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00:28
nice
how goes it?
how do the mountains look with the sun falling over them in the late evening light?
their cast shadows slowly creeping over the plains
I'm mostly just sitting idly at the airport right now, waiting for my plane :P
:P
Like the tent?
it's supposed to look like the mountains, oddly enough
The tent had the longest TSA queue I've seen to date.
Weirdly enough, the border control's queue was nonexistent.
shrug
it's been ages since I went through customs in Denver
Well, I'm kind of a regular client now.
:D
Regularly once a year in May :D
00:32
lol
they do have lots of space in that TSA line though
Well, the previous two times I've been here, the TSA recheck was pretty swift.
But today the queue was literally overflowing from its dedicated space.
the TSA really has gotten their shit together over the last decade and a half
but that is a distinctly disconcerting amount of backlog
how long did it take to get through?
Like... 40 minutes?
With the border check being done in 5-10 minutes.
00:35
ah, yeah. that's quite a bit
Okay, enough sitting idly, time to move around a bit.
enjoy the moving walkways
they yell if you play on them too long :P
or move backwards >_>
in my defense it was an eight hour delay
 
1 hour later…
01:41
@Mysticial you’re the one in charge of shitposting at night this month
What's that even supposed to mean? Am I suppose to moderate the shitposting? Or am I supposed to do the shitposting.
that last one of course
just ask for people to do your job under the guise of innocent flimsily C++-related questions, we won’t notice a difference
01:58
Hello there guys!
Empty here?
maybe
Hmm @Mikhail what OS Do you normally work with?
You mind going to Cloud9IDE Online and helping me on a simple terminal error?
Sorry I'm too lazy
02:01
):
Online IDE's these days...
anyone can be of help?
catface intensifies
02:02
😱
Have you tried downloading more ram?
I'm glad we could start the shit posting early, I need to get up for work tomorrow.
downloading more ram? Wtf
@Mikhail 768 GB of ram is actually cheaper if you download it.
Alternative you can just mount it?
02:04
yeah ram in the cloud
Unfortunately, I don't have root
@Mikhail so your face is more like ⌤ then
lol this lounge..
@Mikhail Why do you need root to download ram?
dude you cant download ram..
02:06
Downloading it is easy, mounting it is hard.
tf is wrong with this lounge lol..
14
lol
@Mikhail Make sure you have the right driver installed.
Make sure you have the right driver installed? Check.
02:07
Fuck, I'll need to rebuild my kernel
I bet Ell knows some tricks to speed it up
I need to download my computer... shet
Put a clock over your computer
"overclock"?
02:08
I need to download keyboard keys to..
Technically you proposed an "underclock"
First World Problems
only if you don't turn the computer upside-down as well
makes sense
if you turn it upside-down, then 'up' for it will be in the direction of gravity
thus, it will take less time to boot up because it will be working with instead of against gravity
02:12
Yeah, the same principle explains my unusually good gas mileage when traveling North-to-South rather than South-to-North. Easier to go downhill.
Right. Since the centripetal force of the Earth's rotation will force you towards the equator.
So when something shits on the fan, you want to move towards the poles because the equator is gonna attract all of it.
For alternative meanings of Bartek, see: Bartek (disambiguation). Bartek (Polish: Bartholomew) is an ancient oak tree in Poland. It grows in Zagnańsk near Kielce in the Świętokrzyskie Mountains. Its age, previously estimated at up to 1200 years, has recently been established to be 686 years (in 2016), with a corer used to extract a sample for a ring count. An accurate count is impossible, as Bartek's interior has hollowed with age. There are several older trees in Poland, both oaks and yews (some over 1000 years old), yet none of them has matched Bartek's fame. The 33,5-metre tall Bartek measures...
8
exactly
@Mikhail I expected something faster tbh
02:15
but ... but ... the tip of the pole is tiny, if everyone thinks like you, you would have to fight with your teeth & claws to stay there
03:01
I almost posted that godawful nazi/not see pun just now. I have become a monster. :(
this is a beautiful thing and I want it
but I don't demolish things on a regular basis. :(
I bought a crow bar 2 years ago. It's extremely handy in lifting heavy items.
through leveraging
03:23
that it would be
04:21
> > -Wall sounds like a good idea in general, I guess.
> And we'll make the bugs pay for it!
05:13
sigh
night
 
1 hour later…
06:39
@jaggedSpire oh boy oh boy
@jaggedSpire the only thing I'd be afraid of is being in the general proximity when this things ships :D
Also lol the abbrev. "FuBar - Functional Utility Bar"
07:03
also wow the customer ratings are stellar
4.9, 167 reviews
Ven
Ven
Yo
07:25
sorting out bills, 'fun' to look through hundreds of credit card transactions ...
Is LTO a scam?
Another great shit question:
-1
Q: How many iterations should you make for the simulation to be a 'Monte Carlo simulation'

HappyBeeHow many iterations should you make for the simulation to be a 'Monte Carlo simulation'? 1) What is the minimum value? 2) I assume there is no "maximum" number of iterations, its up to you after you fulfill the min value.

07:43
> In some Germanic languages, we can trace several cycles, going back several thousand years, of a process that develops perfect and imperfect past tenses, then merges them, then redevelops new aspects.
user1804599
07:54
data Path
  = NamePath VS
  | FieldPath Path String
  | ApplyPath Path Path
  deriving (Eq)
user1804599
This shit is rad.
user1804599
And difficult.
user1804599
(let (string1 (import "./string")
      string2 (import "./string"))
  ; string1.t and string2.t should be the same type
)
@sehe Well, that's just a short conclusion. There are some detailed reasons strewn all over the transcript and some not yet materialised anywhere.
@Morwenn Yes, and IYAM those are all the trivial parts.
@Ell Well, since it is anywhere from painful to impossible to implement functionality which I deem fundamental, yes.
user1804599
08:08
@Morwenn And how many of those are things you cannot do with Boost.Range?
user1804599
Also I'mma try Idris today.
@R.MartinhoFernandes your link makes it look like you think sehe called your opinion dry and stupid
Ven
Ven
@Zoidberg good. Let the types flow through you.
user1804599
Implementing path-dependent types will be an enlightening experience.
nwp
nwp
@Zoidberg no, it will just be a path of madness
user1804599
08:13
No, it's pretty much required for my module mechanism to function.
user1804599
Also, I need a syntax for storing types in structs.
@LucDanton pffft
Ven
Ven
yes you do
user1804599
Currently, the struct literal syntax is {field-name value, field-name value}.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I think I've seen most of them. Anyways, time for a blarg :)
user1804599
08:16
However, what would be the syntax to store types in them as well?
(don't bother for me; I'm fine with lounge + twitter)
user1804599
{field-name value, field-name type} is impossible, because ambiguous
Having the weirdest deja-vu in chat now
Ven
Ven
weird deja vus with rightfold? that can't be right.
user1804599
{(type t) string
 compare (fn (x string, y string) etc)}
user1804599
08:19
meh :/
Ven
Ven
do u even CL
user1804599
No, I only Clojure.
user1804599
Clojure is the only lisp I know.
user1804599
I like {t (type string), compare (fn (x string, y string) etc)} better.
@sehe I've had a post on ranges in various stages of being (re)written for some two years now, but it always feels too ranty to finish.
Or sometimes it feels like I need too much background info to make it clear to a wider audience. What I want to write can be summed up as "ana+cata+bind or gtfo", but that's barely suitable for a tweet.
Ben
Ben
08:23
Hi everyone
I still want to try a different approach for my encoding flush problem later.
Came up with an idea in my sleep.
If you understood it, why did you ask? Also, I don't know how to answer more clearly. Is std::unique_ptr copyable? If not, then using it in completion handlers directly is not possible, and going to be a kludge at best when "papered-over" with indirection. My advice is in my answer. — sehe 22 secs ago
@R.MartinhoFernandes I don't not whether Boost.Range handles projections or proxy iterators.
What do you mean by projections? transform?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Mmm. I respect that (there are enough opinionated blogs :)). I hope you do not subconsciously fall into the "if you don't have a solution, you shouldn't point out problems" trap though
@R.MartinhoFernandes Love it :)
user1804599
08:26
> - idris-codegen-javascript
user1804599
omg
Ven
Ven
Idris has PHP codegen as well. And erlang, IIRC
I might actually tweet it.
user1804599
nice
@R.MartinhoFernandes I'd have to actually use Boost.Range to answer that questions.
08:30
@Morwenn Well, you can describe in non-Boost.Range terms.
user1804599
@Ven I was thinking of a construct shallow-quote, which would be like quote, except it evaluates the elements of lists, arrays, and dicts. For example, (let (a 1) (quote (a))) results in the list (a), whereas (let (a 1) (shallow-quote (a))) results in the list (1).
user1804599
With, of course, reader sugar.
Ven
Ven
that's just `(,a)
congrats, SO's markdown parser, you're retarded.
sometimes the quote backs at you
Can someone help me with a C question? Trying to bubble sort a generic list..
user1804599
08:34
@Ven fucking ugly
Ven
Ven
consistent.
spent 20 minutes trying to upload a csv file on to google doc spreadsheet from mac
textedit doesn't provide any right format
so ended up using xcode
user1804599
Idris takes two seconds to compile hello world :/
user1804599
What is this, C++?
Ven
Ven
no, haxel
08:38
maybe google doesn't think mac users would be cheapskates because they spend extra money to buy pretty much the same thing
user1804599
No, Idris.
Ven
Ven
Idris is written in hax-hail
08:56
In C++14 you can capture [my_ptr=move(my_ptr)] but I wondered if there are any remaining problems. Most concerned about "unique_from_this()" or similar so I wondered if this is genuinely possible to achieve: replace by unique_ptr and have something similar. — Germán Diago 28 mins ago
What is he smoking
⬇⬇⬇ The good answer is below! ⬇⬇⬇ — Andrej Nov 23 '15 at 15:40
How Not To Comment. In 7 Easy Steps For The Absolute Beginner.
@LucDanton: hi
Ven
Ven
unique_from_what
@LucDanton: may I ask you for a little help ?
Ven
Ven
n'énerve pas le duc
user1804599
(rec [list * (+ nil {}, cons {hd bool, tl list})] list)
Ven
Ven
09:17
oh, the CLR is stack-based?
user1804599
yeah
Ven
Ven
i c
user1804599
> In Lecture 35, we gave a quadratic-time automata-based algorithm for testing equality of equirecursive types
user1804599
document y u no hyperlink
fatal error C1202: recursive type or function dependency context too complex
Ben
Ben
09:23
I'm not great at programming, although I want to contribute to Stack Overflow in other ways besides editing questions.
What can I do?
Ven
Ven
answer questions
user1804599
ask questions
nwp
nwp
ask good questions
it is actually fairly easy, "X should do Y, but it does Z instead. Why? Dump of relevant information."
if it is not trivial it is probably a good question
Ben
Ben
@nwp I agree.
Okay serious question, I'm doing some compile time string encryption, when I enter really long strings (like opencl kernels) I start getting recursive type or function dependency context too complex. Is there a flag in MSVC to make it keep going?
09:30
@sehe there you go (note: misuse at own risk)
nwp
nwp
@nwp or a dupe
Ben
Ben
@Mikhail does it involve constexpr?
hi @Morwenn
yes...
Its just stuff stolen from: blackhat.com/docs/eu-14/materials/…
@R.MartinhoFernandes A projection is indeed a way to "transform" or "view" the iterated data by simply providing an additional unary function to the algorithm. Or a pointer to member. The projection is generally applied on the fly whenever the value pointed by a passed iterator needs to be read.
fuck well i need to sleep
Ven
Ven
09:50
@LucDanton lol std::experimental::is_base_of_v
user1804599
 found   : Main.F[[K(in type t)(in type t)(in type t)(in type t)(in type t)(in type t)(in type t)(in type t)]scala.collection.immutable.Map[K(in type t)(in type t)(in type t)(in type t)(in type t)(in type t)(in type t)(in type t),String]]
 required: Main.F[[K(in type t)(in type t)(in type t)(in type t)(in type t)(in type t)(in type t)(in type t)]scala.collection.immutable.Map[K(in type t)(in type t)(in type t)(in type t)(in type t)(in type t)(in type t)(in type t),Int]]
user1804599
Thanks, Odersky.
> found .. ,String]]
> required .. ,Int]]
start at 13:30
tell me whether it sounds as amazing as I think
Ven
Ven
I like it.
user1804599
10:01
Yeah, I got it.
user1804599
{(t list) list, (v nil) nil, (v cons) cons}
Ven
Ven
here, LRiO got 200k. /o/
user1804599
Screw equirecursive types.
user1804599
I'm going with nominal types like Go.
10:25
@BartekBanachewicz You mean the music or the sound?
@Shoe the sound
it's obviously a gear showcase, not a music show
@LucDanton That's an awesome piece of (useless?) code. It's so high on refined innovation that I'm not even sure whether it's completely useless anymore
You can hear how good the sound is via youtube?
Wouldn't it be like extremely compressed?
Quick anyone: unique_from_this is by definition redundant; Yes/No?
@Shoe Yes
@Shoe Not always
@sehe yeah, you can pass around a ref to the unique pointer if you want the option to trifle with that on top of having access to the pointee. it's better separation of concerns
10:28
@Shoe not really? It depends on what's been used to compress it, obviously
technically the pointee is stable whereas the pointer is not though
:)
I think in this case you can hear it pretty well.
I am having a terrible problem with gear
You only want the very expensive gear.
I'd like to buy something new, but my previous gear choices left me with a setup so versatile I don't really need anything
@sehe well that's true.
10:30
I know 'cuz Apple
Hey I've already said I'm gonna buy a Razer laptop next
Also I meant music-wise
I wanted to get myself a small amp which I can
a) practice at home at
b) easily lift off the ground and put it in my car if I need to move somewhere
but it turns out that the more gear there is on the market the harder the choice gets
Yup. We all want those things. I'm still looking for the good stage piano with builtin amp that weighs under 10kg. Oh well. I can dream.
Ven
Ven
@sehe Yes, obviously
@sehe have I already asked you why you can't have a separate amp?
You can only dream if you have enough sleep.
(quotes needed)
10:37
76
Q: Undefined Behavior Killed My Cat

ugorenUndefined Behavior Killed My Cat It's well known that undefined behavior can kill your cat [citation needed]. But can it? Your Task Write a program that invokes undefined behavior. Describe a scenario that starts with the above program being run, resulting in a Felis catus ending its life whi...

@BartekBanachewicz Probably. How is it relevant?
well, instead of having a 15kg thing, you could have two 8kg things
which means only needing to lift 8kg at once
Hehe. The problem is more that all stage pianos weigh >15kg. And that's without the amps
@sehe so many innocent programs that are harmed
@Morwenn Yeah, that's trivial :/
oh wat the FP-50 actually weighs 16.5
@sehe I kinda think that the weight is an essential part of it
10:41
So right now I'm lifting the humongous cases of 19kg and 16kg. That's not counting the stand (10kg) and the crate with peripherals (tweeters, cables) and a tablet stand.
> Oh well. I can dream.
I mean if it was too light it wouldn't feel good I think
and could not be stable enough
I'm getting to the point where I can play many different things, and I care more about the sound than the mechanics. Of course, there's more joy to be had if everything just feels great, but really the sound is the decider
I suppose there are standalone synth modules as well
not sure how popular/well-established those are
They're impopular. And often assume rack mounts
Ven
Ven
> This is incorrect. UB is only invoked if the caller attempts to use the return value.
why does everyone believe that?
10:45
does rST treat {}-brackets in a particular fashion? I'm drawing a blank right now
@Ven Because people want to believe
Ven
Ven
@sehe I think they're just getting confused between C and C++
user1804599
GADTs are cool.
Ven
Ven
yestheyare
user1804599
Imma implement
10:55
@Ven It's true in C
Ven
Ven
9 mins ago, by Ven
@sehe I think they're just getting confused between C and C++
(...but false in C++)
That's what you get for reading a single message without context
Ven
Ven
we still <3 u
I should lurk moar
Ven
Ven
829 messages this week.
I gather it's actually "past 7 days" ;)
10:58
hmph. mingw-w64 defaults _WIN32_WINNT to 0x502 (XP). What's the correct way to override this? -D_WIN32_WINNT 0x0600 on the commandline? what if not all objects are built with this? ugh

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