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19:00
so you keep feature branches around after squash merging them
Ven
Ven
yes
well, sometimes we need to base new things off the feature branch or merge into new release branches
user1804599
I need an immutable bounded iterable queue.
user1804599
Help
I have a thing I call snowball commits, that just grows and grows, nasty when it happens.
Often reverting is best when it happens.
perhaps branch into a temp to diff vs
user1804599
19:08
Where enqueue on full first dequeues.
user1804599
I think I can use a tree structure.
Of course, I should add that every once in a while you run into something truly strange--like a project I just got added to. This is something that a team has been working on for a couple of years or so--but (I kid you not) there wasn't a single branch in the entire repo. Every commit was directly to Master. I spent 10 minutes trying to figure out if my connection was broken or something, so I couldn't see the rest of the repo...
sounds nice imo, rebase and merge with master, nice linear history
@JerryCoffin But Jerry, you want to avoid branches, they can cause mispredicts and slow down your cod
@Borgleader Pffff. Borgpls
19:15
@ThePhD Hello sweetling <3
@Borgleader My cod swims fast!
@Borgleader W-Wow, gonna give me diabetes talking like that!
@JohanLarsson I talked with the people who'd been working on it. Nope--nobody had ever created a branch.
user1804599
Whatever, I'll just use an array. The size is fucking 15 words.
19:17
In TFS you need to be admin to create a branch iirc
@JerryCoffin Because they didn't see the point, or didn't know how/what it was for?
$ grep '::get()' -r . | wc -l
331
user1804599
Lol
this many times a singleton (any singleton) is used in this project
@Borgleader I'm not entirely sure, but I think it was basically not seeing the point leading them to not bother learning what it was for.
19:20
how many are they on the project and are they using svn?
can branching in svn be learned? or merging?
@JohanLarsson It's now a half dozen or so, but was only a couple of people until fairly recently.
@JohanLarsson I certainly used it even in SVN (even if it was slow and clumsy). Merging ... well, let's just say that's one of the few good reasons to use Git instead.
user1804599
Lol, queen of NL visits Germany wearing clothing with visible swastika
user1804599
user1804599
People are angry.
Where is the swastika?
19:26
she's trolling
user1804599
It's a Twitter trend
So I've made an AST-ish.
Like, I have chains
Of like
nodes?
user1804599
Idiot
BinaryExpression<
     BinaryExpression<
          var, var, add
     >,
     constant<int>,
     divide
>
It's not actually templated
that's just how it's... uh
19:29
@JerryCoffin Hmm, on the one hand, if they didnt know then I can really blame them, on the other hand, I'm surprised a whole team was unaware of those.
laid out
Now I need to, like
deep-analyze? it
Like. What's the type of var, is it an input or an output, etc. etc...
I also have a bit of a problem
user1804599
Yes traverse the AST, keep a symbol table while doing so, and check everything that needs to be checked.
return doesn't really communicate to me what the output needs to be in Compute Shader code.
user1804599
That's later step. That's code generation.
Alright, alright, one step at a time...
user1804599
19:32
You don't worry about code generation while implementing semantic analysis
Ven
Ven
hah
@ThePhD you return expr; you get the type from expr
or smt
@Borgleader I do that, yes, but.
@Borgleader decltype(expr)
How do you know how many buffers they're outputting to?
And things like that.
19:47
Oh that
What if the output type is different from the inferred input types?
So, like. r32 + r32, but the output is a clamped r8
Ell
Ell
then compile error mebbe :V
what language are you parsing? HLSL?
@ThePhD That's very open ended, I don't know how you're doing things, what youre exposing to the user etc
@Ell Not parsing: C++ DSL
Ell
Ell
oh right
19:49
Still hammering out the interface but this is the idea.
why is it named csgo
"Compute Shaders: Go!"
user406009
@milleniumbug Counter Strike Global Offensive.
user406009
@ThePhD reveals his true love for CS.
19:51
... Wait a second
WAIT A SECOND
BUAHAHAHAHA
...you just realised?
RIP @ThePhD, he has gone insane.
SO WAIT. DISCORD THINKS THAT MY "csgo" EXECUTABLE IS COUNTER STRIKE: GLOBAL OFFENSIVE
BUUAAAAHAHAHAHAA NOW IT MAKES SENSE
Playing Counter Strike: Global Offensive
Ven
Ven
ha :D
user406009
@ThePhD Use CS GO graphics in your final presentation.
user406009
19:53
It would be a hilarious in joke.
user406009
Like when you have a sample program which does a smoothing image filter or something.
user406009
Use CS GO images.
I had an exam in highschool and one of the questions on CSS was like:
What does the CSS acronym stand for?
a) some thing, b) soemthing else, c) counter-strike: source, d) cascading style sheet
ok, the design of the EntryBox class in this IDE is retarded
user406009
@Borgleader I hope some points were given for c.
19:54
@ThePhD did you seriously figure that out only now
because if that is so
@Borgleader There has been an awakening. Have you felt it?
then I'm deeply disappointed
@Lalaland doubt it, i think the question probably mentioned "in the context of webdev" or something
@Griwes give the man a break
user406009
19:57
CS: Source was a great game though.
user406009
Worked really well as a shooter.
user406009
Smooth graphics, no lag, good gameplay.
@набиячлэвэлиь But please don't give the man a broken arm.
a break; would be nice too
break n; when.
20:09
never
Ven
Ven
if you wanna answer
lol the guy thumbs-down'd me.
@Ven with pleasure
Ven
Ven
:P
@Borgleader What, there are no Counter-Strike Source websites?
20:32
Beer.
Ven
Ven
@milleniumbug love it :)
20:48
I don't understand
@ThePhD It's called semantic analysis if you want to look up stuff
Honestly I don't
@doug65536 Kinky.
I'm working with a website that has stateful pages. What I mean by that is that it uses sessions and cookies to keep track of where you are and what you can access. That means that if you have two tabs on the same website it might create interference and yield strange errors.
Since this thing actually required effort to set it up like that, I wonder why does it exist in the first place.
Like, what is the reason for something like that. What is the rationale.
Perhaps the programmers just wanted more money or something
But even then, it must be a pain to make it work, why would you want pain
20:51
@Shoe There is none. People are retarded and that includes architects etc.
@Shoe Ask the BDSM people. :)
dumb management or poor product owner <-> programmer communication
And apparently this is a framework thing. A Java framework by the name of something I don't remember at the moment
@Shoe Spring? :)
Nah, it's more niche and old
Mar 15 at 21:54, by Shoe
I think it's Java Struts2
This one
Like I can understand it for forms, because there are security issues there
Even though I can think of other ways of exploiting that
But still, I can see the reason behind that
But like for simple GET requests, why would you have this in place
By the way, that also means that if I'm on a page and I have a link to some other page on the website that is not accessible from where I am and I go to that URL I get a 404.
Wether if I click on X and then input the same link, I get to access the page.
@Shoe lul
20:55
\end{rant}
@Shoe It ends up like that because people want "remember me" capability, and the implementation just goes ahead and uses expiring cookies, which are shared across tabs. You could decouple remember me and sessions to solve that. Cookies that have no expiry date are confined to the window that created it
Oct 13 '12 at 22:56, by daknøk
lul means penis.
The Binding of Isaac OST is just too good.
@ThePhD STL rated your index sequence compiler bug as "obscure" :(
@melak47 wut
Does that mean it's not going to get fucking fixed?
Almost all the way to the bottom.
I’ve reduced this and the compiler team will investigate fixing C1XX.
Shit.
Compiler team takes aeons to do shit.
STL's way faster.
Damnit being a compiler bug.
* <future>: promise<T> handled this correctly, but destroying promise<T&>/promise<void> before setting a value wouldn’t store a broken_promise exception (VSO#152487/Connect#1877917). I fixed this broken broken_promise promise by copy-pasting code, carefully.
lol
I fixed this broken broken_promise promise
21:09
The entire final sentence is a masterpiece.
@SeanWolfe89 @MailOnline animals also have straight sex, heterosexuals are ANIMALS
Oh my. Did anyone miss? Gay pride in the wild /cc @TonyTheLion
@ThePhD Depends. When I come across a syntax error or something, they're usually pretty quick to reply "thanks, fixed, will ship someday"
but weird shit like this...
good luck ._.
@Morwenn the soundtrack? link?
@Shaqueenra @SeanWolfe89 @MailOnline All humans are "ANIMALS" by their very definition. Both arguments = void.
21:14
@набиячлэвэлиь there was a context.
In my library I occasionally include headers only if two other headers have already been included. Unfortunately, I probably won't be able to do the same kind of trick with modules.
@sehe hence "both"
@Morwenn It's not like preprocessor is gonna be ever removed you know
I guess I need to make a semantic_analyze function.
Rust-like macros or bust
21:15
@milleniumbug Yeah, but I don't think you can implicitly import a module only if two other modules have been imported.
That you guys know of, is there a way to isolate a bunch of tabs in Chrome?
Like cookie wise
private mode
@Shoe make a new user
@milleniumbug That actually creates only two different states (independently from the number of tabs or windows opened).
argh these singleton apps ruining everything
21:17
@melak47 Creating N users is unfeasible
Actually I'm not even sure it's possible
whaddya mean
@набиячлэвэлиь I think it was a very good inversion that showed the fallacy in the first claim. And the "mooting" was already done immediately
@melak47 From the Chrome extension API, I'm not sure it's possible to create new users that way
21:18
I need to run N tabs with N around 5/10
Maybe more though
autohotkey :v
Wonder how I walk the AST since I'm using inheritance...
@Shoe that's ~0.5
Can't not moot all humans!=animals though
Ell
Ell
@ThePhD visitor pattern ;)
21:18
Guess I just have a .walk() function that's overridable, takes a symbol_table and stuff.
@ThePhD dynamic.. cast..
@sehe Sorry. 5 || 10
inb4 bitwise OR
@ThePhD haha, you've activated my trap card!
@LucDanton o.O
21:19
@melak47 wut
@Shoe don't be bitwise, or
+58 −2,534
god save the queen
@ThePhD I've seen this in LLVM a bit
@Ell I would if I'm using variant. I'm not, so I guess I either dynamic_cast "visitor" the things or just use a virtual overridable function.
if (auto ptr = llvm::dyn_cast<llvm::ConstantInt>(whatever))
    //yay
21:20
@ThePhD I'm a trap card.
@melak47 <_> Well, that seals the deal for me.
@sehe thanks to vidya gaems, I know of an old meaning of moot
I'm changing to use variant, no matter what I have to do to make it work in our project.
I would have been very surprised if 'gay moot' would not have been used before. too good to pass up
@ThePhD I built a variant on top though. I like how overload(lambdas...) scales a little better :/
21:21
that sounds plausible right? cc @DmitriBudnikov #NornPride
@LucDanton wow. TIL
@melak47 So you'd cast to known types, call whichever best-matched?
@ThePhD not following
@LucDanton You're exempted from further need for clarification
@melak47 Like, dynamic_cast to one of the types, check if it worked, and then called the function with the derived type?
21:22
Some of these things have to be jokes
Ell
Ell
@ThePhD you can use the visitor pattern without using variant
What if you had multiple types which derived from a single base?
E.g., a later cast was better than a former cast?
@sehe We live in the future! Get used to it!
@ThePhD just write the traversal polymorphically. Why cast
@sehe internet of shit
21:24
shit of shit
@sehe Because my understanding of the visitor pattern they're talking about isn't overriding a virtual function, but doing casts outside the class and stuff?
@sehe :(
@ThePhD oh well
@slaphappy you’re thinking of smartlet
@Morwenn the sounds & ambiances are nice. It's kinda boring in the long run IYAM
21:26
@sehe I like to listen to it while doing something else. I think it has a nice while a little bit gloomy atmosphere.
And My Innermost Apocalypse is cool :o
Ell
Ell
@ThePhD lemme explain
@sehe In BoI you don't listen to the same track for more than a minute or 4 so that's no problem
Bol?
Binding of Isaac
Oh. It's a game then
while (true) {
    when (current) {
        OPEN_BRACKET -> temp = temp.map { Declarator.Array(it, bracketed { if (current == CLOSE_BRACKET) 0L else expect(INT_CONSTANT) }) }
        OPEN_PAREN -> temp = temp.map { Declarator.Function(it, parenthesized { commaSeparatedList0 { FunctionParameter(declarationSpecifier(), namedDeclarator()) } }) }
        else -> return temp
    }
}
beautiful :D
My favourite part is ) } }) }
*runs away screaming* https://isocpp.org/wiki/faq/cpp14-language#decltype-auto #cplusplus cc: @velartrill https://t.co/lhzzKwmBxi
heh. <3 C++
@SteveEdson @SeanKeach @Independent trolls can get a long ways, being features in "news articles" these days
Gosh. /cc @JerryCoffin
yeah fuck the "parens change the meaning" feature
@melak47 Hey. See my comment too
21:34
@milleniumbug maybe we can get paren overlording. (()) for rvalue ref? :)
@melak47 std::move(local)
what was I thinking, better use angle brackets
<<local>>
of course
the arrows indication motion
21:35
yes, very evocative. I can immediately recognise the motion of panic
Ell
Ell
^Sorry it took me a while. I've forgotten how move semantics work also probably :V
Ell
Ell
well, I've forgotten if you can "move out of" an rvalue reference or if that's a thing
@Ell multiple unique_ptr(new stuff) in one statement! uh oh :D
Ell
Ell
heh
21:41
yup, you're on -std=c++14 anyway
standard's not an excuse
Ell
Ell
ah wait
does -std=c++14 have make unique?
oops :P
I'm really falling behind
@sehe fortuitously Cracked has just published a small list of convenient everyday things (warning: Cracked link. duh), which contains a lot of smart/phone-connected devices. Not esp. interesting on its own, but it's written from a non-tech savvy perspective. it's the juxtaposition of 'hey this looks interesting' and 'on my phone? but the implications…' that I find unnerving
It must have been years since I thought of / saw cracked.com
I can understand why
stackedcracked.com
Ell
Ell
21:45
@ThePhD okay here is the new one coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/25b26104b9dd44d2
only slightly changed
@Ell looks fine
@Ell oh dear, I take it back. you want some virtual destructors in there
Ell
Ell
ooops. of course
I'm too used to writing java :V
The GetHuman app seems too good to be true.
And, consequently, genuinely valuable
Ell
Ell
is it enough to do virtual ~node() = default;? I'd presume so
I'll google actually
@sehe I wonder how that robot keeps the actual human on the line long enough to transfer the call back to you. a robotic "please hold"? :D
21:50
@Ell yup, if it doesn't work that's an old GCC (it's fine on Coliru)
@melak47 lol
@sehe Trolling does seem to provide a quick way to that 15 minutes of fame.
user3790646
Weird thing, the last std::cout in this code is printing an additional double quote, the line being analysed is iconName = "inventory.png"
SSCCE or GTFO
@Andrey substr doesn't take two position, it takes a position and a count. beware
user3790646
Oh
user3790646
21:59
Weird, my first std::cout trolled me
@melak47 I've recently written a slice function because, well, the offset+length is less useful than begin+end
a.substr(5, a.size()-5-2) // argh fuck me
user3790646
@melak47 Oh wow, it's working perfectly now xD thanks
user3790646
You deserve an upvote
@milleniumbug yeah annoying crap :D
I don't really get why there's not at least an iterator version...
most of the string member functions are not useful
22:04
guess it prevents a.substr(b.begin(), c.end()), but it's not like the stdlib holds your hand with that anywhere else :p
@melak47 it's an example of SL–STL divergence
+ my slice function supports negative numbers like Python slices do
@Andrey I believe you're giving it too much credit. The trolling is all yours
user3790646
@sehe Yes indeed, I was trolled by myself
@Andrey You deserve someone who reads docs better
22:06
@melak47 No need--if you have a pair of iterators, you can just pass them to the string constructor that takes iterators.
oh right :D
@JerryCoffin sure.
@milleniumbug that's neat
similarly, std::find and std::search could replace the find, find_first_of, find_first_not_of, first_last_of, find_last_not_of
...now I want ranges-v3 in standard
"We have a technical term for ransomware trojans that go after backups. This is known as a dick move." - @mikko
Wat. Crooks being bad?
@milleniumbug Not before C++19/C++20.
22:11
and filter could replace every fucking _if suffixed algorithm
@ScarletAmaranth no fun functional allowed
@LucDanton do they throw dice to determine what algorithm next will get that ~~cancer~~ suffix?
I guess I'll wait for terrishell.
I hear it's powerful
@LucDanton std::not_fn comes to save us all
@ScarletAmaranth Time to write a proposal.
22:12
from find_not_if and friends
@milleniumbug Hey, I actually need that one :o
@ScarletAmaranth yup
@Morwenn does not compute; stuff like copy_if doesn't compose anyway, nobody is gonna write two intermediate containers for a single pipeline
let's just wait for ranges
inb4 don't hold your breath
I like to std::move it, std::move it
22:14
don't hold it. It's bad for your health. And bad for your breath
@ArchbishopOfBanterbury Old, but kudos for making it for your first time
@milleniumbug especially not on MSVC :p
I know, I'm sorry I just had to
Next to come is « I like to std::iter_move, std::iter_move ».
Ell
Ell
@Morwenn eric already wrote one
22:35
@Ell More importantly, he already implemented it, revised it, and went to meetings to advocate for it.
Night all
Ell
Ell
@sehe night
<sigh> https://twitter.com/socialcoroner/status/720739887851417600
@sehe since you never actually go to bed ^ have you seen this? :P
22:50
what even is that
I see a lot of bitching and whining, little actual description
23:07
^ also this time I'm legit going to bed. Wife will need the support. Laters
23:19
Morning guys.
23:37
morning
@LucDanton ... how did you find that out?
How i can create a new chat room with one user ?
@Starrrks_2 Go to chat.stackoverflow.com, and click the new room button?
Thx
@JerryCoffin You want to work?
23:47
@Starrrks_2 I'm already too busy.
I need easy things. :) You can solve me fast, with your experience.
Some buffers overflow problems.
@Starrrks_2 When I did consulting, I charged $125/hour. If I were going to go back into consulting, I'd almost certainly charge at least that--and for something like fixing buffer overflow problems, almost certainly more (quite possibly a lot more). Oh, and I didn't (and won't) use this venue for trying to find consulting work, either.
Is this venue ? A user ?
here?
Jerry accepts cash, bank cheque, money order and direct deposit. Credit card payment or paypal will attract another 1.5%
23:57
I can pay for full project.
This chat room. It's a chat room, not a place to recruit, find work, etc.
I mean, check my files. Say me a full price.
and this is also a place where we troll the newbies ...
how do we know the work is safe, what happened to Starrrks_1
@Starrrks_2 Seriously, identity the problem and post it on stackoverflow.com

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