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20:01
@BartoszKP unis are being overly cautious about plagiarism I suppose; I have a friend who had some code in a public git repo that he used for his thesis and he was accused of copying code 1 to 1 from his own goddamn repo...
@ScarletAmaranth wow, good that I've got all that in a private repo :v
I find some C++ standard APIs to be more silly than Boost's ones (terminating on thread destructor vs detaching, anyone?)
the Committee could have detached, joined, or terminated, and in three different cases they picked all three options
user1804599
I don't like a thread class at all.
user1804599
Just a function that takes a functor and returns void that spawns a thread. Communication between spawner and spawnee (or someone else) is then up to the programmer.
20:03
@BartoszKP I am really surprised someone has gone out of their way to search for random code snippets from a thesis on the internet... even funnier thing is that his git nickname was closely related to his real-life name; I guess someone bored enough to google for code is necessarily stupid enough to not see the connection between something like "John Smith" with nick "JSmith"
that's probably the automated systems they use, nevertheless human verification should be a thing
mmm; well
the thing is
you don't hand in the code to the automated system
just the text
@ScarletAmaranth there are some automated systems I suppose. In my place it's also very common to verify for plagiarism very thoroughly
we upload the pdfs with the thesis text, but source codes and other enclosed stuffs whatever that might be is just handed directly to opponents
@ScarletAmaranth They use a tool to do it.
20:06
oh, right
@Puppy but how? they do not have the source code - just the text
user1804599
If I index an array with x + y * w, should I for (x : range(w)) { for (y : range(h)) { } } or for (y : range(h)) { for (x : range(w)) { } }?
the only person with access to the source codes and other attachments is the opponent of the thesis
@Zoidberg Just use two dimensions ;p
user1804599
Scala has no 2D arrays.
user1804599
20:07
But even then the problem would still arise.
@Zoidberg depends, do you want to iterate over rows or columns?
how can you not have 2D arrays?
user1804599
@melak47 Over all cells. The order doesn't matter. Whichever is fastest.
it's just an array, where the element type is an array.
@Zoidberg then idk, go with memory layout?
user1804599
20:08
Yes, that's what I want to do.
@Zoidberg Row-major
user1804599
So I think for (x : range(w)) { for (y : range(h)) { } } is the way to go.
user1804599
But I am not sure.
measure!
user1804599
No, wait. It seems not.
user1804599
20:09
[info] 278
[info] 318
[info] 358
[info] 398
[info] 438
[info] 478
user1804599
It should be y + x * h, then.
user1804599
Nice.
@BartoszKP strange that strings were not mentioned in the slicing part
substring as slice is not very niche
@JohanLarsson yeah, and they could take a bit more from the tuple idea (like in Python)
20:16
hope records can be structs
user1804599
Nice.
user1804599
In my world map, I'll represent mountains by positive numbers and non-mountains by negative numbers. The magnitude determines the material in both cases.
20:18
@JohanLarsson this record inheritance syntax was weird in all 3 versions imho :v
yeah, I think I preferred the middle one, less redundancy
but making them sealed sounds reasonable
records will be nice, makes me sad to write 50 lines of text for a two property class
I was mostly interested with the data-over-the-wire part, but it was a bit general
user1804599
Learn F# now instead of waiting for C# 7 and then having to learn C# 7.
20:22
many say f# has no future
I have it on my TODO list to add it to my TODO list
not getting any love from ms/vs
and the compiler code is messy they say
so there is pessimism about new nice features
Does anyone know anything about writing interpreters?
Ahahahaha @LucDanton, see what we missed:
But this has O(n) lookup! — Joaquín M López Muñoz 20 mins ago
(Well, I missed it in any case)
@Francis most probably, because from what I know, some interpreters do exist
20:26
I'm writing an interpreter using Javascript and Node.js and in my primitive tests it seems to be a lot slower than even Python. Would Node.js be a good choice for writing an interpreter in or should I use C++?
user1804599
@Francis Yeah I've done that a lot.
@Zoidberg would an interpreter in Node.js be useful though because of the speed difference?
user1804599
I have one written in JS here if you like: github.com/vlinder-lang/horror/blob/master/src/thread.js#L11
I tested it's speed using the time command in the terminal, so it's not really scientific
user1804599
Well, if you need one written in JS, nothing but one written in JS will be useful.
20:28
I thought about using Javascript because it makes writing the interpreter easier, not really for any other reasons
user1804599
I've also written one in C++. It was not very difficult.
Am I right in thinking that Node.js is slow to start up but is quick once it's going?
@sehe yeah nice attempt at roping me in
Is it possible that an interpreter in Node.js could be fast after the initial startup time due to Node.js using a JIT?
user1804599
20:31
I have no idea about Node.js performance.
user1804599
I would never write anything in JavaScript unless I have no other choice, due to the simple reason that JavaScript is the worst language ever.
It's easier to use than C++
user1804599
No. It's a pain.
user1804599
No type checker means no fun.
user1804599
C++ is also terrible. You deserve a good and easy-to-use language, such as Go or Haskell.
20:33
.@tsa agents at PHL took my property out of my sight, claimed they "saw bitcoins" in my bag and needed to count how much I had.
user3790646
Hey.
I think Go and Haskell are hard too
Don't get interfaces
Javascript means you don't have to worry about any of that crap
user3790646
@Francis Shh, she's Cicada runs away
@Andrey Cicada is not here right now
user3790646
@Borgleader Oh, I see. My, my.
20:35
@Borgleader wot
user1804599
@Francis You still do, but now it's not checked by the compiler.
@JohnKitzmiller @tgif_an_hero @TSA @hackerfantastic THIS IS A COMMON THING WHY IS THIS A COMMON THING https://t.co/mnGa5T7zUa
(google: tsa bitcoin)
user1804599
And it's likely not documented anywhere.
I don't worry about it anyway, probably means I'll end up with a crapy interpreter
@Borgleader wtf
now I'm tempted to make fake bitcoins and stick them in my bag when I go through security at airports
20:37
what do you mean, fake?
make a wallet for each one and print the code on the rim :D
too much effort
Xeo
Xeo
> warning C4503: '__LINE__Var': decorated name length exceeded, name was truncated
WHAT
but making something out of polymer clay and painting it shiny would be fun
user1804599
@Xeo very large line number.
@Xeo You ran into one of MSVC's arbitrary limits didnt you?
user1804599
20:39
døh
(like robot and the maximum length of string literals)
VC++: Software of the very highest quality
user1804599
I think y + x * h + z * w * h is correct.
@Xeo bahaha, wat
@LucDanton I thought you might like to know it was pretty flawed. "Never use std::list": +1
20:40
so lemme get this straight, they create a variable for each line?`and if the name of this variable gets too long...
Xeo
Xeo
I don't even see where the fuck that name is generated
file a bug report for "your compiler is shit"
line 65535? :D
Xeo
Xeo
wait, was there a way to tell boost::variant to use variadic templates instead of the Boost.PP stuff?
user1804599
@Xeo I think not. At least not last time I wanted that. I needed a variant with about 200 variants and it didn't work hence I looked for variadic templates.
20:44
ISTR so. Maybe it's enough to just use a c++11 compiler and recent bost
user1804599
I did however find a different library that did the job.
@Xeo it doesnt seem to be a real problem though?
Xeo
Xeo
what I have is essentially unordered_multimap<variant<a, b, c>, stuff, boost::hash<variant_t>>, and that generates a name long enough to trigger the problem
@Borgleader /WX says it is
Xeo
Xeo
err
ah, okay, so the variadic stuff is hidden behind the Boost.PP macros
20:47
Looks like variadics have been the default since 1.56
user1804599
Oh must be very new then.
Maybe the "buggadics" workaround is still the default on MSVC...
Xeo
Xeo
welp, not on MSVC it seems
even with 2015
Xeo
Xeo
nice, no way to force variadics. grmlgrml
user1804599
20:49
@Xeo I used this: github.com/mapbox/variant
i wonder when we'll get them by default
user1804599
It worked very well.
@Zoidberg zekers. Daar was ik al eens
Xeo
Xeo
welp, compiles fine if I force it to use variadics (by modifying the header)
does boost officially support the uh clang in msvc combo?
Xeo
Xeo
20:50
why the fuck do they test for VC14 if it compiles apparently fine? :(
because you never know
user1804599
It's a subtle way to tell you to not use VC.
2
like you need subtlety
seed11's real dank, @milleniumbug
Xeo
Xeo
so either I leave the boost header modified, or I somehow work around this another way
tis stupid
20:55
@Xeo It probably used to not compile fine and they didnt recheck?
Xeo
Xeo
I wonder if Update 1 fixed stuff, but didn't bump _MSC_VER
user1804599
> Cooking with dog
Xeo
Xeo
I like that channel
@Xeo Maybe Boost just hasn't been updated for U1
user1804599
20:55
I don't like dog hair in my bukkake.
@Xeo doesn't _MSC_VER only have the major release? i.e. 1900? There's another one with the full version I think...
user1804599
I love watching cooking videos but I never cook.
Xeo
Xeo
@melak47 oh yeah.
@Borgleader I don't think so. Many parts that involve boost.config just blow up
@melak47 bummer :(
@Borgleader but with C++1z support, who needs boost :p
@HubertApplebaum Looks like I spoke too soon. I ran my exhaustive set of unit tests last night. And they didn't finish. It looks like they deadlocked. Unfortunately, I don't have symbols for production builds, so I'll need to see if I can repro it under the debugger. There aren't too many locks involved so I think I know which two it is that's causing the deadlock. But I haven't been able to construct a sequence of events that will lead to it.
Xeo
Xeo
god dammit, and now I want bool operator==(T const&) = default again.
The unit/integration tests subject the pool to a "crazier" workload than what the intended use case is. And it's been a while since I've ran the exhaustive tests.
21:03
@Xeo that seems like a fairly reasonable thing to want
Xeo
Xeo
there's also a proposal for it
but that doesn't help me right now :(
I'd have no objections against member-wise operator< if you ask for it explicitly, either...
user1804599
Where do you buy seaweed?
user1804599
The supermarket lacks it.
really?
Xeo
Xeo
21:05
asian market
try an asian specialty market then
user1804599
Oh.
user1804599
Hmm.
user1804599
> Tonkotsu (豚骨, "pork bone"; not to be confused with tonkatsu) ramen usually has a cloudy white colored broth.
user1804599
lol "ton kots" in Dutch means "vat of vomit"
user1804599
21:08
user1804599
It even looks like vomit.
I still feel ill.
user1804599
Vomit.
@Morwenn :(
user1804599
It appears there is a webshop dedicated to seaweed.
21:10
@Zoidberg I've got nothing left but bile to vomit :(
user1804599
eww!
user1804599
Oh the other supermarket does sell seaweed.
I managed to sleep through most of the day, but I can't start my night yet. Not tired enough.
You puked because you ate too much yesterday?
@Borgleader It's probably due to alcohol and I also ate too much.
Worst hangover in months.
I couldn't do anything but suffer (or sleep) before 7pm.
21:12
oh, you got drunk too. yeah not a good combo
@Morwenn moar?
@набиячлэвэлиь Thanks :) I need to find non-Windows platforms that have broken or non-existing /dev/urandom so I can support them :D
@jaggedSpire I don't have other things exactly like that, but you can check out Victories in Wonderland, by Agneton.
@Morwenn thanks
21:17
@jaggedSpire No problem, even though I believe I already shared it here :)
@Borgleader oooh, energetic
@Borgleader Some good parts :D
i also listen to this one, i prefer it because it has more ups and downs, keeps things interesting
21:38
@Borgleader interesting sound
I build up a playlist by listening to a few channels from di.fm (mostly Club Sounds & Electro House)
Ghosh I remember when that was the main thing I used to listen to
Nowadays I'm more of a metalhead myself, but I can still appreciate a bit of this
when programming though I alternate between Ambient, Chillout, Lounge, and Space Dreams
hmm
I need to generate a shitload of function overloads.
21:40
yeah
ok, no idea then
I'm writing code to calculate all the overloads of a given function.
it's trickier than I expected
ah maybe I've been a bit overly generic in framing the overloads, and it would be a lot simpler if I handled each case individually.
finally done with everything that has to do with composing emails in mutt in markdown, while sending the email as multipart/alternative (having text/plain and text/html)! woho!
22:04
@ChristianHackl But if this is "questioning the question" then what the hell did he think the question was? Suggesting std::array is more than useless here. It's really more like "kneejerking the question" then :) — sehe 1 min ago
> Eure: le curé se payait des percings et de la drogue avec l'argent de la quête
@HubertApplebaum pas l’Essonne !
(on me dit que c’est du clickbait de bas-étage mensonger, quelle surprise)
ah merde c’est la même affaire que la dernière fois :/ on peut plus faire confiance à Internet
@LucDanton Nice.
@Morwenn Je ne parles pas francais.
user1804599
22:23
I feel horrible.
user1804599
the diarrhoea
user1804599
my guts
sorry but I won that one a long time ago
Ell
Ell
@Puppy isn't that infinite? o.O
no.
unless you mean "All of the arguments the function can be called with", which I imagine is infinite
Ell
Ell
22:36
but I mean. f(int) is an overload of f()
yep
Ell
Ell
and f(int, int) is an overload of f(int)
etc. etc. ad infinitum
yeah, but none of those are legal overloads unless you define them.
so unless you have an infinitely long source file, you can't define infinite overloads.
@Puppy I define "infinite overloads" as "a silly idea".
also
in this case, I am figuring out the overloads defined by a single source function
22:45
@Puppy until you have varargs
or templates
those guys only count as one
@orlp Still not even close to infinite (but yes, the maximum is set by the implementation, not the design).
in an immediate world that's not infinite, even infinite trash is not possible
limited amount of trash in the limited space on earth
or in the cyber space
user1804599
23:03
Overloading is one of these features that terribly complicate everything and have no benefits whatsoever.
Programming is terrible to start with.
lol
zoidberg's opinions on programming
This one he's p right about
Ell
Ell
well no he isn't
because he said they have no benefits whatsoever
but they do
The only benefit and dubious at that is reusing the name
Where it matters other forms of polymorphism are better (because you're about to say + or whatever with different types)
23:20
user image
4
wtf
@CatPlusPlus well, things like factory/constructor functions for say a (maths) vector that can take either another vector or three floats or doubles is nice.
@Columbo one of these things is not like the others, one of these things does not belong
Naming is hard. Overloads partly solve that problem of finding new names.
@Morwenn makeVectorFromVector makeVectorFromFloats makeVectorFromDoubles ¬_¬ overload's make that much nicer, just makeVector
@Columbo to be honest, I wouldn't know what you really wanted based on that
23:37
it's remarkable that so many are about LaTeX actually
my thoughts exactly
DDG must be shit for wanking too
tbh I completely forgot about latex the material
LaTeX girl seemed very oddly specific
you know, I really want to watch Pirates of the Caribbean again
I don't remember too much about my new role model
23:56
@thecoshman You've clearly never used Rust
@thecoshman How to properly typeset Big-O notation in LaTeX
@набиячлэвэлиь actually I have :P
long time ago
Not a girl in latex with an excessively large vagina
It is slightly annoying to not be able to reuse names, but it's not a goal worth adding overloading for
That's rightfold
No one wants him her
23:57
@thecoshman So stop wanking around, this is not Go (a.k.a. 1986), we have generics

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