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15:00
@R.MartinhoFernandes No, because default grammatical usage is masculine here. Even when it implies gender. But people know it's a job application and gender isn't a requirement unless specified
user1804599
ooooh wait
I know the logic is twisted but that's where I save my ass with the "reasonable" fuzzy thing
user784668
@Zoidberg http://whatever.example/?
@AndyProwl Right, so the meaning of "programatorka" is strictly "female programmer". Given that, can't you fathom that some language has words that mean "male X" for some X profession?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yes, I can. But that does not affect my point
In particular, I don't think programmer is one of those professions
user784668
15:01
@R.MartinhoFernandes But "software developer" is not one.
@Fanael Yes, but people spread the same idea everywhere because 1) it costs virtually nothing and 2) it carries zero risk, unlike the alternative.
guys this is interesting but I really need to get to work
today I achieved approximately nothing, and that's an overstatement
Even if you can be sure you'd win any lawsuit, you don't want to have the bother of actually winning it.
Yeah, because unreasonable people who sue :)
last intervention
@AndyProwl But those can just be a vocal minority, and that's why I don't think you can chalk it up to culture.
All cultures have extreme individuals in them.
user1804599
15:05
Docker is super good.
user1804599
@sehe thanks
Those few extreme ones can be a hassle, and HR people choose to wipe out that possibility entirely.
When programming I employ similar reasoning at times. If it costs nothing to avoid something that "never happens", I often do it.
(You know what kind of "never" I mean: "as soon as you deploy")
there's never "check this pointer for null" and never "ifstream::close()"
Ven
Ven
ugh I'm tilting.
fuck C++
15:19
@набиячлэвэлиь у вот мэит
didn't know you spoke cyrillic
More like ю вот мэйт
Ven
Ven
^ he doesn't :P
head hurts after 1 drink all is fine
mine looks better
Ven
Ven
15:20
@VeronikaPrüssels what did you drink
nwp
nwp
@Ven 50MB of template error messages?
alcohol obv
Ven
Ven
@nwp yeah
thanks Google Fruit.
@VeronikaPrüssels I know. which ones?
user784668
@набиячлэвэлиь y u no ю
15:21
@Ven just a baileys
Ven
Ven
oh.
Dammit, I'm late to fix the Cyrillic.
short variables names, no whitespace, multiple levels of indirections all rolled into one. You're not helping yourself or us here. — Borgleader 7 secs ago
(Warning 3 star programmer)
Ven
Ven
holy molly that code
user1804599
15:31
public static function main(): void {
    echo "Hello, world!\n";
}
user1804599
it works :3 :3 :3 :3 :3
is this 1950
@VeronikaPrüssels I'm pretty sure there was never a time that code like that was reasonable.
I'm going to upvote this question just for the effort that went into writing this... — Transcendental 2 mins ago
terrible question promoters
@Fanael Not quite true either (there have been cases of women raping men, though only a few). "Get it up or die" while holding gun to his head was apparently sufficient.
15:39
@JerryCoffin There was there was. In 1992 or '93 when Ruby and PHP was created
@Borgleader nice
And Java too I guess
Wouldnt the stress of being held at gunpoint interfere with the getting it up part?
user784668
@JerryCoffin Whoosh.
15:40
@VeronikaPrüssels are you turned on by guns to your face
Never tried
il est temps de se regarder un petit Karim Debbache les enfants
Ven
Ven
lequel?
il a commencé à faire les vidéos de son patreon/tippee/etc?
Moi j'aime bien les canons wesh
Ven
Ven
izi
Saint patrick day!
15:45
@Ven Oui 3e released ojd
Get yer irish blood pumping
Ven
Ven
@VeronikaPrüssels omg link j'en ai vu 0
www.dailymotion.com/karimdebbache
Ven
Ven
mais mdr daily. avec leur vieux site wordpress.
Il a expliqué que YT a des conditions d'utilisation trop contraignantes
Si mes souvenirs sont bons
15:47
SMSB, the hipster IIRC
Ven
Ven
@VeronikaPrüssels I can understand. although it's making me sad bc it means I'll have to keep checking this website often.
@Shoe ..and what's supposed to happen to the other half of my blood?
@Ven well worth it IMO
guess the password
Ven
Ven
@VeronikaPrüssels well, if I have to decide between karim on DM vs no karim, I'll definitely pick DM :)
found a deadlock :D
15:55
@slaphappy Lol what's this bs
nwp
nwp
Why do people keep saying SO is not a free debugging service? stackoverflow.com/a/36065639/3484570
...because it isn't
Fixing a bug in a 550 line code dump of unreadable, unformatted code helps nobody other than the OP.
@JerryCoffin Party :)
nwp
nwp
@milleniumbug I know that and agree. Yet reality seems to disagree.
disagree on what
nwp
nwp
16:10
That SO is not a debugging service. Dump terrible code, eat a downvote or 2, get a problem fixed by some 10k+ user, rinse and repeat.
It shouldn't work, yet it does
Because there are badlets in this world
Ven
Ven
and they create badware.
16:21
trwtf is nobody closing the question
Hey !
anyone has a framework which implements methods of (FBSDE : Forward Backward Stochastic Differential Equations ) in C++ ?
user1804599
yay unit tests run in docker container
Ven
Ven
yay.
> XMLDiffWrapper.dll
probability of dll being heap of useless crap: 100%
why do they keep making ~wrappers~
user1804599
.PHONY: test
test: build ${HACK_TEST_TARGETS}
	${DOCKER} build -t XXXXXXX_test -f docker/test/Dockerfile .
	${DOCKER} run --rm XXXXXXX_test
nwp
nwp
16:25
@slaphappy wrappers allow you to make libs with cool functionality without actually having to do the work
maybe not the answer you were looking for ...
@nwp what about wrappers around the lib that you already own
nwp
nwp
Interface change without breaking backwards compatibility? IDK
@slaphappy interesting we have the same disease here
jerking around with ~design~ and ~architecture~ imo
we even have a wrapper around oci
user406009
@slaphappy Maybe they should just refuckter the design a littler more?
16:35
@Lalaland maybe add some protobuf there and there?
and then a wrapper around it
here no design
but don't forget adding that one dependency that only supports vc++ 2003, ever
piss code as fast as possible
all the rest is irrelevant
lol
don't you ever look for another job?
why would I
nwp
nwp
16:38
write a code generator, retire early :D
@VeronikaPrüssels do you enjoy it?
not really but not disliking it enough to quit, and even if I did I don't know what else I would do (lol)
write a generator for code generators
or better
write a generator for bikeshedding topics
user406009
@VeronikaPrüssels Are most of the programming jobs in HK in finance?
In C++ yeah even exclusively I'd say
Not that I'm stuck in HK anyway
Also 00:40 time to do some sleep
user406009
16:41
@VeronikaPrüssels Good night.
@VeronikaPrüssels if you want to move to southern spain, I know someone who'd like to speak with you.
y quien es
pls not the biicode team
they all died
Ell
Ell
you could write a c++ transpiler, you would enjoy that
user406009
@Ell C++ to what?
Ell
Ell
16:45
to javascript
user406009
That already exists.
to go
@Lalaland Exists at least twice over, no less (though I'm pretty sure both are basically Clang for the compilation itself).
Evening
@KarimEssam Hello.
16:56
How's it going c:
Ven
Ven
@Griwes Fucktamura's projections? :P
yo
@KarimEssam Oh, not bad.
@JerryCoffin Good to know. c:
@Ven o/
Ven
Ven
I really wish I were able to communicate in the type system that a function "X" must be called with a lock on "Y"
even if it only worked with RAII-based lock classes.
2
lol
Ven
Ven
17:08
I think I remember Chandler (from clang) wanting to add some annotations in this style, in his clang-sanitiziers style.
user406009
@Ven You can do that in Rust.
Ell
Ell
@Lalaland how?
Ven
Ven
...And your point is?
user406009
You can communicate that in a type system. You just can't do in C++'s type system.
Ven
Ven
Which is why I really wish I could.
17:11
strange people here !!
user406009
@Ell Rust will track the lifetime of references.
Ell
Ell
@Lalaland I mean, what would the code look like?
user406009
Ven
Ven
not sure GSL wants to even move in that direction, since they don't want explicit annotations :s.
hey
remember when people wrote "bisou lol"
Ven
Ven
17:18
xoxoxo mdr. xDD
Ell
Ell
@Lalaland I still can't see how it is done in rusts type system
unless I misunderstand the requirement
user406009
@Ell Rust's type system verifies that whatever is in the mutex is only accessible while you hold the lock.
user406009
If you want a function to only be called while holding the lock, make it depend on what's in the mutex.
user406009
Wheras in C++, you could take a pointer to the thing inside the mutex, and hold onto it even after unlocking the mutex.
Ell
Ell
Right so let's say I want to make some function require a lock on some global resource
that can't be done in rust even
user406009
17:24
Yeah, you simply put that resource in a mutex.
user406009
And then make that function have that resource as a parameter to the function.
I am reading this file using c++ inpfile.reset(new std::ifstream(argv[1], std::ifstream::binary));
I want to get firt 15 number from this file .
which is shown in Hex
@james no need for reset/pointers
the value printed is this §
std::ifstream file;
file.exceptions(std::ios::eofbit | std::ios::badbit);
file.open(argv[1], std::ios::binary);
~or~
std::ifstream file(argv[1], std::ios::binary); and then you check for errors manually
@james there are two things that can go wrong: the reading, or the printing. do you know which one is bad?
17:29
@slaphappy yeah you are right about that
if I read the file and write back as it is in hex format
it gives me the same file
but when I read it I don't know how to get that hex value which is 15 for that § like sign
user1804599
I am so happy.
also cast to int to get that "number" formatting
hth
Ell
Ell
@Lalaland I'm confused
@Zoidberg whats up
Ell
Ell
17:34
mutex<int> global_counter;
void need_global_counter_lock(lock: ???) {...}
what would the type of lock be?
user406009
You need a dummy type for the counter.
@slaphappy it gives me weird values because I guess the value exceed 128. I have tried so many things
Ell
Ell
@Lalaland which is no better than c++ right
@james don't forget to cast to int (see my code)
user406009
@Ell No, in C++ you can do this.
user406009
17:37
CounterType* cheater = NULL;
{
  const CounterType& real = lock.lock().get();
  cheater = &real;
  // lock unlocked due to destructor
}
// Victory!
Protecting from Machiavelli is nonsensical, since it will never work without hindering your ability to actually do smart things.
also because he's dead
It's Murphy you are supposed to protect from, and the above can hardly arise from being dumb for a moment; it's hard to write that accidentally.
Ell
Ell
@Lalaland I don't really know enough about mutexes and c++ to know what that is doing :V
what is the .get() method?
getting the resource inside the mutex?
It's trying to apply Rust thinking to C++.
user406009
17:40
It's pseudocode.
Ell
Ell
wait that doesn't make sense
@slaphappy I got this error on console. "Error after 4 bytes: bitset::_M_copy_from_ptr"
user406009
The idea is that lock() returns a temporary with a destructor that locks the mutex.
And there is no clue on google
user406009
get gets the item from the lock.
17:40
Where in fact in C++ it works completely differently and the example is nonsensical either way.
Ell
Ell
@Lalaland right
@james try copying in coliru
user406009
@Ell But anyways, the idea is that you can "cheat" in C++.
user406009
And keep references around even when you are not supposed to.
user406009
Leading to classic use after free bugs.
Ell
Ell
17:41
right
I'm pretty damn sure you can also cheat in a similar way in Rust.
Also again, no-one writes code like that.
Ell
Ell
but I mean, you can still ask for a lock to something in a function
as a parameter
right
@Ell yeah
but that could be any lock! how can you be sure :p
user406009
@Griwes Well, there is always unsafe.
user406009
17:46
But it's called unsafe for a reason.
user406009
If you know of any mistakes/holes in the Rust type system while in "safe" mode, you should post them as issues to the Rust github right away.
> The new version due later this year
C++17 will be released in 2016?
Today I did some JavaScript.
Fuck this and its scope.
user406009
@Morwenn Arrow functions help a lot with that.
> I consider a language feature or a library component major if it affects the way you think about programming and affects how you structure your code. With that definition, sadly, my answer must be: For most people, I don't see anything major in C++17. Please don't pull "I don't see anything major" out of context as a pullquote or a title; that would be inaccurate and unnecessarily inflammatory.
ITT Bjarne Stroustrup doesn't see anything major in C++17.
17:49
@Lalaland I'm only tweaking existing code and I don't even know half of the language .______.
@fredoverflow Note how he's got fed up of being misquoted :D
@Zoidberg cheers :)
@R.MartinhoFernandes I missed your special brand of irony :)
Probably better known as realism
Can't upvote that disclaimer enough. I think it's false security to highlight this one element. Although the effort is admirable — sehe 33 secs ago
@R.MartinhoFernandes How's hebrew going? Still have opportunity to exercise?
@sehe Hey~
@Morwenn's here too :o
Less than a week ago, but still there.
This character "§"in my hex editor shows 15 as its hex value. However I have tried many ways to read this value and convert it into hex. It is giving me weird values and error. Can anyone tell me if I am reading a binary file in c++ and it read '§' this symbol how can I get 15 as hex value or 21 as its decimal value?
18:02
@milleniumbug that’s not it, no
i think i should post it as a question.
@james ASCII 21 is a non-printable character. A hex editor can assign an arbitrary graphic symbol to it.
lol assigning arbitrary symbols to NAK (unprintables in general)
@milleniumbug can you give me any hint on how to get 15 for that arbitrary graphic symbol ?
Actually first character of this file
@james You don't.
That's what arbitrary means.
It was picked for no reason and there is no relation between 15 and §.
18:13
so if i am reading file as a binary than how can i pick 15 Hex value for it?
Reading file byte-for-byte is a straightforward thing
If you are reading a file as binary you will read 15.
open the file as binary, use the .read() function
There's nothing actionable here.
inp.read(&chunk.front(), 4); this is the way i am doing it
where chunk is a string
And this weird error i get "Error after 4 bytes: bitset::_M_copy_from_ptr
"
18:16
What you are asking is equivalent to "Can anyone tell me if I am reading a binary file in c++ and it read 'twenty-one' this symbol how can I get 15 as hex value or 21 as its decimal value?".
@james SSCCE on coliru please
"twenty-one" is just a way to represent that number, and so are XXI and IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII, but none of that is relevant because read reads numbers, not representations.
@R.MartinhoFernandes how do you get 21 for this symbol?
Xeo
Xeo
lol
18:18
@james WTF. Didn't I just tell you you don't?
bitset
Why are you using a bitset as if it was a raw memory buffer?
I turned on signing for git commits, which I like, but it's awkward when I have to input my signing key password to stash.
@R.MartinhoFernandes i thought this is the way to get 21 out of it
Is there an option to skip signing for stashes?
@james You keep asking the wrong question.
But i am thinking i am too dump to get what you people are saying
18:24
If what you want is to get 21, just do int twenty_one = 21;
If you want to read bytes from a file, make a byte buffer (std::vector<char>) and use read.
If you want to do something else, stop asking to "get 21".
std::get<21>(o);
@R.MartinhoFernandes Why? More signing = good.
@набиячлэвэлиь I don't want to input my password to stash stuff.
Stashes are not meant to be public.
But why? Stashes are kinda like commits
I know why it happens, but I don't think it's useful. Signing is only useful for things that will be published.
Stashes won't.
It's annoying if I'm stashing stuff to say, pull into a clean repo, and there pops up the password input.
You might go around that by putting git-stash in your PATH and disable signing -> run actual git-stash -> enable signing from there
18:29
Typing passwords is always super annoying for me because they're long as fuck and masked inputs are HORRIBLE HORRIBLE THINGS THAT SHOULD DIE IN A FIRE.
wait, you type your passwords?
There's three I do, yes.
Let me rephrase it. How to get decimal or Hex value of NAK in c++?
@james chars are numbers, there's no "decimal" or "hex" values of numbers
18:30
@james int value_of_nak = 21;
@james what the HEK is a NAK
@james But if you actually mean "decimal or hex value" when you say "decimal or Hex value", then std::string decimal_value_of_nak = "21"; std::string hex_value_of_nak = "15";
@melak47 0x15, negative acknowledge
@melak47 ASCII 0x15.
OIC.
18:34
int value_of_nak = 0x15; also works, but it's exactly the same, because 21 and 0x15 represent the same number in C++, and ints in C++ are numbers, not "decimal values", not "hex values", not "arbitrary graphic symbols".
Good job, std::is_callable just got standardized and I realize today that I actually need it.
@R.MartinhoFernandes but i am getting this symbol "§" while I am reading a binary file. Now when I open this file in hex editor I can see 15 against it. So by seeing 15 against it I know that it is NAK. Now what I want to do is that I want to read every symbol of that file and get it's decimal or hex value which in current case is 15 for hex and 21 for decimal.
@james No, you are not "getting [that] symbol".
"Binary files" don't have symbols in them.
There is a reason why they are not called "symbol files".
@james how things decide to print non-printable characters doesn't really matter
@james representations of things and things are separate entities
18:36
Please check this Image. Its first byte is 15 and symbol against it is "§"
The mere fact that such things as control characters exist always annoy me a bit .____.
in the encoding the hex editor chosen
There are no symbols in the file. Only in your head the hex editor's interface.
Now even when i read this file I get this arbitrary symbol
@james No, you don't, because there are no symbols in it.
Only numbers.
§ is clearly not a number, therefore that is not what you are reading from the file.
> Now when I lookup this city in a map I can see "Berlin" written next to it. So by seeing "Berlin" next to it I know that it is the capital of Germany. Now what I want to do is that I want to travel to every city in that map and get its map which in current case is Berlin.
DOS/IBM-ASCII
in my hex editor
It doesn't matter!
18:40
Either excellent noob or excellent troll.
Judging by the tags I'd say the former
@james Repeat after me: there are no symbols.
Then: don't read bytes into a bitset as if it was a raw memory buffer.
(Chorus: the symbol against it is §!)
There are no symbols
25 mins ago, by milleniumbug
@james SSCCE on coliru please
also post a clear problem statement
you're too deep in XY
18:43
@james Try this: instead of printing anything to check what you read, write assert(thing_that_was_read == 0x15);. No symbols, just numbers.
> >Developer at Centangle Interactive
@milleniumbug That's gay.
2
rip Centangle Interactive
@Morwenn golf clap
@R.MartinhoFernandes yeah that would be strange. Is there a good workflow that signs only when committing on certain branches?
@R.MartinhoFernandes oh lol
Mobile chat is much better now.
18:52
I want desktop chat.
discord has a desktop app
:p
@R.MartinhoFernandes Discord > SO mobile chat though :)
Wat ._.
(actually idk, i only used it on pc)
@Morwenn wat wat
18:59
nice
but srsly, what confused you

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