« first day (1963 days earlier)      last day (3211 days later) » 

03:01
...Cookie Clicker just told me to go to bed /cc @Borgleader
@HubertApplebaum I tried Staff Tempest and I feel much more useful
also the Paladin amulet is very nifty
@jaggedSpire rekt
@LucDanton but what to do about auto color = color();
@Rapptz help
I already told ya mang
13
Q: Why is it hard to draw people running in animes?

SongoWhy is it so hard in many animes to draw people running? I mean even if the whole anime drawing is good, somehow when someone is running it feels so awkward. Their body movements don't look realistic. Sometimes people seem to be leaping or scrolling. Sometimes their steps seem to be longer than ...

You may find this interesting.
03:08
@HubertApplebaum idm it
it doesn't compile you silly
@HubertApplebaum consider using namespaces
like a sane senpai
I'm really impressed with how well you guys have been keeping away the flags. Good job. Job well done. Kudos.
pumps you up
> Open a UDP connection
user406009
@AaronHall The secret is that all the non-PC stuff has been moved to Discourse.
Not IRC?
@Rapptz pretty
Discord not Discourse nerd
user406009
@StackedCrooked Cool. So anime optimizes for art while American shows tend to optimize for animation.
user406009
03:14
@Rapptz Oops.
user406009
I mean, I can totally understand the code of conduct stuff in a work setting.
user406009
It's just that sometimes it doesn't seem to make as much sense when we are all fooling around on a chat room.
Discord > SO chat anyway
user406009
Nah, I like it here better.
user406009
Direct message replies + stars are good.
user406009
03:21
Plus, the notification system is much better.
you scrub can stay here then
@HubertApplebaum shh
ur senile
user406009
It's really sorta odd but I find that my perception of Cicada does sorta change with every nick.
user406009
It's probably just me being silly, but I swear.
I've never needed direct replies
and stars are w/e
user406009
03:23
@Rapptz They are mainly useful for announcements.
#announcements channel lol
@Lalaland or long term conversations not worthy of a chennel
What TeX distribution do you all use on Windows?
@ThePhD last time I used miktex
not sure if it's still the best
03:24
texstudio is better
user406009
@ThePhD One option is overleaf.com
dicktex is annoying
texstudio is an IDE
MikTeX is a distribution
which is what I use
hrm
LaTeX site recommends proTeXt.
03:25
maybe in the future MSYS2 can improve the state of tex on windows
Which is apparently based on MikTeX?
just use miktex
protext is an IDE bundled with miktex
22
A: What to download, proTeXt or MiKTeX?

doncherryUpdate: The current proTeXt actually contains TeXstudio as an editor, and not TeXnicCenter anymore, but that information hasn't even reached all of their own web sites yet. proTeXt is a bundle that contains, among other things, MiKTeX, which is one of the two major TeX distributions (the other...

Oh.
It's an opinionated distro.
yes
I didn't know it came with TeXstudio now
(which I also use)
apparently 2012
03:28
latex is annoying
@HubertApplebaum ur senile
your opinion is invalid
user406009
@HubertApplebaum Yep. Markdown is so much nicer 99% of the time.
@Lalaland that's cause you don't have to do complex things in markdown
@HubertApplebaum Publishers want me to write in it though.
I like the typesetting
But a) the syntax is horrendous b) it can break horribly in non-obvious ways
03:29
@Lalaland how would you write this in markdown? drive.google.com/file/d/0B1-vl-dPgKm_T0Fxeno1a0lGT0E/view
it's incredibly painful to customize layout in general
Guess I'll get proTeXt since it's just MikTex + things-I'll-download-anyways.
user406009
@orlp For that you would need Latex.
user406009
But, there are a lot of cases where people reach for Latex where it really isn't as necessary.
LaTeX is a typesetting tool.
If you need to typeset, you need it.
If all you care is to have some formatted text, you don't.
03:31
warning deep opinion alert
@orlp Neato! I wanna write like that.
> This is a cross-platform, 100% ES6 implementation of the Unix rm command.
... wut.
user406009
@ThePhD People writing simple applications to try out their JS knowledge.
some autist implemented a retarded shell in js with 6 unix commands
4071 stars on dickhub
> think Cygwin, except:

No native compiling
No ugly DLLs
Works in any terminal
1/15th of the size
lol
it laugh if it weren't so sad tbh
03:37
Catch just broke my build. =/
user406009
@HubertApplebaum Why do you consider it sad?
the developer genuinely lists those as advantages
"1/15th of the size!!!!!!!"
also 1/50th of the functionality good job
user406009
Well, the "no native" part does have a certain point.
> Works in any terminal
user406009
Sometimes you have to get shit to run on strange architectures.
03:39
very useful considering you target windows only you dumbfuck
> No ugly DLLs
so?? you still require a node environment, good job on moving the problem
> No native compiling
yes I always enjoyed slow software particularly coreutils
please die
user406009
Like one of my school's main computing clusters has these POWER7 chips.
user406009
And it's always a pain to get stuff running on there.
you know how much a barrel of oil costs? 30$
go buy one and set those clusters on fire
@HubertApplebaum that won't buy you the barrel though
user406009
It's actually very difficult for consumers to buy oil.
user406009
03:42
It's a toxic substance and very difficult to handle and store.
you know what else is toxic
your pedantry
30 years dungeon
user406009
Pedantry? In the Lounge?
user406009
Oh, the horror!
user406009
I guess we better get out the pitchforks.
@PitchForkEmporium we need you
03:56
delicious! /cc @Borgleader @Ell @ElimGarak @ThePhD @TonyTheLion @Ven @Xeo @набиячлэвэлиь
@jaggedSpire Delicious leafy greens!
@ThePhD Indeed!
Sublime text has me very confused.
This fox otter feel mighty wet after this /cc @Borgleader @Ell @ElimGarak @TonyTheLion @ThePhD @Ven @набиячлэвэлиь
@ThePhD because it's got different shortcuts for simple text manipulation than either Visual Studio or Notepad++?
I usually wind up trying about five different key combinations before figuring out how to swap lines for either ST or NP++
wanna bikeshed the name for a trait
04:04
ctrl + shift + up/down
I’m 'emulating' noexcept(auto) (maybe), i.e. given
auto f(X x) noexcept(noexcept( x.bar() )) -> decltype( x.bar() ) { return x.bar(); }
that looks like it’s correct, but I’m skeptical
i.e. there might be a move/copy at that return
so I’m guessing something like noexcept(noexcept( x.bar() ) && trait_goes_here<decltype( x.bar() )>)
isn’t that just lovely
@Rapptz thank you.
now I'll be able to remember those are the same in those two
ctrl shift direction changes screen orientation for me
no that's ctrl alt nvm
@jaggedSpire No, it's the build system commands.
Like, if I invoke make it tells me I need to pass a target.
@ThePhD fun times
04:12
So I try to figure out how to pass a target and it just fails horrifically.
I just keep a command prompt open
So I try to make a new build system but now it can't find the target I give it.
Really not having a good time.
I'm so fucking lost
I just want to run this command for the Ctrl + B shortcut
wtf sublime text
"Unfortunately, there is no support for multiple commands in a build system"
You fucking what.
Whatever, I'll just use the CLI.
cmake ..\ -g "MinGW Makefiles" and then mingw32-make is so much less brain damage for me
my laptop...it doesn't burn to the touch and I'm running chrome and firefox and sublime text
I'm so happy
I didn't really see much dust getting cleared out but what was there must have been absolute murder
I...
Think I overflowed Nonius's integers.
That number is only millions, though. That should fit in a 32-bit integer.
oh damn. I'm sorry, PhD
that was >8 hours wasn't it?
04:27
Yep.
Either way, results without the std::list bullshit:
ordered vector is still faster for inserting elements than a std::set by a humongous margin, even at 1,000,000 elements.
ordered vector wins at life
The deletion results will be coming in soon.
Well, eventually.
It basically has to perform insertion,
and then it has to also perform deletion.
So basically 2x the time.
At 10,000 elements, ordered<std::vector<T>> starts overtaking std::set<T>
I guess I could have a noexcept(noexcept( return_(arg.foo() + arg.lol()) )) actually
04:30
> arg.lol()
For small sizes (e.g. 5,000 or less) std::set wins out.
yes sorry I should have used something serious like arg.bar()
and between them?
@LucDanton arg.lol()
mmh that can’t work right, since for one I need to tell xvalues and prvalues apart
lol is my placeholder
I have infected the luc
04:38
we’ll go with that
user406009
@LucDanton They should have just gone with the first two frames of the comic.
user406009
The remaining 4 don't really hold up as well.
> In some cases, BSON will use more space than JSON
I can see that being the case for lotsof small numbers.
For example, "1.1", quotes included, is far smaller than 1.1 in IEEE 754 64-bit floating point format dumped onto the disk.
@ThePhD not in UCS-4
04:50
JSON's canonical transport is UTF8
user406009
Everything should be UTF8.
user406009
Microsoft and Java failed hard.
only thing I can think of is noexcept( []() -> decltype(auto) { return expr; }() ) cos obv. that exposes a return together with decltype(auto)
no lambdas in noexcept of course
which really makes a point of how it’s not really a matter of return, but of decltype—so I guess I’ll eat up the repetition, oh well
@Morwenn threads?
@Morwenn where's <cthread>?

« first day (1963 days earlier)      last day (3211 days later) »