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yes
God, Winslow!
good morning
@sehe Winslow isnt a god though
Moore’s Law is really dead this time http://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2016/02/moores-law-really-is-dead-this-time/ and http://www.nature.com/news/the-chips-are-down-for-moore-s-law-1.19338
i thought it died a long time ago
00:43
@4LegsDrivenCat why not just use for (auto& o:outFile) cout << o.good() << "\n"; altogether. It's 2016 — sehe 11 secs ago
00:53
@ThePhD congratulations :)
@sehe Surprised you didn't recommend that in your answer tbh
Someone posted a question with a screenshot of the build command
01:11
@VeronikaPrüssels 2012 (also, likely didn't bother straying more from the OP's code)
Update it for 2016!
Nope :) Have you counted the number of answers? Have you seen the question quality?
WOW microaggression
Micro? You have high thresholds if that's micro :)
No scale to measure
01:15
> Prefer to use C++-style loop index variables (for (int i = ....). This prevents surprises from i having excess scope.
ahahaha; I did improve :)
@VeronikaPrüssels humoured you (a little, didn't read the rest of post)
> Does the inconsistency in naming conventions in C++ bother anyone else's OCD when utilizing multiple libraries with different styles in your code?
@sehe I knew you'd cede to the pressure
I had already upvoted it anyway (you repwhore!)
I see
> But C++11 lambdas have one more trick up their sleeve, [...] Lambdas can capture state.
Truly impressive
01:49
Do you have rational reasons for not wanting the extra thread? I reckon, if it's not doing much, it's not hurting much. — sehe 6 secs ago
Mental overhead :3
the website for that lib is p bad
lol when I try to save a file with UTF-8 without BOM, VS2013 pops up "Not implemented"
> warning C4819: The file contains a character that cannot be represented in the current code page (950). Save the file in Unicode format to prevent data loss
IT IS IN UNICODE YOU BASTARD
And thanks for telling me which character on which line you dumbfuck
Use Vim. Thank me later
I use vim on linusc
02:06
Nisce
Buenos nosce
@sehe have a good sched_setscheduler(SCHED_IDLE)
@VeronikaPrüssels "unicode" on windows == UTF-16, I wish they'd fix that.. but they won't
user406009
Why would UTF-8 need a BOM?
user406009
That's stupid.
02:22
@Lalaland because windows thinks that all byte oriented encoding are non-unicode
user406009
@Mgetz Oh, it's a backwards compatibility thing?
user406009
Using the BOM as a magic identifier for UTF8?
@Lalaland unfortunately, personally I think they should just do a hard break in win 10, make it so that byte oriented encodings on software marked as win 10 compatible are not available on the API
make it UTF-8 only
user406009
Well, you do sorta have to give it to Windows for backwards compatibility.
user406009
02:26
They really do a good job with that.
idk, a better job would be run everything in a virtualizer. Its too hard to figure out if your program is correctly targeted for different versions of Windows.
@Lalaland true
Does SO automatically change all "damn"s to "darn"s?
user406009
@Mikhail Is that like an anti-tautology?
user406009
A statement false by the fact you posted it without a change?
02:34
In the questions
For example, today I asked a question:
0
Q: How to efficienlty get all include paths in MSVC2013

MikhailI'm tyring to refactor my code using include-what-you-use, but I need to figure out exactly which directories VS is looking in. How do I get a listing of all include paths visible to files in my project? If I add an incorrect include, something like "#include " I get the listing I want, but I...

user406009
You could try editing a damn in there?
I think I'm going crazy
user406009
Maybe it's just on the initial post?
user406009
Is there like a test tag so we can submit dummy questions?
lol, they didn't like my include-what-you-use tag
Sometimes I forget that SO is run by the gestapo
Maybe closing some questions will make me feel better
02:39
Yeah, the design is a little like wikipedia; mods can get really crazy with political correctness
user406009
@Aaron3468 Well, this isn't really political correctness. More just people obsessed with the rules.
@Lalaland Pretty much. Most open threads on the internet either devolve into contrarianism, or run away on tangents
So I've returned to C++, the mother language, today. My project bumped into Python's glaring flaw(TM), so I had to find a new language. I really liked Go until I found its critical weakness; no good GUI/audio libraries yet.
Ell
Ell
I don't think that's its critical weakness
I'd say lack of generics is pretty critical
user406009
@Aaron3468 What's Python's "glaring flaw"?
user406009
Low performance?
02:49
Good point on the generics, Ell
Ell
Ell
Boy I really do need to sleep now
@Lalaland In a roundabout way... Storing fixed-width integers and imitating overflow is such a poorly supported feature that all implementations are suboptimal. Basically it amounts to dressing string or int as binary data and casting between the two for all calculations
aren't fix width integers 32bits?
Yeah, but I've got to do 8 bit and 16 bit signed/unsigned arithmetic. Lots of converting to strings to trim the value, then back to int to do calculations
02:55
@Mikhail >.< I was asking tons of people and you're the only one who knew about that... Thank you
Say I did a project for $300, and got offered an additional $200 to merge the code. But after merging the code, they wanted you to merge the code again with a new version. And the new version was a major change, and you had to redo a lot of work as part of the merge.
@MichaelFulton charge them
Should I just suck it up and uphold my end of the bargain? Or ask for more money when they give me laundry list of fixes?
Also multiply your free by a factor of 100
0 * 100 :p
@MichaelFulton Don't let them get labour for less than its worth. Find a fair compromise to cover the labour cost of fixes
02:58
I think this too. But there is truth that what I turned in did cause the specified errors.
But if I go ahead and fix them, I'm making less than minimum wage.
And honestly, I want to spend a good couple days on it and make it somehting I'm proud of building.
@MichaelFulton Exactly. They don't care if it's an extra $50-100 if it works fine in the end
Ok, thanks for this reality check
Granted, don't go insane with the prices, but don't undervalue your work.
I don't want to be my own boss anymore :(
Well $500 dollars for a project is the cheapest I've ever seen a project. This is still 10x cheaper than ordering a WordPress website form India.
03:04
The project was for implementing localization in an existing webapp. It looks pretty built up.. but they had all sorts of stuff going on using C# resx + i18next localization approaches.
So I merged them into one approach, but the newest version changed all the naming schemes and required a lot of manual work that I didn't finish before turning it in. I should have asked for more time at that point.
It reminds me of how a lot of amateur photographers feel bad for charging $100, but when you think about the expertise, time commitment, and value of their photos, that's a steal. Getting awesome wedding photos for the price of a video game?!
unless that guy ruins your wedding
hey guyss.. anyone here is a mastermind on Cassandra or any nosql related stuff? x.x
I know a classy wedding photographer. I need to have a chat with that guy lol
@DhiogoCorrêa no
03:11
@Mikhail LOL !
trully sad
Well, this is the C++ room... No the PhP room, or the nosql room...
I know :) sorry.. there isnt those rooms, so ive tried my luck.. thanks
03:47
@ThePhD /u/ThePhantomDerpstorm
don't post on reddit bro
@StackedCrooked I can't wait to tell my children about how their children will finally get to use concepts.
6
user406009
Wait, isn't there like some implementation somewhere already?
user406009
It was clang or gcc I forgot.
04:05
@orlp Huh?
Alright, numpy is running now and it is beautiful
04:31
> JSON Objects to add gender diversity into your website
my cancer
So they didn't use optional enums and a custom field?
It's efficient and doesn't need glue code, but its painful to look at because the underlying model is combinatorial. You'd need huge attention to detail to rewrite that.
@VeronikaPrüssels only needs one option
lmftfy:
{
	"identities": [
		"No one cares"
	]
}
Lmao
I offended someone
With my comment
at line 2452
Of my source code.
10/10 would offend again.
@ThePhD no sir please follow me you're going straight to prison
@ThePhD begins looking for comment
04:39
@Aaron3468 sol/stack/hpp
@ThePhD They were offended by a random comment in source code that most people won't look at?
Le sigh, people are really strange. I think it's funny when I find stray comments
@Aaron3468 It started because on the docs I say "... and if you're completely mad and turn off RTTI and Exceptions..."
@ThePhD Ahaha, even better!
dynamic_cast is very well abused.
@VeronikaPrüssels If this is a joke I would love to donate, if its not can I take money out of his bank account?
04:54
@Mikhail try a negative donation first to be sure?
Do you think it would be technically possible to expand cereal to automatically generate a .toString() function? I think we can just write the output to std::cout, but that feels dirty
05:42
And it's Pi day!
1:59?
I just pushed the YMP binaries to my GitHub. So anyone with VS2015 can toy around with my NumberFactory app which uses the same back-end as y-cruncher.
 
1 hour later…
06:52
Okay
I answered all of hte questions in Reddit and github.
And I fixed all the early errors.
We are good to go.
Now I'm gonna take a nap.
@VeronikaPrüssels What's the difference between gender identities such as "transsexual man" and "transsexual male"?
07:14
What do I know
Ring and index finger comparison
user1804599
07:31
Lol, terrorist erdogan wants to stop terrorism in Turkey
08:13
Why is the below code causes segmentation fault :
#include <iostream>
#include <ostream>

std::ostream& operator<<(std::ostream& cout , const char* str)
{
    cout <<"Hello " << str << " bye!!" ;
    return cout;
}

int main()
{
    std::cout << "World" ;
}
@AngelusMortis Infinite recursion, stack overflow.
@VeronikaPrüssels Thanks
@AngelusMortis if you are going to overload the operator, put it in a class
user1804599
@sehe ok I'll try
08:22
I think I crashed coliru online compiler
@KhaledKhnifer gonna try it, thanks
user1804599
Happy pi day @Mysticial.
16
Happy π day, everyone!
@KhaledKhnifer but I can't modify main function
@sehe Ha-π day to you too!
@AngelusMortis pardon?
08:26
@KhaledKhnifer that was exercise that i can't touch main function, yet i have to print hello world bye!!
user1804599
Docker depends on Boost. :(
I'll solve the problem even I have to create new compiler to solve that problem
@VeronikaPrüssels well played
hm, so Clang 3.8 was just released but this talks about "Clang 3.9 documentation". I wonder if it applies to the 3.8
maybe a typo
@AngelusMortis An easy solution is to call the std::string overload
08:32
@VeronikaPrüssels I just did cout <<std::string("Hello ") << str << std::string(" bye!!") ; and after that you replied
hence I solved it first :)
Nope, my message was first.
0/10
Plus your solution isn't correct.
yes , seems it keeps printing hello
:(
> cout << std::string("Hello ") << std::string(str) << std::string(" bye!!");
Very difficult I know
std::cout
@AngelusMortis that doesn't solve the problem if the function is template
08:34
poor form
alternatively cout << std::string("Hello ") + str + "bye !!"
std::operator<<(cout,"Hello "),std::operator<<(cout,str),std::operator<<(cout," bye!!");
@Mikhail Click the coliru, it's not std::cout in this case
poor naming I agree
Recently discovered this gem while trying to debug some code in MSVC2013
fuck microsoft
@Mikhail that was deliberate :(
@VeronikaPrüssels cout<<str will keep recurring and printing hellp, right?
anyways I solved a great problem, time to take rest now :)
08:37
You're welcome
Don't forget to put my name on your homework
That is sooo not homework, it's me learning C++ as hobby :)
@KhaledKhnifer Thanks :)
@AngelusMortis did you understand how my solution work?
@KhaledKhnifer ofcourse I did , magic of comma operator, right?
08:39
@AngelusMortis you're looking at the wrong direction
@KhaledKhnifer why is that? oO
@Mikhail Don't use VS2013.
@Mysticial I need CUDA 7.5
Even if it's update 4.
Who uses CUDA nowadays
08:41
Dude, I need teh CUDA
CUDA is for wimps
OCL doesn't have templates
How do I thrust?
Thrust is terrible, use cub
@KhaledKhnifer you're explicitly calling std::operator << overload having const char* as second param, with mix of comma operator , don't you?
08:44
@AngelusMortis it work by calling the standard operator that print strings directly as a function. because even if you do std::cout << .. it's still an ostream and still will call the same function, in case your function accept strings too, changing the operand type is not the solution, this exercise aim to teach you to learn how function calls work in a scope.
@VeronikaPrüssels Yeah, but then I still need to use CUDA. For some company work I used opencv's umats, with an OCL back-end, but I don't have time to port all my cuda kernels
I was kidding you know
Do you work as a contractor btw?
@KhaledKhnifer This time I totally understoor, Thanks
08:46
@VeronikaPrüssels Kinda
@AngelusMortis if you're writing C++ code for real, don't use the comma, also don't write global functions, put them in a namespace or a class.
@sehetw I totally thought you were one of the devs given how much stackoverflow interactions you have on Spirit :)
Spirited away
@Mikhail What do you mean?
@KhaledKhnifer C# way it is :) , Thanks for the advice )
08:49
@VeronikaPrüssels For example, this summer I had to do work in my professor's company.
Oh you're a PhD
I also did a bunch of contract work in undergrad to pay for college. Mostly on publishing workflows.
user1804599
> Instagram accounts hacked

... phishing ...
One day i'll be a real boy
user1804599
That's not hacking. :|
08:51
@VeronikaPrüssels nice movie
> those who spoke against that generally expressed that this feature was so important that we want to be sure we get it right and approve it once we have more experience using it in real world users’ code.
wait a sec
does this mean people are expected to use TS features in production?
if that's the case, doesn't that mean people accept breaking backwards compatibility?
and if that's the case, why do we need a TS?
no but they figure some idiots will do it anyway
@Zoidberg Hacking is firing up Atom and writing PHP code on your MacBook Pro in a Starbucks.
ah
> in real world idiots’ code.
like me :)
08:54
alright, I'll like you
lol took me a while
Monday mornings are slow
yeah
I wish it was Friday 5 PM already
5 days closer to death?
user1804599
Kernel hot swapping is rad.
@AndyProwl Doesn't that take it to an extreme though?
08:57
@Mikhail This is death
Friday is life
Hmm, I'm not at work tomorrow, so I guess it's simultaneously Monday and Friday today for me...
@Zoidberg Yeah.
@Griwes Easy to ask that when you have tomorrow off
user1804599
yay Docker works
The great thing about Docker is that it's got a Levenshtein distance of 1 from both Dicker and Cocker.
9
09:02
lol
also Fucker
Sucker
(you flipped two characters)
I'll give you Ducker
why did I read 2 instead of 1
09:04
because you are a Sucker
maybe cos last Levensthein joke by Cicada involved distance 2
user1804599
 _________________________________________
/  A New York City judge ruled that if    \
| two women behind you at the movies      |
| insist on discussing the probable       |
| outcome of the film, you have the right |
| to turn around and blow a Bronx cheer   |
\ at them.                                /
 -----------------------------------------
    \
     \
      \
                    ##        .
              ## ## ##       ==
           ## ## ## ##      ===
       /""""""""""""""""___/ ===
what is that
a whale?
09:06
what is a Bronx cheer?
@AndyProwl looks like your mom to me
etc etc
yeah but my mom knows nothing about New York judges so can't be
Is its mouth open or closed?
I'd say open
mom's mouth is always open
09:10
user1804599
@sehe Say you have a Dockerfile like this. It's running in production. Now I want to change it to install and run additional software. How do I do that? What about file system of existing containers? Will it stay intact?
@AndyProwl No, I mean, Fridays are usually fun here - it could be Thursday 5PM already, though (work-wise; I'd like the rest of stuff happening over the week to happen :P).
Friday isn't much fun at work for me
it's just like the other days except I'm more tired
I've almost never used priority_queue.
Maybe I should check my priorities.
user1804599
std::queue is also a priority queue. The priority is the time of insertion.
09:14
I did once
while implementing Dijkstra algorithm
09:26
guess who broke master and ruined all the tests this week-end
user1804599
> Application containers should not store application data.
user1804599
OIC
user1804599
Well that makes it easy.
user1804599
Just delete the image and container and create new ones.
09:31
so you have a database container
@Zoidberg minus time of insertion
or negative time of insertion
user1804599
Depends on the comparator.
Priority queue uses > by default.
iirc
well, it uses std::less
but I suppose it inverses the result to get the priority
or maybe I'm just wrong
I like bananas.
doesn't OpenCV and Qt do reference counting for images?
They do IIRC
09:41
Seems reasonable that they would do that.
> Kudos to my wife and children for putting up with me being even busier than normal, and of course to Jesus Christ for - well, everything!
09:59
kudos4jesus
Solving the world's problems one after the other.
10:18
just need another one for the sensation of touching cocks and no one needs dating sites anymore
solve 1, create 2
As an engineer, you always have more problems to solve
now think about it, when people say that they are problem solvers, it could mean that they solve problems by creating new ones, couldn't it?
or if someone who is always busy - it could mean that the person is really slow or inefficient, right?
I read about RAII from here http://www.tomdalling.com/blog/software-design/resource-acquisition-is-initialisation-raii-explained/.

how to apply RAII for heap objects ?
that's like asking how to use fishing hook to capture wild birds
you could, just that you complicate things unnecessarily
stack is your friend, especially when using RAII
10:35
it's literally explained in the article you posted
suppose if one of the method of pointer object throws an exception , now I need to delete this object how to do that ? there is no finally in c++ because of RAII
@samnaction it is literally explained in that article
10:50
@VeronikaPrüssels so much confusion
Ven
Ven
I'm at an APL conference :D.
@Zoidberg they had an example on how to create venn diagrams!
Byte order marks screwing me.
bonjour
Ven
Ven
Salut
11:07
This is a sharp observation
@Ven you... :mind-blown:
BUT WHY?!
Ven
Ven
That guy is so smart.
@sehe it's legit amazing. They're showing really cool stuff
APL is a small language. You do need to know the glyphs, but there are few of them, and are really expressive (whatever that word means)
@sehe Wow! Could this be what the runtime in RTTI subtly suggests?
> The weird part of CTTI was to write a constexpr string class able to build substrings at compile time, with C++11 constexpr only, supporting Visual Studio. Cannot bold that last item enough. That was such a pain in the ass. See THE ISSUE.
@VeronikaPrüssels Doesn't take anything away from the observation.
@VeronikaPrüssels Yeah. Like "F" in SFINAE subtly suggests failure, maybe?!
Not having static reflection is bogus.
And C++ should have agreed on something a long time ago.
@ThePhD come to discord so I can yell at you
11:11
They agreed on seomthing already
Some people from CERN put forth an implementation that seems to be gaining some ground, but it's quite gutted compared t the other 2 that has risen.
Ven
Ven
Yay
@Rapptz :nopeface:.jpg
@Rapptz What did I do? .-.
@ThePhD IT NEEDS TO GAIN MORE MOMENTUM AH AH
11:13
SNRK.
something that makes ripples in the C++ spacetime continuum
C++ is a blackhole, it will suck in all your time & energy, not even your enlightment could escape
Good. Does it go for all typos? Because that'd make it more attractive for @thecoshman
11:31
@mooli It's not "missing". It's "overwritten". Obviously, because the paths are the same. It's your work to decide a way to handle duplicate keys. Did I mention flattening might not be what you want? — sehe 14 secs ago
Hint. I did. More than once.
@sehe as a matter of interest, do you enjoy writing C++ code?
Yes edition, otherwise why the hell would I be writing answers in it?
@ThePhD esp for types that conform to is_standard_layout
You should be able to get member offsets as an integral constant.
@edition if we are talking about just "writing code", I do enjoy writing code
@KhaledKhnifer So do I.
@Rapptz rofl, why would you yell at @ThePhD?
@sehe wheres that from?
11:48
@ThePhD it sucks
well, with nothing much else to speak of, I'll be leaving.
@edition you got it

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