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04:05
@jaggedSpire But free BF3.
Also aaaagh I still feel weird from dancing. I can't do that shit for the life of me.
@Nooble bah
@jaggedSpire tel field three
ok time for bed i can barely stay way, night all
you pronounce battle weirdly
@Borgleader night! <3
also, "way"
04:07
@jaggedSpire @Ell
@Nooble bah-tell
you're still weird
@jaggedSpire I pronounce it batl.
pronouncing the second half like Ell does not make the first half resemble bat any more
@Nooble so do I
but bah has an almost audible h, the way I say it. And a long 'a', I think.
I am amusingly bad at discerning the difference between long and short 'a's
bat-til
04:38
bah-dum-tss
bah-rteck
@nick <3
Beeeeeenchmarking.
@Borgleader Nighty night, sleep tight, don't let the bedbugs bite.
@ThePhD I just finished off the first bundle of yarn I bought a week ago. It was 256 yards.
I've knit almost 256 yards of yarn into a scarf in the last week.
halp
@jaggedSpire ... What... what kind of winter are you preparing for?
@ThePhD the worst winter
the winter of my soul
jk
It's really just an unreasonably wide scarf for knitting
04:47
@jaggedSpire HAYYY
@nick IS FOR HORSES
@Borgleader nn babe
on the plus side, it just hit 51"
A blanket scarf?
I'm calling it good at 6', so there's not a terrible amount left
just a few days at the rate I'm going
@nick it's 6.5" wide
04:49
wot
not unusually wide, for non hand-knit scarves
Ohh inches I misread that as feet
lol that would be bloody huge
a blanket scarf indeed
10/10 would nap in
<3
it is very nice and soft.
when I press on it, I leave faint hand prints
04:51
you mean paw prints
wait cats lack the dexterity to knit stuff
The catface is a lie
shining cats have something that works like an opposable thumb though
tf is that
red pandas ^_^
at least, I think that's what their latin name means...
nope.
Where did I hear that?
oh. Fanfiction
waaait
In 1825, Cuvier published the description, choosing the name Ailurus fulgens meaning "shining" or "fire-colored" cat
L O L
The measurements of time are SO fucking bad
that it takes MICROSECONDS to complete these operations
when all others are nanoseconds
in C++?
oh you're just talking about non-calendar measurement
nvm
04:58
No, benching C++ code.
oooh did they fix the high resolution clock implementation in VS2015?
Yeah.
And a bunch of other <chrono> bugs.
Score!
actually, I don't think that was technically a bug.
You should convince your company to upgrade.
I read somewhere that a valid implementation was a typedef of the standard clock
04:59
@jaggedSpire It was conformant but shitty, so a QoI issue.
I did! :D
@jaggedSpire Kinky.
...aaaaand now I've been transferred to writing C# code for the time being
what fun
r e k t
It must be fun code, though?
I shall mourn the loss of const every day for months
it's been replaced by const and readonly.
c# const appears to be C++ constexpr, and readonly is the equivalent of a constant pointer to an object.
because why would I want to ensure that something can't be modified?
that would be crazy
afdjkl
05:02
vOv
and then! AND THEN! There's the badness of the RAII hack they stuck in the language.
Don't rely on finalizers ever.
Use IDisposable and using statements.
"Let's make some of these types use RAII, but require a special syntax to use properly, and then make it possible to easily use them improperly!"
foams at mouth
@jaggedSpire it’s not RAII
@ThePhD yes, I have been
05:05
You'll be fine, then! Pat pat.
you’d only think that if you’re the sort of programmer that is able to write Fortran C++ in any language; is that really the person you are striving to be?
@LucDanton it fulfills many of the same purposes though. At least, in the two weeks I've been using it, it seems to be the mechanism to use when you need predictable lifetime management of unmanaged resources
@LucDanton ...no. :(
@jaggedSpire of course it is
that doesn’t make it RAII
I want to be a good programmer, not a resentful one.
trains and buses fulfil some of the same goals, but don’t try to put a bus on rails
05:09
Would you mind pointing out some of the points where they differ in more than implementation? Presently, I'm stuck on the discrepancies between the two languages.
RAII doesn’t require you to do anything to reap its benefits
RAIIish types compose nicely
the two being tied—you write your type and more often than not you have nothing to do
not so with execute-around etc.
...what I'm getting from this is that C#'s approach to solving the problem solved by RAII is hackish
a much much more innocuous thing, execute-around suffers from rightwards drift
what are you talking about
are you talking about IDisposable?
@Rapptz same things as always
05:12
or finalizers?
cause they're like two completely different things
@jaggedSpire it’s like you’ve never used any other language than C++
Python has context managers.
with ... as ...
same as using in C#
it’s execute-around cum continuations
ah I intercoursed up
I forget what the Lisp name is
@LucDanton I, er, haven't in any great capacity
it’s not execute-around
05:15
iunno if I'd recommend it
it gets boring
sea pee pee may be quirky but it's fun
@jaggedSpire long story short it’s oooold (Lisp old) and the golden standard everywhere (not always with dedicated syntax though)
The only enjoyment I get out of Python is hacking it completely
@Rapptz you bad man
badman -> batman
but my APIs are so fresh
I even abuse the GC now
05:17
I'm sorry for being so dense, but are you referring to the try {} catch {} finally {} sort of thing in Java and C#?
but when you look at the internals you'd think I was high on drugs
@jaggedSpire using in C#, try-with-resources in Java
vengeful mutilation of a standard is the best kind of drug
I'm not breaking any rules
@ThePhD oh, okay
05:19
All over the fucking place.
oh
I saw a chart comparing other Lua libs
Probably context switches since I'm running lots of shit.
We're the fastest one
sometimes faster than the raw C somehow
@Rapptz Yep. And I added more code to make us even ~faster~.
I didn't know Selene was so slow
05:20
(I specialized the case of lua_getglobal, and now we're about as fast as possible)
That's because Selene's API design is braindead retarded.
it's stolen from mine though
I literally told him how to design it lol
Selene started before you?
iunno if he diverged
no he didn't
Scary.
I remember it very clearly.
05:21
He went with a "selector" approach.
He posted a blogpost on gamedev reddit saying that he's learning how to wrap Lua in C++
Sep 28 '11 at 0:32, by Luc Danton
What's the idiom called again :( ? use-with?
That is, everything is a lookup/query.
I have a history of not remembering this apparently
At least I remember that
@LucDanton execute around
05:22
We're fast because we store hard indices into the stack/registry.
@Rapptz well, no
you sure? it looks like it
somehow I got the idea it’s Lisp-style overriding
105
Q: What is the "Execute Around" idiom?

Tom Hawtin - tacklineWhat is this "Execute Around" idiom (or similar) I've been hearing about? Why might I use it, and why might I not want to use it?

lol
that's what it is right?
execute around idiom
there are :around methods in Lisp so I’m not entirely off-the-mark
05:25
oh it is
wth Danny read chat logs
@Rapptz sounds vague.
is it
I wouldn’t be surprised if the alleged idiom came to be called this due to around methods
you used lua back then?
this is really deja vu m8
we were talking about Lua earlier
@Rapptz what do you mean?
05:26
in the chat log
you're using lua
14 mins ago, by Luc Danton
@Rapptz same things as always
I was kinda serious
@Rapptz I do use Lua from time to time, not just then
@Rapptz oooh shiny
my discord bot is shiny
@Rapptz kinda surprising you didn’t notice before but okay
I did
we talked about lua like 5 times
05:29
right then I’m not sure what the surprise is, the 2011 date?
I was just poking fun about how this entire coincidental conversation is similar-ish to ~4 years ago
@Rapptz not the first time it has happened :(
same things as always
E_DEJAVU
yeah happens a lot here eh
although to be fair I haven’t talked about Lua today (until you brought it up), have I?
05:33
nah just me
what the hell is try with resources
oh that
ew
wolf in different sheep’s clothing
does that make sense I don’t know
Triple-quoted strings no longer treat tabs as 8 spaces. Instead, the longest common prefix of spaces and tabs is removed.
@Xeo Julia on de-indenting 'big' literals
i.e. similar enough to Python
does Julia have a GC
I wanna say no
rip it does
yes
@Rapptz everybody does
but sea pee pee doesn't
Rust devs hard at work figuring out how to add one atm
05:40
y
I thought it was a SYSTEMS PROGRAMMING LANGUAGE
@Rapptz ded gaem languaeg
in Python I call del all the time
"but Rapptz you're not supposed to" some might say
butwhy.mp3
but I say "I want my __del__ to be called okay"
and then it's the usual "why do you have __del__?" and ye
spirals out from there
I’d ask what is going on but
I yield
GEDDIT?
05:42
lmao
yield from friend
I'm going to do the unthinkable. I'm gonna use exception handling for flow control.
Just because it's the easiest.
Searching 170 files for "yield from" (case sensitive)
290 matches
thank Guido for async with so that our Python stuff is responsive on all paths
I do like the interfaces and events though
async for is sexier
05:44
@Mysticial horror of horrors!
@Rapptz yes but that one makes sense… kinda
async_is_fun.png
at least one commit per yield from, well granulated my friend
almost midnight. Time for me to put down the scarf and get my badlet self into bed.
supporting async for in a Python 3.4/3.5 world is kind of complicated
05:45
@Rapptz OH
You can stay up.
@jaggedSpire But weekend.
seeing your docstrings remind me
Stay with us.
Good night, and thank you for talking me down from my indignance, @LucDanton
I’ve been itching for some doc chit-chat while you were fighting the infidels
05:46
@ThePhD I've got a hair appointment at 9:30AM tomorrow, and I need to do my usual weekend crash thing
@jaggedSpire Oh well, okay.
@jaggedSpire remember: your only shame is that you know C++, go forth and learn C#
@Rapptz so is that |coro| thing a tag? I don’t recognize the syntax
it's a global substitution
@ThePhD see you tomorrow though. I'll give you more riveting updates on my scarf
like how incredibly long it is and how I feel compelled to keep working on it until it's completed
so it says "This function is a coroutine" with a link in coroutine saying what a coroutine is
05:47
oh neato, even better then
so it’s really à propos because I’ve been wondering how I would be documenting functor-returning things (if I had a doc thing to use for C++, but nvm about that)
is à propos a thing you say I don’t know why I said that
I believe my parents have used it
are the infidels at it again
I have a bunch of g++ commands in a shell script. I want to add an option to do a parallel build, like make's -j option. Anyone know how to do this?
06:01
We don't get as many reports for verbal abuse as you might imagine. The practice of blocking toxic players rather than reporting them seems fairly common. Yesterday there were a total of 6 reports accounts reported for "verbal abuse," and 4 of the accounts reported were suspended.
this doesn’t make sense, given the size of the GW2 playerbase
@LucDanton whatcha mean
@Rapptz what would you document
documenting the class and its call op seems like overkill when really all that matters is pointing out complement(f)(args...) == !f(args...)
I'd just document the function
not the implementation detail
kinda how std::bind is documented but the result type is /* unspecified */
@Rapptz I don’t entirely consider the type an implementation detail tbh
it’s certainly a necessary evil, but the user should be allowed to see what is happening (e.g. for retrieving or prodding the complemented_functor)
that’s an interesting question, how opaque or abstract are Voldemort types supposed to be?
In one of my python functions I return something called StreamPlayer
I don''t document the StreamPlayer itself (it's an implementation detail)
I just say what you can do with it
granted in python you can figure it out
but whatever
06:15
In this case I have the pattern drilled down to a point so I could just the same as with |coro|, hence why my interest was piqued
@Rapptz no refs to what a StreamPlayer is
exactly :v
mmmh
yeah okay I have a roadmap of sorts
let’s call it 'simple models'
i.e. the result of complement is a simple model of Predicate, such that blah blah … == !f(args...)
and |simplemodel| or whatever tells us that given factory call auto x = foo(one_arg, the_other_arg); then you can retrieve the arg with x.fooed_arg and x.fooed_other_arg
works for me
it's a little complicated so here's something to help ya
the Sphinx setup?
the global replacement
with a URL in it
06:19
aw :(
anyway, thanks for the ref and rubber duck designing
much appreciated
another trick will be to document the data members
esp. considering that sometimes I used constructors :/ dunno if I can get away with no constructor
Corrupt Boon – Reducing the amount of boons you can corrupt from 5 to 3. Recharge reduced from 40s to 15s. You can corrupt boons more frequently instead of corrupting a large swath of boons at once.
Putrid Curse (scepter autoattack chain 3) – Corrupt one boon with every attack. So every third autoattack you can corrupt one boon.
Unyielding Blast – No longer adds piercing but Life Blast and Plague Blast now pierce by default.
they are buffing base necro what is happening @AngryLettuce
06:41
"let’s update ranger by making it more obnoxious" never change anet
I think I now can finally get Rune of Durability for my WvW armor. Now that it's removed from PvP I'm certain it'll never actually be balanced to reasonable levels.
lawl
My trackpad is dying.
 
1 hour later…
08:23
Hot damn.
Guess I need more iterations.
@ThePhD They forgot to sleep the thread before polling more messages with PeekMessage maybe? ;)
There's no stack pointer informatin
so the CPU sampler can't construct a proper anything
@ThePhD it was just speculation, the high CPU usage is probably due to something else ;)
08:53
@Rapptz If you care about these things then you should probably be using __enter__, __exit__ and with
09:43
@jaggedSpire what are you talking about
Xeo
Xeo
09:53
mornin
10:06
evening
@sehe huh?
Good morning
10:32
these sentences just don't end
10:50
Morning!
@milleniumbug its to ensure a consistent train of thought.
  Cookie[] cookies = request.getCookies();
  if(cookies != null) {
      for (int i = 0; i < cookies.length; i++) {
          cookie=cookies[i]
          String cookieName = cookie.getName();
          String cookieValue = cookie.getValue();
       }
   }
Getting a cookie in Java
:/
Wait, why aren't cookies stored in a hash structure?
Dear god
Also why would getCookies() return null?
user1804599
11:11
@Shoe use lombok.val you scrub.
If there are not cookies it should return an empty array
user1804599
@Shoe Never underestimate the stupidity of web developers.
lombok.wat
user1804599
@Shoe Lombok monkey-patches javac to add goodness projectlombok.org/features/val.html
Can't use it
user1804599
11:11
RIP
user1804599
When you have RSI you can point the health insurance company to your school.
yeah
@MadameElyse Can't I transform a Java array in some better container that allows me to search based on a predicate in 1 line and return the object that satisfies the predicate?
user1804599
@Shoe oh god you're not using the JDK's HTTP library are you
I'm using the Servlet API
damnit
I think that it might be impossible for me to offer outlining on website
user1804599
11:17
@Shoe You can. Arrays.stream(array).filter(x -> x.blah).findFirst().
user1804599
@Shoe ohh
@MadameElyse Thanks
user1804599
It breaks if the element is null because Optional was designed by morons.
user1804599
But you shouldn't be using null anyway.
Funny, iPhone 6s is 41% than the best competing Android
user1804599
11:28
Does anybody here have experience with Boost.Spirit?
sehe
user1804599
Maybe I'll use an arena for the AST.
don't
I did that for a while
it makes allocating the AST a breeze, but it locks you out in flexibility terms
user1804599
OK!
you can't return the AST on its own or really do a great deal of anything with it
you always have to deal with practically the whole AST at a time and keep the arena owner around as well.
it's just not worth using unless you're desperate for every cycle of performance and you know all your users
it's much simpler and much easier to deal with if you use a plain parent-owns-children tree
11:47
made an earthquake sim for the lounge: gist.github.com/edition-ben/33e32d39f92d85139389
or rather more directly: javascript:(function() { var css = document.createElement("style"); css.type = "text/css"; css.innerHTML = "html { animation: anim 0.25s infinite linear; } @keyframes anim { 0% { margin-left: -15px; transform: rotate(-0.2deg) } 100% { margin-left: 15px; transform: rotate(0.8deg); } }"; document.body.appendChild(css)})();
sigh
tried it
it was terribad
have you ever had the problem where you know something to be true, but you doubt yourself to such an extent that you believe that it should be false?
and you cannot think freely?
no
ok so Microsoft has come up with a "uniform" way to handle apps for all their devies; and when you're going trough the docs, it contains shit like this everywhere: "For Windows Phone Store apps, this method is called each time the user launches the app from Start tile or app list, even when the app is currently suspended in memory. On Windows, launching a suspended app from Start tile or app list doesn’t call this method."
@ScarletAmaranth I dislike too much conformity.

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