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Ven
Ven
09:00
@BartekBanachewicz well, feel free to insult me all you want
you can pick any single C++ codebase and come up with a list of at least 20 points that you could debate for a week
My 96 year old grandfather updated his computer to Windows 10. Not intentionally. Now his new Linksys AE1200 Wireless Adapter doesn't work.
sweet
@Ven lol don't tell me you started that
If you really look at std::vector, the difference in cost between reserve + N * emplace really isn't the same as N * push_back
@Ven lol he doesn't know that sizeof(char) is always 1
09:00
oh wait vendethiel starts with ven
Ven
Ven
@BartekBanachewicz I told them their codebase sucked, and they said "if you think it sucks, tell us why"
Ven
Ven
so I told why I thought it sucked.
@Ven in the github age, again, you can find dozens of reasons for every codebase
every codebase sucks
Ven
Ven
They asked me why, so I pointed stuff out. End of the story
09:01
@BartekBanachewicz lololol
You'd have a more constructive argument saying that push_back really is encouraging anal-rape culture tbh
Ven
Ven
@Griwes I pointed that (your comment) out earlier
@BartekBanachewicz "wow this guy is such a fucking moron" "oh it's you sorry"
Ven
Ven
@BartekBanachewicz Also you're just being an ass for no special reason right now :)
@Ven No he's just being Bartek
09:02
@slaphappy no, I said the discussion was idiotic. I didn't call Ven a moron.
Ven
Ven
Bartek is nice. Just bikeshedding about bikeshedding right now
@DmitriBudnikov cmon dude.
@sehe My grandpa is 95 and he's keen to learn computers :p
@Ven eh maybe. I just can't remember a single time where such a discussion ended with a reasonable reaction from the devs
@BartekBanachewicz I know, just hyperboling
everyone gets defensive when you start pointing out where they were wrong
Ven
Ven
09:03
@BartekBanachewicz Well, it seems they reacted just fine in this case.
@slaphappy isn't that my job usually :P
Ven
Ven
I wouldn't have replied if they were just a ted negative. But both contributors said they appreciated the feedback
@Ven Man. If the guy doesn't like criticism, move on.
If people refuse to improve it's their problem, not yours.
Ven
Ven
@DmitriBudnikov maybe he likes criticism, but not anal rape?
> I'd be more than happy to accept pull requests addressing this stuff. Otherwise, I'll probably do it myself eventually when I have a larger amount of free time somewhere in the future.
I think the whole thing could be summed up with this one sentence.
I mean I understand you wanted the best for the project
Ven
Ven
09:04
it's fine, I'm not totalitarian
I just think that such whole-codebase reviews require vast amount of work to fix
Ven
Ven
Look, you really are bikeshedding about bikeshedding right now. If I like discussing with people how to make some pieces of code more "idiomatic", it's not your time I'm wasting
a person going around the codebase can pick up a lot of things that could be fixed; but actually fixing them is a much, much bigger task
> .reserve is O(N), not O(1).
what!
Ven
Ven
09:06
46 mins ago, by Dmitri Budnikov
@Ven O(N)
You typed reverse!
@Ven it's not like I'm going to forbid you to do that. I was just trying to say why I think this isn't as helpful as you might maybe think.
47 mins ago, by Ven
and reverse's? cppreference doesn't mention them...
wow talk about a misunderstanding
@DmitriBudnikov lol
> So yeah, complexity-wise .reserve only gets rid of the "amortized". Of course it does speed things up by some constant factor. Otherwise there wouldn't be a need for it to exist. The reason I see against using it on every single vector where the size is known upfront is just, that it'll be one more line of code that can break some time in the future without yielding any tangible benefit. I'd really only use it when the vector is actually huge (millions of elements).
Ven
Ven
09:06
@DmitriBudnikov so you told me reserve's complexity is O(N)
AHAHAHAHAHAHHAHHAHAHHHHAHAHA
This is the dumbest thing I've read this week.
Possibly even this year.
You can't measure the complexity of reserve in terms of the size of the container
I think Luc mentioned this
> Complexity
> At most linear in the size() of the container.
This sounds sensibly.
Ven
Ven
stop being an asshole for no reason – except "feeling superior" , @Griwes.
09:09
reserve/push_back is okay imo but there is redundancy indeed
Oh, pointing out nonsense is now being an asshole?
I didn't get the memo, sorry.
Shut up with your facts Griwes
> Let me stress again that this kind of tricks are definitely regarded as unidiomatic in Haskell. In everyday programming, this is not the way to write good, readable, solid Haskell code.
Ven
Ven
@Griwes pointing nonsense that's already been pointed out and discussed while insulting the contributors is being an asshole
> everyday programming
> Haskell
09:10
@Ven oh noes!
Ven
Ven
I don't resent you, don't worry :-).
Grimes of Mroclam
> Of course it does speed things up by some constant factor
What is there to debate?
Ven
Ven
grimé comme une tin-ca
@sehe Whether having fast software is desirable
09:12
@sehe dunno, sounds like a simple typo of factor instead of amount
@DmitriBudnikov fast software is overrated
Fast software is like a bridge except there's no bridge, instead of a pair of catapults, one of each river bank.
low latency ruby
realtime lazy haskell
readable c++
I like that game we should play it more often.
I wanna C multi-threaded perl scripts for HFT
09:16
@sehe Well, that's not strictly true.
most of the time fast is only whether the latency is acceptable for the user, IOW it doesn't matter
I can name one simple case where reserve() changes the complexity notably and that's in the case of variable-length vector members.
We still have people worrying about the time it takes to parse a xml document before showing a window here
push_back would be amortized O(k) (where k is the length of the vector's members)
and reserve() would still be O(1).
@slaphappy lies, you need faster machine to lose money quicker
09:17
yes it takes 1 whopping millisecond who the fuck cares
hand in a document to a government organization, turn around time is 1 month
@slaphappy that's still nothing compared to idiots gamedev
WILL THE 1ns DELAY CAUSE MY GAME TO RUN SLOW
and they make it mandatory, so stuff you
@slaphappy that is why we can't have nice things
better unroll the loop manually by copy-pasting the code a thousand times
@BartekBanachewicz gamedevs at least have a legitimate concern
@slaphappy and that is also why software is getting slower faster than hardware is getting faster
Ven
Ven
@BartekBanachewicz :(
@slaphappy that's like cutting down the rainforest to print out "save the rainforest" manifesto
@Griwes Yes- because they're right and nobody gives a fuck, they'd rather have new features.
09:20
@Griwes is this because people need to run fucking google chrome with javascript to open a text file?
@Ven blocked at work
Ven
Ven
@DmitriBudnikov lol. c'est windev
@Ven tbh I'm quite annoyed because I can't bring myself to work on Hate since like long
@BartekBanachewicz you don't want to see finance
while some other people will give you shit for returning std::string by value
09:21
I tell people to take and return strings by value these days on codementor.
wth
return by ref?
I am always like "do I talk about references" and the answer is pretty much always "no one cares".
@DmitriBudnikov const std::string& getName() const;
wow that's bad
return a string_view idk
but const std::string& is cancer
@DmitriBudnikov also I really meant "by value" and then I thought you were asking about the opposite
I know I know
wait what
09:23
yes.
I meant "by value" from beginning, hence trying to clarify now
good jumpscare
when you asked "return by ref" I thought you were asking about what could that bring
2 mins ago, by Bartek Banachewicz
I am always like "do I talk about references" and the answer is pretty much always "no one cares".
not edited
@DmitriBudnikov right
@DmitriBudnikov but TBH if you say need one character from result...
and then electron
09:25
@BartekBanachewicz still string_view
but PERFORMANCE
but PERFORMANCE
but double posts
@DmitriBudnikov but wait, is that just a renamed ref_wrapper
it's cow no?
@BartekBanachewicz no it's boost::string_ref
09:28
@slaphappy ah
to be honest I find all of the references incredibly confusing
code with just values is much more readable and maintainable
@Puppy that's my point. It just doesn't make sense.
@BartekBanachewicz you need better language support
@BartekBanachewicz That's not what a typo is
In that sense, Cinch would be just another thecoshman.
lol
@slaphappy s/support//
@BartekBanachewicz inb4 rightfold "References are an optimization."
"????????"
09:31
"I am so happy."
"I had this wonderful idea."
<trivial piece of code>
"Amazing."
@DmitriBudnikov they are. They also happen to be a natural way to model physical machine architecture (which happens to explain why it's frequently an optimization)
"In Scala you can"
Ven
Ven
@DmitriBudnikov well, one line of code can go a long way :P
Today is a great day.
09:32
@sehe I'm not disagreeing, just having fun :)
Ven
Ven
"my new language has that bundled in"
@slaphappy altough
@DmitriBudnikov I wanna make a video game
Ven
Ven
@DmitriBudnikov define "trivial" :P
I wanna make a Lounge trading card game
09:32
I do have problems with Haskell references
as in, they are values
#define trivial
I'm so funny
my Lua VM essentially leaks everything because I haven't figured out how to hack into the Haskell's GC yet
when a reference to a value is dropped I can't do shit, I don't count them or anyting
@DmitriBudnikov there were some magic lounger cards sometime back
@DmitriBudnikov there were some magic lounger cards sometime back
I'd need to go through the list of all existing references and kinda mark the things that don't have anything pointing to them
but that's just garbage collection
can someone help me with a winsock server?
09:34
lol no
@BartekBanachewicz Yeah, mark-and-sweep is the usual way of things in Lua IIRC.
@Puppy I'd really like to simply be able to attach the "destroyed" callback sorta to my objects though
@19mike95 make sure you pair the socks
7
so that when the Haskell's GC cleans them I can clean them up as well
Ven
Ven
@DmitriBudnikov ah, you were talking about rightfold stuff, okay
09:36
you mean like RAII or someshit? ;p
Ven
Ven
@DmitriBudnikov don't forget about the map-if she posted twice
@Puppy Well, not really. RAII implies that losing the value means deallocation. I simply want to note when the last reference gets destroyed, but it doesn't have to happen immediately
well
typically the Haskell value would not be GCed whilst there is a Lua reference to it
but then again it's kinda hard to do because I'm not tracking the copies
so you mark-and-sweep in Lua, then clean up Lua->Haskell references, then let the Haskell GC worry about the Haskell objects.
09:37
@Puppy I'm talking about Haskell values that represent Lua references
@Puppy but that'd be slow as fuck
i mean traversing every single value in the vm?
not really.
you only need to traverse userdata/functions
Lua doesn't have arrays, it only has tables, and they are always native Lua values.
well, I mean, you need to implement GC for tables, but that's not a Lua->Haskell interaction in this way.
yeah my problem is in the "implement the GC" part
I mean, yes, you have to traverse the whole (live) heap, that's what GCs do.
09:39
that's not really something I planned
if it's too slow for you then you can look at e.g. generational GCs or something
@Puppy eh the whole VM is gonna be slow as hell anyway
anyway I've got some ACCU to enjoy
you can continue receiving my wisdom at a later date ;p
@slaphappy you are a horrible person <3
user1804599
Implementing Lua in Haskell is easy peasy.
09:42
@Ven Amazing.
Hehe. Another "ermagahd Boost Property Tree isn't parsing JSON" dupe-closed within 49s
1
Q: Time function sometimes works sometimes doesn't

Bad programmer So I am trying to make a time function that counts down. It's based on something I saw here. The variables are given from a different function. Once time runs out the variable finish is turned to 1 and it leaves the function. This function works sometimes and sometimes it doesn't work, for exampl...

@Zoidberg that's why I chose it right
Ven
Ven
@DmitriBudnikov te retourne pas frer, elle est là :P
I'm programming in normal C, really basic logic — Bad programmer yesterday
The tragedy is that that's really "normal C": really basic logic
@DmitriBudnikov at your service
09:45
Oh: "si on avait refait docker aujourd'hui, ce serait en rust"
This should appeal to specific loungers on several levels
Ven
Ven
Docker porte le marcel.
Should be "Se: ", surentendu.
Ven
Ven
(en plus c'est pas vrai, ça serait en go... ohwait)
Google made go but then they made an AI to beat it, they don’t know what they want.
13
:chapeau:
09:49
@Ven en go te pendre
@DmitriBudnikov o.O
@Ven tous les langages devraient être fournis d’un générique
user1804599
@BartekBanachewicz you can do __gc with ForeignPtr
Ven
Ven
@sehe blatant lie ;)
> time2 = 5; //60 SECONDS
09:50
@LucDanton They demonstrate the power of competition and natural selection in software evolution
@Ven savais-je
Ven
Ven
@sehe ^ doesn't make sense, sadly :P
It's just sad you don't make much effort
I looked inside the Stack Exchange building today.
Ven
Ven
Or rather that I'm stupid and can barely talk french.
malheureusement 'recte' c’est du vieux françois, on peut plus dire 'savais-je recte' :/
09:52
I approve of this
@Ven I can bearly talk.
chateau de lounge
> Perhaps LocalDef could still be used, albeit changed to "set nils in a closure, then exec a synthetic assignment".
holy shit I wrote that 5 months ago and now I have no idea what I meant
qu'entends-je
que lis-je
@edition how
@slaphappy google maps.
10:01
> Ubuntu 16.04 LTS adds new “snap” application package format, enabling further convergence across IOT, mobile and desktop
@Griwes Can the dash menu location be changed now? :/
Wesh ya dla battle et personne me prévient ?
Nope. Suit yourself
@fredoverflow I'm glad lounge agrees /cc @JerryCoffin
10:06
can't risk consistency
I like that attitude ... especially when it's by a bad programmer
I used to enjoy coding much more when I was a worse programmer
I enjoy coding when it's not under prolonged pressure to get stuff done on short notice
I think I need a singleton
10:17
maybe that's why I like codementor
people don't really have top-notch code there, but it doesn't matter
I wonder how soon a serious security problem will emerge because this new ubuntu package mechanism embeds every dependency in every package...
imagines a package using openssl that is updated a year after some critical openssl patch and shivers
I'm about to write bad code, back off
This bad? #yougotnothingonme
My stack can't handle my recursion
lol
10:20
@sehe hahaha that empty
Well, it's JS so very likely
@DmitriBudnikov It's a nice bouquet of multi faceted bad
@Shoe touché
I don't call my code, bad code, I call them quick hacks
@Shoe what are you making shoe?
@sehe wait lolwut is that empty marked const
10:22
@BartekBanachewicz A bot for a website
@Griwes that part makes sense
@sehe IDGI...
@sehe I'd make the lock mutable though
@wilx what use is empty()? And size()?
@Griwes it's actually isEmpty but NAMING IS HARD
10:22
@DmitriBudnikov yup that's one facet of the bad
Also I think I recognize that color scheme
@Shoe why don't you work on Hate for a while if you have nothing to do
@BartekBanachewicz way to derail and miss the awesome badness that will lead to errors
@DmitriBudnikov YOU JELLY?
I knew it
@sehe I don't think I see it actually
10:23
@sehe ah wait, for some reason I parsed that as clear() (so as do empty, not is empty)
Unfortunately I have plenty to do. I also have to write a quiz software in node.js and mongodb for my year long uni project
U mad breh
1 min ago, by sehe
@wilx what use is empty()? And size()?
It's a big fat well-known antipattern
10:24
I'm just trying to finish this bot quickly so it's one less thing that i have to do
@Shoe use meteor :D
@sehe What is? RW lock?
@BartekBanachewicz How can you use the methods? [That is, for any purpose than to either forget about the result /or/ to create a race condition] /cc @wilx
This is experience I guess. Everyone who ever thought about threadsafe queueing properly has this internalized.
I see what you mean I think
:D
10:25
I have never thought about threadsafe queuing properly
I just use TQueue.
Then you should also have noticed.
@sehe reminds of this
You mean that checking if something is empty atomically is useless because the next method you call on that queue might be on a non-empty queue if some other thread pushed new things into it in the meantime
@sehe really nope
So you would have to protect those with another mutex anyway
Right?
10:26
@Shoe oh that could make sense
@BartekBanachewicz Because /either/ it doesn't have size(), or it passes lock-refs araound or it has try_pop and waiting_pop operations etc.
@Shoe The mutex should be client-owned
@Shoe Indeed.
@Shoe ^^ the message to Bartek
@sehe this is all really much more complicated than using STM
Concurrency is hard
10:28
Concurrency in imperative languages with mutable state is hard
Which really is just a reflection of how common hardware works so you have to deal with it eventually anyway
@sehe Oh, you mean the lock is inside the queue structure? Well. I can see how it could be wrong but I can also see it could be OK in some situations.
e.g. by using an abstraction that doesn't make you deal with it
well honestly I think high level languages are overrated
When I was a boy
@nick right, legendary C productivity and lack of bugs has been noted
10:30
We scratched the hard drive by hand
@sehe Or here we have struct socket { socket(bool use_mutex = false) {} ... } and then all operations start with if (use_mutex) lock()
We didn't have concurrency or mutable state
Actually, not even, they all start with lock() and lock() does if (use_mutex) m_mutex.lock()
10:45
@DmitriBudnikov I have a guard that I can attach and lock to handle this conditional locking.
@wilx which ones? Also, it doesn't matter where the lock resides. What matters is what operations are performed holding the lock (and which aren't)
@DmitriBudnikov That's icky, but actually better (NullMutex required)
@DmitriBudnikov I hope there's some kind of exception resiliency
@sehe Should be templated on mutex yes (it doesn't make sense to choose locking policy at runtime ._.)
@BartekBanachewicz youdontsay.jpg
@Telkitty any suggestions?
10:53
@nick so, exactly what did you scratch onto that HDD?
@DmitriBudnikov fyl
Ven
Ven
@DmitriBudnikov surely that's atomic :P
@wilx everyone does. It's in the standard library. Several flavours
@edition about?
@Telkitty cpp-jit-interpreter
The preprocessor is always JIT interpreted
10:55
@sehe yes
@sehe he want to write a parser so one can run C++ as a scripting language, right @edition?
@Telkitty yes, but I'm lacking direction.
> Qt 5.7 Beta released
wow Digia is seriously stepping up their Qt game
@edition So you have found Cinch'es prospective bride for suggestions. Well done.
god Node 0.10 is such a piece of shit
10:59
@edition I think @JerryCoffin is the best person to ask, @sehe wouldn't know much
I can't believe it's supported until end of the year
Ven
Ven
@BartekBanachewicz it's old :P

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