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19:00
its spreading
user406009
Are we still actually using discord?
Of course, Discord is pretty great.
weird, people can click on the discord link, but not on the rules one
user406009
If it looks like a long term thing I guess I should start writing my plugin.
19:03
@Lalaland Yeah
Discord is nice.
More heartfelt discussions can be had there
And Google doesn't index every impolite thing we say
user406009
@ElimGarak But it's still there, public and forever.
user406009
Discord != private.
If someone is tenacious enough to scroll 50 kilometers, he deserves to find whatever he's looking for.
user406009
19:05
@ElimGarak You can do it automatically with just a tad of scripting.
We can make an actual private channel
user406009
It's actually sorta what I am working on right now.
Or really just quarantine unverified to #general
@Lalaland Well, that applies only to people who are accepted into our little circle?
Which granted, needs a bit more work on the actual permissions
@Lalaland There, private. #lounge
Reading history is a privilege too and it's been taken away~
19:21
History is written by the victors verified scrubs
no history allowed!
that’s a rule we’ve had for… I don’t remember how long
19:41
@LucDanton :P
user1804599
> German state says it will REFUSE any more asylum seekers from Morocco after young men from the country featured prominently in Cologne sex attacks
user1804599
Why do Moroccans seek asylum
Because people confuse them for morons and they're sick of it
Title of the day:
-2
Q: Ego driven corrupt moderators

John SmithSo I recently wrote a question. The moderator claims it is a duplicate (it was a decision dictated only by him by the way). He claims it already has an answer but has not linked a relevant question. Here's the link to it Isn't it time for sponsored questions on S/E? (by the way this is still me b...

19:59
@Mysticial i also love the smell of butthurt in the afternoon
user1804599
lol
user1804599
20:31
TIL 10! seconds is exactly 6 weeks.
@Zoidberg You did that just to make us all expand it. Not biting:)
user1804599
??? No I didn't !!!
why are you guys not using the discord thing?
user1804599
because I can't plonk people there
who do you need to plonk?
20:33
@JohanLarsson We are
user1804599
because people are annoying and uninteresting
@Zoidberg OK, I give in. I calculated it, and you're right. Now I need to find a suitably embarrassing forfeit. I'll buy a 'JavaScript for Dummies' book.
user1804599
@Ven how about requiring that type names start with Greek letters
20:38
javascript is for smart people
I need types
user1804599
Smart people recognize their own incapability of manual type checking, and therefore want automatic type checkers.
@Zoidberg s/checkers/manglers
Where's my vodka?
Is that my vodka?

"Moo! Moo!"

That's not my vodka:(
Ven
Ven
@Zoidberg go ahead :p
user1804599
No. :P
user1804599
I'm implementing variance now. \o/
20:46
@MartinJames aw
I wrote shit code this week
You did?
Why would you
@JohanLarsson well done! celebrate
@JohanLarsson Beats an enema.
feel tired
Ven
Ven
20:49
Je suis la Venn des neiges
user1804599
ven help
user1804599
how do you check whether T[A, B, C] is a subtype of U[D, E, F] when T and U have different but compatible variance annotations
Heh, PewDiePie was on Conan recently.
@Ven I’ve heard that one before & I’m not falling for it again
user1804599
20:56
I think I just have to take the variance annotations of the most derived type.
user1804599
Yeah, obviously.
user1804599
(actorparams.map(_._1), aargs, bargs).zipped.forall {
  case (Invariant,     aarg, barg) => equalType(aarg, barg)
  case (Covariant,     aarg, barg) => subtype(aarg, barg)
  case (Contravariant, aarg, barg) => supertype(aarg, barg)
}
user1804599
Extremely shiny.
.-.
You're all lood.
That shouldn't have 12 stars.
I hadn't even noticed yet.
21:07
@StackedCrooked reff reff, reff reff reff .. reff reff reff reff reff
Can someone recommend a C++ library for building DOM trees?
@milleniumbug Poco XML has a dom parser. Not sure if it can build them.
AutoPtr<Document> pDoc = new Document;
AutoPtr<Element> pRoot = pDoc->createElement("root");
pDoc->appendChild(pRoot);
AutoPtr<Element> pChild1 = pDoc->createElement("child1");
AutoPtr<Text> pText1 = pDoc->createTextNode("text1");
pChild1->appendChild(pText1);
pRoot->appendChild(pChild1);
Apparently they do :)
Ok, that will do. Thanks!
It's copy pasta from here.
I can't BELIEVE Jens tweeted this:
I mean. It screams "I can't write C++ without UB and I blame the tools"
21:17
Hi girls and boys :)
I'm finally back.
Hello Godwenn.
why is meetingcpp posting random rants
Just came to realize the OP for Gate S2 is actually really good.
@milleniumbug Because he can't ... write code.
@ThePhD This is getting strange :s
21:18
@sehe Dunno the details, but it looks like sarcasm to me.
It would really be hilarious. But he always seems like the coworker I'd hate to have
@Morwenn But it's fun to say. :<
Oh. Jens from cppcon?
Yup Also, tweet deleted
@ThePhD But I ain't of godly nature :o
21:18
That cocky ignorant guy.
I guess.
@sehe I mean... isn't this an official account of some organization or sth?
For his own org, yes
> Jens Weller has worked, since 2007, as a freelancer in C++, specialising in consulting, training and programming C++. He started with programming C++ back in 1998. He is an active member of the European C++ community and the founder of the Meeting C++ platform and conference
Hm...
21:20
I mean. That tweet. I'd say (at gun point): "Step away from the keyboard"
@sehe the tweet only appears in debug mode
ROFL
@LucDanton So tempted to tweet the picture with that line
21:21
@Morwenn Well, alrighty. I won't say it anymore. Sorry!
user1804599
@Ven what should the kind of List be? [*] => *? I think variance should be in it, i.e. [+*] => *.
@StackedCrooked Nope.
@ThePhD No problem TheGoD :D
@Morwenn Pfffffffffff Morwennpls.
@sehe Maybe if he was an anime fan I'd forgive him.
21:22
mrowen plz
Mrowwen...
Rowenn.
Row, row row your boat.
I like the proposal to add SFINAE to decltype(auto).
... Huh
@StackedCrooked For some values of « similar » :p
21:24
Character count :)
Lexical comparison would require parsing 4 characters.
Morregen is how he pronounces "morgen" which means tomorrow. (FYI)
@sehe Hmm...(struggling to give him the benefit of any possible doubt) maybe he means there's a bug in it that happens to work in (some compiler's version of) debug mode? Or possibly that some compiler that will remain nameless, but has explicit "debug" and "release" modes in its IDE has a bug that prevents the code from working in its "release" mode?
@StackedCrooked Interesting.
@JerryCoffin He means that. But he's very very overwhelmingly likely wrong. He's been publicly failing at using Boostache for 2 weeks now , from the looks of it
@StackedCrooked I thought he was saying 'MURRICA
@JerryCoffin It's weird that overload resolution would change on release/debug.
21:28
Woof.
Functions biting me in the ass rn.
@ThePhD puppy
@ThePhD Functions are the first abstraction you learn as a programmer.
You fail.
int(&)(lua_State*L) -> unqualified -> int()(lua_State*L) -> does not match lua_CFunction, which is int(*)(lua_State*L)
Ripperdoodles.
Template Library for Parallel For Loops was an interesting read.
It contains a proposal to add some kind of reducers to the standard library.
Also that one about std::sort(begin, end, (>)); because why not.
Kek.
Also, uh.
Bikeshed.
Many things about executors and stuff. I didn't understand half of them :(
21:36
constructors<...> passes a typelist as an argument that produces std::allocator<T> constructors that obey overloading.
I need something for what are essentially factory functions / generators.
Any ideas?
generator<Functions...>?
@Zoidberg I'm probably going to record a ~30 minute Java 8 video in the next couple of days. Prepare to be amazed and/or bored to death.
And no, by ~30 minutes I do not mean -31 minutes or 4294967265 minutes ;)
signed 5 bit overflow.
@StackedCrooked Is "Weller" the comparative form of "well"? Does he do weller than others?
@Morwenn execution policies are michael wong stuff iirc
user1804599
@fredoverflow Nice.
21:40
@StackedCrooked This is so wong.
while executors are kohlhoff stuff
@Zoidberg I already have a name for it, but I don't want to spoil the fun.
user1804599
@fredoverflow Look what I implemented today: scroll down to text highlighted in blue.
looks compiler-related ;)
Actors? cool
oh, variance
user1804599
No, that's "a ctor". Like "b ctor".
21:42
@StackedCrooked The one I didn't undestand was a paper by Torvald Riegel.
user1804599
It implements the subtyping relationship between two applied type constructors.
@Zoidberg oh lol
user1804599
I'm going to change TupleType(elements: List[Type]) into TupleType(elementCount: Int).
user1804599
So that TupleType(n) is a type constructor.
What's the advantage?
user1804599
21:48
That you can pass (,,,) to higher-kinded type constructors.
user1804599
E.g. T[(,)].
TupleType sounds like PewDiePie.
Muh bikeshed is going badly.
what are you bikeshedding about?
is the group in get things done mode?
user1804599
21:53
@fredoverflow I already implemented higher kinds and singleton types. All I need now is tests!
still vlinder?
user1804599
No, but similar.
user1804599
Vlinder did type reification.
user1804599
lcx doesn't.
Proposal to add short float to C++ and to alias long float and long long float to double and long double.
21:55
@StackedCrooked Trying to find a name for this idiom.
@Zoidberg Shouldn't you have started with the tests?
@ThePhD Hm, are you sure it's an idiom?
I know when you have a function that takes a T* and calls destruct on it it's just a destructorof sorts (not a deleter as the memory is deallocated by something else), but what is the name of something that takes a T* and placement new / constructs that thing?
Do I just call it constructor? And the overloaded version constructors?
user1804599
@fredoverflow shush
user1804599
@Morwenn lol
21:57
I ask because I already have something that's called constructors and it's already locked in as a name, so I need 1 more name for something that constructs something but doesn't actually use placement new / the constructor (e.g., some kind of factory function thingy).
@Morwenn that would make scanf's "%lf" format specifier consistent with what it's referring to
@milleniumbug Don't know, don't care. It's a C function :p
@ThePhD constructioner
argh C++ regexes
> doesn't actually use placement new / the constructor
That "/ the constructor" is kinda worrying :)
22:00
and its std::sub_match deriving from std::pair instead of providing begin()/end() member or non-member functions
It's for types whos constructors are hidden
maker
e.g. your typical enterprise shit.
Where you need to use some special snowflake factory function.
that's what factories are, not?
Hrm. Maybe I should just call it factory<T...> then?
22:01
reflexpr operator. Such a great name.
user1804599
What does that do?
El Capitan's default desktop wallpaper is a picture of the moutain. But it looks really crisp. I have to give it to them that they know how to make impressive wallpapers.
@Zoidberg It's equivalent to the proposed mirrored. It's a static reflection operator which gives a class containing information about the reflected object. Or something like that.
user1804599
meh
user1804599
reflection in C++
user1804599
22:04
how about fixing the type system before bolting reflection onto it
@Zoidberg I can do that in both blender and GIMP.
BWUH where's Hubert
@CaptainGiraffe You can do it in b(l)ender? Neat!
They usually come up with great names.
How many fps should one use for a programming podcast?
22:05
@Zoidberg That's for 2072 buddy.
user1804599
user1804599
@fredoverflow 30 is fine.
Or is the overhead of 30 fps negligible due to excellent compression of successive repeated frames?
@Zoidberg You monster.
@ThePhD I say shopped, nobody would be this cruel in reality.
@Zoidberg I think my C podcasts have been 12 fps so far...
user1804599
22:07
@fredoverflow Indeed. Any sane person would cut the cake like this:
Here is a hypothetical. You have a last and final chance at meeting your guru, leader and hero. Who is your last chance hero?
@Zoidberg know it, love it
user1804599
Numberphile Life Hacks
Mine would be Turing.
22:11
@Zoidberg Have you seen the new calculator unboxing?
user1804599
I linked that here earlier today. :)
The graphs in the static reflection proposals are shiny xD
Show me the graphs!
@Zoidberg Gonna cut any cake I come across like this
@Zoidberg I like how the blue model comes with an example number, 24 thousand something :)
std::y_combinator
user1804599
22:15
@Morwenn std::markov_chain
Not proposed yet :p
Y combinator 2: Argument Day
user1804599
The Y combinator is for people who like it too complicated. Typical C++.
user1804599
All you need is the U combinator. You can derive everything else from it.
@Zoidberg You do love to shit on C++ people :p
22:17
@Zoidberg Do you think it's wise to promote my Java 8 video via my current reddit account? :)
user1804599
Yes. That would be funny.
user1804599
Y = (U (U (U (U U)))) ((U (U (U U))) ((U (U (U (U U)))) (U U) (U U))) ((U (U (U (U U)))) ((U (U (U (U U)))) ((U (U (U U))) (U (U (U (U U))))) (U (U (U U)))) ((U (U (U U))) ((U (U (U (U U)))) (U U) (U U)))) :)
user1804599
This really works!
OMG @Mysticial They've printed your secrets and are showing it on the tarmac now
user1804599
It's the Y combinator defined in terms of solely the U combinator.
22:20
@Zoidberg Can I buy a T-shirt?
Shirt<T>
user1804599
@fredoverflow No, but you can evaluate it as-is in Ela. :D
user1804599
And in Haskell if you add unsafeCoerce here and there.
I just realized you should be able to insert a type into lua that is not constructible or destructible by the VM itself.
Man why is this so hard. =/
Proposals for civil time and timezone libraries too.
22:27
Is it howard hinnant's?
user1804599
@fredoverflow Computing 1 + 2 took five seconds. Classic Java.
@ThePhD Nope, but apparently the proposal is still partly based on Howard's library.
Ven
Ven
@Morwenn i read a bit, what is this one?
> Visually parsing an IP address should not feel like visually comprehending C++ templates.
@Zoidberg My first try took so long I was convinced I was missing a Browser plugin or something :)
22:30
@Ven Did you read the old proposal about mirrored? It's just an update.
Ven
Ven
@Morwenn as someone who talks to her on IRC almost daily, she does that with anything -- and especially anyone
@Morwenn no!
@Ven Erf, it's just a huge paper about static reflection and reflecting everything and anything in the language.
Fun graphs starting at the 23rd page.
@StackedCrooked They're right, I can't figure out how that reads worth a damn. =/
@StackedCrooked That reminds me: why did they choose ':' as a separator, since it can indeed be used in URLs?
Ven
Ven
@Morwenn ah, I have the tab open
Was . not allowed or whatever?
22:35
One cool about IPv6 is how automatically everything works.
fuckin' hell
according to Dell's order tracking, my parcel left the factory, sat outside the door for five days, and then spontaneously teleported to a town in the middle of England.
You did read that book about about quantum mechanics.
@Puppy Yeah. That happens. We called up some guy in Essex about his 3-foot high, plaster garden gnome that had appeared on our, (midlands). doorstep with an advice note pack on his head. The purchaser was at work, and his tracker number said that his package had been delivered to his home in Braintree and signed for.
22:58
evenin'
man why are google projects so ugly and terrible to compile
google it
user1804599
Incompetence.
I once heard Alex saying something along the lines of
"They prefered to keep 300LoC that could be replaced with one std::rotate call because <nobody knows what rotate does>."
so that's why
Sean Parent echoed that sentiment.
23:00
well I meant more the compile part
And then he stopped working at Google. :v
But their avoidance of std at least I can partially understand
@Prismatic Anything that has to compile for multiple platforms is a nightmare.
Even I refuse to deal with multi-platform compilation. .-.
And yet there are plenty of cross platform projects that seem just fine
23:02
oh god C++ regexes are so annoying
So I think I can have dirty cheats to make my code faster.
@ThePhD "even I "
google's builds often expect you to do weird shit, pull in ridiculous amounts of deps and then they build everything with really ugly tools like gyp
Just use CMake god damn
user1804599
@milleniumbug use PCRE
I can detect when someone does not bind any member variables
23:03
can't help but wrap them in a more reasonable interface
and if they do not bind any member variables, use dirty hacks to index into the metamethod table rather than call the function.
can't wrap but help them in a more reasonable interface?
This will give me insane performance if the user meets the criteria.
INSANE PERFORMANCE
INSAAAAAANE.
23:06
fucking migrate to discord
Every few years there's this anime that's so good.
Like Boku no Pico.
lol
More like boku dake ga inai machi.
@StackedCrooked worth wasting my time on?
lol, yeah
user406009
23:12
@StackedCrooked One issue is that everyone has different preferences, which are sometimes mutually incompatible.
user406009
I'll check it out. It does seem to match the types of genres that I like.
Don't watch it. It's horrible!
Watch it soon.
It's not the same without the cliffhangers that last for a week.
Damn I hate those cliffhangers.
user406009
I usually just wait for a series to completely finish before watching.
user406009
Waiting gets really annoying quickly.
user406009
And as long as you stay ~ a year behind, it's the same throughput of content anyways.
23:22
After watching an episode I feel a strong urge to talk about it with people. I suppose I'm not alone. The discussion about yesterday's episode on /r/anime already has many comments.
user406009
Yeah that's the cost. You lose out on the sense of community if you wait.
Ven
Ven
lol watch animes in 2006. Newbs.
I also had this when watching Parasyte.
Or hxh.
user406009
Parasyte was pretty cool.
But this series is a little different because you feel so strongly for the characters.
23:27
Gravity Falls finished this week
I didn't think Disney allowed things like that to happen in their shows but apparently yes
What's Elyses nick-of-the-season?
Not here apparently
@Zoidberg hope you're busy patching your BSD server marc.info/?l=openbsd-tech&m=145590012904434&w=2
user406009
@sehe I think Elyse is now Zoidberg
user406009
Yep, confirmed via transcript.
Ah I had 3 seconds left
> Security: Modern DB management systems support SSL connections (e.g. PostgreSQL). We can securely connect to a DBMS. There is no difference between securely connecting to a database and securely connecting to an application server.
hmm
user406009
23:38
Web servers/browsers do support more advanced security features nowadays though like certificate pinning.
Oh lol, that proposal to standardize [a..b) for up-to expressions.
Way to fuck balanced braces everywhere.
Yeah.
This kills the parser.
And every code editor ever.
user406009
The compiler parsers should be able to deal with it quite fine.
why is everybody proposing irrelevant syntax bullshit instead of doing something meaningful
user406009
23:42
It's the shit inside code editors and syntax highlighters which is going to have trouble.
Yeah, where's my properties
user406009
@milleniumbug Because syntax bullshit is easier to propose.
user406009
And there is a certain argument that syntax bullshit can be helpful in certain cases.
user406009
See STL's new iteration syntax idea.
I've been kind of enthused about coroutines. But lately I've been wondering if I can really find a good use case for them.
23:44
@Lalaland Yes, but you're still running completely untrustworthy client code and allowing it to hit your database.
@milleniumbug To be honest there are many more things that syntax bullshit proposed, but there are soooo many things...
@StackedCrooked I've not really found any compelling uses of them
well, there are a couple of language features that I think are actually coroutines under the hood, like yield return.
Ell
Ell
@StackedCrooked there are plenty!
any time you want to do something asynchronous coroutines make things much easier to reason about
@Puppy "yield return" sounds like a business term
Ell
Ell
imho - else you get into callback hell
23:45
Chiquita got a real good yield return last season.
it's a C# language feature- a good one
look it up
user406009
@StackedCrooked Have you ever tried programming either with them or with a heavy amount of callbacks?
user406009
The main advantage that people care about is that you can transform callback centric code into straight line code.
^^ Good video!
user406009
23:49
Truthfully, I also don't think they are that important. Good promises/futures are good enough.
@Lalaland I don't really have any callback centric code, so I don't have a need for that feature.
@StackedCrooked 1. Eat less, 2. Get off your ass, 3. ???, 4. Profit
the words of a man who's never had a serious weight problem
Ell
Ell
@Puppy how does your parser use CPS'?
@Ell By passing some functions that call functions and stuff

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