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13:00
try stack overflow
@ThePhD What build badge?
q___q
build_passing
Yep, I see it too now.
13:06
Can i build a website using C++(not C#)?
guys - what has happened to lounge?
I think weekend
@HariPrasad aren't those the same? with like some differences
nono, this has been going on for a while
@Morwenn Reminds me of Streets of Rage.
13:08
@ScarletAmaranth is there a way?
@ThePhD Surely not the whole thing :p
@ScarletAmaranth The fact that people are moving to whatever other chat thing they find?
@Morwenn join the dark side too
you're always welcome on discord
Too many rooms.
@Morwenn I'm 2 minutes in so far
@Morwenn I have the same complaint, actually.
Sometimes you like things leaking into general chat.
@ThePhD that's one minute longer than you usually muster!
13:10
@ThePhD Exactly :o
@ScarletAmaranth Sweet, sweet progress \o/
ye those rooms are annoying to me too
@ThePhD Can we simulate an entire universe in c++?
I'd prefer just one
@Morwenn Annnd 3:43 is where the differences show up.
I kinda liked it until 3:43. .-.
13:12
Well, it's a progressive thing. You actually find the original theme until 6:20.
Then it goes more metal.
what is this room for?
It's useless. We all are.
I can see why :D
Apparently one of the inspirations for the track was Daft Punk's Veridis Quo.
Streets of Rage's music was cool :D
The single.py is broken.
And I don't know how to fix it. .-.
I think my python 3 didn't install the standard library. .-.
I guess that I will start working on trinary comparators.
And make sure that my library can dterministically sort floating point numbers.
Well, here it is. In case someone from here reads the question and needs clarifications, I am available.
0
Q: Design C++ DSL for notating and transferring trees

SzabolcsIn short I am trying to design a nicer C++ interface for a C library that sends data through a communication channel (à la iostreams vs stdio). In this case the data is not linear, but a tree structure. My question is if all my goals (explained below) can be met using C++. Simplified explanat...

I think nan is the only special snowflek you have to take care of
13:28
@milleniumbug Positive and negative 0 too.
oh right
Anyway, IEEE specifies partial, weak and total orders for floating points, so I can just use that.
Basically I will just steal the design ideas in P0100.
It's not going to be included in C++17 anway, which means that I can have it at least 3 years sooner if I reimplement it by myself.
@Szabolcs No problem- downvotes are always freely available
"io" is not a package
Goddamnit, python
It is
You're probably on an outdated version of Python
13:33
3.5.1 :l
user1804599
Python is worse at modules than C++.
@ThePhD Cannot reproduce
@Zoidberg C++ can't be bad at modules, it doesn't have any.
$python
Python 3.5.1 (v3.5.1:37a07cee5969, Dec  6 2015, 01:54:25) [MSC v.1900 64 bit (AMD64)] on win32
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> import io
>>>
user1804599
Scala is the best at modules.
13:34
@Morwenn Of course it can
user1804599
Every object can be treated as a module.
So apparently "StringIO" is what doesn't exist
If C++ has modularity 0, then Python has modularity -1 because it sucks so hard
but python points to "io" not being a package.
... Thanks, python.
reinstall python
13:35
Real clear in your error message.
@ThePhD io is not a package, it's a built-in module
user1804599
val delicious = "bukkake"
import delicious._
println(toUpperCase(Locale.ENGLISH)) // prints BUKKAKE
user1804599
@ThePhD Do you have a source file named io.py?
user1804599
@ThePhD How are you importing it?
user1804599
You must write from io import StringIO, not import io.StringIO, you noob.
13:36
import io.StringIO as sstream
@Zoidberg But why?
user1804599
Because Python is terrible. Deal with it.
io is not in scope
obviously
user1804599
13:37
The part after import without from is a module name or package name, not a module member.
user1804599
To import a module member you have to use from.
Okay...
user1804599
import a.b.c # imports module a.b.c
from a.b import c # imports member c from module a.b, or module c from package a.b
@Zoidberg IDGI...
Well, at least that error is gone.
13:37
ThePhd cannot into Python.
I can figure out the rest I guess.
@wilx Because you suck
@набиячлэвэлиь If I sucked, I would get some. :(
Hw do you alias a thing, then?
user1804599
@wilx delicious is an object. Objects are modules in Scala. So import delicious._ brings all non-static methods from String into scope.
13:38
Is it like
from io import StringIO as sstream ?
user1804599
Yes.
@JohanLarsson :D
.... StringIO can't handle UTF8 characters
I literally can't even right now.
Maybe it's just me... blargh, let's figure this bullshit out..
user1804599
13:41
@JohanLarsson lol
for line in f
I need to unicode-ify that
> The default encoding for Python source code is UTF-8
Bloody fucking liars, it's erroring in cp1252, which is most certainly NOT the utf8 handler.
> source code
user1804599
.INTERMEDIATE: $(TS_SOURCES_POST_M4)
$(TS_TARGET_DIR)/%.ts: $(TS_SOURCE_DIR)/%.ts | tools/struct.m4
	mkdir -p $(dir $@)
	cat tools/struct.m4 $< | m4 -P > $@
user1804599
so cool :D .INTERMEDIATE
... Pythong is making me cry.
13:56
What are you doing and which version
"SyntaxError: invalid syntax" why python
WHY
Spaces?
WHY IS THAT INVALID SYNTA jdawdkwad
Ell
Ell
Afternoon
@Morwenn I am indenting with four spaces.
13:56
idk I generally don't have problems with Python.
if not args.quiet:
    print('processing {}'.format(filename)

out.write('// beginning of {}\n\n'.format(relativefilename))
empty_line_state = True
Like.
@ThePhD On the other hand, it sounds like you have strange problems whenever you try to use anything.
There's nothing wrong witht hose lines.
You're missing a paren you butt
13:57
What
Second line.
Python couldn't tell me that?
Why did it point to empty_line_state?
Because how can Python know where the paren is supposed to close?
I don't know, before the indentation it shoves down my throat?
Nope, indentation is free form inside parens.
13:58
that's why semicolons are a thing in languages
@ThePhD no, newline is not always an instruction terminator
Yeah, error recovery with implicit statement terminators is fairly shit
Also show the code that fails on Unicode because you're doing something wrong
@CatPlusPlus I was, Python only defaults to utf8 with python files.
For everything else, you need to specify the encoding explicitly.
Or it defaults to the platform's default encoding, which for windows is cp1252
Ell
Ell
@ThePhD a bad workman always blames his tools
Do you know what that means?
It means you can eat shit. :v
Ell
Ell
Haha
14:05
@ThePhD Which is totally fine and rational.
Default I/O encoding can be set through PYTHONIOENCODING but defaults is not a thing for general I/O, it's only there for console output more or less, same thing as everywhere
Not sure why you'd assume otherwise
DOes python read bytemarkers?
detecting the encoding is in general not possible.
Buh.
Well, either way, I need to draft a Github release.
You specify encoding up-front or not at all
If you want to detect based on BOM then you need to open the file in binary mode and check for BOM yourself
If you want transparent decoding then you need out-of-band encoding data
user1804599
14:10
@sehe yay it works
My first fully released, fully fleshed out library.
Sniff.
It's beautiful.
I guess I should throw it up on r/cpp now.
sarcastic golf clap
@ThePhD congratz
@ThePhD nice :D
Reddit release post /cc @DeanSeo @Rapptz @VeronikaPrüssels
What is Cicada's newest name, again? .-.
I think those are the people interested.
14:24
@ThePhD One of those three
user406009
@VeronikaPrüssels is the new Cicada.
user406009
Arg, fuck DST. I don't know how I am going to wake up tomorrow morning.
@ThePhD Congratulations :D
Oh, yeah, that's right
Also @Zoidberg NOW we have consistency and documentation for the API, so you can't tell me it's bad anymore. D:<
user1804599
yay
14:31
> In the next C++, they will write a lambda which captures the human soul by value.
@Morwenn I think I'd prefer that over move-capturing it :p
Xeo
Xeo
gawd, after hours of wrangling with my dependencies, I think I finally got them all setup properly for x86/x64 Debug/Release builds
so annoying
what a PITA
what was the problem with them?
Xeo
Xeo
a few things
mainly paths n stuff
so you were on the wrong path? :^)
Xeo
Xeo
14:40
also had to build libjpeg and zlib myself
which added to the annoyance
this for business or "pleasure"
Xeo
Xeo
hobby stuff
@BartekBanachewicz can I clear the screen to a specified color; or, even better, can I draw rectangles in Hate?
@Xeo Are you setting this up manually with VS? :/
Xeo
Xeo
@melak47 for now, ye
it wasn't too bad, but getting the settings right for cmake was annoying
also having to generate two build folders for x86/x64 cause cmake can't handle generating both in a single solution for VS
14:45
the more I hear about cmake, the less I want to hear about cmake
@Xeo cmake for the dependencies? or are you retrofitting to cmake after setting it up manually?
Xeo
Xeo
@melak47 cmake to generate the dependencies' solutions
So, I managed to reimplement the generic partial_order, weak_order and total_order as described by P0100R1. Now... do I actually have to reimplement every algorithm to use them? Shipping several versions of every algorithm would be a pain...
why should you
make an comparer adapter or sth
@Xeo Had that problem with LLVM myself- the main reason why I almost always build Wide as x86 for Windows.
Because they return an enumeration, not a boolean. I can write a comparer adapter, but then we kind of lose the few gains in efficiency that the trinaty comparators could offer :/
I wish Lawrence Crowl had an implementation of the proposal somewhere.
Xeo
Xeo
15:04
Oh yeah, I should prolly try to run all four binaries, to see if they actually work and not just build
whee, everything seems fine
15:19
bah
my gigantic commit is only 2500 line diff.
I expected more.
time to see how terribly I've broken my tests, guess I expect all or nearly all to fail
Ell
Ell
jesus
commit early; commit often :P
nah
having no collaborators has downsides but it has upsides too and I'mma enjoy them
like force pushing to master or making "Fix everything" commits
then again
on the upside, I didn't actually fix everything, far from it, so there's plenty of scope to aim for a bigger commit next time
Ell
Ell
wat
why would you aim for a bigger commit instead of fewer smaller self contained commits?
obviously big ones are unavoidable sometimes
also by force pushing to master I assume you mean force pushing to origin right?
origin/master yeah
and the answer is because it's fun
Professional Puppy makes small incremental commits
Ell
Ell
lol
I find big commits ugly and unfun
15:32
nah
you just take the code, then you hack on it until you're done, then you commit
I also like to amend and force push to origin/master when a random commit broke stuff and I don't want to fix it with a separate commit.
Rewriting history like a boss.
When does the new Game of Thrones season start?
I like rewriting history on my own branches
but can't do that on master at work
@набиячлэвэлиь no more conversation thanks to Google :)
15:35
Mar 9 at 16:42, by набиячлэвэлиь
Nota bene: the box below this message is not a Google search box
@набиячлэвэлиь 42 days. How ominous.
Eh, why can't integer three-way comparison boil down to a single optimized builtin function?
If everyone placed their questions in the Google search box first, we'd have a much lower noob rate
@набиячлэвэлиь That does not stop me. :-)
fuck!
121 of my tests succeed.
come on, Puppy, where's the 0% success rate?
I must be gettin' old
user1804599
15:37
@sehe Hejlsberg was involved.
In Wide, is --llvm-path in premake command is supposed to point at source directory of LLVM, or install directory, ...or?
which platform?
I'm compiling on linux, tried making the install script for other distributions
so I'm mostly following what the install script for Ubuntu 12.04 suggests, with changes
don't bother passing it in on Linux
you can use an LLVM package and that's enough.
it's mostly for Windows now
the script for 12.04 IIRC doesn't pass the path in.
well, it doesn't
I'm not sure my distro has LLVM compiled with RTTI, so I'm compiling it manually
15:42
don't bother
if you look at the 12.04 install-deps, there's an LLVM PPA you can use
I'm not running Ubuntu
oh ok.
Ell
Ell
@milleniumbug I would think the source directory
well in answer to your question, it's supposed to be the source directory, as CMake by default builds into source/build, IIRC.
> If you go to the grocery store, and, say, pick six jalapenos up, and cut them open and look at those veins, the more yellow you see, the hotter the jalapeno
15:44
but it's pretty tricky because I think the directory structure is not the same on Windows and Linux
^^ You are supposed to pay for that.
ok thanks
really I should just use the key function hack to prevent you from needing RTTI in the first place.
but I haven't gotten around to it yet
@StackedCrooked lol
> A 2015 study published in BMJ found that individuals who ate spicy foods almost every day had a 14-percent decreased likelihood of dying.
LOL
How does that make sense.
15:52
They have a 14% chance of forever living
user1804599
someone did an akbar again
Heh I got the Famous Question badge 17 times.
I dont get boost::bind T_T
what's not to get
inb4 use boost::ref
see tcp_server::handle_accept()
I'm confused by the placeholder
16:01
boost::bind(&tcp_server::handle_accept, this, new_connection, boost::asio::placeholders::error)); ?
Yes that, like, I get every parameter in this except the placeholders::error.
it's probably an alias or sth
boost::arg<1>& error = boost::asio::placeholders::detail::placeholder<1>::get();
@StackedCrooked That's 17 more than I have...
I just dont know when the value of error gets updated, or by whom., i get why were capturing this (to call start_accept), and new_connection (to call start), but not error
16:04
@JerryCoffin yeah, but how about answers :P
user1804599
SELECT NULL IS NOT DISTINCT FROM NULL;
@StackedCrooked Most answers are boring, so who cares about them? :-)
16:23
No one to help me out of a ... bind? ba-dum-tss :P
0
Q: (URGENT!!!)Help with javascript assignment, for creating a website for ordering online

PandattacksSo I have a final project/assignment for my Intro to web computing class, which I'm struggling in as it is really challenging for me. I've tried to get help from my school's learning center, but they're not allowed to help out thoroughly on final assignments, and none of my friends/ family have a...

wow you must be really desperate to post URGENT questions on Meta.SE
@Catija We dont help with homework on SO. even less when its urgent. — Borgleader 23 secs ago
@Borgleader No, but we may be able to give you some closure.
16:27
haha
also i love how the question is tagged "discussion"
he must be really desperate to ask on Meta
or just stupid
Great: it is possible to create either quiet or signaling NaN but apparently there is no way to discriminate between them except by performing an arithmetic operation and checking the foating point exceptions.
perhaps a CPU intrinsic exposed as a compiler intrinsic?
Also copying a NaN might change its bit pattern... I hope it doesn't mean that it can turn a quiet NaN into a signaling NaN or something.
16:30
not sure why do you care
@Puppy I will check whether something like that exists.
@Morwenn Interpret it as an integer and manually parse it. lol
@milleniumbug I am trying to reimplement IEEE's totalOrder for floating point numbers.
Ell
Ell
my kernel makefiles disappear :V I'm not sure why.
@Mysticial Can't there be several bit patterns for equivalent NaN values?
Ell
Ell
16:32
ah no it's my makefile
if it's nan it has a specific bit pattern for exponent
@Morwenn Yes. But I'm pretty sure there's an easy bit hack for it.
Ell
Ell
ohhh I get it.
16:38
Ugh.
I guess nobody cares about quiet vs. signaling NaN anyway. I will ignore the issue for now. Using floating point exceptions requires access to the floating point environment which is apparently not supported everywhere.
Fuck floating points forever .__.
user1804599
Wrap float with a never-NaN invariant and use that instead..
NNaN
user1804599
16:53
superior<float> and superior<double>
Or violent fucking exception whenever someone tries to pass a NaN values. Not even using an exception type to make sure that it's less likely to be caught.
Nah, apparently my total order on floating point values works, modulo that quiet/signaling NaN thing, but it doesn't matter.
user1804599
throw the NaN
lol
And document the behaviour as a « floating point exception » to confuse people even more.
user1804599
😈
The resulting header is shiny: it combines almost copy-pasted things from both Eric Niebler and Lawrence Crowl.
16:59
if (x != x) throw x - yeah, seems reasonable :D
I think that the functions I wrote theorically work even if the floating point types used are standard-compliant but not IEEE.
@Morwenn try it on long double
Works.
dong louble
Syntax error :(
17:04
wow make is so terrible
user1804599
@milleniumbug why?
user1804599
works4me
a.) it can't figure out the core count by itself (see ninja) b.) obscure commands c.) stringly typed
user1804599
What commands are obscure?
Tyeps are important
user1804599
17:20
The built-in functions are well-documented in the manual.
17:45
I know someone who might be interested by this name >.>
@Morwenn Throw a signalling NaN by value, so any attempt at catching it throws another exception.
(...and no, that's not really how things would work, but it sounded almost believable, right?)
Ok so I've been learning C++ today and I've been wondering, do class names start Uppercase like Java?
I know it isn't a requirement
But i mean is that what the majority of the programmers do
there's no convention that's respected everywhere
oh
Question, if I do "include<iostream>" in a header and I include that header, are those includes brought along with the class implementation?
user1804599
18:02
Yes.
Thanks :)
user1804599
#include literally copy-pastes the code from the header file.
user1804599
It's a terrible mechanism.
Why doesn't it just reference the header file instead of copying it?
18:05
the parser has to literally read the included file
also the phases are separate
Ok so now that I have a actually good IDE I'm starting to really like C++
When I finish SudoEngine for java I might make a C++ version
user1804599
DagNote/Dag.hh:4:17,19: Please make your type parameter start with the letter T (capital) (Naming[2042])
DagNote/Dag.hh:4:22,22: Please make your type parameter start with the letter T (capital) (Naming[2042])
user1804599
dat error
18:24
Looks like a great design.
18:39
TIL ADL also looks into associated inline namespaces.
18:49
@Zoidberg you can just attack them
but I don't know when I'll have the time
user1804599
No, they'll kill me.
I mean once you attack them they will attack the base
no need for lua
user1804599
oh ok
user1804599
I made logistic robors.
user1804599
And built more walls.
user1804599
18:54
With gates.
make sure you cover the turrets with repair bots
user1804599
Also we have too little oil and the most nearby oil field that we don't already use is miles away.
did you go laser or regular turret
user1804599
Plastic production is very slow.
user1804599
I haven't yet made turrets.
18:55
okay
the poutine delivery person is here cc @EtiennedeMartel
see you guys later.
Bon appétit !
omg c++ refuses to compile
user1804599
Another upside of using UUIDs instead of sequences for IDs in an RDBMS is that you are more likely to get empty sets when you mix up foreign keys, instead of seemingly correct (but horribly incorrect) data. This happens because it's only 2016 and RDBMSes are still terrible at data types.
Like I just want a simple class and header and it just wont do it because it's one error after another
user1804599
Try not programming in C++.
18:59
no
I would do Java but I've been on training wheels long enough
first you must let C++ program you

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