« first day (2039 days earlier)      last day (3136 days later) » 

user1804599
00:02
user image
5
user1804599
The USA is larger than North America.
@Lalaland Did you mean Sword Art Online? They dumped the pacing for 5 or 6 episodes because they needed to develop a romance
user406009
@Aaron3468 It seems to be a common trend with a lot of anime.
Speaking of mis-categorization, this 'alternative' playlist I'm listening to has Kid Cudi on it...
nwp
nwp
@doug65536 As far as I understand you can only ping one person in comments. The poster automatically gets pinged so better only ping the not-poster.
00:17
@nwp yeah I thought so. realized later one was redundant :)
nwp
nwp
one being redundant is not the problem, the other one not working is
I already have an implementation that does new for every property
whole point of new implementation is not doing that - try to store more contiguously
nwp
nwp
anyways, I have to sleep, stayed awake way too long, cya
good night, thanks
nwp
nwp
oh, about that, it is stored contiguously
the void* is just a placeholder
00:19
what do I put in second
nwp
nwp
Variant
yeah? in my .insert(std::piecewise_construct, std::make_tuple(...stuff...), std::make_tuple(... what do I put here?...) )
that's void* constructor, right?
but you had to go, don't want to keep you lol
nwp
nwp
uhm... you do something like data["hello"] = Variant{42}; or whatever the equivalent piecewise_construct is
no void* anywhere, you can replace void* with double or anything actually
yeah, so it would insert with string hello, pointing to what in second
new ?
nwp
nwp
second is a Variant, right? Variant cannot point to anything
00:24
what type is ThatUnorderedMap::value_type::second... void* right?
nwp
nwp
no, it is Variant
that was the whole point
what does that void* point to?
what value would I initialize it with?
nwp
nwp
there is no void*
std::aligned_union<0, std::vector<Variant>,
                     std::unordered_map<std::string, void *>,
                     std::int64_t>::type data;
that isn't void*?
nwp
nwp
that is used to figure out the alignment and the size
00:26
you can point to any object with void*? sometimes void* can be used as function pointer as well
nwp
nwp
it is never instanciated
okay...
is it making enough room in the unordered map value_type?
nwp
nwp
right
user406009
@Telkitty I believe so.
that is for sizing the whole object right? It is so annoyingly self referential
user406009
00:27
@Telkitty Oh, yeah, there is that edge case.
nwp
nwp
except it doesn't really matter because value_type is not stored inside the unordered_map, so it doesn't matter how big value_type is
user406009
Technically you can't store function pointers in a void*.
user406009
But it usually works because POSIX requires that you be able to store function pointers in a void *.
the type has a finite size though, there is no recursive runaway, that's what makes it annoying
I should have a vector of property text, and store iterator_range in ::first and use the vector to store the keyvalue pairs by storing two indices into the map, then I am just using a numeric index of properties, stored in the vector
or a std::map<string,property>
00:35
before any of these changes, it does an awful lot of allocations. I am reining that in
so I dont spray the heap with thousands of fragmented new calls
it seemed like it would be a quick change at first
Isn't there a family of boost::flat_ structures for this kind of thing? alternatively std::array with some finite number that no rational person would exceed.
does deque still have 512 byte block size on gcc?
it was 16 bytes per alloc on earlier vs deque - that cracked me up
well, its size would be max(16,sizeof T) with max(1, 16 / sizeof T) entries each
that doesnt matter, it's 512 on gcc last time I checked
max(512,sizeof T) block size with max(1, 512 / sizeof T) entries each
user406009
@Borgleader But wait, how does that even work?
user406009
Aren't most new processors backwards compatible?
Microsoft and its partners will not be putting in the significant work necessary to make new hardware work with older versions of Windows.
user406009
@Borgleader That's what I am questioning.
user406009
There shouldn't be any "new work".
01:31
and its partners I would assume this means Intel has had to do a thing or two for this to be the case. i.e. they've had to make them backwards compat
user406009
The more important question is whether or not they will work on linux.
Hello, does anyone here have knowledge of RakNet?
@Lalaland Why not? theyre not saying theyre locking themselves in with Windows 10, just that theyre not doing backwards compat
@MarfGamer Nope
@Borgleader I know. They're a douche.
01:41
Well its a RakNet problem, but It's also more of an ordering problem. I have the protocol down but it's my logic that's messing everything up handler wise
At least I've more or less figured out how to firewall off most of the Win10's shenanigans.
@MarfGamer ask on SO
@Mysticial I still haven't upgraded to Win10 on my home machine. My current inclination is to actually not upgrade this one, and only use Win10 on the next PC I'll build.
Don't upgrade to Win10. Just put it on new builds.
01:48
Isnt that what I just said :P Or were you agreeing?
agreeing
Ven
Ven
Yo
02:38
Upgrading win 10 is done automatically without any issues. but linux(ubuntu for example) upgrade is pain in ass in many cases it's easier to make a clear installation. /:
03:10
Win 10 is pretty nice, but it doesn't have a compelling reason to switch. It also has more than a few weird, but non-fatal bugs
One of the family friends works with MS in marketing and if a bug was mentioned, the official spiel was 'microsoft is not responsible for maintaining compatibility'. Basically, 'it isn't our fault windows 10 is terrible'
@Aaron3468 Ok. You just made me want to buy a third SSD exclusively for win
 
3 hours later…
06:02
@Xeo @StackedCrooked imgur.com/DTNEt4w.jpg
Geographically it seems very unlikely.
It's garbage.
Dunno about the Japanese but half the Hebrew isn't.
garbage which should be binned
 
1 hour later…
07:04
@R.MartinhoFernandes Hiragana and Katakana are based on radicals from Chinese characters, AFAIK.
Xeo
Xeo
08:02
Yeah, they're ultra simplified hanzi / kanji, IIRC
Ven
Ven
Yo.
08:38
so quiet today, so quiet everywhere these a few days ...
Ven
Ven
09:07
It is
user1804599
Hi
09:20
morning
@Telkitty Quiet before the storm...
@BartekBanachewicz No.
nwp
nwp
I'm trying to learn to work with the clang/llvm infrastructure and I'll start with adding a clang-tidy check that replaces const std::string & with std::experimental::string_view
@wilx it is. It has everything a nice song needs. It's funny. It's well executed. It's enticing instrumentally.
nwp
nwp
later I'll try doing cooler things like implement reflection by forward declaring a template <class T> size_t get_number_of_members() and a template <class T, size_t index> T&get_member() which I will replace in the AST with the correct values that the AST already has
maybe someone already did that
@nwp funny. We've talked about const string& with @Puppy yesterday
pretty much agreeing that it's a premature optimization
09:47
@wilx snow storm?
@Telkitty Awww. Cute. :)
I think that string_view is introducing unnecessary complexity
nwp
nwp
string_view is, but array_view will make things more flexible I believe
Also more complicated
But making things more complicated seems to be the motto of C++
I watched half of a talk about GHC 8.0, and the guy was like "I really like that those breaking changes were made, it shows that the committee isn't afraid to improve the language, otherwise you end up with something like C++"
nwp
nwp
09:49
solving hard problems instead of staying on a limited island of neatness is the motto here
yeah, right.
Everyone wants to feel like a special snowflake solving hard problems
nwp
nwp
there is no reason to take a vector<int> and be completely screwed because you happen to have a array<int>
Try saying "your game doesn't need the kind of C++ performance" to a gamedev
@nwp where "completely screwed" typically means "absolutely irrelevant performance loss in most of the cases"
copying memory isn't particularly expensive, but that's what we're lead to believe.
user1804599
Use Rust. It has array views built in.
nwp
nwp
need is tricky here, of course you don't really need 60 FPS, 20 will be playable too, and the unit limit doesn't need to be 400, the game is fun with 100 units too
but every bit of performance will make the game better
user1804599
09:52
Write good well-designed code and optimizing it will be easy.
@nwp This is where you're wrong
user1804599
Screw it up and you'll not have the opportunity to optimize since you'll break everythong
@nwp Except language speed is hardly a bottleneck in achieving high framerates
This is the oft-repeated FUD
Seriously, language instructions even for slow ones measure in nanoseconds
16 milliseconds you have for a frame is an eternity for a computer program.
user1804599
Taking an array view instead of a vector is good anyway, since you shouldn't ask for more than you actually need.
user1804599
Also iterator-taking template functions
09:54
fuck iterators
nwp
nwp
anyways, this is primarily to learn llvm stuff, so if it makes performance and readability worse I'll still consider it a net win due to having learned something
wait, did they really add a std::experimental::string_view but "forgot" std::experimental::array_view?
the latter seems to be less useful
that is, I use string_views more often
also overlooking stuff happens quite often
nwp
nwp
weird, I'd consider array_view much more useful
array_view seems to have fixed sizes, guess I want a vector_view or a pair<T*, T*> with convenience functions
user1804599
Array views have fixed runtime sizes
nwp
nwp
ok, my bad, used the wrong word here
maybe I want the GSL and use span
10:05
so for some reason my AST definition for a For loop has multiple names even for the numeric one
I have no idea what that's supposed to do
> for x,y = 1,2 do print(x) end
stdin:1: 'in' expected near '='
hmm, apparently nothing
Time to fix the AST
aaaand I think I need a new closure here
just for this one variable. hmpfh
Third, you should never change the value of the control variable: The effect of such changes is unpredictable. If you want to break a for loop before its normal termination, use break.
what the
for(int i = 0; i < 5; ++i) { i = 20; } // lol
in C++ it's well defined I think
That was from Programming in Lua
In C++ it's well defined, yes. But then again there for is a fancy wrapper over while anyway.
nwp
nwp
@BartekBanachewicz I remember something about loops being required to be finite
It seems Lua tried to enforce this, but failed
Pascal also doesn't like when you try to modify its loop control variable
10:19
Cool stuff. The youngest discovered another hack. All that play with tablets leads to something.
He noticed some high pitched noises from the Furby so he decided to record them using the tablet and play them back to see whether he could figure out whether "other Furby's" would respond (we have only one real Furby of course)
He's due to have class presentation about hacking so this is a welcome addition to the list of self-discovered hacks
The index variable must be of an ordinal data. The index can be used in calculations within the body of the loop, but its value cannot be changed (i.e. count:=5 will cause a program exception.
dat missing ) vexes me
@BartekBanachewicz Of course a small google further I found some resources that reverse engineer the protocol
@milleniumbug And now it vexes us. Oh wait, you cancel it out.
Still not balanced due to block quote and semantics
oh no forever ruined
10:22
> for x=1,3 do local x = 5; print (x) end
5
5
5
fuck
This is gonna be a problem
Maybe I simply shouldn't store the counter variable in the closure
@BartekBanachewicz what language has , to construct a range
wait no I have to because it has to be accessible there
aaaaaaaargghh
@sehe it's not a range, it's a specialcase syntax for for-loop; And I thought you did program in Lua
Not enough to remember this oddity, then
I don't see the problem exactly..
wait can I do shadowing in Lua
oh apparently yes
@Khaled.K Well see how I assign 5 to "x"?
And see how it doesn't affect the counter? There's only one conclusion; the counter isn't shadowed by that declaration
Which means there's one closure for the counter and then another for the body of the loop
but that just sounds... silly
10:28
If you asked a dozen non-Lua programmers what for x = 1,3 do print(x) end does, I bet some would say "print 1, then 3" (list constructor), others would say "print 3" (comma sequence operator) but few would say "print 1, 2 and 3" - Surely they'd look confused and suggest 1..3 or so instead?
6
A: Can't modify loop-variable in lua

Nicol BolasAs Colonel Thirty Two said, there is no way to modify a loop variable in Lua. Or rather more to the point, the loop counter in Lua is hidden from you. The variable i in your case is merely a copy of the counter's current value. So changing it does nothing; it will be overwritten by the actual hid...

user1804599
I believe Fortran does this too.
@Khaled.K oh thanks
there's the expansion to while
..it seems you need to use a while, if you want to modify the loop counter
well I don't need to use it
user1804599
10:30
do i=1,10
    print*,i**2
end do
@sehe yeah well you can bikeshed syntax forever
@Khaled.K I'm implementing the for loop :P
@BartekBanachewicz you're extending Lua?
@Khaled.K no, I'm implementing Lua
what if I do for x = 3, 1 do print(x) end
nwp
nwp
@ScarletAmaranth luademo says it runs successfully with no output. I suppose it is equivalent to for (int x = 3; x < 1; x++) cout << x; in C++
user1804599
10:47
Next time a professor tells you how important diversity is, ask them how many republicans there are in their sociology department.
user1804599
Apparently it's a 1:44 ratio of republicans : democrats.
user1804599
Good luck forming your own opinions in such an environment at that age.
This needs more communism.
user1804599
No wonder it's crawling with SJWs
@rightfold Agreed.
11:26
Has everyone migrated to the other chat now?
Ven
Ven
11:40
Meow
user1804599
I want to make a video game.
@Ven Woofeow
Well, computers can also do nothing else but addition. Seriously, that's the only thing computers can do.
They're so good at additions that they can add negative numbers, resulting in subtraction.
They're so good at additions that they can add numbers multiple time, resulting in multiplications.
And they're so good at additions that they can somehow also do fractions.
They can also display text, access remote servers and play Crysis.
All solely with additions.
So saying quantum computers can never outperform traditional computers because they can only do a specific type of task is a vastl
(see full text)
user1804599
scala career timeline: year 1: dope, gonna write some terse code year 2: hmm, maybe i shouldnt use every feature year 3: java 8 looks nice
user1804599
@Shoe Multiplication isn't implemented as repeated addition. That's just too moronic.
11:44
ikr
Comparison-based quantum sort is still Big-Omega(n log n).
user1804599
Quantum computers are really read.
user1804599
I advice everyone who knows something about vectors and matrices to watch this series:
user1804599
user1804599
s/read/rad/
11:57
I've got a compile-time error and I'm totally clueless about it. That's pretty uncommon ._____.
user1804599
SSCCE
That's the problem: I don't actually understand where it comes from.
comment out code until you find it
Fun times.
printf comment debugging
12:05
Yay, apparently it comes from some subtle macro shit I managed to throw into the mix.
macros are bad for you
Days since last macros accident: 0
7
Tried to include <functiontal>, and namespace::std, does not help. Thanks for your time.
@Borgleader How else am I supposed to include stuff without modules?
user1804599
Funciton is invariant under 90° rotations. This means you can take any program or any individual function declaration and turn it by 90° without altering its semantics or the semantics of anything that calls it.
user1804599
Killer feature. C++ should have this.
12:13
That was because of the following use case: I have class A and class template T in my library, and I want to actually define the full specialization T<A> only when the files with the definitions of A and T have been included together. Of course it'd cause problems :D
@rightfold It would probably allow to enhance the analog literals.
@Morwenn Is that just for the compile time optimization part of it?
@Shoe More or less. It's to avoid having useless full specializations when they are guaranteed not to be used, and to avoid including many things along with them. I guess it does only impact compile times.
nwp
nwp
12:36
frying stuff with milk doesn't work as well as I thought it would
13:00
@ScarletAmaranth for x = 3,1,-1
oh so you can specify the step, nice
I would probably just take the linear arithmetic progression from the two things you feed
(with d = second - first)
user1804599
@BartekBanachewicz no they're really terrible
@rightfold you're terrible
13:34
You know what else is 8-inches and shiny?
user1804599
benis
Ell
Ell
@BartekBanachewicz nice
oh cool maybe my friend will join me for Harvest
You becoming a farmer bartek?
3
Finally you have found your vocation
Bartek the pig farmer
13:40
@Shoe "Farmer Bartek" sounds like it could be the beginning of a children's song.
I am slightly ambidextrous
Seriously, whaz harvest? Is it the "Simple Online Time Tracking Software" or maybe this
Probably the former, you gotta track the time when you're deep in monads abstraction or your life will quickly slip away
@Shoe the RTS idea I had for a while
but essentially an experiment in making an RTS on Hate
Oh wait. I remember you were working with it with a friend like a year ago
I think it was turn based back then
@Shoe that was potato empires
and it didn't use Hate
13:50
I see
but the friend is the same
Yeah it used JS over some server
It had a JS client and a Haskell server
@BartekBanachewicz What do you think of Rust?
woah Showtime played absolutely great in G3
@Shoe it's fine
13:59
6.5/10?
Oh wait, where is the poll
@Shoe what's 10? For some uses, it's good. For other it's bad.
Ouch, 140/200 14/20 7/10
@BartekBanachewicz "total fun and flowers and ponies"
@Shoe well it has a strong inclination towards imperative programming
also a lot of things that are deliberately low-level
14:03
Without a lot of the downsides of imperative programming
@Shoe the biggest downside is non-parametrized context for imperative code
and that's meh after using monads
You still have that at execution time in Haskell
Yeah, I know technically not because IO actions and all that jazz
14:05
Still if you have a function in terms of func :: ... -> IO X then the context of that function is not always necessary clear from the parameters of the function
@Shoe well for one, such functions shouldn't ever be written imho
they should be using MonadIO instead
Because inside it could have stuff like getEnv on which it configures itself on
and MonadIO is actually becoming a core class in GHC 8
and the road from MonadIO to MonadRIO isn't that long
Emilia Clarke has gotten fat.
She did
@Shoe Well, the character could have gotten fat because of who she is... I wonder if she is going to get slimmer in the next season for the same reasons. :)
That's from another TV series I believe
Something with guns
I cannot really fit this in GoT
@Shoe Wow, she looks even fatter in this picture.
@Shoe In general I think writing against concrete monads have made a lot of people dislike tranformers for wrong reasons
14:20
What's NSFW about it? It's a bunch of dressed 3D geishas models talking to each other in a room
@Telkitty the way they speak makes me sick
the one in white clothes is supposed to be a really good looking guy with great fighting skills and fast moves?
folks
what is the best way to express "move a shared_ptr into an object by the constructor"?
MyClass::MyClass(shared_ptr<Foo> &&p)
?
note that we cannot accept shared_ptr<Foo> p, as you would do for a move-only object, because it would not give up ownership
rvalue constructor sounds most appropriate, but to me the entire idea smells a bit fishy
what's the use case?
why do you require the user to give up a resource which is shared by definition?
Ven
Ven
@rightfold learning some esolangs?
Also please no sc2 spoil
14:34
I can just do std::shared_ptr<Foo> temp = res; MyClass m(std::move(temp));
@Ven do watch game 3
it was freaking amazing
Train wreck of the day:
-4
Q: The Dupe Flail of Death

StepanImagine Wikipedia page "String [duplicate of [variable duplicate of [programming language[duplicate of information (excellent article)]]]]" This would look strange. You have a question on DE interface. Google it and find a question How do I connect CD? (-5 likes, year 2015, no constructive ans...

@Borgleader
Ven
Ven
@BartekBanachewicz i will when I get home
Give up ownership sounds more like std::unique_ptr.
Ven
Ven
@JohannesSchaub-litb the idea behind shared_ptr is that there isn't a single "ownership" tho
14:43
@Mysticial bwahahahaha
hmm I think I'll release hate 0.1.5.0 today
Or is it because SO community is afraid to lose job to those newbies?
what
@Shoe dunning kruger or wtv
Ven
Ven
LOL
ffs cache fails on CI are so annoying
Also fuck Lens build times
feels almost like compiling C++ :/
14:50
That's because Lens bring C++ to your Haskell home
+complexity, +imperative, +pain, +buildtimes
@Shoe there's nothing imperative about Lenses
Also the code becomes vastly simpler and cleaner with them
so from what you wrote, only "build times" is true
Suuure
the fact you can't you use them proves nothing really
+incomprehensiblecompileerrors
14:52
dat too
You guys must be using some other lenses than me
maybe you actually need lenses
anyway OverloadedRecordFields will hit soon
nwp
nwp
contact lenses
make everything clearer and build times don't matter
isn't the entire problem with generating code, that is, Template Haskell
14:53
Dunno, I found TH pretty pleasant to use in Turnip
TH is only necessary because records suck
@BartekBanachewicz Will it be before or after C++ modules?
definitely before
@Shoe 8.0.0 will have partial support
and it's just around the corner
hell will also freeze before C++ modules
Ven
Ven
:D
14:55
I have a better one
Hate 1.0 will be released before C++ modules.
Wide too
On the other hand, it depends on the meaning of « released » considering that there are at least two implementations of modules in the wild.
so, OverloadedRecordFields ------------- Hell Freezing ------------------------------------ Release of Hate 1.0 -------------------- Heat Death of the Universe ------------------------------------ C++ modules ----->
6
14:58
I love trying to cry on command
I'm terrible at it though
.. ------------ Half Life 3 Release --------------- C++ modules ----->
user1804599
The Dutch evolved to be tall to keep their heads above water.
------- C++ modules ------- Haskell becomes widely used and FP takes over ------->

« first day (2039 days earlier)      last day (3136 days later) »