computer several blocks.
17:13
Node has only a dumb event loop
Go and Erlang both have actual schedulers
to the computer cemetary?
@nick Nah, shipped it somewhere.
Plus better tools to deal with networking
@cat interesting, haven't looked into that
Also, the last time I tried to do something async in JS that interacted with UI, everyone laughed at me and said I had to...
17:14
Deploying Node is painful as fuck
... what was that term they used? "timer the output"? or whatever
Erlang has been around a while though right? why hasn't it gotten traction?
Basically I had to insert timers everywhere.
@sehe Login skype. I sended a message.
It has traction in things it wants traction in
I.e. high reliability distributed systems
17:15
setTimeout? shouldn't really be necessary unless youre including delays for effect
Erlang has a very specific design and requires some tradeoffs to get there
@cat how has node deployment been difficult in your experience?
NPM shitting itself mostly
I've had limited experience but it's always been very simple
Git clone npm install npm start boom done
A good way to deploy to N servers yes
17:20
JS is great for building a UI, not a complete web app
And then wait 12 hours as all dependencies get downloaded N*M times because NPM is shit
I really appreciate single-binary things
npm 3's flat file structure makes things simpler and quicker if that's what you're referring to
really really really
Thankfully nothing actually uses Node so I don't have to deal with it (well, building frontend stuff does, but that's slightly less painful)
Cat become full heap programmer pls
I've worked on enterprise web architectures, I haven't worked on distributed architectures, I know they give a better degree of freedom on nodes & easy to optimize, but they're painful to work with
17:37
I like foggy evenings <3
potato quality sry phone
looks better resized
> Getting a warning about undefined references after the first LaTeX run is nothing to worry about. Just rerun LaTeX once or twice more and all cross-references should be resolved (including the one to lastpage).
niiiiiiickkkkkkkkkkk
Stateful compilation
lol
@AlexM. damn, this looks like a render
17:40
It looks like a photo
If you can compile C++ without storing crap in the filesystem, you have no excuse to do that in anything else
LaTeX is a mess
sure it is
but nothing better exists
Except for plain text
(maybe except for microsoft word; word is the best)
17:44
hey @ScarletAmaranth :) sup bby <3
nothing much; studying - tomorrow and the day after 2 finals, then the semester ends, then I need to finish ma thesis until... may
wow
sounds intense
good luck with all that <3
thanks; should be fine, they generally let you pass once you get to the final semester
maybe it's just my uni, or perhaps a universal thing
but it gets fairly easy once you make it to the end, you just need to hand in something that resembles a thesis and you should be fine (at least finals-wise)
17:47
whats your thesis gonna be about?
I transform specifications (dependent types) to their implementation
sounds difficult
yeah it doesn't work ^^ not as well as I'd like anyway :D
but it's just a thought experiment, there will be no judgement
I don't really know what it is about either
depedent types to me are those things you get in templates
dependent types are those things that let your types depend on values
such as length of the list encoded in the type; in C++ you can't really do it
Ell
Ell
17:50
@milleniumbug yup :/
@ScarletAmaranth how do you mean "encoded"?
std::string.size() surely that size member is part of the type?
I mean you can say that the resulting container from std::transform (map) is of the same length as the one that you pass in (and you can check that at compilation)
@TonyTheLion yeah, and you can access it at compile time - because you have constructed it from n applications of some constructor that appends 1 element to "Nil"
wait
how do you use size at compile time?
unless your string is a literal?
17:56
@milleniumbug: hi. how are u?
Fine, how are you?
Ell
Ell
@TonyTheLion it's like a function with signature auto concat(std::vector<int, n> a, std::vector<int, m> b) -> std::vector<int, n+m>;
because you can check at compile time how many applications of "Cons" have been used to create the string (Cons just being "append one element to some list, with list being either <nothing> or one element followed by a list")
@AngryShoe: same 2 u.
@Ell ah I see
17:57
@Ell yeah, and this in C++ you'd need a separate function for each of the n and m combination
@AngryShoe: needs ur help.
> I hate the peoples who says that C++ is not fully object oriented programming language & consider it as an drawback of C++.
so basically, a dependent types specifies a "family" of functions
similar to what generics do
I think I get it
generics are a "retarded" form of dependent types, because at least they can depend on the type of the value
17:58
but maybe I don't
@AngryShoe: you checked my SO profile recently. right?
and a generic function really creates MANY functions
@PravasiMeet You are going to hate cat
@ScarletAmaranth that’s a very silly thing to say
@AngryShoe: I didn't get it.
17:59
@LucDanton is it?
Ell
Ell
@TonyTheLion it's like doing this: coliru.stacked-crooked.com with std::vector. I think
@PravasiMeet @CatPlusPlus says that
IIRC
@ScarletAmaranth how is id :: a -> a not a family of functions?
Also:
> Programming is fun !!!
eh
@AngryShoe: what @catplusplus says ?
17:59
@LucDanton it is; when did I say it's not?

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