« first day (2045 days earlier)      last day (3131 days later) » 

17:01
@orlp Apparently some people would like to see pdqsort in Boost.Sort.
Also hi everyone :)
Ell
Ell
hi morwenn
What's up?
Ell
Ell
^morwenn the moorhen
@Morwenn not much :3 just studying for my final exam tomorrow woo
how about you? how is your weekend?
Hi there, may I ask something? I'm a little confused about lambda expressions but I'm unsure if my question is really worth an SO question.
It's probably more of a lack of understanding
user3790646
@ExaberriTokugawa Tell us your question :)
17:04
@ExaberriTokugawa Have you read the doc ?
@Ell I had nothing planned, but I ended up being drunk with friends Friday, going to a party with other friends yesterday, sleeping at my sister's, then drinking a coffee at my guitarist's today before going to a rehearsal with a part of my band where we just had fun playing old compositions.
@Ell Haha, good luck I guess :D
I did read it, I'm just starting with lambdas and I did the following
Ell
Ell
that sounds like a good weekend for you then :)
@Morwenn thanks :)
Yeah, I even had time to write a first article about Gray codes yesterday :)
Ell
Ell
are they public or just for yourself?
17:05
They're public.
typedef void (*Func)();
typedef void (*DispatchFuncWithContext)(void *);

void doWork(DispatchFuncWithContext f)
{
f(NULL);
}

// then somewhere in a function I do the following
doWork([&](void*){f0();});
but the compiler won't accept it as a valid thing
should have said that f0 is Func f0
the funny thing is, if I remove the f0() call inside the function the rest is valid as it matches the signature
And where is f0 declared? and what error did you get?
"not a valid thing" matches like all compiler errors
candidate funciton not viable: no known conversion from (lambda) to DispatchFuncWithContext" (aka "void ()(void)")
I'm using llvm clang
Yes because you need context for that lambda and that means it's not convertible to a function pointar
17:08
More generally you cant convert a functor to a function pointer
thats what a lambda is, a function object
As long as you don't capture anything
Ell
Ell
@Morwenn can I have a link?
I'll read it tomorrow
I'm retro fitting two different libraries, making small wrappers for tbb/libdispatch so I can use across the board thats why the weird context being thrown away :S
Ell
Ell
thanks :)
No problem.
how come is it not convertible to a function pointer?
@ExaberriTokugawa Only lambdas that don't capture anything are convertible to function pointers.
ahh I see
so this would be ok
void blah(Func f){ [&](){f();} }
actually no
I get it now
17:20
@ExaberriTokugawa That would do nothing... Youre defining a lambda that calls f() but youre not calling the lambda itself.
sorry I will need to read up more on lambdas
on the docs
I wasn't aware of what @Griwes and @набиячлэвэлиь are saying, I didn't know it would stop them from being convertible
I can easily get around it in my use case, I was more interested in knowing why it didn't go through, I now know. I'll try and find the explanation on the docs for this case
@ExaberriTokugawa The main thing you need to do is step back and just use them for a bit. A typical use of a lambda is to pass a bit of functionality to an algorithm. For example, let's assume you wanted to sort a vector of struct, and depending on some input, you might do it by either name or age.
if (sort_criteria == name)
    std::sort(people.begin(), people.end(), [](person const &a, person const &b) { return a->name < b->name; });
else
    std::sort(people.begin(), people.end(), [](person const &a, person const &b) { return a->age < b->age; });
Also extremely useful with things like find_if, copy_if, transform, and so on.
the general use cases I can see them, I guess I'm more using some corner cases as I'm moving a pretty big project from C++98 over to C++11 purely for the simplicity of threading code with simple wrapper pools using tbb::parallel_for and/or dispatch_apply_f and so on
which kind of forces me to look for function wrappers
17:35
@JerryCoffin occasionally also count_if
@StackedCrooked thanks having a look
Well, just ignore that screenshot.
@Morwenn I'm already on it :)
@orlp I wasn't sure that GitHub mentions worked when people were unrelated to the original issue/project. Glad to see it works :)
I never had trouble getting lambda. In my early days of C++ frequently found myself wanting to define a function inside a function. I had learning C++ from Accelerated C++ so I was familiar with a few algorithms. But writing a predicate functor was always burdenful.
When I told my colleague I'd like the ability to define functions inside functions he was like why would you want that.
17:45
@StackedCrooked That falls under "and so on". So do accumulate, generate, inner_product, unique, replace_if, partial_sum...and the hits just keep on coming... :-)
@StackedCrooked Well, you can still declare functions inside functions :p
@Morwenn yeah. they almost let you think you can do it.
I don't remember why this feature exists, but I remember reading about a use case that seemed ok.
I'm pretty used to c++ and have used python's lambdas for a while too just never really upgraded from c++98 ish code
Ven
Ven
la lambada
17:47
it's what working with large old codebases does to you hehe
Ven
Ven
@Morwenn just declare or GNU-style define as well?
@Ven Just declare.
I suppose in early C it may have been found convenient by programmers.. Or maybe it just was allowed by accident.
Ven
Ven
also hi @Morwenn :)
nwp
nwp
@StackedCrooked you can define a struct with a static function in a function, so there is actually no reason to disallow functions in functions
17:49
IIRC it's allowed so that you can define function in header and define them somewhere else but still have the function name invisible to people who include your header. Something like that.
@nwp That's a workaround I often used.
@Ven Hey, how are you? :p
Also boost bind.
Ven
Ven
@Morwenn fine, fine – you?
@Ven Fine too. My weekend was rather full.
17:50
@Morwenn The justification is pretty simple: declarations should be restricted to the minimum scope necessary to do their job.
Ven
Ven
mine was dull!
@nwp The two are quite different, and yes there is a good reason.
@Ven Too bad :(
16
A: ENTER and LEAVE in Assembly?

Jerry CoffinEnter creates a stack frame, and leave destroys a stack frame. With the 0,0 parameters on the enter, they're basically equivalent to: ; enter push ebp mov ebp, esp ; leave mov esp, ebp pop ebp Although it's not used in the code you posted, enter does support doing a bit more than the simple p...

nwp
nwp
@JerryCoffin that is only an issue if you want inner functions to automatically have access to local variables of the outer function which it doesn't need to
17:58
@nwp Here's an old sample I wrote back in 2008. Note the use of nested bind and operator<.
boost::bind is much more powerful than std::bind
All bind()s are shit
bound by boost bind
50
Q: Passing lambda as function pointer

CoryKramerIs it possible to pass a lambda function as a function pointer? If so, I must be doing something incorrectly because I am getting a compile error. Consider the following example using DecisionFn = bool(*)(); class Decide { public: Decide(DecisionFn dec) : _dec{dec} {} private: Decision...

@nwp But that point a nested function is no longer really a nested function. I.e., it doesn't follow the scoping rules followed by the entire rest of the language--such an exceptional case is a nearly always a bad idea (and I don't see any reason it wouldn't be here).
18:18
thanks @fredoverflow !!! that's exactly it!
nwp
nwp
@JerryCoffin I have a different intuition about scoping rules. If you declare a Foo foo; inside a function it doesn't have access to all local variables, so I would not expect that to be the case if foo was a function either.
especially since that function could be saved in a function pointer and called from elsewhere where there are no local variables
@nwp that argument doesn’t make sense. of course the declaration has access to the scope
@nwp That's fine for a declaration (and it exactly how things work now). However (in C), when I write code inside a scope, that code automatically has access to all the variables local to that scope, and every surrounding scope. If you define local functions so that's not the case, your definition provides no utility beyond what normal functions now provide.
nwp
nwp
@JerryCoffin it provides encapsulation, especially when you are in a header
if you want access to local variables use a lambda instead
@nwp Encapsulation of what? The function's variables are already encapsulated inside the function. If you're concerned about the name of the function, just define it in its own TU, and declare it at the scope where you want to use it.
nwp
nwp
18:30
own TU fails for templates
I just use local lambdas that don't capture anything to implement local functions, but it is a workaround for a missing sentence in the standard
@nwp I though we were talking about functions. The rule against nested functions predates templates by a few decades or so.
nwp
nwp
there are clearly easy workarounds, it just doesn't seem right that a workaround is necessary
@nwp "a missing sentence"? Sorry, but that's not even close to accurate. Describing the scoping for a case like this would be decidedly non-trivial, to put it mildly. It's probably be an entire new chapter in itself.
nwp
nwp
"local functions have the same access to everything as if they were defined outside of the enclosing function."
even translated into standardese it doesn't become a chapter
@JerryCoffin I don't understand that argument.
you’ve mentioned function pointers yourself, you have to address(hah) that as well somewhere
nwp
nwp
18:37
there is no difference
how do you handle template<typename T> void foo() { void bar(T) {} }?
nwp
nwp
what is there to handle? If there is a void (*f)(U) and U happens to be T then you can assign bar to f, otherwise you cannot. I fail to see the difference between handing function pointers to foo and to bar.
you said 'as if defined outside etc.', does that mean that e.g. void ns::foo() { void bar() { /* scope here */ } } results in the innermost scope not being ns, where foo is defined?
nwp
nwp
@LucDanton correct
Anyway, if all it takes is a sentence I suggest you put it to the standardization process then. There’s often a fast track for those.
nwp
nwp
18:42
although different designs are possible there
it is not important enough for standardization, it will just be ignored to death
@nwp that was a separate example, not necessarily related to function pointers
@nwp it takes more than one sentence to specify even non-capturing lambda expressions and their (non-)closure objects btw
Nested functions have been proposed for standardization before even templates, but they didn't handle capture at all.
nwp
nwp
@Morwenn do you know why the proposal failed?
Because nested funcitons are lol
Ell
Ell
I think nested functions can make sense
for example I wrote an impl of dijkstras in java
18:48
@nwp Because not being able to capture anything meant that the feature had a huge cost implementation and specification cost compared to the power it brought to programmers.
Ell
Ell
and I used members to keep track of stuff so I didn't have to pass it around everywhere
@Ell The other option is to create a Dijkstra pathfinder object to enclose related functions and formalize an interface
Ell
Ell
that's an option
but it's a bad one
dijkstras is an algorithm
and so it should be represented by a function
imho
instead of doing Dijkstras d = new Dijkstras(); d.dijkstras(a, b, graph); it should be dijkstras(a, b, graph);
From Clang's user manual:
> clang does not support nested functions; this is a complex feature which is infrequently used, so it is unlikely to be implemented anytime soon.
Ven
Ven
fair 'nuff
gcc does crazy stuff with the stack to implement it
Ven
Ven
(AFAIK it disables "no stack pointers" for the function)
@Ell Indeed, but if you have a pathfinder object, not only can it implement multiple algorithms, but it can be easily replaced in comparison to a nest of functions. Furthermore, it means that you can abstract multiple problem spaces to communicate with the pathfinder, rather than having it 'stuck' in your source so to speak.
So for example, it wouldn't be stuck searching grids and you'd be able to reuse it to solve anagrams with whitespaces as well
nwp
nwp
@Aaron3468 why do you need an object for that? (that is not a function)
@Ven It indeed sounds a bit crazy.
18:59
You don't need an object, however the object allows you to define communication hooks so that you can modify the algorithm's behaviour before, during, and after it executes. In addition, it greatly reduces the need to rewrite external code if you choose to make changes.
Ell
Ell
@Aaron3468 I don't understand what you mean
@StackedCrooked strongly disagree
It's the same as how you don't need a shovel to dig a hole, but knowing the tools you have helps you choose the most efficient one. Nested functions are a 'loose' absraction in the sense that they're not as rigidly encapsulated. It can be good and bad
Ell
Ell
I don't think it's a good argument
if you change how dijkstras works on the inside, it's not dijkstras anymore
you're better off having multiple different functions
@JerryCoffin Am I remembering correctly that they didn't exist in 8088/8086/80186?
19:03
But then what happens when you want the algorithm to pause should it use too much execution time? A pathfinder object allows the state to be saved. An object also means that the remainder of your code doesn't care if you are using Dijkstra or A*; it's accessing a pathfinder
@Ell algorithms have strategies. Using a custom predicate to STL can make it a different algo too.
This is all bread and butter in functional programming
@Aaron3468 Yup. However, pausing is algo agnostic and should likely be expressed outside of it
@Ell Really, the biggest benefit is that you don't need to refactor all your calls of dijkstraPathfind() to astarPathfind() when you decide to change algo. Nested functions aren't quite as powerful a tool as objects, but they have their own merits when you don't want/can't have an object.
Ell
Ell
@sehe this is a fair point, I envisage the pathfinding algorithm as being the strategy though
doSomething(&dijkstras) or doSomething(&astar)
@sehe True, though I'm not sure how to accomplish this without wiring a .pause() command to the outside of the object.
Ell
Ell
@Aaron3468 IMHO when asynchronous programming is brought up the situation changes
19:12
@Ell There you go! As I say, know your tools, and you can choose the right one :)
@Ell Or, doSomething<dijkstra> or dijkstra<do_something_visitor> or astar<do_something_visitor>
Ell
Ell
I suppose
@Aaron3468 co-routines for the win
Ell
Ell
^
> What percentage of "the entire C++ community" do you think has access to a C++ 14 compiler anyway?
Boost mailing list hard at war of who is the target audience
> Boost is supposed to serve the entire C++ community; it isn't Boost's goal to serve Boost's community
Also
> These three points *do **not* imply that we should throw out the original
graph. Just because the numbers don't support a particular position doesn't
mean we should throw out all kinds of FUD over the data. The decline of
Boost is real and we should face that reality.
Drama is everywhere
19:24
@sehe Do you have a link?
I might need to keep that for future reference
I just deleted 291 messages. But there is: boost.2283326.n4.nabble.com if you are intent on it
@sehe Hmm...was probably there in the 186. It had pretty much the same stuff as a 286 in real mode.
@sehe The decline of Boost (at least some parts of it) is nearly inevitable. Under C++98, you just about needed Boost just to keep the language livable at all. C++11 and 14 have reduced that dependence dramatically.
That's a shame
@Dmitri Message de rage du jour en PvP : "t'en fait expres ?" (AJA "t'en fais exprès", possiblement un belgicisme)
Because now instead of including Boost into project people copy random non-tested classes from another projects and/or write their own utility classes
i.e. why every modern C++ project writes their own Optional
19:35
@milleniumbug that’s not new at all
see the myriad of quasi-vector implementations everywhere
I sometimes would like to have a « clean C++something Boost distribution » where things that already exist in the wanted C++ version are not included. But that couldn't happen since the remaining parts of Boost rely on these ones too.
so then, it's time for Boostlang?
@milleniumbug I guess it would happen less often if C++ had an official package manager.
Carrying dependencies can be a pain in C++, so standalone header-only libraries are easier to distribute.
@Morwenn Oh, I think something on that order is not only possible, but also nearly inevitable. In fact, some of it has happened already--some pieces of Boost will use stuff from the standard library if it's available, and other parts of Boost if it's not. But it is hard--quite a bit of work for fairly minimal benefit.
Ell
Ell
@Morwenn I think modules would help too
19:40
@JerryCoffin C++98-compatible Boost modules that don't have equivalents in the C++11 standard library would still rely on Boost.TypeTraits for example, so it would need a lot of work.
@Ell Maybe.
user1804599
Use Rust
user1804599
Also I started working on world generation
user1804599
It is a refreshing experience.
Perlin noise?
user1804599
No lol
user1804599
19:44
Attempts to place rooms at random coordinates
Not fun :(
user1804599
Also maybe I'll do the tiles 32x32 instead of 64x64.
Ven
Ven
Perlin ? Est-ce toi, Perlin ?
user1804599
Perlin noise doesn't make sense for a dungeon crawler
Ell
Ell
pls remake castle of the winds @rightfold thanks
Ven
Ven
19:49
@rightfold sometimes, not making sense is fun
(but you're right)
When you make the dungeons, do you roll to choose rewards and then fill it until that threshold is reached, or do you fill until a size is reached, rolling rewards for each new room added?
user1804599
Each room gets a random room type
user1804599
The room type determines the reward range
user1804599
For some rooms it's the empty range because they have a different function, e.g. shop, brewing, oracle
Cool!
user1804599
19:53
A random number is picked from the range to determine the items in the room and chests
That also means you can apply statistics to estimate probabilities of different ranges ^^
user1804599
I'm not very sure whether I want it turn-based or real-time
user1804599
If I make it real-time then I need to make entity positions floats instead of ints and do more advanced collision checking
I like turn-based personally because it lends itself to dungeon crawlers as a board game. Getting real-time right can be difficult because AI and animation take a lot more work to be believable (because it has to stand around in the room/pursue player, react to intrusion, and not seem omniscient)
user1804599
Yeah
user1804599
19:57
It also makes it more strategic
user1804599
You can think as much as you want before you make a move
Ven
Ven
@JerryCoffin well, "decline". Some parts of Boost are outright outdated (they served well). But I don't think it's enough to say it's "on the decline"
Exactly! I really liked Final Fantasy Tactics for some of the cool turn-based mechanics they used, like the Mime class, the Calculator class, and an initiative system that determined turn frequency
How are you thinking of implementing player units?
user1804599
You have a single character and you move around with WASD
user1804599
And you have an inventory and XP and HP
user1804599
20:02
Currently it renders as @ but I want proper sprites.
Ven
Ven
LOL @ that guy linking to the sourceforge downloads to claim "boost is dead"
Ell
Ell
hi
20:07
Ahaha, it'll come rightfold. It's a good start! The moment I'm considering any graphics, I usually start with OpenGL and move up from there. game libraries are a godsend sometimes.
> As an aside, it's a good idea in general to avoid disjunctions in concept definitions. They can have catastrophic performance consequences in the current GCC implementation of concepts.
@Aaron3468 Oooh new person
Who are you?
nwp
nwp
a manga girl obviously
@LucDanton :D
I work a lot with algorithms and architecture type stuff, but I'm pretty much a newbie in 10 different languages ^^; At least 2 of them compile and do some interesting things.
Ven
Ven
20:12
@Morwenn relaxing once in a while
@Ven Sometimes nothing is something worth doing :p
how much would you earn on average freelancing as opposed to company lifestyle?
@Ven Note how much C++ is used in Ethiopia.
Ven
Ven
@Morwenn and korea
user1804599
@Aaron3468 lol why would you start with something that difficult
Ven
Ven
I hope north korea uses C++ for their missiles. I'd feel very safe.
user1804599
I use SVG for rendering
> Transforms a sequence of two elements into a std::pair.
user1804599
I first construct a string of commands in PureScript, then I parse that string in JavaScript, and create SVG elements
^ Kinda underwhelming.
20:17
Do north koreans even really know how to code properly?
user1804599
@StackedCrooked unzip
Not in public.
user1804599
StackedCooked
@rightfold because it's one of the few platform and language agnostic graphics libraries that doesn't condemn me to GUI event hell T.T
@betarunex The USA government once told they were hacked by North Korean hackers. I guess some of their people know how to code.
20:21
But it sounds like you've got the beginnings of a graphics pipeline going, rightfold :D
user1804599
@Aaron3468 Electron + React + SVG
user1804599
> vim feels inadequate on a computer with a mouse after using acme, and acme feels inadequate on a computer with a keyboard after using [vim]
I'm leaving for now. Not sure whether I will come back before tomorrow.
Ell
Ell
have fun :)
@Morwenn But have you seen some footage from inside? It looks like none of them even know how to use a computer. and being cut off from the rest of the world, their programmers must be quite limited...
20:29
@Ell Not really: many oil refineries are currently blocked in France, so I'm going to take public transportation tomorrow, which means that I need to wake up 45~60 minutes sooner... which means that I need to sleep 45~60 minutes sooner too :/
The fact of the matter is that in any country, somebody with $1m to throw around can support a group of skilled hackers. In addition, there are often more than a few people who can at least afford to mess around with a C64 or equivalent
@betarunex If nobody knew how to use computes, they wouldn't have computers at all to start with.
hi, I took a 2-3 tree algorithm that works with g++ (I tried) and am trying to make it work in Visual Studio but I get a bazilion errors that I don't understand. What can I do?
It really only takes <20 individuals with hacking skill, and in countries with pops exceeding 1 million, it doesn't matter how small a percentage hackers are
nwp
nwp
20:32
@kush make sure you use VS2015. If it still doesn't work it is because VS is bad.
Ell
Ell
@Morwenn oh man that sucks :(
@Morwenn but check this... youtu.be/5hUegMTSh0U?t=57
@Ell Well yeah, but the cause of the blockage (the law that the government force-passed against the will of basically everyone) is even worse, so that's ok. I won't really complain.
Too late, I'm out :p
Ell
Ell
bye!
@kush stop and cry
20:34
@набиячлэвэлиь I'm already there
@nwp Absolutely correct. It's completely impossible that gcc includes any extensions, and even if it did, there's no chance at all that anybody would ever use any of them.
inb4 VLAs
user1804599
> Regarding vi's modal nature, some Emacs users joke that vi has two modes – "beep repeatedly" and "break everything".
Ell
Ell
lol
nwp
nwp
@JerryCoffin :(
user1804599
20:40
TIL Safari is the most popular web browser in Greenland.
Ven
Ven
hah.
user1804599
Is Servo dead yet?
Ell
Ell
No
it's actively developed I think
user1804599
I hope it is. Fuck the existence of more than one such engine.
user1804599
Servo should be abandoned and Firefox and Edge should switch to WebKit.
Ell
Ell
20:44
webrender is quite impressive imho
@rightfold but servo is better.
@rightfold Monoculture is definitely the right answer, almost regardless of the question.
nwp
nwp
@JerryCoffin did your gf leave you or something?
Just hold on a moment, I'm gonna learn how to be another Jerry. We have too many personalities. While I'm at it, I need a plastic surgeon and geneticist
Ven
Ven
why not become another sehe? We can understand too many people here.
@nwp Hmmm....not recently. OTOH, my wife is gone at the moment, and won't be back until late this evening...
20:52
The point is that while monoculture makes communication easier, having multiple options is a natural consequence of each option having its own drawbacks
Ell
Ell
@Aaron3468 so you are saying there is no completely correct opinion?
user1804599
Fuck having to support multiple engines
user1804599
It's a fucking PITA
Ell
Ell
@Aaron3468 then why do you hold your opinion?:P
user1804599
20:54
The American people are sick and tired of not being able to lead normal lives and to constantly be on the lookout for terror and terrorists!
@Ell Of course there is. Mine is always right (for some values of "me").
Because it's a good decision heuristic that I'll use until I find a better one whose marginal benefits outweigh the cost of adopting it.
user1804599
See what I mean? Trump would be very good with browser engines
American people?
Oh you mean immigrants
Ell
Ell
@JerryCoffin haha that was the point I was trying to suggest to @Aaron3468
20:57
@rightfold Well, as stated, he's at least sort of right. I'm certainly sick of having to be on the lookout for terror. Unfortunately, Donald Trump is pretty much tied with Hillary Clinton as the leading cause of my terror.
7
I guess my perspective was a little bit too objective xD That's a fair way to induce a perfect opinion by ignoring people with imperfect ones. You mathematicians, geez.
If mathematicians had their way, dijkstra's algorithm would be the only search algorithm needed
I get the feeling the only reason we're sick and tired of terror is that politicians have been beating that dead horse for ages to rile the public
Ell
Ell
I think we are "sick and tired" of terror because it is terrifying
and terrorists are killing innocent people
@Aaron3468 I doubt that mathematicians are quite that homogeneous.
@JerryCoffin facepalm Yep, poor generality. Solutions to mathematical formulations of a problem generally can ignore efficiency that programmers must consider when solving the same problem.
As far as the population goes, terrorists are generally a small proportion of the population and tend to be motivated by political intrusions on their homes. IRA, etc. So motivating a nation to begin 'War on Terror' is the equivalent of kicking a hornet's nest
if I recall, the IRA were primarily motivated by hating the guy with the other religion and losing a democratic vote 60 years ago
21:16
I didn't mention terrorists were always reasonable. They seem largely motivated to restore or protect a community that they identify with. So when politicians try to attack that community because of terrorism, it cements the sense of intrusion that caused the terrorism to begin with. That's why I don't like the idea of fighting terrorism as a political platform.
/ideological rant
you're totally right I think
"Hey, there are some Muslim terrorists, so let's treat all Muslims like shit" is not how to handle matters
Technically, killing all of them would solve the problem.
But we can't do that because it's politically incorrect.
Jeez. Today.
Ell
Ell
lol
user1804599
@StackedCrooked no people, no problems
My issue with America of the last century is whether it be Muslims, Communists, or Blacks, it's had issues coping with people who have different ideologies in ways that don't involve political warfare. America just wants to be left alone and not deal with anybody else.
21:25
StackedCukked
user1804599
@Aaron3468 what do you mean by intrusion?
plenty of those folks are American, you know
^ exactly, yet communists in america were at one point marginalized and considered 'unamerican'
Ell
Ell
well it is unamerican to be communist
AMERICAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
user1804599
21:29
Multiculturalization was clearly a failed experiment.
@rightfold I'm not quite sure of the word I'd use, honestly. It's when somebody/something establishes themselves in opposition to what you believe yourself to be
user1804599
The dream was shattered and the pieces are slowly being wiped away
Anyways, maybe I'm thinking too abstractly about the whole thing ^^; Multiculturalism is a fact of the modern world and watching how nations cope is interesting to me
user1804599
Monocultural societies are the future.
user1804599
More agreement, less bullshit. More resources left to focus on improvement.
nwp
nwp
21:34
@rightfold unless the improvement gets suppressed for being culturally different
user1804599
There is nothing better than western culture
user1804599
So I don't care
I write great essays, but make terrible conversation
Btw rightfold, have you checked this dungeon generator out?
user1804599
Yeah
user1804599
I've read a few articles on the topic a year ago
21:37
@softfennec COMMITTEE: we must prevent the standard language from suffering feature bloat COMMITTEE: vector graphics in stdlib
decline != extinction
It's like saying "the decline of the fossile fuel vehicle"
user1804599
My current design involves multiple floors but I think I'm getting rid of that
user1804599
I want just a single floor
Multiple floors are just one floor but obstructed!
@JerryCoffin several libraries are moving to c++14 only
21:43
@rightfold For the last few dungeons, you can always return to that idea with a handcrafted multi-floor dungeon :D
user1804599
Nah, I'll probably do some sort of bridge-over-water-to-island-with-fortress
user1804599
For the last few dungeons
user1804599
I don't like floors
Ell
Ell
I like multi floors
@JerryCoffin He's right on almost all the claims. "The American people are sick" (check). They are "tired of not being able to lead normal lives" (check, thanks Obama whoever is about to succeed) and "tired to constantly be on the lookout for terror and terrorists" (yes, please stop doing that Trump)
Ell
Ell
21:46
this makes me want torchlight :V
I'm looking forward to trying out whatever you make. Let me know when it's finished/if there's a price and I'll check it out rightfold :D
user1804599
I never finish anything
6
nwp
nwp
@Aaron3468 the price is your sanity
Then we can share half-finished projects some time!
user1804599
Once bare dungeon generation works I'll implement player movement
21:48
@nwp lol, I paid that price long ago when I decided programming was a cool thing
user1804599
It's very easy
nwp
nwp
@rightfold I know people like that. They like the challenge, make stuff until they know they can do it and then lose interest, because the rest is just work.
@sehe that's not a good example, I quickly withdrew from that discussion, after seeing that there is indeed no hope for the most of these people :/
nwp
nwp
I think the trick is to convince yourself that finishing is not actually trivial.
@Griwes example of what? I just quoted the mailing list
21:51
I mean, ugh, Dave fucking Abrahams says you are doing it wrong, and you say "this thing is just a phase" - ugh.
hmm so the biggest curved screen from dell seems to be 34"
@sehe I believe you quoted me :P
That's accidental then. Did not notice
I have that bad habit. I made a simple opengl engine 13 times before I really understood what I was doing, then I could finally start working on my game i wanted to, but I'll get around to it some day
Just saying, I didn't try to start a war, which makes it not a good example of a war :P
21:52
I don't believe I pay attention to individuals on the boost mailing list :)
@Griwes Ah. Apology accepted :>
I wanted a discussion to start, but the only thing that started has been a "bjam is the best" and "we are the only correct ones" circlejerk.
Ell
Ell
wtf
freecad requires an update to nvidia-drivers apparently :V
@Griwes Like every other week
Ell
Ell
welp my system is borked again
@Griwes Who says you're doing it wrong is irrelevant. What matters is their given reasons.
21:53
So... I basically promptly quietly moved out of anything boost-related and I intend to stay that way this time :/ (Except for C++Now basically :/)
I've remade the same client for vindinium.org like 12 times in 5 languages, and I've only had a working bot twice. Both times it was 1800+ elo with really poor algorithms
I think 34" might be a bit too small
5
Buying dildos?
2 mins ago, by Bartek Banachewicz
hmm so the biggest curved screen from dell seems to be 34"
also it's not 4K
it's 3440x1440
@Griwes Anything's a...
21:56
which is really not like a super upgrade considering I have 3840x1200 now on two screens
Maybe I could just put my two other screens on top of it
I want to wall mount them anyway
hm hm hm

« first day (2045 days earlier)      last day (3131 days later) »