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21:00
@CatPlusPlus there were fun:
@sehetw @cmuratori see last 3 posts here http://blogs.msdn.com/b/ricom/
@Lalaland True that
@sehe if i was the network admin i'd have more detailed information about the structure of our intranet. Considering i'm a network admin, but that's not my primary job title, it just means i have access to everything, almost. Short answer was yes because everything's behind a firewall, however email wasn't the sercurity hole that we received our most recent attack from. Cryptolocker likes to start with email though, and we've had our share of that.
@Johnathon That's not what backward compatibility means. That's just backwards
Backwards compatibility means: you can still run your software on the new OS version.
@sehe the backwards compatibility issues stems from products that no longer are supported. Completely different topic
@Johnathon wow
@Johnathon That's indeed a different topic (but you did mention compatibility yourself, not "supported state")
user1804599
user406009
21:05
@Johnathon Is there a special version of cryptolocker for corperations?
user406009
Do they try to have you pay more or something?
@Lalaland lol, no i'd say it's the same version everyone that clicks on that particular email link gets
user406009
I have to say that cryptolocker is a genius idea. A very unethical idea, but a genius one.
@Lalaland we refuse to be held for ransom ;)
@Lalaland and just because you can do something, does not mean you should
user406009
@Johnathon Most people will pay though.
21:08
@Lalaland ethics doesn't really play into the picture, it's more along the lines of do you have a soul.
@Lalaland I've not really seen any figures that give me any indication on the success of the virus or not. Not my field of interest.
if I have a soul, can I sell it for tree fiddy
@TonyTheLion SHIT TONS OF ERRORS
@Nooble take the top one, and fix it?
hmm
I figured out what's wrong with the Wide integration tests
seems that LLVM explodes if you redirect stderr.
21:12
@Puppy LLVM on what? windows, linux, or native mac?
linux
@Puppy see if redirecting stderr with gcc blows up
dunno, I couldn't get that far because I can't create the object file it's supposed to use ;p
I'm actually having a bit of a problem redirecting g++'s output as well
it fails with "bad file descriptor"
not sure wtf that's on about
21:14
@Puppy the file descriptor, it is bad
it's perfectly good ;p
lmao
@Puppy are you mixing c++ std libs?
what do you mean?
user1804599
I'm fork/execing, so I don't think the child process should give a shit what stdlib the parent process is using
21:17
@Puppy it does however care what stderr is.
originally I redirected it to /dev/null
and that worked flawlessly right
nope
and it blows up on you with /dev/null ?
user1804599
@Puppy It cares about the search path of the dynamic linker.
21:18
yep
user1804599
Which is stored in an environment variable, which are typically inherited.
well actually
Thanks @m.s. I was able to guess the problem from there, but you're totally right. It's annoying when people deliberately leave out the problem code. — sehe 13 secs ago
LLVM blows up if I use /dev/null, I think
GCC I can't even get that far so don't know ;p
@Puppy can your gcc compile a working hello world?
21:20
@LucDanton is that botany again
@Johnathon Everything works absolutely fine, as long as you aren't trying to spawn it as a process with redirected stdout/stderr.
> In the context of forums and imageboard sites, the phrase serves as the anti-climactic punchline in bait-and-switch stories that abruptly end with Loch Ness Monster begging for $3.50.
I'm still so meme-uneducated
@Puppy are you trying to redirect it to a file descriptor?
no
I want to capture stdout (which seems to be working fine) and dump stderr
dump stderr to where?
user406009
21:24
How are you doing the redirection? Dup2?
@Johnathon /dev/null sounds good to me
@Lalaland yep, dup2 into a pipe
user406009
@Puppy you might want to try testing on a dummy program if you haven't already.
user406009
Std::cerr<<"hello world" or whatever.
@Puppy no errno ?
nope
21:27
@Puppy what's the call to dup2 returning?
a fd (or -1)
Are you dup2-ing before fork?
actually not completely sure
I stole the codes off the Internets and they have while ((dup2(filedes[1], STDOUT_FILENO) == -1) && (errno == EINTR)) {}
@sehe No.
I create the pipe, then fork, then dup2
Good. Carry on
Calls for popen or Boost Process IYAM :)\
@sehe I wish (the latter)
I've used popen with success before, but don't know how to get the exit code
21:29
Me neither. You could perhaps make a wrapper script that echos the exit code... :|
@Borgleader I looked for one briefly the other day but couldn't find any.
@LucDanton The versions are a mess. ISTR 0.5.0 has some serious flaws. What is your problem with Boost Process?
(Conversely, what do you use for "high level" process control in C++?)
@sehe I was amazed to see that Boost includes 9999 facilities for interprocess communication, but none for actually starting the other process you're supposed to communicate with
Why isn't there an implicit conversion from std::unique_ptr<T> to T*.
@sehe well, it’s not actually Boost.Process
21:31
because that would be super dumb
@sehe I’m asking myself the same question
@Nooble Because safety.
@Puppy Okay :c
@Morwenn Oh riggghhttttt.
That thing.
unique_ptr and T* are two completely different things.
its all about ownership
21:32
@Puppy Boost Inter Process
@LucDanton Well. It is the name of the library. Call it confusing, but it's not named anything else
@Nooble Why would there be...?
@sehe yeah yeah I suck
Okay. Allow me to rub it in :)
user1804599
Maybe I should write a book.
@MadameElyse fiction, or non-fiction ?
user1804599
21:34
Non-fiction, of course.
@sehe Alternatively, it’s the tentative name it would have adopted had it been accepted into Boost (and until then it would be a candidate Boost.Process). Back to the topic, the real shame is not the lack of acceptance, but the gradual abandonment that has followed.
Programming is so awesome
@sehe :P
@LucDanton The problem is, then, a lack of name. And since everyone still knows it by this non-name that it should not have, I'll consider it it's name
@MadameElyse now if writing non-fiction could just force people to actually put forth enough intellectual power to comprehend it, it'd be worth it.
user1804599
21:36
@Shoe Why?
fuck this I'm gonna play Left 4 Dead 2
@LucDanton Also, in what way was the abandonment gradual? All I can see is that it was total. I don't think there was ever a new maintainer or did I miss that?
What if you are left for dead though?
and home alone?
in the middle?
last summer?
@sehe yes, there were a handful (three? I forget)
@sehe No, the problem I have with it is lack of a good home to take good care of it (Boost or otherwise).
21:37
Wow. That's. ... Probably the reason all the regressions happened :)
I had a barbecue with my brother tonight, in our garden. It was awesome :3
Best day ever.
BBQ with family is nice.
Seems a little cold for bbq though.
It was 12 degrees here. Will be ~17° later this week. Craziness
negative?
16°C in the afternoon, so this evening was a bit cold but just fine with warm clothes.
21:41
Is there a good place to learn about make and makefile? I really don't know anything about this stuff, and haven't been able to find a detailed resource. I understand its purpose, but I would like to know how to write one
it's 6°C here atm
user1804599
@MadameElyse It was a joke
@wellington It's pretty easy, see. Just put an all:, press enter and tab, and then go to town with those commands.
It's probably 8°C here right now.
user1804599
21:42
@Shoe why?
@Madame Elyse thank you.
@MadameElyse Why?
@Morwenn it's also 3:42 pm atm
user1804599
@Shoe because I am interested.
Why what?
21:43
@Johnathon 10:45pm here.
Super warm.
user1804599
> Ingredients.
72 g haricot beans
101 eggs
108 g lard
111 cups oil
32 zucchinis
119 ml water
114 g red salmon
100 g dijon mustard
33 potatoes
user1804599
> Serves 1.
actually, I don't see where this page is useful..
@Morwenn You are close to me
Ell
Ell
21:44
33 potatoes
@Shoe Can't be closer though :'(
Why?
@Ell Did you plonk me?
@Nooble the commands is the part that I need to learn and reference... haha
user1804599
21:45
@wellington g++ something.cpp -osomething.exe -std=c++14 -Werror -Wall -Wextra -pedantic -modules_pls?
VAR = things
name:
    command1
    command2 $(VAR)
    ...
@wellington Here, that's all you need to know
@Nooble DON'T USE .exe WITH -o JESUS CHRIST ARE YOU 5
@набиячлэвэлиь if he's using mingw, it'll be .exe
Is there a good source to learn about what all these mean? I've seen these on other sites, but little explanation. I appreciate the advice everyone.
@Johnathon With -oasdf it'll output asdf.exe, obv
21:47
no
The only thing you can do is use ninja instead
@wellington manpages for your compiler
And copy boostrap.py from one of robot's repositories
And everything will work fine
@набиячлэвэлиь REALLY
NO FUCKING WAY
@набиячлэвэлиь perhaps he's not using mingw and whats his executables suffixed with .exe .. who cares what he wants, he's not 5 for wanting it
@Johnathon, I did use mingw
Ell
Ell
21:48
Also on a train so terribad signal
@shoe no o.O
Why would I plonk?
I'm mobile BTW
@MadameElyse 101 eggs?
@набиячлэвэлиь why didn't you tell me about this sooner you weirdo
@StackedCrooked the 101 eggs was not me sir
@Nooble I thought this was obvious
Those are Unix tools, so they act like it
user1804599
The problem I've run into is that I get the error "No targets specified and no makefile found."
@wellington then there isn't a Makefile.
Ell
Ell
Jefff why did you think I plonked you? :(
@wellington are you still trying to use some esoteric ide ?
I think Nooble told me yesterday to change one of the mingw files in bin to make...which i did... the i ended up getting that error
I'm using Sublime Text..real pain in the ass..
21:50
yea.
@wellington Yeah, so you can call it with make :P
shouldn't change functionality
Just trying to be a better programmer not relying on an advanced ide like eclipse or netbeans
@Ell oh Jeff
@wellington start small. open up vi/vim/emacs and make a hello world, then compile it with good ol g++ and see if you get your a.exe or what not, if it works then you have your environment variables set up right (or you did it all in mingw's directory)
@Ell Yesterday I was sending messages to you and you never replied :C
21:53
@wellington if what ever your using isn't an ide, then it likely wont keep track of those for you.
user1804599
@Shoe how's Elixir going?
user1804599
Already abandoned?
Not yet
@wellington and by vi/vim/emacs i mean your favorate editor, and use a shell to compile your code
Phoenix looks awesome as of right now
21:54
@Johnathon It's not 1999, use Sublime Text 3
It even has that "automatic reload" thingy so whenever you make changes it automatically reloads them in the page you have opened
RIP @AngryLettuce @nick (etc?)
Not that refreshing the page was particularly difficult, I just find it neat
@набиячлэвэлиь if he's using windows i'd say notepad++ , but that's just me
@набиячлэвэлиь read more
21:55
@Johnathon Nah, ST3 > NPP (I know, I've used both extensively)
@Johnathon, thanks, I will give this a shot I guess and get back to you. I did at mingw's directory to the system variables path
user1804599
@Shoe but does it automatically execute your repeatable experiments (unit tests)?
@MadameElyse The actor model is getting more and more interesting the more I hear about it
the stuff they don't teach you in class...haha
@StackedCrooked well, actually (hold on...)
user1804599
21:55
The actor model is boring.
@sehe It was a suggestion
user1804599
Go is all the rage.
of course
@MadameElyse the only place I've seen go used was in the controls for a packing machine. Embedded windows xp machine at that.
@Shoe actor-framework.org/manual/#sec2 is on my reading list
21:56
Nov 8 '15 at 15:57, by Elyse
Actor model seems terrific.
Ell
Ell
It doesn't make you a better programmer really
I suppose it helps you to adapt to different tools which is good
@Shoe That was months ago
this kind of stuff is never class teachable.
It differs too much. And next year it's different again. You should understand the concepts, and learn (this is teachable) to RTFM.
> When dealing with dozens of cores, mutexes, semaphores and other threading primitives are the wrong level of abstraction.
21:58
The rest is holding up your own pants. That's professionalism in software development
Totally agree
Ell
Ell
@Shoe oh o.O maybe I was asleep or busy. I'll reply to them when I get home :)
user1804599
> By decoupling concurrently running software components via message passing, the actor model avoids race conditions by design.
user1804599
nonsense
user1804599
you can still get race conditions easily
21:58
@Shoe Many solutions to that, though
yup
@MadameElyse Depends on the messages
god damn it I hate everything pointers
user1804599
Actors can be used to encapsulate shared state, and boom.
@Ell Well, they were jokes during that XML/languages discussion earlier with puppy
Nothing important
Ell
Ell
21:59
Ohh I remember
@Nooble what are you trying to do?
Ell
Ell
I think I kept going to reply but had to reply to puppy instead :V idk
My apologies anyway
Additional sorting algorithms for C++14 https://github.com/Morwenn/cpp-sort // sorting networks are pretty cool! :-)
Look what the cat dragged in /cc @Morwenn
@Nooble is this still the std::unique_ptr to *T thing?
Of course not
22:01
@Johnathon the program compiled within cmd
@Johnathon C-style callbacks with class member functions.
we have -5 and snow, beautiful, been skiing five days in a row
@Ell Don't worry about it, I was just curious as to whether you had plonked me or not
@sehe Oh, that might explain why I had so many views :o
@Nooble HAHAHAHAHHAHA RIP
22:02
@Nooble and your running into trouble with pointers how?
@набиячлэвэлиь YEAH EXACTLY RIGHT
@Johnathon Not really with pointers, but with design.
@Nooble what exactly are you trying to get to call your code, as in what are you passing your callback function to?
user1804599
loop(N) ->
    receive
        {add, N2} -> loop(N + N2);
        {get, Ref, Pid} -> Pid ! {Ref, N}, loop(N)
    end.

racy(Pid) ->
    Ref1 = make_ref(),
    Pid ! {get, Ref1, self()},
    Number1 = receive {Ref1, N} -> N end,

    Pid ! {add, 1},

    Ref2 = make_ref(),
    Pid ! {get, Ref2, self()},
    Number2 = receive {Ref2, N} -> N end,

    assert(Number1 == Number2 + 1).
user1804599
Call racy from two actors passing the same Pid and boom race condition.
@Johnathon I'm trying to get a C-style callback to a member function working.
I can't have whatever it is being called as static because it modifies a value belonging to an object.
22:05
@Nooble how many different instances of this class are you going to have?
Ell
Ell
@Nooble you'll likely need a userdata and a dispatch function
@Johnathon As many as required.
It's a window class.
Although I'm throwing not_implemented when there's multiple :P
@Nooble trying to make a window in c++ eh?
@Ell I think this was your idea hehe.
@Johnathon Trying to manage one.
Ell
Ell
wptr = reinterpret_cast<window*>(userdata)
22:06
@Nooble on windows , with mingw ?
user1804599
this isn't an lvalue.
I suppose I could make those values static too, since I only have one instance support.
But that's a hack.
Nothing more permanent than a temporary solution.
@Johnathon Yes.
@Nooble a window, just a window .. not windows
@Ell static_cast, you filthy C wanker
@Ell huh
22:08
@Nooble The void-pointer-userdata idiom for callbacks
@Nooble ok, here's the deal. WinProc passes an HWND as the first paramter to your messge function. You can have windows replace that value with the pointer of your class , effectively leaving the HWND to management of your class. Secondly, your static function can keep a static array of your windows, like a vector.. just make darn sure you wrap it around a proper lock.
@Nooble or, you can use a library that's already been written to do such things.
@Johnathon I'm using glfw.
@Johnathon He's not using WinAPI, dumb-dumb
It does input stuff.
These inputs are streamed through callbacks.
topkek using WinAPI for window management
@Nooble Do they take void* userdata?
22:10
@набиячлэвэлиь wut
you set the callbacks by giving them a pointer to the function
The function takes some arguments and void* userdata, which you pass to the registering function
It's like explicit this
user1804599
I wish I were a salmon.
user1804599
A life without worries.
But then when you rush you die
@MadameElyse I wish I were an apricot.
22:15
We all wish you were
So I could sleep all the time.
Because nobody notices when apricot is sleeping.
@набиячлэвэлиь no
I'm fucked.
I'm not about to make a class just for handling this.
Fucking GLFW.
@Nooble Link to the docs plz
22:16
@Nooble that's where you're wrong
@набиячлэвэлиь glfw.org/docs/latest/group__input.html <-- this one
@sehe :c
user1804599
@StackedCrooked How does a Belgian catch a rabbit? By waiting behind a tree while imitating the sound of a carrot.
Ell
Ell
@Nooble you don't make a class, you make one free function per callback
@MadameElyse sodemieter op
glfwSetWindowUserPointer there we go @Nooble
user1804599
22:20
I feel sad. :(
@MadameElyse why?
@MadameElyse sunday eve depression?
user1804599
@StackedCrooked Yup.
@Nooble You should make a class
Ell
Ell
I don't get the carrot joke
22:21
@StackedCrooked nou nou
user1804599
Same horrible job again tomorrow. Didn't have any fun today.
@Ell ENOTBELGIAN
happens to me a lot
@MadameElyse you have 38 minutes to fap
@milleniumbug ?
user1804599
22:21
I fixed a bug in my FALSE interpreter.
@sehe lol
user1804599
And added a feature to my Perl 6 module skeleton generator.
user1804599
Those two things were fun to do.
@Ell the joke is, he doesn't get the carrot either
@Johnathon Well, you certainly started off on the wrong foot, but "tool" might be overstating things a little. Then again, who am I to say for sure--maybe "tool" is exactly what some of them think of you.
22:22
> Perl 6 module skeleton generator
This should be grounds for euthanasia, really
why are you generating skeletons in Perl?
@Nooble this is the function where you pass userdata to
> [Added in GLFW 3.0.](www.glfw.org/docs/latest/group__window.html#ga17807ce0f45ac3f8bb50d6dcc59a4‌​e06)
lol GLFW 1.0 and 2.0 must have been written by retards
@milleniumbug implied
user1804599
@TonyTheLion Because it is tedious to do the same thing manually over and over again. Automation is what programmers ought to do.
22:25
not read it yet
@MadameElyse makes sense
FUCKING SHIT MARKDOWN
user1804599
Automate your own job.
@JerryCoffin is there any other foot to start off on eh?
user1804599
> say 'a' x 3 × 4
aaaaaaaaaaaa
user1804599
22:26
go figure
ah, found the problem.
turns out that if you redirect stderr, LLVM fails and calls exit(1) in the destructor of a static object.
@набиячлэвэлиь so what do I do with this userdata
I'm so confused.
> Peter Drucker, a management thinker, argued that you can do real work or go to meetings but you cannot do both.
@набиячлэвэлиь Also now you know why I can't deliver.
@JohanLarsson that's a matter of perspective, and what it is you do for a living. As programmers, yes that's true. For a project manager that's entirely false as meetings are required to do their job. etc.
22:33
You pass the pointer to object that stores all the relevant data (actual objects, std::function or what have you). Set the functions that cast the pointer to the type you used, and inside the glfw callback, call the function you want to use
@MadameElyse 15 characters to generate 12 characters
Doesn't matter
@milleniumbug Thanks :)
user1804599
22:49
@milleniumbug add http:// and yer golden
@Johnathon Certainly.
Heh, tomorrow I'm multistacking.

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