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01:01
Or dis. I'd wear that, I wouldn't give two fucks. :D
I thought it was a nazi uniform at first
It's the coolest faction in The Expanse show. :D
I did nazi that show
2
01:04
@ElimGarak no spoils plz, i mean to watch that show, my boss told me about it on friday
@Borgleader You play SWTOR? :D
@ElimGarak from time to time
I tried getting into it, but had nobody to play it with. :(
It's a poor single player KOTOR game.
@ElimGarak with the latest expansion theyre really pushing into kotor territory imo
I'd pay $100 for KOTOR III. Right now. KOTOR III sounds so right.
01:07
Id buy/be happy with Kotor Anniversary edition =/
like they did with halo 1
be suspicious of macros, always
patch all the shadorz
One day, a select lounger is going to explain to me what's all the fuss with buttcoin
@ElimGarak it’s sad and tragic and hilarious
@ElimGarak you don't get paid in it at work
01:12
@CatPlusPlus I liked the buildup of the song, but I do realize sounds a bit corny in the beginning. For some reason thinking back of your reaction cracks me up.
you can't buy food with bitcoin
so it's pretty much worthless to me
@AlexM. Only USDs and buttplugs here.
@AlexM. You can buy bitcoins though.
can you buy n bitcoins with n - 1 bitcoins?
Ell
Ell
oh wow, TIL arstechnica.co.uk/tech-policy/2015/12/… guy who took down silk road also stole from it
user406009
01:15
@AlexM. That depends, do you control more than 50% of the processing power?
user406009
If so, yes.
> Ross William Ulbricht (born 27 March 1984[1]) created a darknet market named Silk Road and ran it until his 2013 arrest,[2] under the pseudonym Dread Pirate Roberts. Ulbricht was convicted of money laundering, computer hacking and conspiracy to traffic narcotics in February 2015. He is serving a life sentence without the possibility of parole.
Hory shit.
You didn't know?
Ell
Ell
I hope openbazaar.org also doesn't get killed
user406009
@LucDanton Standard bitcoin tactics I guess.
user406009
01:19
Bitcoin seems to have attracted some of the sleaziest people around.
quite an achievement
Ell
Ell
The future is formally proven programmes
Maybe :V
user406009
@LucDanton Well, it's good for everyone else as it's easier to avoid the assholes when they are all clustered.
user406009
The biggest problem with Bitcoin is that people do not realize that most of the regulations we have are for our own benefit.
user406009
I like being able to request chargebacks on my credit card.
01:21
oh you can do that with Bitz:the coin now
user406009
I like having the knowledge that my funds are safe in my banking accounts.
user406009
I like how the fed guarantees a certain degree of stability for my currency.
@TonyTheLion I find it fascinating that he's almost your age. :D
@Lalaland Also Bitcoin.
@Ell Formally proven code is the future of programming. Always has been and always will be.
01:24
@JerryCoffin But Ada QQ...
Isn't Ada an example of a formal language that isn't mainstream yet has been around forever?
user406009
@ElimGarak Our drug laws are way too severe.
user406009
It's a good think that we are seeing some reform now.
user406009
Marijuana will probably be legalized country-wide in the next 10 years.
NASA and government make use of Ada and it seems quite useful but nobody uses it. Why?
Yeah, I am trying to justify the life sentence, but I am at a loss. With no parole, no less. That means after 20 years, he can go fuck himself for another 20 years.
01:25
@ElimGarak Its scary though, to be that young and be sentenced to life without possibility of parole. He's got a lot of years ahead of him spending in a small box, with nowhere to go.
user406009
@VermillionAzure Everyone else has lower degrees of needed correctness.
@VermillionAzure it’s not that old, all things considered
@VermillionAzure Ada isn't particularly formal in terms of formal proofs. It's just a Pascal/Modula variant that nobody really wanted.
@JerryCoffin mmmm I see.
I was thinking of trying to create a toy language for experience and try to design it for static and formal analysis.
> “Please leave a small light at the end of the tunnel, an excuse to stay healthy, an excuse to dream of better days ahead, and a chance to redeem myself before I meet my maker.”
01:26
Doing everything through compile-time traits and then formulating types from that
Judge doesn't give a fuck :D
user406009
@ElimGarak He was penalized a lot due to the "hit man" shenanigans.
user406009
From the horse's mouth:
@ElimGarak The only thing he can look forward to is dying, I suppose. Because life in a box for that long has got to be the most terrible life there is. Its actually terrifying to think about.
user406009
> The judge suggested that her decision to come down so harshly was in part due to Ulbricht’s attempt to hire hit men and in part by the scale of the operation, which led drug dealers using Silk Road to customers across the world.
user406009
@ElimGarak And also, you have to remember that people died due to the Silk Road.
@Lalaland Oh. Welp that's a bit drastic.
user406009
Parents testified in the case over losing their children due to overdose.
Hit men are certainly NOT gonna be a sympathy point
> Why Functional Programming Matters | John Hughes The University, Glasgow cs.utexas.edu/~shmat/courses/cs345/whyfp.pdf
dayem a scientific paper
user406009
01:28
@AlexM. "scientific"
@TonyTheLion Yeah. He should have thought of that when he was entering "the business". I am all for life sentence, people have died, hitmen have been certainly hired.
Why must it be functional, though? Do we need to abandon imperative completely?
@Lalaland see the tilde in the url? it's scientific
user406009
@ScarletAmaranth The hit men were fake.
@VermillionAzure It's fairly difficult to implement (on the same general order as C++, though less in the parsing/codegen and more in the standard library). Early compilers were quite expensive. Although you can get Gnu's Ada implementation (Gnat) for free now, but it was too little too late.
user406009
01:28
It is unknown whether or not DPR knew they were fake at the time.
user406009
It could be he was just screwing with the obviously fake hit men.
Also, people overdosing is their own goddamn fault.
user406009
We will never know.
@VermillionAzure yes, we’re in peak imperative right now
@JerryCoffin What about making a smaller language?
01:29
I can see 10 years and even that is hard time.
user406009
@ElimGarak Yeah, but as human beings we are flawed. And if a mother comes crying into your courtroom about her dead children ...
10 years for basically a lounger-esque creature is beyond cruel and unusual, let alone life. Let alone no parole.
@ScarletAmaranth I'm not defending what he did, just saying that the prospect of a sentence like that is absolutely terrifying.
@TonyTheLion Yeah. That's the nice bonus! :)
@Lalaland Is it bad to scream fire in a theater if there's no fire?
01:30
@ScarletAmaranth What is a nice bonus?
Ell
Ell
I think being charged for making the silk road is awful
user406009
@VermillionAzure Truthfully, it depends. On this case I don't really know enough.
There's nothing nice about a punishment like that.
Scarlet "The Punisher" Amaranth <3
@TonyTheLion Some extra psychological terror added to his sentence.
Ell
Ell
01:31
I think being charged for hiring hitmen etc. etc. Is fine and just
@Lalaland It's punishable by law anyways, whether with a fire or not.
all of this would be avoided
if people just worked for a living
@AlexM. You mean, like, slaves? Work or die?
user406009
@AlexM. What do you mean by that?
Ferengi rule of acquisition 62: Riskier the road, the greater the profit
user406009
01:32
Working in which sense?
@JerryCoffin Yo, what do you think about a compiled language that uses static traits for a type system?
And a life sentence increases the risk and hence the profit from future such ventures.
I am pretty sure that he's contributed to ruining at least a few lives fairly directly, and many more indirectly
user406009
A lot of the consumers were working jobs. DPR was certainly running a business and "working".
01:32
it basically means
@ElimGarak and silk is notoriously slippery
get an honest job and contribute to something worthwhile
user406009
@AlexM. So you actually mean: "All of this would be avoided if people just followed the laws"?
@VermillionAzure A few tried, but the DoD trademarked "Ada" with respect to programming languages, so you could only use the name if your compiler was certified. In a way, however, you could argue that the smaller language was done though (in the form of things like Modula III and Oberon/Oberon 2).
user406009
What about unjust laws?
01:33
I'm talking about the guy who made the silkroad
user406009
Should one free slaves even if slavery is legal?
I have no idea what the thing you're going on about is
@AlexM. By your token we can consider all artists useless. What is something "worthwhile?" Am I useless if I decide to work in general medicine and not solving cancer because cancer is a bigger problem?
@VermillionAzure I hadn't really thought about it.
@VermillionAzure No, that's a bullshit conclusion you came to. Not what @AlexM. said; entertainment is perfectly worthwhile
01:34
@VermillionAzure Something that doesn't lead to a life in prison without parole sentence.
user406009
@AlexM. I am arguing that you can't solve social issues like this by just demanding that everyone follow the laws.
user406009
You have to look into why people act they way they do.
@JerryCoffin If you were to create a type system system and then create traits to require and enforce static functions, you could potentially have the compiler do automatic static analysis
@ElimGarak Farting in the crowd
And then the traits could tell the optimizer which optimizations can be done
01:35
@milleniumbug Better :D
@Lalaland is that about the silkroad guy
user406009
For instance, this case would be helped by legalizing certain drugs and having increased amounts of rehab therapy.
@Lalaland But the thing blocking the way is social stigma
user406009
I really don't have anything against the crime of drug dealing. I couldn't care less about drug dealers.
@Lalaland it also helps to give out life sentences to people who head world-wide underground drug channels
01:35
I've just noticed that the whole "procuring murder" ordeal is yet to go to trial.
@ElimGarak do you know stuff about SetWindowCompositionAttribute on Windows 10 by any chance? :)
@Lalaland Except they may not always be trustworthy. If a drug dealer mixes something wrong and the customer dies, where's the regulation to prevent that?
@melak47 Haven't played around with it, are you toying with desktop compositing and "aero"? :P
@VermillionAzure I think that deserves more thought than I have time to give it at the moment.
Case in point: old Industrial Era meat packing
01:37
Life in prison with chance of parole would've been better. IMO, that is.
user406009
@VermillionAzure There are separate crimes for that.
@ElimGarak yeah. According to people on the internets, it worked at some point in time. Maybe the 10586 build broke it somewhat :/
@VermillionAzure Drug dealers don't mix. They are low level grunts.
@ElimGarak ...perhaps there was some sort of corruption within the system itself
@ElimGarak They deal. But they can lace.
user406009
@VermillionAzure Criminally negligent manslaughter is the correct crime.
01:38
@melak47 what are you trying to do? (I might help with UWP stuff)
@VermillionAzure That sounds a lot like IME :P
oo Cinch...
dunno what an UWP ist, but thanks :D
Anyways...
Metaprogramming in R is awesome.
because of the window border fakery, it blurs not just the "client area"
01:39
Does Python have a quote, substitute, and environments like R?
user406009
@VermillionAzure The rest of it sorta sucks though.
are you setting window style to None and rebuilding everything within the client area?
@Lalaland It's really not that bad.
@melak47 Initially, I wanted our engine editors to have such livery as well, really darkened. To capture data from below, but it felt like fluff on top of already intense processes below.
in Win7 with DwmEnableBlurBehind you could specify a region for the blur. Don't see any way to do that with what I've found about SetWindowCompositionAttribute
01:40
In fact, I enjoy it because it's so mature and high-level.
@VermillionAzure no quoting, it’s all evaluation from source (strings, files and the like); environments yes
user406009
@VermillionAzure Truthfully, it might have simply been that I didn't spend enough time learning R correctly.
@melak47 Thats a sexy window
@Lalaland Did you use RStudio?
user406009
@VermillionAzure Python has decent libraries that get sorta close. The best is the scipy collection.
01:41
@ScarletAmaranth nah, this is just Win10 default (with a dark grey accent color)
@LucDanton So you can't do something like, assign(variable='foo', value=c(1,2,3), envir=.GlobalEnv)?
@ScarletAmaranth WS_POPUP master race :D
user406009
@VermillionAzure no, just R commandline.
@Lalaland That's why.
RStudio is half the reason to program in R.
@melak47 how did you change the color without utilizing the Universal Windows Platform stuff? I don't think there is a way besides hand-building within the client area OR capturing the non_client_pain message
01:42
what color do you mean?
@VermillionAzure you can
One of the things that I had to regedit was that stupid login wallpaper. I completely knocked it out and now it is a pleasant blue constant.
also, this is a native Win32 program, no "store app"
@melak47 the entirety of the title bar - are you capturing the WM_<whatever> in WndProc?
@LucDanton How about passing expressions to a function and then inserting it into an another function without evaluation and returning it?
e.g. f( expr={ return(Foo) } ) { return function(foo) { eval(substitute(substitute(expr))) }
01:44
@VermillionAzure you can’t, that right there is actually a direct use of quoting (that Python doesn’t have)
Before Google. People would call librarians with stupid questions. Love these 4 from @nypl New York Public Library https://t.co/n17OlnIoay
Cinch, you're an anachronism
@melak47 Wtf happened to the text
@melak47 Nice potato screenshot capture :D
01:44
o.O wtf
@melak47 oh, ok; I thought you were overriding user-defined themes, my bad
@LucDanton It's actually a key feature in my project--I really like it
why does imgur hate me
Ell
Ell
I don't understand how windows let's you steal other windows content without permission
R's web application framework needs to use it to embed server code into an environment while preserving the semantics of the environment access of where the expression comes from while using the core framework's context for input and output from the UI
01:45
@Ell it doesn't (or, well it probably does), the desktop compositor does this under your window
user406009
@sehe The last question actually might have some sense to it.
@Ell Desktop composition allows you to capture the state of the framebuffer and apply transforms to it.
@Ell you generally steal "non-client area"
@Lalaland Right
@VermillionAzure note that the quoting syntax you use above is not that much shorter to a lambda expression in Python e.g. (lambda: expr) which is a possible alternative to passing in a quote
user406009
01:46
@sehe Isn't there some evidence that Socrates never existed, or at the very least never wrote what we thought he wrote?
It's a leftover from the days of Aero which are now largely knocked out (only the start menu still applies it).
@sehe well, what are the answers?
@LucDanton I like the way R does it because it's easier, at least to me, to have the paradigm of having generic names and code that can be evaluated in an arbitrary environment
@Lalaland That's a far stretch from what you said though
01:46
@ElimGarak I love the fresh content-first metro style
And you control when the code is evaluated clearly.
Ell
Ell
@melak47 ah the compositor does it. That make sesne
@ElimGarak well, not quite true - they explicitly brought it back for win10 :)
@LucDanton They didn't file them on Yahoo! Answers. So, sadly, we can't see
we will never know
Ell
Ell
01:47
For some reason I presumed having transparent backgrounds meant you could take the area beneath your window
As opposed to the compositor just not drawing your window instead
@melak47 Yeah, people begged and, as I understand the state of it now, they're considering doing more of it depending on feedback?
People keep saying Python > R, but R definitely has things going for it.
@ElimGarak dunno.
user406009
@LucDanton Well, at least we have the questions. Unlike with SO where they get deleted if they aren't "relevant".
Ell
Ell
@ElimGarak but the application itsself doesn't take the frame buffer right? Which is why I was concerned
01:48
@Ell Nah, it's done during composition :D
@ElimGarak It'd probably be easier to kill yourself.
I wonder---would it be feasible to build a high-level library for C++ and then program from there?
but anyway... since MS is cheating with their window borders, enabling the blur on a regular window colours outside the lines :(
oh Cinch...
Or perhaps implement a small language on top of it and then do things? That's how a lot of people do it, right?
01:49
@melak47 don't use undocumented stuff
@Lalaland those Athenian city elders at it again
@ScarletAmaranth WHAT am i doing
@VermillionAzure Does a man need a reason to say "oh Cinch..."?
@ScarletAmaranth MS shouldn't break the documented stuff then :p
user406009
@VermillionAzure Scarlet is trolling right now.
01:50
But one of the tricks you can do is minimize your window once moved, take a desktop screenshot of everything below and then determine the area below and apply a gaussian filter to it, darken it and interpolate. But requires custom rendering to look nice. And also, you have to move the window before the stuff below is computed. :D
@ElimGarak yeah holy crap I don't want to do that :p
@melak47 there is a reason for it - UWP
@ScarletAmaranth you keep saying UWP
But is there no real high-level standard platform for C++? I guess Boost could be but Boost prefers not to be a platform.
01:51
8 mins ago, by ScarletAmaranth
@melak47 how did you change the color without utilizing the Universal Windows Platform stuff? I don't think there is a way besides hand-building within the client area OR capturing the non_client_pain message
Ell
Ell
How does one programmatically take a screenshot without the user seeing the window minimised and then maximised?
user406009
@VermillionAzure The closest is the C++ standard library.
user406009
STL, etc, etc.
@Ell That's the problem, there is a stutter, but it only needs to recompute on move/resize. :D
Ell
Ell
Or other windows moving around
01:52
@Lalaland But C++ doesn't have data frames, matrices, or CSV/serialization
9 mins ago, by melak47
also, this is a native Win32 program, no "store app"
@Ell huh?
@Ell And the content below is static, so forget video :D
It also doesn't have any of the metaprogramming facilities of R without having to dive in that terrible templates stuff.
@melak47 yes, they are "deprecating" stuff because of UWP; that's not related to whatever your app is running as
01:52
There's a lot of drawbacks to it :D
Ell
Ell
@Borgleader if other windows move below it, it will have to take a new screenshot
user406009
@VermillionAzure Well, you can find specific libraries to do all of those things.
@Ell oh
@Lalaland But I wanted to find a platform.
user406009
It's more a question of how much consolidation of libraries do you want.
Ell
Ell
01:53
@ElimGarak it seems entirely unpractical :P but who wants transparent windows anyway
The point of a window is to draw things on, not to not draw things on :D
@Ell I do, they look cool :(
user406009
@VermillionAzure Also, people are currently working on that with the reflection C++ proposals.
It's nice having a real platform or true standardized toolset. The standard library sure is standard but it's certainly not all encompasing.
@ScarletAmaranth but they didn't deprecate DwmEnableBlurBehindWindow - they just broke it.
user406009
@VermillionAzure Yeah, it might be nice to have something similar to scipy for C++.
01:53
@Ell It can add a lot of visual appeal to it if you can blur everything below and then really darken it to the shade of Visual Studio Dark. :D
Ell
Ell
@Borgleader meh I find them ugly. When would it be useful anyway?
@melak47 yeah that's a failure vOv
it reports success but does nothing
But the stuff you need to do it is very unreliable, so I just dropped it after a day. :D
@Lalaland I think they should focus on just creating a wrapper or monad library with serialization for C++ types and then go from there.
Ell
Ell
01:54
I mean doing it as a whole window thing via the compositor I understand
@Ell "looking cool" and "useful" are too orthogonal things.
Ell
Ell
For example I used to use semi transparent terminals so I could read web pages while entering commands also
I'll show an example, sec
user406009
@VermillionAzure I don't think monads would be of that much use in C++.
Something like Type<std::vector> and then being able to print it, serialize it, and then switch based on the type could be immensely useful while still being compatible with the larger C++
Ell
Ell
01:55
@Borgleader yeah that's fair
a Monad library, oh Cinch
Ell
Ell
I guess my point is: leave it to the compositor
user406009
@VermillionAzure Yeah, people are working on that sort of thing in the reflection API proposals.
user406009
It's hard work though.
@Lalaland If they can find a way to map types to some compile-time generated enum then it might be possible.
And then linking across libraries would require some static function or if they really want to go farther, serialize the unique internal type names as strings
01:56
> perhaps with monads
user406009
@VermillionAzure Well, we have typeid
Ell
Ell
@ScarletAmaranth lol
I'm going to start using that mémé more often
@Lalaland Welp, then all they have to do is something like struct Type<T> { type_info(T) ; T data } and then provide the relevant methods.
user406009
@VermillionAzure type_info doesn't have a lot of things useful for doing reflection.
Like dis. Can be made even more subtle.
01:58
@Ell I remember a few days ago he was wondering whether Nomad and Monad are two different things, then he surely wanted to write a tutorial for monads and now we have moved to suggesting monadic solutions to serialization and reflection; brilliant
or that :)
@Lalaland Oh god, wait, I had to look it up again
but the blur outside the window frame kills the appeal :(
@melak47 Ahh... ASCII color codes
user406009
01:58
@ScarletAmaranth I think serialization/deserialization is actually a comonad :P
Reflection should NOT be allowed. At least without a lot of care.
put a hit on reflection

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