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14:06
And if my keyboard summoned a large autonomous truck to drive over my pet cat that would be dangerous too. — sehe 30 secs ago
I'm not a nice person when I'm trying to focus on work
@Ven nope. One of the few central omissions. It 'affords' them, but doesn't actively respect them
I think the c++ XML library flow chart on SO is still pretty accurate
@Borgleader Hiiiyoo.
@sehe It seems pretty spot on, as long as tinyxml is the one that actually has string in it (iirc one of the versions of tinyxml uses char* instead?)
@ThePhD How are you today? :)
@Borgleader Shrug.
@Borgleader I thought that was a conditional
~vim window is elsewhere~
@sehe is 'afford' a Dutch-ism here?
14:15
Nah. It's a use of the word I picked somewhere. UX design if I recall
oo I am now intrigued
@sehe cool!
I bent it slightly to apply it in the context before
It's how I roll
@Rapptz did you notice if you do e.g. .. function:: template<typename Foo> Foo blah(); then the Foo in the return type links to the template parameter—any idea if that's exposed as a role so I can do my own refs?
Ven
Ven
14:27
@sehe I think that's going to be just fine by me...
For me too many times. At work I use libxml2 now, though
Ven
Ven
AngularJS can't into multiple isolated scopes per element???
do they really stick the scope on the DOM or what
> I don't want a partner
> Get an e-mail from somebody asking me if they want to help with Sol
wut
How do they even.
How did anyone in the class even -find- me. D:
I don't even have my photo placed on the internal course website.
Ven
Ven
well, they're probably Phantom DerpStorming as well :3
I don't even have my e-mail public on github or in any of my repos!
Did the Professor rat me out?!
Ven
Ven
14:37
you probably have it on your commits...
can you copy an invalidated iterator?
@ThePhD Is phdofthehouse at Google's mail a working email? :D
@LucDanton are you chinese
@Griwes She e-mailed me at my secret e-mail. :<
Ven
Ven
@ThePhD isn't it your commit email?
14:40
No.
Capslock pls.
@ThePhD Okay, I'll look further. :D
@LucDanton mmm. is the iterator POD?
Or better, trivially copyable?
@sehe generic, so no
Can you detect and assert that it is :)
require it
what good does that do
14:49
make the problem not yours :)
I don't think it does anything at all except make the code useless
TBH I wouldn't be surprised if copying is supposed to be ok. Think forward iterators.
@sehe what about them
It specifically states that the effect of (?operations?) on a copy of the iterator should be the same, right
some of them, yeah
14:51
Now if we can get a list of which ones, that might clear up things. Or not. Since you're here
15:17
So, @malwareforme found "MireWare" ransomware: https://twitter.com/malwareforme/status/714632342766292993 Looked into it, found something interesting. https://t.co/WAt6qSROmX
Professionals
Xeo
Xeo
ransomware is just evil
ransomware isn't evil people are
etc
15:34
@amin What?
funny you should mention this; my friend's mom has just been a victim of ransomware shit
Xeo
Xeo
I don't get that phrasing. The "should" is totally throwing me off.
yet correct
'right' mix includes 'no lounger at all' right
10
15:46
:D
@Xeo it's just a silly phrase to express coincidence
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton "Founded by" does not imply "run by"!
Also, are people that migrated to Discord still technically Loungers?
this place is slowly becoming a support center
there wont be "real lounge" to speak of soon
@ScarletAmaranth What do you mean?
@ScarletAmaranth Discord
16:02
Group membeers.
@Xeo Yes
@ScarletAmaranth The "real lounge" is a myth that exists only warped memories.
@VeronikaPrüssels Ransomware is of use only to evil people. It has no legitimate purpose in existence.
There is one known example of usage of the Tibetan half-eight digit (fileformat.info/info/unicode/char/0f31/index.htm). It's a stamp from 1933. No evidence of usage of any of the other half- digits exists (before their introduction in the Unicode charts, I mean).
The half-zero is just hilarious, especially when you notice that its value is -1/2.
@R.MartinhoFernandes lol, what?
16:13
@R.MartinhoFernandes Oh perfect, I can finally represent half of the major features that made it into C++17
2 mins ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
The half-zero is just hilarious, especially when you notice that its value is -1/2.
@R.MartinhoFernandes A bit of background, my internet blackedout for 2-5 min as i was posting this, so i posted it right when it came back (without reading the new stuff). Anyway, still works with my message if its value is negative ;)
@R.MartinhoFernandes cool stuff… kinda
@wilx Since the single known usage of "half-eight" (which is so called because it is the normal "eight" digit with a slash) represents 7.5 (which is known because the stamp value is known), whoever assigned the values to all ten half- digits assigned them one half less than the value of the underlying digit, so half-zero ended up with -0.5.
@Borgleader No inaccurate jokes in the Lounges!
16:18
Well shit :(
@R.MartinhoFernandes Oh. That seems silly.
Java says all Tibetan half- digits have numeric value -2.
(in)consistency \o/
just as arbitrary as -1/2
16:23
@milleniumbug No, -1/2 is not arbitrary. It's extrapolated from the existing evidence.
static int getNumericValue(int codePoint)
Returns the int value that the specified character (Unicode code point) represents.
> int
good job
Yeah, return an int is wrong to start with.
But -2 makes no sense.
Dat rounding.
Throwing, returning 0, or returning -1 could all be somehow justified. Returning -2 is just nonsensical.
Plus, -2 for half-eight is flat-out wrong, since that one is known from usage, not extrapolated.
Ok, we've established Java standard library is bad at unicode
16:26
Oh, wait, -2 is a magic value.
> the numeric value of the character, as a nonnegative int value; -2 if the character has a numeric value that is not a nonnegative integer; -1 if the character has no numeric value.
lol
They'll be sooo screwed if there's a character with numeric value of -1
bah
@milleniumbug It just returns -2.
user1804599
Hi.
truly terrible programming right ther
e
16:27
@R.MartinhoFernandes ...but extrapolated in a somewhat arbitrary fashion. They decided that "slashed N" means "N - 1/2", but based on the evidence could just as well have decided on a rule something like "N * 15 /16".
@R.MartinhoFernandes oh right
@R.MartinhoFernandes EINBAND
@JerryCoffin True, but it's the most likely scenario: it's the simplest and it's not a previously unseen system.
(And fwiw, it is possible that the people that assigned those values had more data available, but there are no logs of the meetings available; as far as I could ascertain modern attempts to find evidence have only uncovered that one stamp)
@JerryCoffin Oh, also, the written Tibetan for "seven and a half" is "half eight", and so on for the others (no such thing as "half zero", though).
@R.MartinhoFernandes ...that is... so absolutely terrible.
It's almost brilliantly terrible.
@Griwes FWIW, there is no API in that library that can help you if you get a -1 or -2 result.
16:37
you could say it's eville
Nonnegative integer or bust.
@AndyProwl sigh
i tried
@TonyTheLion top kek
16:42
<3
user1804599
If I want the last N elements of a range, do I need range.end() - N, range.end() or range.end() - 1 - N, range.end()?
user1804599
I'm so confused.
user1804599
range.end() - N, I think.
user1804599
//              v--- end()
   [0, 1, 2, 3]
//           ^--- end() - 1
user1804599
Great!
user1804599
16:47
One-past-the-end is so nice.
@R.MartinhoFernandes That certainly points toward the "N - 1/2" interpretation being a reasonable one, at least for the other digits.
user1804599
17:13
case opcode::thread_dump:
    ++FELDSPAR_PC;
    std::cerr << ...;
    break;
user1804599
Quiz: guess the bug in the above code.
FELDSPAR_PC overflows
std:cerr is the wrong stream
@EtiennedeMartel TEDx talks are generally worthless.
Does TED stand for anything?
17:26
allright
the new wikipedia banner is downright ridiculous
user1804599
TEDx talks are dumb circle jerking.
2
fred@blackbox ~ $ LANG=C clojure
The program 'clojure' can be found in the following packages:
 * clojure1.2
 * clojure1.4
Try: sudo apt-get install <selected package>
Isn't Clojure 1.4 super ancient?
stupid outdated packages
@orlp Cannot reproduce, SS?
user1804599
Current Clojure version is 1.8.
17:30
I just accidentally closed the chat.
@набиячлэвэлиь ^
Close it and ignore
I'd donate more at all if you guys weren't such utter dicks about it every time you need money
@Zoidberg I just tried to quit the Clojure REPL with :q, but of course that just evaluates to the keyword :q... :D
The what
17:35
it's deep, man
2deep4me
18
Q: How to exit the REPL

patzI'm trying to exit the REPL. I use (. System exit 0) or (System/exit 0), but that causes an error: Exception in thread "Thread-3" java.lang.RuntimeException: java.lang.IndexOutOfBoundsException Is there another way to exit the REPL? How I can resolve this error?

So wikipedia gets around ~15b pageviews per month. They usually show the banner for like a month, each pageview requires half a second of scrolling to get past the banner, that's 7.5b seconds wasted, or 237 years. Everytime wikipedia shows the banner they waste the life equivalent of around 3 human lives.
6
to be fair, they're more efficient at gathering money than a high-class assassin, but not by a huge margin
@Shoe If the contents are discarded, then the containing structures must be as well.
c cannot be null, and b cannot exist with an invalid c member.
@R.MartinhoFernandes So when you move a.b.c you also move the container object and since it's not captured in c it's discarded?
17:41
Yep. It's unusable anyway. The same thing that makes a.b.c invalid makes a.b invalid (what is a B without a c member?)
I see. Thanks :)
user406009
@orlp So, by that logic, Youtube is a mass murderer with their ads.
So you can't use a.b.d (if there was a second member of B) after you move a.b.c?
Or can you? :P
@Lalaland Mass murderers don't make money though
@Lalaland p. much
well, more like mass hired assassin
17:42
@Griwes can't
That's... not my favorite design decision ever.
Maybe a hitman institute
@Griwes No. Box doesn't have "moved-from" states like unique_ptr. If you move it, you invalidate everything that could use it.
(Which is something I say quite often whenever I'm confronted with something Rusty, it seems...)
@Griwes You cannot use x after you move x._
17:43
@Griwes Use a nullable type if you want the C++ behaviour.
@R.MartinhoFernandes That's a workaround, yes, and I can see it, but that doesn't stop that not being my favorite design decision ever.
@Griwes It's not a "workaround". It's the design you want.
It doesn't get in the way tbh
B was designed so that it doesn't work without a c. So it doesn't work without a c.
using language != bikeshedding about it
17:44
@R.MartinhoFernandes ...sorry, but I'm more qualified at saying what I want than you.
I don't want to argue, just expressing an opinion vOv
@Griwes Sorry, but that's not a meaningful argument. Say what you want in a way that isn't just "not this".
@R.MartinhoFernandes I understand that a.b cannot be valid anymore, but a.b.d is a separate object from a.b.c, so in my eyes, it should still be a valid object.
Either way, as I said above, not wanting to argue about (or discuss) this, at least not right now.
@Griwes what if d has references to a.b?
user1804599
@fredoverflow look at my code reuse!
user1804599
void operator()(let_expression const& expression) const {
    compile_expression(*bytecode, call_expression(
        lambda_expression(expression.variable, expression.body),
        expression.value
    ));
}
17:47
Then d is terrible.
Oh well, I guess I should go back to ignoring your opinions.
Ah yes, just because I wanted to just state an opinion, and not present a full detailed design on my own, my opinions are now worthless.
s/ignoring/colon
Flawless logic. /s
personally, I think that that design is pretty much just unique_ptr but with compile-time checking instead of nullptr.
so as long as you can fall back to runtime when the compiler can't prove safety but you know it is safe, then I don't see how it's bad.
17:52
@Griwes Ah no, I just find your opinions worthless on their own quite often, so I'm just making myself more efficient.
Hey ho guys. Someone interested to work ?
@Puppy But it's not C++!
Ah yes, I'm starting to remember why I decided to be gone from the Lounge for a while now.
But I think this time plonking will do.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Well, it... pretty much is.
Almost done with TicTacToe reworked :D
17:55
just take the C++ thing, add optional compile-time checking, and job's done.
'like C++ but with different compile-time and runtime things' means 'not C++'
@Zoidberg Can you share some photo with us? we are all a family here , especially i want to see you for a while. lel
@Ramy But who are you
user1804599
?????????? WTF
Kidding dear
17:57
well it's true that it's not literally C++
user1804599
user1804599
There you go.
but on a conceptual level, it pretty much is C++.
@Puppy FWIW, that was a sarcastic representation of what I often find @Griwes opinions to be.
@Zoidberg LOL.
17:58
fair enough.
@Zoidberg Pretty face.
I just hear that said often enough about my own opinions :(
@Zoidberg You had the picture ready for such moments?
Monkey selfies are a series of images taken by Celebes crested macaques using equipment belonging to the British nature photographer David Slater. The posting of the images on Wikimedia Commons was at the centre of a dispute in mid-2014 over whether copyright could be held on artworks made by non-human animals. Slater's claim of copyright on the images was disputed by several scholars and organizations, based on an understanding that copyright was held by the creator, and that a non-human creator (not being a legal person) could not hold copyright. In December 2014, the United States Copyright...
It's from this.
or just for me?
18:03
> we are all a family here
btw , nobody want to work ? :)
a job
@Zoidberg Can you show me your boobies? We are all a family here :)
Wait, that came out wrong
@Zoidberg I want too.
Let's say that we are family but, not blood related, so it's fine
user1804599
WTF
user1804599
18:05
NO
Unless you are not legal
In which case it doesn't matter whether you are blood related or not
@R.MartinhoFernandes I feel pretty sorry for that guy to be denied copyright. I think it's not unfair for him to say that if he deliberately arranged for the monkey to take the photo, that he could be at least partially credited as the creator.
Well, unless I'm also not legal
user1804599
How to get boob pics: don't be a dick.
tru story
18:06
You old nick was Elise right ?
already forgot me
Family members don't forget the name of other family members
Come on bro
@Columbo Great news :D
Can you fix Git submodule to particular commit or is Git retarded in this way?
Today at work after ten minutes working on a problem: wait I already have to use a thread and queue?
@Puppy Initially his website described it as accidental (something like "the monkeys got the camera and pressed the buttons") but he since changed it to a more detailed description that makes it look like it was done on purpose for the monkeys to take selfies.
@набиячлэвэлиь Which one? :)
Still didn't get it, though.
@набиячлэвэлиь Well? How?
18:19
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah, I think it's a pretty nuanced case that would really depend on exactly which actions he took and which ones the monkey took ;p
@Puppy Also, just to be clear, the two descriptions are not contradictory. The original lacked detail about the circumstances through which the monkeys got a hold of the camera, which made it look accidental.
yeah
It's quite possible he really did it on purpose and just failed to describe it accurately.
well I gotta say that since the monkey cannot be assigned copyright, as long as he has a non-zero intentional part in its creation, he deserves to get the copyright
Ven
Ven
18:21
@orlp that last part was pretty good :D
@Puppy Yeah, I think the same.
I'm not sure what I think is fair if it was really accidental, though.
Can't make up my mind about it.
nah
On one hand, I think it's clear he's not the author, but on the other hand, it's only in the public domain because he chose to release them. The pictures were "his", in a way.
hmm
it's clear the monkey has the bigger share of authorship
but he can't get copyright
the question is how much is left over for him
I've thought a lot about this. What if I take your camera, make some pictures with it, and return the camera without getting copies for myself? I deserve the copyright, but I have no way to assert it.
Or if you ask a stranger to take a picture of you in front of some monument, like tourists do?
18:28
well
I'd argue that that's work-for-hire in a sense
you agree to perform the work of taking the photo for the tourist
The picture is "yours" but you're not the author.
seems legit to me that the tourist gets the copyright in that case.
@Puppy But there's never even a verbal agreement on the assignment of copyright.
no, but I'd guess that's because people don't really care about the copyright rather than because the principle does not exist.
In real work-for-hire such things are made explicit in contracts.
@Puppy Right. But what if the stranger is a dick and decides to assert his copyright over the picture?
18:30
well, that's just like any other case of people asserting rights they don't have
you go to a court, the guy loses, he pays up the costs etc etc
But would he lose? That's the question.
well, I certainly think that he should lose
No, it isn't the same question. Just similar.
whether or not he would lose is a matter for a legal expert ;p
@Puppy Right, don't mind that.
Though in this case, you also have some artistic input, since you choose where you are and your pose, etc, so I guess you could argue for joint authorship.
18:34
yeah
@wilx uh, aren't submodules always fixed at a particular commit?
I can make it more convoluted to remove that, though.
I think that the tourist and the volunteer have joint authorship, but when you agree to take the photo for them, you're taking the photo for them.
@melak47 Dunno.
so I think that it's pretty much a given that it's completely for the benefit for the tourists
18:35
The stranger takes a picture while you're walking to your pose, and there's something of artistic value in the background.
Or even just a news event, and news agencies will pay for a license.
personally I'd still go with the tourists
@wilx last time I used them they certainly behaved like that. for example: github.com/boostorg/boost/tree/master/libs
but
I think it's unusual enough a case that the common understanding of taking a photo of somebody probably doesn't cover it
so you could probably argue either way
Actually, a stranger once took an accidental selfie with my phone when I asked her to take a picture of me and my friend.
Kinda hard to argue I hold the rights for it, though.
well strictly, you didn't ask them to take the picture, so conceptually it wouldn't fall under work for hire
18:50
@LucDanton I've never done that before but I don't think you can.
Xeo
Xeo
> Delivery tomorrow
Shipping today
Xeo
Xeo
It's 9pm, somehow I don't believe that anymore.
19:05
@Morwenn cool, that was the best one I've heard from them
It sounds a bit like Daft Punk or Justice, but with a distinct touch.
for listening on a headphone, this is easy on my ear than Daft Punk
BIKESHED
lua["nonexisting-key"]["nope"]["lol"] = 1;
None of those keys exist. Do we create tables all along the way?
no.
BIKE = SHEDDED
Thanks.
19:09
well it really depends on whether you want to mirror C++ value semantics or Lua semantics.
or you can create a class that behaves like a 3 dimensional array
That errors in lua too
a.b.c = 1
overload operator []
Will crash / call at_panic if a/b are not something indexable.
yeah, but it would not error in C++
at least in the comparable map/unordered_map
it default-constructs instead
19:10
Hrm.
Default constructing provides a performance hit...
I wonder if there's a way to specify that things be created along the way...
obviously the PERFORMANCE is what matters here
lua["a"]["b"]["c"] = create( 1 );
nothing to do with getting the semantics correct
Well, the correct semantics is exploding, because that's what the underlying API does and how lua behaves.
And you're accessing lua values. vOv
well, is it?
from a C++ programmer's perspective, they may quite reasonably expect you to model after map/unordered_map
19:19
Rrrghhh.
Stop muddying the waters. ;~;
there's no point efficiently implementing the wrong thing.
@Columbo Just one quick question concerning the alignof proposal: I guess it doesn't allow to get the alignment from a variable passed to a function since it takes the declared alignment and you can't declare an alignment for a function parameter? Just checking.
19:42
@Morwenn Pass-by-reference?

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