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21:01
@KhaledKhnifer it has everything including your mom :P
@Borgleader Seemed almost reasonable, until we got to: "Winters here are very similar to the North East USA". I think I'll pass on that, thanks anyway.
Yesterday I wrote a way to iterate loops and discovered that we have faster results than a simple for loop if we use logarithmic expressions. [foo_log_n](http://coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/a2dbd97a24f21988)

I'm still confused to the date, a math principle worked out, and it even has more code.
so then
there's finally an EU referendum in the UK
I can tell the Government to fuck off on my own personalized ballot
oh there's gonna be a referendum?
yep
21:07
seems like a big deal
I suppose referendums always are
@Borgleader oh neat
it's a big deal because our government is made up of stupid nancy boys who couldn't see a good idea if they had a billion treaties cementing it
in the most literal sense.
@Puppy you just described most (if not all) governments :P
nancy boys, hehe
never heard that term before
@StackedCrooked interesting, I just watched the first episode .. his ability reminded me of debugging in a real time application
21:12
you watched the first episode in 10 minutes? :)
> I got to ask, what's the deal with your username? Maybe its a joke, maybe its something personal. But you are over here posting Java in /r/java and you have THAT username! Please explain.
Joke answer: so your arrays can be bigger than Integer.MAX_VALUE :D — milleniumbug 7 mins ago
@Zoidberg I knew it :D
user1804599
:P
21:16
@fredoverflow should be JavaSucks :P
That was probably already taken, I can't remember :)
Maybe it was supposed to be a mixture of JavaSucks and JavaScript, I dunno...
JavaScripts
@KhaledKhnifer but it is 23 minutes
do you have a superpower? or do you watch on 2x speed?
I need to know.
@StackedCrooked you were right about it having a mom
-25
Q: Naming convention for Stack Overflow chatrooms?

ItachiUchihaSome time back I came across a chat room created on Stack Overflow Chat named as Java Sucks. I wanted to flag about the name of the chat room, but didn't find any way to do it. Nevertheless, I thought that some moderator would come across it and eventually it will get blocked. Today, after few m...

21:19
@StackedCrooked I've been watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer
The comments are so hilarious...
@Puppy I'm not very familiar with that series. But I recall seeing a few episodes on TV back in the late 90s early 2000.
@Puppy Oh I watched that a few years ago
@StackedCrooked you can play a 22 minutes video in 11 minutes, in x1 speed. on 2 different screens.
it's getting on a bit now
but I was too young really to see it the first time around
21:21
@fredoverflow Jeebus!
@Puppy Same for me, binged it on netflix in my 3rd or 4th year in university
although you'll have to excuse the first season, as per usual.
I also watched the spinoff but it wasnt as good I found
> Does it mention rightfold's vagina? If yes, it's not appropriate.
lol
@VictorLopez I'm not convinced, I think something else is going on :)
yes, it's called Stack Overflow
@VictorLopez also, you should use nonius for micro benchmarks! :D
My daughter is grinding her teeth in sleep. I can hear it here from the other room.
@wilx that can't be good for her
21:25
@melak47 Well, I hope it is not bad for her. :)
I mean, her mother does this as well.
according to my dentists' pointed questions when they find cracks in my teeth it can crack your teeth
@wilx How about a bite tray?
also eating ice and uncooked pasta, much to my dismay
Who would eat uncooked pasta?!?
it's crunchy!
21:27
@melak47 You're trying to run a benchmark on a multitasking server that has absolutely no reliability whatsoever.
I don't have a realtime OS to run it on, so it's never reliable
-7
Q: Why does the sizeof an arithmetic-types calculated?Like int or double

Allan CordaWhy does the sizeof a arithmetic-types like sizeof int in 32-bit environment is size of 4. In a 64-bit it is 8. In a 32-bit the sizeof int is 4. here is where I am lost "sizeof(int) need not be 8 of a 64 bit system, need not be 4 on a 32 bit system and so on." if we create an int depending on o...

wat
-1
Q: Directx - keep an object in the corner of the screen

AsphodelusI'm looking for a solution to keep a 3D object in the corner of the screen, regardless of the position of the camera or FOV I have no idea how to do it :( In fact, I'd convert a 2D position on the screen in 3D position

Why does he not simply draw in 2D?
or render a 3D scene to a texture and then use that
21:30
> You've earned the "Fanatic" badge (Visit the site each day for 100 consecutive days. (Days are counted in UTC.)).
not sure if this is good...
@fredoverflow Because its a 3d object, duh :P
or a thousand ways of doing it
the point is, it's a terrible question and we should lynch that guy for our own amusement
@Puppy or just render his UI or whatever it with an orthographic camera..
its probably pretty easy to just compute it from where the camera is and what its looking at and not bother with an intermediate texture
@Puppy Man, you are just mean.
21:32
not my fault he simply posted a statement of inadequacy rather than asking a question
lets imagine a client is willing to send me something like description - "if X > 4 than DOthis ELSE DoThat" it is a set of rules which will depend on runtime values, how should I parse them and store? My latest idea is to create DSL for client and use sth from: bison, ast tree +boost spirit...i feel Im over-enginering it.
@Puppy right now
@CyberGuy Try the giant ASK QUESTION button
will need to do that #cpp hashtag hmm any more?
in Java::chat ><> & Chips, Feb 17 at 13:03, by wonderb0lt
com.stackoverflow.java.NotEnterpriseEnoughException: Your code does not contain a StaticMockFactoryBuilderBeanHolderExpressionHandlerReferenceCountingBeanFactory
21:34
@CyberGuy hashtags are for twitter
@CyberGuy People interested in C++ already browse questions on stack overflow. No need to tweet your question.
please do not use hashtags to tag your SO questions
3
oh you guys!
@JohanLarsson Wait, you listened to me bragging about code without seeing the actual code? Twice? Wow :)
@jaggedSpire how would you describe how that makes you feel
21:41
@LucDanton I feel a remarkable amount of indignation upon seeing out of place hashtag based tagging, actually.
@LucDanton #disgusted
actually a good portion of why I instantly despised that comment.
@Borgleader and for the C preprocessor
certainly it was worthy of derision without the tag, but the tag really put it below the waterline
@jaggedSpire you know what I despise more? Calling # character "hashtag"
21:45
@milleniumbug sorry. I use hashtag when referring to the tagging system used by twitter. :\
@milleniumbug whats the official name for that thing, i always called it the pound sign
it's the sharp from C# :p
@Borgleader I call it just "hash", but "pound sign" is fine too, there are other names too
context dependent names are fun
@jaggedSpire my reaction to such people usually reduces to:
"ARGH YOU DIPSHIT IT'S CALLED HASHTAG BECAUSE IT CONSISTS OF A HASH AND A TAG THERE IS NO TAG HERE"
21:48
lol
You should read it from right to left.
calling them sgathsah improves nothing
\o/ it doesn't!
so good so far, my question closed after few minutes
guys you are great
at least one vote
primarily opinion-based :/
well it kind of is (its not my vote btw, but i agree)
21:50
@melak47 indeed
yes, but any better way to ask it...
I would have gone with "too broad" myself
@CyberGuy Asking about which tools are fit for a problem is not on-topic on stack overflow, is it?
why am I wearing headphones I haven't plugged in?
its more like software-design not exacttly what tool
21:51
jeez I need to get it together
@jaggedSpire because you are silly?
@Borgleader and a menace
@jaggedSpire #indigned
@jaggedSpire :O
@Borgleader That's what she wants you to believe. It was really connected to a portable soul player that streams to he the sounds of their abject agony and depression.
21:57
I like Sofia Vergara.
@ThePhD I think you're a good friend too.
Ven
Ven
I need something programming-related to do
But I do not have a computer
@VictorLopez results
@Ven How are you in the Lounge without a computer?
21:59
mobile? :S
No way to program that?
well, I think you can get a terminal emulator :D
@melak47 wow, nonius, just, wow. I'm trying to do foo_log_n with iterators. What is it? is it nonius.io?
@StackedCrooked wot
@VictorLopez yep
@StackedCrooked is it possible to direct link to a file on coliru?
22:04
@ThePhD What makes you think I dont have one of those? :P
@melak47 sure
also, how are you today?
@Borgleader I think he might not want to contemplate that possibility. :P
@StackedCrooked say I have this, and want to link @VictorLopez to the results.html :S
would that be considered abuse? :p
Oh, that file is gone.
22:05
heh. I see
@Borgleader ........
Ven
Ven
@fredoverflow mobile indeed
@Ven You can't spell mobile without bile.
@fredoverflow locomotive
@ThePhD catface may be slightly contagious. Slightly.
I'm sure you don't have to worry about it.
22:10
@ThePhD Dont worry bby, I'm just kidding. I dont have one.
> Deriving instances of Read/Show/Data/Generic for largely recursive ADTs can sometimes lead to quadratic memory behavior when the nesting gets deep.
wtf
user1804599
@fredoverflow hashtogram
module MegaCorpPrelude (module Exports) where
import Data.Int as Exports
import Data.Tuple as Exports
Ven
Ven
@LucDanton yes we all read it :P
Yes people use dump-deriv option in prod. codebases
@Ven it took me longer because I had to swap
geddit
user1804599
22:24
Chisel is a really nice Minecraft mod.
user1804599
Besides patterns it has stuff like fans and warning signs.
@melak47 That is just fine. The iterators need some tweaking, there are some empty indexes when filling with data, nonius is a great framework.
user1804599
@fredoverflow you should make the algorithm parallel
luc we miss you like crazy in the discord thing
@VictorLopez running this on linux I get around the same time for all of them except reverse_foo_n and foo_log_n (which take longer)
22:38
@melak47 yes and due to pair numbers/division the iterators should take in consideration resizing the container to the next pot or iterate with distances == 0.
This is peculiar.
In 99% of places returning const T& and T& get treated like an object and value semantics are assumed by the lib.
user1804599
@fredoverflow why do you generate Java source code instead of generating the lookup table at the start of the program?
But in user code, when someone returns const self& from a member function, they don't expect it to copy... in fact, they expect it to chain endlessly.
This is problematic for my system.
oh boy
22:44
hi loungé
hi prismatique
Iterators seem to be faster with big data.
Big Data™
Big Data℠
@ThePhD since you posted the base, and someone has to do it...kinky.
22:53
... Service Mark?
man cmake cant just output both shared and static libs with the same name
sigh
Just like CMake can't fathom wanting x64 builds in the same project file.
c++ is so painful
more because of this stupid build bullshit than anything else
it is late February why is it warm enough to sit outside and watch the clouds pass by?
I'm wearing a short sleeved shirt
I was woken up by a cardinal on a tree near my window today
22:55
@jaggedSpire did you end up on the wrong hemisphere by accident
this is late spring weather back home
it can happen
@Prismatic it can't because it's ~~cross-platform~~ and this would be so broken on Windows
@LucDanton not unless my apartment did so too. I'm sitting on my porch. :P
it should be crappy winter weather, not early spring
@Prismatic (creating shared library involves creating a DLL and a stub, which would be named the same as the static library if you could do this)
user1804599
23:09
@Prismatic use Java.
@Zoidberg Hm, good question. I guess it didn't occur to me :)
C infested brain.
user1804599
Also you should sort the output, not the input.
user1804599
Then it also works with parallelism.
Great suggestions, but I didn't want to get into concurrent collections.
23:12
@Borgleader he appears to be preoccupied with feet and asses
@jaggedSpire he is, he is
user1804599
@fredoverflow I recently optimised a function from 5 seconds to 0.5 seconds by eliminating laziness.
@Zoidberg i want to use existing c++ libs :[
user1804599
So it fetched 180000 database records all at once, instead of one by one.
user1804599
@Prismatic Which ones?
23:13
oh man there aren't any bugs alive and writhing about this time of year I can just leave my sliding glass door open
Right now I'm trying to use Skia skia.org
@Zoidberg Scala?
Lots of Google's libs seem to be used in a rigid configuration internally and its pretty hard to build with only what you want etc
user1804599
@fredoverflow Python.
Can't you make it 100x faster by porting to C? ;)
user1804599
23:15
I turned rows = self._db.execute(query) into rows = self._db.execute(query).fetchall().
@fredoverflow i can by putting the most used rule first :)
user1804599
@fredoverflow No, the overhead is from for each row informing PostgreSQL you want the next row, vs once informing PostgreSQL you want all rows. This happens over a TCP socket.
user1804599
If all rows fit in memory, you should fetch them all at once.
One thing I've noticed is that they often redo the work they already have over and over again and I think its partially because their projects are hard to re-use in a flexible way. Like Skia is a 2d drawing library like Cairo and it has an OpenGL back end. So you'd think that another Google project called FlatUI, which is a 2d GUI lib would simply use Skia to do all of its work, but instead they just rewrite all the functionality they want
Then they have this OpenGL wrapper lib called ion but neither FlatUI or Skia uses it afaict. Just large chunks of code doing the same thing written again and again so many times... pretty silly
But Google is so big its probably really hard to coordinate things at that level any wya
@Prismatic not surprising if they were all made by different teams
23:20
@Prismatic To an extent, yes--but I think Google does quite a bit less such coordination than many other companies close to the same size.
Doesn't it exist a method for partitioning databases?
user406009
@Prismatic Still, I would rather have a library which solves one problem really well rather than a library which solves a bunch of problems poorly.
composing with libraries is nice until version hell
user1804599
hi D3
still think srp applies to libraries of course
user406009
23:26
@JohanLarsson It sorta depends on the language and how the package management works. I'm not sure of the term, but NPM does it in a sort of nested manner in which those problems sort of go away.
@Lalaland Yeah but in that case imo it seemed like reinventing the wheel. Skia in particular is a library that has been around for a long time. It renders everything on Android and in Chrome, so its very robust and tested extremely well
ideally all libs would have a specific focus and you could just go around grabbing what you need
@Lalaland ok, never tried npm, don't write any js
doesn't NPM end up having multiple versions of the same library many times over
user406009
@Prismatic Yep. That's the primary cost.
user406009
They are looking into ways of reducing that though.
user406009
23:29
Like using system links instead of copies in certain cases.
user406009
@JohanLarsson Here is sorta how it works:
user406009
@Lalaland I do that manually, sortof. My projects usually have a deps or extern folder which mostly contains symlinks to folders of libraries i already have elsewhere
@Zoidberg By the way, I would really like to see an hour long video of you diving into one of your compiler projects.
user1804599
you'd be bored to death
23:31
with microphone on
I'd watch it trice
user1804599
implementing a compiler is mostly doing the same thing over and over again for different kinds of AST nodes
stream for us on that thing sehe streams on
Oh, TIS-100 is only 7 bucks! Has any Lounger played it?
@Prismatic does @sehe not stream anymore?
what happened to that, anyway?
23:32
why did sehe stop?
@fredoverflow @Rapptz and I have.
@Borgleader Your opinion on it in a sentence?
I don't knwo if he stopped
@fredoverflow Got my money's worth but never finished it.
I think rapptz was pissed that they dumbed down some of the puzzles at some point.
How can you dumb down parallel assembly coding? :)
23:33
Change/Remove some requirements.
Is performance related to the math distance between data? Probably, if we think about the fpu and apu as small stacks that pop and push operations the result of a multiplication would consume less time than stacking a value every iteration.
> Real programming (in a business environment) works like this:
> Dev: I need two days to implement a beautiful and extensible solution
> Manager: You have until this evening, just make it work
> Dev. Giant hack it is then
not sure I agree, think it is more like this:
user1804599
@milleniumbug What is that?
23:38
> The light panels of FROSTBURG, a CM-5, on display at the National Cryptologic Museum. The panels were used to check the usage of the processing nodes, and to run diagnostics.
user1804599
@fredoverflow It should be:
user1804599
Real programming (in a business environment) works like this:
Dev: I need two days to implement a beautiful and extensible solution
Manager: You have until this evening, just make it work
Dev. No
Manager: You're fired.
Average dev: I have no idea, never had one.
Manager: I've been clueless my whole career but I learned corporate speak.
Result: standard mess
@Mysticial Dev: Fine, I'll continue work on my compiler!
user1804599
23:39
@Mysticial Then you're too incompetent. Can't fire the best guy you have.
user1804599
You should have been fired already.
like a screensaver for panels; a panelsaver, if you will
The manager should've been fired.
What if the manager is a singleton?
ManagerSingletonFactory
2
23:42
get a gc that can handle it
user1804599
We have a class called AccountManager.
user1804599
Instances of it represent people who manage accounts.
user1804599
@fredoverflow Can you do this in Java?
user1804599
public abstract class C<E extends Exception> {
    public abstract void f() throws E;
}
user406009
I'm relatively sure you can.
user406009
23:45
At least, I think I did something similar with a generic exception type.
@JohanLarsson What's "trice"?
three times, not sure it is a word
@JohanLarsson No, that's "thrice"
user1804599
Checked exceptions are my favourite Java feature.
user1804599
23:46
They are so awesome.
blergh codebloat
user406009
Checked exceptions make it really hard to write generic code though.
user406009
A result monad works so much better.
user1804599
lol no it doesn't
The only thing that makes it hard is your face
user1804599
23:47
it has the exact same problems
@Borgleader too busy
oh that makes sense
Aren't multipliers the basis of processors?, they are, right? I remember pop and push operations inside assembly code, also multiplications. That is probably the basis of high performance code.
user1804599
???
user406009
@Zoidberg In theory they have the exact same problems. In practice, with checked exceptions you need two type parameters where you only need one with result monads.
user1804599
I only like Go's error handling.
I stay away from Go because Rigidfold praises it
Yes, like for example, inside asm{ }; You can multiply and divide but sums are handled as stacks.
every variable is a small stack that pushes and pops values to increase its number.
23:56
Go's error handling is garbage and also dependency management too
When you calculate by dividing or multiplying you have the index of the element calculated by math instead of pushing or popping to a variable that auto-increments.

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