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10:00
I would say that C++ programmers are rather fastidious
@TonyTheLion damn you, now I need to google what 'fastidious' means
oh... right
nope, C++ programmers are pedantic
and fastidious
sbi
sbi
@thecoshman See, even their vocabulary is.
10:01
lol
@thecoshman Thank you for fastidiously correcting that.
saying that... the Google definition is not what I expected "Of or like a pedant"
@KonradRudolph erff. What platform was that again? For my own 'mental hunt' purposes
@LucDanton I must insist that I was acting pedantically
@sehe GCC 4.6.2 without patches on OS X 10.7.3
I used the -static-libgcc in the first place because there were some other issues with dynamically linking the libgcc which I can’t reproduce now, of course …
@sehe Incidentally I’ve also cornered the (unrelated) issue with the grammar and I’ll probably edit my question to replace the PEG grammar with a working Spirit.Qi code …
10:12
People are going crazy with Kickstarter-funded games.
@CatPlusPlus it's a fairly good funding system though
finally spelt it correctly ¬_¬
you know before you start if people actually want your game. You just need to make sure you can actually make it for what you are funded for
Some Belgian kid got funding in San Fransisco for his new website idea, by some big IT investors and IT companies.
He got 1.25M USD together for his new business
The Williams tube better called the Williams-Kilburn tube (after inventors Freddie Williams and Tom Kilburn),http://www.computer50.org/mark1/notes.html#acousticdelay Why Williams-Kilburn Tube is a Better Name for the Williams Tube developed in 1946 and 1947, was a cathode ray tube used to electronically store binary data. It was the first random-access digital storage device, and was used successfully in several early computers. Williams and Kilburn applied for British patents on Dec. 11, 1946 and Oct. 2, 1947, followed by US patent applications on Dec. 10, 1947 () and May 16, 1949 ...
can you imagine having this to store your data on ?
lol
10:37
Hey Friends, can anyone tell me in which chat room should I ask this question.
"Is there any guide to convert MASM code to Pure Win32 API?"
Stack Overflow. Also, it doesn't make sense.
I've asked it on Stack Overflow, but no answer. I asked it one day ago.
you can't. "pure Win32 API" is just a set of functions provided by Windows, which you can call. You can't write a program in "pure Win32 API", any more than you can make a pie out of "pure oven"
@jalf Who said that we can't write programs in Pure Win32 API anymore? Whoever it is. He doesn't have good knowledge in Programming.
@RavikaJain then wait longer
@RavikaJain the win32 API is just a bunch of functions. If you think you can do anything with nothing more then win32 API you are either a freaking genius or a freaking idiot
10:43
Also, creating UIs with raw WinAPI is a waste of time.
I used to do that because I didn't like MFC.
And because Qt was GPL at the time.
@RavikaJain Show me a program written in "pure Win32 API" then
no matter how simple
Pedantry again?
@StackedCrooked what do you mean?
Not to mention anything using raw WinAPI is not portable.
10:53
@RavikaJain Programs are written in a programming language. The Win32 API is not a programming language. Therefore, you can not write programs in the Win32 API
You can write programs in C++, using the Win32 API
@CatPlusPlus WxWidgets uses WinAPI :p
"Raw", as in non-abstracted.
oooh, just got an Enlightened badge :D
11:09
@thecoshman It’s all lies
liar.
Also, why?
@KonradRudolph got ten upboats for it, so I don't care :D
11:24
@TonyTheLion That wikipedia explanation is quite academic (and horrible to understand), I hope my answer clarified some things.
@KillianDS thanks for the answer :) Upvoted :) Makes more sense
Stupid differential equations.
am I missing something, or is the boost Matrix class more or less just containers. I don't see any functions for doing much more then storing Matrices.
@thecoshman You're talking about ublas? It's pretty limited yeah, it can do more than just store matrices, but not a lot more.
@KillianDS I think so...
11:37
Eigen is better. Or GLM for simpler things.
does boost have an actual matrix library? you know, one that actually provides functions for mad things like, I don't know, dot product?
@CatPlusPlus awe
Dammit, I forgot everything about matrices.
@CatPlusPlus probably for the best :D
Not really. Exam in 7 hours.
good luck :)
11:41
well now, I would have to simply assume that your Exam involves Matrices. Though I would hazard a fairly strong guess that most exams have nothing to do with matrices. I think I will go with my assumption here though... yeah, not good
sbi
sbi
@CatPlusPlus That's 8:30pm! You have exams at night?
Oh, Sarrus' rule. I've been missing that.
not sure if this looks tasty... macromeme.com/dog/brownie-mug.html
@thecoshman Differential equations, dynamic systems and all that. Matrices come up in linear least squares thingy.
@CatPlusPlus I can do numbers me!
11:43
@sbi It starts at 6:55PM, actually.
I have a vague idea what you just said, for the most part, I know enough maths to work out roughly what I want to know and take it from there
6 hours, whatever.
It'll end at 8:30.
sbi
sbi
@CatPlusPlus That sounds nasty. Makes for a whole day to worry.
Makes for a whole day to learn.
that is a late exam
thanks for the link to Eigen @CatPlusPlus means I can forget all about how to do matrix maths :D
11:59
I wouldn't use sarrus
sbi
sbi
12:55
@CatPlusPlus Didn't I say that? :)
sbi
sbi
13:52
The next time you think about casting something 'just in case', remind yourself that most people don't wear condoms all day for the same.
In C++, the problem with explicit casting is that it effectively tells the compiler to shut up, because you (think you) know what you are doing. If you stick to implicit casting whenever possible, changing types of the involved objects has a higher chance of resulting in a diagnostic.
you mean... you don't wear a condom all day?
sbi
sbi
Hi, @Shog9!
We had another case of fun-flagging yesterday. I know someone has said that before, but I forgot whether you gods can see who flagged a message. So can you?
'morning
sbi
sbi
@Shog9 'fternoon
@sbi Sorta... But only if the flag is still active. Once it's been dismissed, there's no (easily-accessible) history.
sbi
sbi
13:56
@thecoshman Wouldn't wearing a condom all day imply wearing an erection all day?
@sbi not if you taped it down
sbi
sbi
@Shog9 Thanks. Now that you say this, I seem to remember having heard exactly that before. (Very likely by you. Sorry.) Also, I deliberately didn't vote on the flag (I had a hunch), but pinged for you instead, but it was still dismissed within a few dozen seconds.
@CollinHockey "it" referring to what?
@sbi not too sure... perhaps I should try it some day
Yeah, flags have a short lifespan
too many predators
@sbi I meant the condom
The flag button is alltogether too close to the star button
sbi
sbi
14:02
@Shog9 I still feel that fun-flagging is a real nuisance here in the chat. On SO, I can easily ignore the menu giving me access to the list of flags to be validated, but the number popping here in the chat is too intrusive for me to ignore it. — Which would Ok, actually, if fun-flagging trolls would face immediate punishment. As it is, until a mod/god arrives and has a look, they have all the fun at the cost of the whole of rest of the chat.
@CollinHockey The flag button is altogether too existing FTFY
:3002676 smooth
sbi
sbi
3 messages moved to bin
What, Ruby devs don't use condoms ?
Nah - just leave it to the garbage collector
sbi
sbi
@CollinHockey But when you click on flagging a message box pops up, and you need to confirm your action, whereas stars are applied immediately. So accidental flagging is very unlikely to ever happen.
14:10
Expression: !"Boost.Variant internal error: 'which' out of range."
Breaking stuff is fun!
user406009
Sounds like a case of boost not using enough variadic templates.
Boost uses variadic templates?
@sbi Guess I've never tried to flag, I just take lots of extra time finding the star
14:28
dang... my compooter box has stopped responding to SO ¬_¬
now how am I suppose to waste time :(
I just need to get more ram, whenever mine starts swapping to the SSD, EVERYTHING grinds to a halt
Xeo
Xeo
@CollinHockey You have your swapspace on your SSD?
it's a laptop, only disk in the machine
Xeo
Xeo
Oh
more asbestos! more asbestos!
shouldn't having an SSD as swap space be faster then HDD, all things being the same
14:35
it seems like they have a harder time switching between read and write mode, even though large sets of reads and writes are at least on par with spinning drives - at least ours do
my work machine has some encryption stuff running on it that might be affecting things
@CollinHockey ffs I hate that. as if the shit they make us use is not shit enough already ¬_¬
Xeo
Xeo
IMO, SSDs don't have a very good place inside laptops. Much more wear on the disk than a typical desktop computer. And SSDs don't take wear as good as spinning disks
I wish I had the choice when they bought this machine. All things considered, it's pretty nice, and I get really good freedom on what I put on it
I would have chosen a 500GB or whatever spinning disk over the SSD though
Xeo
Xeo
14:53
Reading your morning comics I see?
@CollinHockey read ALL the comics
@Xeo ? Where did you get the 'much more wear' part? Doesn't make sense to me. Besides, the same optimizations that you should apply to your desktop help out for your laptop
@sehe Maybe just that swapping to the SSD puts more wear on it, whereas in a desktop you could put swap on an HDD
and still load your OS and applictions from the SSD
@CollinHockey Hah. Swapping is death anyway. Also, what use is running an SSD if your gonna swap? Let alone swap to HDD?!
afk
Xeo
Xeo
15:03
@sehe Well, at least IME laptops tend to be rebooted much more often than desktop PCs, which poses an additional wear. Also, the swap thingy, but that can be alleviated by adding a HDD
which is why I need more RAM.. 4GB just isn't enough to run VM-ware, builds, emacs, ides..
@Xeo hmm, really? I shut down my desktop computer when I'm not using it, but I never shut down my laptop
just put it in sleep/hibernate
Just need to convince a project to buy 8 for me, but that's hard
Xeo
Xeo
@jalf That's why I said IME. :)
and wear is only an issue for writes. I don't think shutdown/startup is particularly bad in terms of writes, is it?
Xeo
Xeo
15:06
For shutdown I'd sure think so.
What is the OS doing on shutdown besides saving open files?
15:19
serioulsly guys, times when SSDs died fast are over
@bamboon they still die
depends on how you define "fast"
but they certainly don't last half as long as harddrives
after 18 months or so, I'd start paying really close attention to my backups
@bamboon The alleged problem is that they die unpredictably … even with algorithms to distribute writes evenly
all drives die unpredictably, that's why backups are always necessary
HDDs can die after 6 months, too
@bamboon Of course, that wasn’t the argument. The only relevant metric is quantitative.
15:34
@KonradRudolph that is what everybody is saying, though I havn't seen any up to date statistics. one thing when buying SSDs is to buy good models with good controlers(like intel, samsung or crucial drives), the quality spread is definitely higher on SSDs than on HDDs. I won't force anybody to buy them, but everybody who is not using one, is just punishing himself in my oppionon.
@bamboon I agree with that one, for regular use I’d only buy SSDs nowadays. The performance boost is just so overwhelming
For backups I still use HDDs, for the simple reason that they are much cheaper
(and speed is not important)
sure, SSDs as backups would be a bit overkill.
@jalf For a laptop that you use on a train and comparable environments SSDs will outlive most HDDs
ironically, using SSDs for backup would probably be least prone to failure since you essentially never write any location more than once
@KillianDS yeah, plus they will save battery
sbi
sbi
15:50
@jalf Same here.
Cheaper? HDDs got expensive since that flooding in Asia.
They've integrated our company phone book with Outlook so people's badge photos show up with your email. I thought that would be nice, but it turns out having your co-workers stare at you while you type them email is really disconcerting.
7
Hi
does the c++ faq need/have a question about why in-line functions are in the header?
@KonradRudolph what? well, I suppose it depends how you are doing your back ups really
15:59
@thecoshman Do you mean that the other way around? I.e. if the function is defined in the header, it must be declared inline?
@thecoshman Nevermind, that was bullshit.
5
Q: Why are C++ inline functions in the header

thecoshmanThis is not a question about how to use inline functions or how they work, more why they are done the way they are. The deceleration of a class does not need to define a function as inline, it is only the actual implementation of the function. (EDIT by this I mean, when I do my class foo{} bit, ...

I think that might be a good candidate for faq, perhaps with a bit of editing maybe
I still say this is backwards. You use inline because you want to put the definition in the header. You don't put the definition in the header because you declared inline -- the solution to that last 'problem' is to not declare inline.
2
@LucDanton sort, I mean, why I have to write the implementation of in-line functions in the header, see my question that I suggest adding to faq
@LucDanton That should be the reason
16:18
yeah! 100% accept rate :D
I have a 100% accept rate on 0 questions.
not sure what to make of that
Just a random note.
Waah, I want more time for projects.
I want to try something with those damn WinSDK headers.
fun projects or work projects?
Fun projects.
I'm thinking WinSDK can be generated, so it's a matter of preparing some source files and the generator.
16:23
he he he
Some of the IDL-generated headers are >1MB in size.
16:49
@thecoshman I have questions on SO with no answers, I don't think I'll ever get 100% :/
@CatPlusPlus how?
@MooingDuck I don't think 0 answer questions count toward that
@CheersandhthAlf How what?
@CatPlusPlus how can you generate WinSDK headers?
It's all COM interfaces and dllimport stubs.
80% of it is already generated (all the COM stuff), but in a sucky way.
16:51
:-) ok, you can use the typelibs for that, yes
I want something with no macros, sane versioning, proper namespaces.
@CollinHockey hmm I can't figure out how to find my number then
@MooingDuck Yeah, I have 100% accept rate now, 4/4 with one question that has no answers
the last bit is difficult. i did once try to put [windows.h] in a namespace. practically you need to include the four or five C lib headers that it uses, first. and be prepared to fix up things with each new version...
That's why I want a replacement. Something that doesn't use existing WinSDK headers.
Something new and modern.
I strongly believe it's doable, but I don't have time now. :(
16:55
Microsoft tried that with [gdiplus.h], which is a C++ header-only module wrapping the low level C interface. But -- it uses the "min" and "max" lowercase macros from [windows.h] :-)
@CollinHockey stackoverflow.com/… I must have 100% then
@MooingDuck Yeah, it says so on the little name-badge on your questions
@CollinHockey oh, there it is
user1182183
Hey everyone, is somebody here familiar with mutexes in windows? I have some cross-compatible code but it seems that th windows variant doesn't work properly
user1182183
16:57
when I aquire the lock on windows
user1182183
the given time to wait in miliseconds is like 'ignored' and I need to use WHILE to aquire the lock
user1182183
I would like to avoid while
user1182183
for example I try
user1182183
Lock q (mutex_p);
if (q.acquire (1))
{
16:58
@CheersandhthAlf msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms533798(v=vs.85).aspx "The GDI+ C++ class-based interface is designed for use by C/C++ programmers." How does C use classes?
Use Boost.Thread or C++11 threading.
user1182183
and on windows I would have to change that to while q.acquire(1) != true
@MooingDuck Via COM.
And no, it's not safe for sanity.
@RafalGrasman where's the call to OpenMutex?
user1182183
hmm does windows need that? ; o
17:00
@MooingDuck it tells you something about MS tech writers' understanding?
MUTEX is a handle. Mutexes in Windows can be named.
If you don't need named mutexes, use critical sections.
are there any C++ solvers?
And then scrap your code and use Boost.Thread or C++11 threading.
Xeo
Xeo
@JohnSmith Any what?
user1182183
hmm k, I'll switch to boost ; o
17:02
linear equation solvers
user1182183
thanks, byeybe ;d
calculating number of valid solutions given constraints
@RafalGrasman A windows "Critical Section" is what you want
I just said that.
Anyway, exam time. Damn differential equations.
I told him to switch to Boost.
@CatPlusPlus Yeah, I don't know what I was thinking. He should go for C++11 or boost.
@JohnSmith still on that Euler dice problem?
17:04
@JohnSmith i did that thing on my calculator in high school, using Cramer's rule (is that the name?). i didn't understand why it was so sloooooooow. yes they must exist
Yes Mooing
Is the std::stack interface incomplete in the context of new move semantics?
I'm thinking, the old reasons for having separate pop() and top() was that the copy construction for top() could throw.
But now std::stack could be designed with a popped() method that would be safe for movable element type, and for types where copying is guaranteed noexcept
@CheersandhthAlf and what if you don't have a movable element type?
@MooingDuck Then it would just be a little unsafe?
I think it's complete
17:08
Not just move semantics but traits in general. std::is_nothrow_copy_constructible is available.
Are there any solvers that return number of integer solutions to a set of equations and constraints?
@LucDanton but do you want the interface of queue to change depending on the type held?
@JohnSmith yes, but that would be cheating
it's not cheating
it's linear programming
@JohnSmith so program it
I don't know how to, hence my question
if there were any such libraries out there
it may turn out to be too slow an approach anyway
17:10
@JohnSmith yes, I believe MatLab can do it, amonst others
since my list of A dice are 1mil<x<2mil
@MooingDuck I haven't thought too much about the whole idea. In any case consider that many functions and function templates have their exception-safety contracts in terms of the exception-safety of e.g. copy construction or move construction of another type. Interface is already affected to some extent.
@LucDanton so you'd change the definition of queue to require the held type to have a nothrow copy or be movable, simply so you can have that one function?
@MooingDuck No.
I think you made that up in your head.
@LucDanton Always probable I misunderstood you, or didn't think what I was saying through all the way. Very very common problems for me.
17:17
All I did is mention std::is_nothrow_copy_constructible. I'm not changing any interface.
sbi
sbi
This just to counter Alf's regular food porn.
@sbi hm, you just happened to browse into that, yes?
sbi
sbi
@CheersandhthAlf Yep. Came by on Twitter.
17:36
This is the c++ room?
Who wants to know? :-D
i need some help with some (probably stupid) things =/
then we can probably help - although more involved issues should become a question on SO
Rubber-ducking is a common practice here.
isn't about SO, but i think an experienced c++ programmer can help me
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/9791727/cant-get-data-from-vector-inside-another-vector
and yes, i'm a real newbie.
17:41
I was going to make a gay joke, butt fuck it
Hey, it's Robot's cousin!
joke @TonyTheLion?
@PetrisRodrigoFernandes In Square.txt do you see the words "x = "?
@PetrisRodrigoFernandes yes, Tony is famous for his jokes like that
Can someone check my answer here? Is it correct or am I talking out of my ass?
0
A: std::set::iterator conversion error

Prætorianstd::set is an ordered container, so if you're allowed to iterate over the set and muck with the internal state of the items in it, you may cause the sorting order to change, thus leaving the set in an inconsistent state. To prevent this, std::set::iterator::operator-> returns a const std::set...

17:57
Well, operator-> returns a pointer, not a reference, but that's not a fundamental error.
@LucDanton Oops, thanks, I'll fix that
@Prætorian your answer is correct, but does not address his issue: "cannot convert from 'std::_Tree_const_iterator<_Mytree>' to 'std::_Tree_const_iterator<_Mytree>'"
@sbi lol, is that a pedobear?
@MooingDuck Edited the answer
18:04
@MooingDuck I thought the problem might be that he hasn't specified the default argument std::less<Board> explicitly too, but it compiles without errors on VS2010 either way
@Prætorian did you see the error message? Your answer still doesn't mention the problem.
@Prætorian oh, I'll check VS2008
@Prætorian removed -1 until I'm sure
@MooingDuck Look at MichaelBurr's answer, he's posted the relevant typedef
@Prætorian neither of your answers address the conversion problem though.
which is CNR in MSVC++9
@MooingDuck There is no conversion problem. The question is badly formed, the code posted by the OP compiles without errors.
You need to use that iterator to call a non-const function or some such thing within the loop for there to be an error
@Prætorian I don't disagree that the code posted by the OP compiles without errors, and he probably also has the issues you discuss.
But he has an error message in his question which seems to be the cause of his post, which is not addressed by your two answers. (not that we have enough information to do more than speculate)
18:12
@MooingDuck Look at his latest edit, now he has std::lessfor the comparer in one set and std::greater in another and he's trying to convert between the two!
I give up
@IntermediateHacker The dish of the gods
ooh! Another day with positive rep!
Zero is a positive number :)
@StackedCrooked no it's not :/
@StackedCrooked Not really. It’s nonnegative. Positive is often seen to imply strictly > 0
18:26
This was to be expected.
of course ;)
someone is wrong on the internet …
@KonradRudolph Really?
In mathematics, the word sign refers to the property of being positive or negative. Every nonzero real number is either positive or negative, and therefore has a sign. Zero itself is signless, although in some contexts it makes sense to consider a signed zero. In addition to its application to real numbers, the word sign is used throughout mathematics to indicate aspects of mathematical objects that resemble positivity and negativity, such as the sign of a permutation. The word sign is also sometimes used to refer to various mathematical symbols, such as the plus and minus symbols an...
This is mind-blowing. My native language doesn't do that AFAIK.
Yep, difference confirmed. This is tricky!
@KonradRudolph Thank you for that bit of info!
Yow, I didn't think I would ever feel good about C++ errors, but it's now a reality thanks to the 'niceness' of being Enterprise-y.
18:53
@LucDanton I'm having trouble applying your statement to that article.
I now feel like there is debugging that is as inconvenient as debugging C++ errors.
@LucDanton ah. I should make a little blurb that can do stack traces in C++. That'd be interesting.
Question is: how much functionality should I add?
@MooingDuck
No, just some weird squares .-.
@PetrisRodrigoFernandes I bet the code works fine and you're looking at it wrong. What are you opening the file with?
Well, I wanted it to also show function parameters, but I guess I can't do that without variadics. Stupid VS.
can I put threadlocal "globals" in a header?
hi! can someone help me with my openssl problem?
I try to run the MD5 function defined in openssl/md5.h, but i get the error "undefined reference to md5"
19:08
@MooingDuck Declaration, yes. Definition not so much.
@LucDanton alright, I'll see if I can work some magic
@MooingDuck

to open the file i'm just using

#include <fstream>

using namespace std;

ofstream out ("square.txt")
out << "text" << data.x
Hi! I'm extending a program that compiles and runs just fine. however when I integrate my code into the existing code base it crashes at runtime with a Segmentation Fault. However, the crash occurs in the original code base before any of my code is ever executed. However when I compile the original code base without my changes I can't get it to crash.
I'm at a loss trying to figure out what kind of error might cause this kind of behavior
@PetrisRodrigoFernandes the code is fine. Why do you say it's wrong?
@slayton how did you "integrate"?
@MooingDuck after the compilation, when i check the txt file, all the text is just 6 weird characters (squares)
19:12
@PetrisRodrigoFernandes how did you check the text file?
I have written a few class files that extend classes the old code base uses. I modified the original sources by adding a few includes and adding an adding an addition case to a switch statement
@slayton what about the fact you have two int main()?
@MooingDuck i just double-click it
er.. adding an additional .. (not sure what happened there)
@PetrisRodrigoFernandes so notepad?
19:13
@MooingDuck nope there is only 1 main
@MooingDuck yes
@slayton so how did you "integrate" them?
@PetrisRodrigoFernandes notepad might be using the incorrect locale, which would show all the wrong glyphs (letters)
The original program makes use of a "Processor" class that I have extended into a new class. During execution the original program checks a switch statement to see what kind of class to create an instance of. I simply added an additional case to that switch statement with my class
The original code base has children of this same processor class that get created in this same switch statement
@slayton The only thing that comes to mind is that you added global/static variables (This includes logging) that changed the global state of the program, causing the crash.
@MooingDuck ok I'll look for that...
@MooingDuck oh there is one more thing I forgot to mention
19:17
@slayton always is
The segfaults are sporadic
and they never occur when I run the program in GDB
@slayton any threading going on?
lots
not in my code though
@slayton yeah.... that probably means there's a race condition that only happens sometimes, and your global/static/whatever has rearranged the code to cause it to trigger more often.
ok great, I really appreciate your help
19:26
can anyone help me with this stackoverflow.com/questions/9791296/…
@dark_shadow ok, we just need two additional votes
@Abyx two additional votes for what ?
@dark_shadow to close it
But right now it's not close so you can help me with that
@dark_shadow no I can't, I have my own problems to solve.
19:37
@Abyx Fine.so best of luck
and thanks for replying
Hello foljs :)
@dark_shadow drive by linking is against the rules
19:58
@LucDanton Debugging EE is actually worse.
evening
21:02
hmm, Visual Studio isn't rebuilding my project when I change this header. It's making debugging the header very hard
@LucDanton woo! Got it! I made a little dohicky that can show a stack trace, with up to 5 parameters per function.
hmm, crashes when I run it with GCC though. Also Ideone won't compile it ideone.com/wkcTL
21:21
stackoverflow.com/q/9794733/1090079 how the fcuk was the accepted answer chosen over mine?
@refp because it's a better answer
@MooingDuck I wasn't super seriöuz to be honest..
K.
oops, found the crash in my code.
21:28
So what's the youtube video
@SethCarnegie say what now?
The youtube video below the room title
well, the link I should say, since I get a 502 when I try it
"Simon & Garfunkel - The Sound of Silence"
Live in Central Park, 1981.
That's weird, it works now
good song though
If I merge a local Git branch to master and then push master to a remote repository, will the remote repository "see" that a branch existed? Or will all the commits in that branch just appear inline with those made directly to master?
21:35
I noticed that a comment thread on an old answer had many comments completely off topic. I removed mine, but what do I do about the others? Should I flag them as "off topic"?

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