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09:00
The protocol I'm having here doesn't do that
@AngryLettuce because that would have been good design, and in finance thats unacceptable :P
@TelkittytheWebDeveloper hah. You can buy my swag.
@AngryLettuce So there must be a case like this: struct Header { uint16_t a; uint32_t b; // padding introduced => pragma hack required
@TonyTheLion exactly
@bitcode Yeah I'm not exactly too sure but the idea was to allow for typeclasses
09:01
@StackedCrooked Nice try young man, but it's pragma pack all the way down
@TelkittytheWebDeveloper Oh that's a picture you took. Carry on
@AngryLettuce funnily enough code I deal with also has that going on
So, say we want to have some sort of basic vector of bytes. We should be able to do this by returning this type from a Vector function with one of its parameters taking in a type
@TonyTheLion ~~C programmers~~
Now of course nothing makes sense
Spec says a thing, server sends something else
And I see padding in the structure idk why
fuck it
09:02
Nobody is to blame. All is bliss
@sehe hahah yea pretty much
But now, say we want a vector of decimal digits. So the values must be enforced from 0 to 10
@sehe I thought that Stackoverflow closed down their shop
finaaaaaaance
@AngryLettuce print the packet data and find the location place where padding was introduced?
09:03
So what we can do is to define a new type by creating a function to analyze the type and then bound it statically to our new value range
gotta make money, no time for proper design!
@TonyTheLion They think it's important to "optimize" serialization only because writing on a higher level of abstraction introduces to much plumbing code
@StackedCrooked I found it, obviously, but it contradicts the spec (as usual)
@AngryLettuce What about technical debt. There's the word debt in it, they should understand right? :p
> What happened when a Chinese TV station replaced its meteorologist with a chatbot washingtonpost.com/news/innovations/wp/2016/01/12/…
09:04
@AngryLettuce that's pretty much the basis on which everything is done
you know those hologram casters they have in cyberpunk things?
@TelkittytheWebDeveloper I don't need to buy it
its gonna happen soon
Given we can define traits and characteristics for the fundamental types, we should be able to reason about certain ranges: e.g. a byte should be able to hold a range of 256 or whatever values
@sehe its kind of dumb in my humble opinion
09:05
I get how they get to their point, but it's really silly how they never view it as a /cost/ of using C, but rather as a /strength/
So if our range were to be (0..10,000), and we provided a char to that function, the compiler should be able to figure out that trying to have a vector of integers that need a bound of (0 10000) is not going to work
It's dubious at best. All the "perf gained" could easily be lost due to the lack of alignment
@sehe especially if you use pragma pack(1)
Is what I meant
Because we would define functions to operate on types and assert traits that can also be read and written statically by functions
09:07
@VermillionAzure seems complex
@bitcode Not so much
Just do something like this:
@JerryCoffin Question for you: I just found a patent (dated April 2015) that covers how to do parallel large integer multiplication. Much of it overlaps with what I've already been doing since 2008. In the event that I attempt to monetize my bignum library and get sued, would I have the ability to invalidate such a patent by proving prior art?
@bitcode He's going AW, don't give him attention plz he craves for it
@Mysticial Yes
nonzero = class(obj = type()) :
	$ensure(expr=(obj != 0))
;
09:09
also lmao patenting multiplication
h i l a r i t y
@AngryLettuce inorite?
Then if you try to divide using a non-zero value on the protected version of the division operator, also decided by a static trait, it would give an error.
It's dumb.
If not predatory.
In fact, the compiler would complain if it didn't ensure it was a nonzero type.
@AngryLettuce I remember when Mozilla launched their mobile OS and they had to make a 2 step lockscreen to avoid patent infringement... Pretty funny story :')
09:11
@VermillionAzure why dont you switch to { } ?
Because if we were to do something like /(int int), it would give an error. Because an integer could be 0.
@bitcode Because I wanted to reserve that exclusively for struct notation
But then again, structs are also technically types but idk
So classes are typeclasses like concepts except operating mostly on static traits instead of focusing on interface functions
Structs are structs as in C
and there are pure functions and non-pure functions, which are processes
Functions cannot call processes, and functions can return types.
how far into this project are you?
@bitcode I'm trying to sort out the theory, but I'm also thinking a bit about the low-level side as well...
I know the Itanium ABI is quite popular but it makes me wonder if we could optimize in the calling convention as well
But the downside is that we would lose dynamic dispatch based on function type alone
And that's an implementation issue
So maybe it's not worth it
But, if you think about it...
Oh, and also, processes can only return void. Not sure if I should make them return anything
@bitcode What do you think?
I think your language seems to be all about returning types, when returning types should be a feature of it.
The point is that operating on types and performing logic on them can be used to help do static analysis
So it creates stronger guarantees
user1804599
09:19
Is there a file manager for Windows that has a tree view like Finder on OS X?
by the way, I'm not an expert on designing languages. you should show your idea to other people too
@bitcode I'm not far enough along, but I think it's worth it.
This is the kind of stuff I want to do
user1804599
I don't want a tree view on the side.
@KhaledAKhunaifer Not really, lists already have specific dedicated algorithms that perform well.
Aslo morning :)
09:25
hi
user1804599
hello
@Luc any cinch bunkers to rent
user1804599
Imma try AutoHotkey.
Yay hernia wasn't enough, now broken finger on right foot. This is gonna be a great year.
@Morwenn I see .. I know that Insert-Sort is a good algorithm to work on a Linked-List, because you only have to compare neighbors
09:27
Morning Lounge
@AndyProwl stay on your couch for the rest of the year I guess
@Mr.kbok That makes sense but how to food?
@KhaledAKhunaifer You can also implement stable selection sort for lists. But the algorithm generally used is a variant of mergesort that uses less memory.
@AndyProwl how did you break your toe?
user1804599
woot so awesome
user1804599
09:30
#IfWinActive ahk_class Chrome_WidgetWin_1
 ~$WheelDown::
 ~$WheelUp::
    MouseGetPos,, yaxis
    IfGreater,yaxis,23, Return
    IfEqual,A_ThisHotkey,~$WheelDown, Send ^{PgDn}
                                 Else Send ^{PgUp}
Return
#IfWinActive
@AndyProwl here, delivery people go right up to your door. I'm sure they would make the way to the couch if you find a way to remotely open the door.
@bitcode By hitting the piano stand
@Morwenn insert sort use no memory. When working with Linked Lists. the List size N is considered unfeasible - theoretically infinity
@KhaledAKhunaifer Well yeah but insertion has a O(n²) worst case.
@Mr.kbok Nice. Now I just need to figure out how to remotely visit the toilet
09:31
Write a RemoteToiletVisitor
@Morwenn on a Linked List, all other algorithms are way more expensive .. memory relative to list size is always unfeasible in theory
@AndyProwl just make your toilet comfier, I guess, and call it a couch. put it in front of computer
@AndyProwl 2 months ago I was playing football and I got my big toe nail detached. I think it is as bad as breaking finger
@Mr.kbok Yep, that's gonna be a great year. Confirmed.
@AndyProwl Alternative solution:
09:33
but I need to buy a mom
can be anyone, really
just find someone that's unemployed
Go find Vlad.
@bitcode the rage is real with that guy
@AndyProwl what do you need a mom for?
09:42
@Mr.kbok Damn I was catching up with the transcript and I wanted to link to the exact same clip :(
@TelkittytheWebDeveloper To put kbok's suggestion into practice
@TelkittytheWebDeveloper To take dumps on the couch. You're welcome
user1804599
@AndyProwl TRIGGERED
You got a discal hernia @AndyProwl?
Inguinal
09:45
@AndyProwl in this case, disregard what I said yesterday about surgery. if your hernia is not near your bones, maybe surgery is a good option in the long run
@AndyProwl It would have been worse if it was a discal one (yeah I'm good at cheering people up :p )
@AndyProwl <3 <3 <3
It feels like someone's constantly strangling my left testicle but yeah, could be worse
> :Discal hernia
@AndyProwl If only it's something much gentler than strangling. ;)
09:48
now strangle gently the testicle
user1804599
Maybe I'll invest time in learning JetBrains MPS.
user1804599
And then implement a SQL and Python code generation for this kind of stuff.
guys
what do you call the keyword that's either class or struct
09:49
classtruct?
:(
srsly
@Mr.kbok Standardese is 'class head' iirc
@TelkittytheWebDeveloper wow :)
@LucDanton thanks.
@LucDanton Could've sworn it was Robert
user1804599
09:50
@Mr.kbok Depends on where.
@Mr.kbok although strictly speaking that also includes union
@MadameElyse Do you have other suggestions? It's just for docs
user1804599
If in an enum class I believe it's called "enum-key" together with the enum keyword.
oh it’s class-key
09:51
very imaginative
std::vector<int> vec(std::capacity(84));
I used to call it type type but it's not very clear
the class-head is the struct [[blah]] foo final: protected bar stuff before the opening brace actually
@Morwenn Can't see any optimization opportunities between that and construct-then-capacity.
No but it makes for fun typo possibilities such as std::cacacity
09:54
std::papacity
@MarkGarcia I'm trying to find the original paper.
@MarkGarcia It seems that it the original paper it had semantics different than reserve: reserve allocates memory for at least n element while this would have allocated memory for exactly n elements. Now the proposal was rejected but the committee votes show that some people still want an std::capacity coonstructor even if it has the same semantics as reserve.
makes sense
@TonyTheLion I'm gonna have to ask you to delete this link for violating some random rule
10:09
@TonyTheLion this maybe sound like a dumb question but it isn't: are you more of a cat person (not lions) or dog person?
Mmm. Just realized. The % of rep I got from Boost is likely very much disproportionate to the number of boost-related answers:
@bitcode That's a difficult question. I really cats, but I like dogs too. Choice is a hard one.
So. That would _seem_ to be at most 3.6/185 ~= 1.9%
Whereas boost is is 36% of my answers
You're still the master of Boost
@TonyTheLion get both, and a dog that is nice to cats, like a shibe
10:11
To be honest I'm quite fond of ferrets too.
Having owned one
Now who can deny doesn't pay
@Morwenn I thought reserve(n) reserved exactly n bytes, while resize(n) could trigger a reserve > n.
@bitcode I don't travel like a pleb
Is there some way to get a tag breakdown of actual rep on SE?
Apparently I'm wrong..
10:12
@AngryLettuce went to visit an apartment just now and met another french dude
> Increase the capacity of the container to a value that's greater or equal to new_cap.
@sehe time to stop answering
can’t pay the rep bills
Hehe.
@Morwenn I might need to revise some of my code then.. :0
@jaggedSpire :D
10:14
@Mr.kbok Too late. We know.
@jaggedSpire awww, tired lil fella
@StackedCrooked If you want control over the exact allocations, use a custom container. Or maybe check the behaviour of your stdlib implementation (perhaps with a tracing allocator?)
@Morwenn turns out it's not true vOv
@StackedCrooked Why so? Do you often need exactly some amount of memory to the point it makes a difference?
time to go to work now
10:15
@Morwenn only 1 time
Damn, I don't have a classy way to solve a signed vs. unsigned comparison without either incorrectness or boilerplate.
somewhere in my packet pool code..
@StackedCrooked Make that at least 1 one :p
in a galaxy far, far away
@Morwenn disable warning
j/k :P
Poco actually disables that warning
10:17
> ignore
Most correct solution is ugly:
auto dist = jacobsthal_diff[k];
using size_type = std::common_type_t<
    decltype(dist),
    typename std::list<RandomAccessIterator>::difference_type
>;
if (dist > static_cast<size_type>(std::distance(current_pend, std::end(pend)))) break;
dist is unsigned?
Yep, std::uint_fast64_t, and its values actually grow to the limit of 64 bit.
@nick HK is riddled with french
@AngryLettuce how awful, we have the same problem around here
10:24
let me know if you ever find a remedy
@CatPlusPlus I wasn't even surprised, typical braindead response you might expect
Shouldn't you normally cast the unsigned party to signed?
@BartekBanachewicz did you see my tweet? It's outrageous
Well, it would need a signed 128-bit integer to hold some values.
but what if the signed party is actually negative?
Then the cast to unsigned will break the comparison.
10:27
> Now I'm struggleling with the jumping logic. Everything is Object Oriented and written as objects.
Can the std::common_type_t pick an unsigned integer type instead of a signed one?
Lol. The product that keeps on giving.
CVEs that is.
>2016
>using antivirii
@sehe oh my, that's terrible
Hum, I've maybe one value that fits in an unsigned 64-bit type but not in a signed one. I think that I could safely drop that one. Considering that the algorithm isn't good with big collection it shouldn't matter anyway.
10:28
@AngryLettuce it's still not a bad idea for many people. But god. This product seems worse than average
:hopefully:
@Borgleader hugs
Oh, even better, I forgot that I changed the algorithm logic. I don't even need the only value that doesn't in a signed 64-bit integer, so dropping it should still yield a valid algorithm :D
Yo bastards
@AngryShoe tempted to flag it
also jefery I have a new shitty deck wanna lose against it later
@AngryShoe hey shoe! <3 Sup?
10:33
supp
@BartekBanachewicz Not much time today I think
me not much
user1804599
Thank you, Python, for your pointless dynamicity.
user1804599
Turned a usage of a global into usage of a local and the function now returns in 1 second instead of in 5.
I'm making a 2d game. is it bad practice to use typeid() to determine if one object should make collision calculations with other objects? I don't want objects of class X to collide with objects of class Y.
10:48
@BartekBanachewicz incredible
@bitcode Yes, it seems bad. Maybe you should have a base class that identifies "colidable" objects?
@bitcode ...or a member functions returning bool identifying colidable objects?
Or have colidable objects gathered in separate list?
@BartekBanachewicz lol
@wilx the problem is this: objects of type X should not collide with of type Y, but should collide with type Z
@BartekBanachewicz Everyone is bad at security
Searching Twitter for "Please see our official statement" is a goldmine: https://twitter.com/search?q=%22please%20see%20our%20official%20statement%22&src=typd
It is true. It's the new github-search-for-id-rsa-or.keyfiles
10:57
I am triggered!
@sehe more like a boringmine
> Oops! Error 404, unable to process image
...by this:
The holes in his face!
they're called eyes you specieist
Contribute something positive, you ferret.
11:02
@CatPlusPlus No, you retard. On his forehead!
@wilx he is also too pale
@CatPlusPlus Pretty epic rant.
> Front end developers come in to a company like Airbnb, like a parasitic infection of over engineered sloth turd. For what? Masterbaiting about their line code count for displaying fucking text on a page?
LMAO.
@AngryLettuce french are a plague
11:25
@Mysticial Yes. Specifically: "A person shall be entitled to a patent unless--(1) the claimed invention was patented, described in a printed publication, or in public use, on sale, or otherwise available to the public before the effective filing date of the claimed invention; [...]" (35 USC, §102).
Some guy was refused a patent because Donald Duck invented the thing before him.
And there were better pictures in Donald Duck to describe how it worked.
don't run, it's only a web developer ...
11:31
TIL about water flow rate and central heating
I thought the thing was broken but the flow rate was too great for it to heat the water fast enough
seems if I want lotsa heated water fast during winter I need to get a boiler
as expected they're at least 2x the price of regular central heaters
it's like humans just don't even want to try to make the world perfect
nothing
I have.
@Morwenn written a musical score?
Several.
what genres?
11:46
Baroque/instrumental/stuff for video games.
@Morwenn similar music interests
@edition Nah, it's just that I'm not good/patient enough to create decent sounds, otherwise I'd be making electronic music.
I also occasionally contributes to my band's music.
@Morwenn would you make a game, if you had the time and artists providing you with the assets?
@edition No, I don't have the motivation anymore.
vi is becoming more fun to use.
@Morwenn what instruments do you play?
I play the recorder and the piano. Also, whatever flutes your boat.
@TonyTheLion cousin!!
@TonyTheLion lol
12:02
this is a nice squirrel
@KhaledAKhunaifer layan
@Morwenn awesome
have hard time finding thin & fit animals eating pizza
I hate it when the continuous integration fails because Travis has problems.
12:12
@TonyTheLion :D
@TonyTheLion well made, except a little bit at the end
12:32
hello
@TonyTheLion takes some talent to hear it as that
Doesn't help I can dream those lyrics and had latin in highschool
@sehe yea that doesn't help in this case
Anyhoops. It's fun. Makes me wonder why the lryics are colorized the way they are.
katy perry is hot
12:37
That she is <3
the california gurls video
maaaaan
so much lipstick, instant turn off.
I don't care how hot people are. The lipstick sends me "I'm a whore" vibes. I really hate it.
Yeah, lipstick also really doesn't work. I appreciate the idea, but you end up looking like a clown afterwards.
I didn't watch that katy perry video yet
I'll watch it at home
I think katy perry is NSFW and NSFP by default
And then she makes you go into a store to buy some chips and your face goddammit.
12:40
@AlexM. People?
@sehe yea, popele ( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
Peanus
There are surprisingly very few tools that can log stdin and rotate logs. The most useful think for this I have found is multilog.
@ElimGarak do you know what I dislike the most when it comes to make-up
very young girls who abuse it
@AlexM. The lack of it? :D
12:41
and they end up looking 10+ years older
@AlexM. Oh, yeah, you have to ID everyone nowadays.
I was looking through a mate's gf pics on fb a few days ago
and stumbled upon a make-up heavy pic
@wilx "log stdin"? You mean, there isn't a UNIX filter for that?
I didn't even recognize her not because she looked different but because she looked essentially much older
and not in a good way
@sehe Multilog is the only one that I could find that seems useful, so far.
12:42
srsly stop using makeup unless your face has defects you want to hide
My ex had a big nose, so she was a big student of light & shadow.
@AlexM. What if they think their whole face is defective? :)
Apparently, they also have a technique where they essentially hide the edge of their lips and then paint lipstick as if they had lips with more volumes.
The line is still painfully obvious because surface normals, but they don't give a fuck.
@wilx hers wasn't
this reminded me of a colleague from my first workplace
she was ~35+ but looked 22 at most
Works for you :D
12:44
she's the only (only) woman who displayed her age on facebook, out of all that I've seen
I think the make-up abuse must come due to things like pressure from friends and the need to imitate
I can't explain it otherwise
Makes it easier to find the rebels. :D
user1804599
12:58
I want to learn AutoHotkey.

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