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user1804599
This is hilarious.
My friend returned my rooster because he chased after small children and caused her nephew to have stitches ...
I am feeling sad
needs comfort ...
monster chook
Fun fact: there was a lawsuit where a couple got two beds instead of a big one, and they sued because it wasn't possible for them to make love properly. They lost, and the judge reasoned that they should have done exactly what was propsed here because "The belt was evidently not needed for its usual function in that situation". — PlasmaHH Jan 12 '15 at 12:44
lol
Ben
Ben
oh, hi @telkitty :)
Hello :)
13:26
TIL that you can run /usr/lib/libc.so.6
so it's both an executable and a library
Welcome to how elf position independent files work.
Well, I knew it should be possible to make an executable like this, but I didn't know they existed in real life, that is, not as some kind of party trick
Also you might find that some of the dynamic libraries in your system are in fact... not binaries at all.
This is my /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libc.so, for example:
OUTPUT_FORMAT(elf64-x86-64)
GROUP ( /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libc.so.6 /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libc_nonshared.a  AS_NEEDED ( /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2 ) )
@Griwes Surely, though, this doesn't really make logical sense because presumably, libc doesn't have a main().
It doesn't have to be a main() to be an entry point of an ELF file.
ELF just says "hey the executable should start from here".
13:35
ok, but what the fuck would that entry point even do
in libc's case
No idea.
This actually makes sense!
Actually... I really like the concept.
Which one? GitHub, GitLab or BitBucket?
Ben
Ben
BitBucket, cause private repositories are neat.
Github is fine as well.
13:52
...seems that my silly little application calls memchr 186k times.
...I need to look into my string operations :x
Do you prefer printf() or cout? I prefer print
I dislike both
excuse me, may i ask a question that is not suitable for posting?
i'd like an explaination to what is actually going on in my code if that would be okay =/
why would it be more appropriate here? :P
Ben
Ben
@ceefax12 Have you tried posting your code on codereview.se?
14:06
because if i posed it on the overflow it would conflict with other questions i think
@Ben No, that's not the aim of codreview.se
i'll check it out thanks :)
@Ben he likely wants us to debug his code, thats OT for codereview
Ben
Ben
@Borgleader ah, sorry, yes.
no no no not debugging it works fine
but i cant get my head around how it works, ive drawn out the math on paper and i cant work it out
that website is not working for me =/
14:08
So its not your code then
ask the author
i am the author :L i made the program from a complation of other code, let me write something out so i can explain clearly, give me a minute
@ceefax12 codereview.se is short for codereview.stackexchange.com
ahh i see it's working now
i'll post it on there thank you
no, don't post it in there
14:11
huh?
Ben
Ben
@ceefax12 How can you ask others to review code you cannot properly understand?
hang on...
Code review is for asking code reviews not for asking why pieces of code you found on SO do what you want but you dont know why. Ben was under the wrong impression of what you wanted when he suggested that.
You'll gain a lot more as a programmer by stepping through the code and figuring out why it works than if we just tell you.
You can still use a debugger even if there don't appear to be any bugs :)
Ben
Ben
I've found using a whiteboard to be useful when representing ideas.
14:18
i'm trying but i'm puzzled
this is the code and what i think is happening, sorry for bad explaination
Ven
Ven
@sehe do you have your bin handy?
Cake is baked.
and so are you?
Sugary, almondy, lemony & greeny.
@Borgleader Not today. Care to lend a hand?
14:24
No thx, I'm drug free (even coffee)
Ben
Ben
@Morwenn I seem to be good at baking dense loaves. :/
@Borgleader Haha, I bet you'd die without water :D
@Ben Which kind of bread?
Ben
Ben
@Morwenn I don't know, just cups of flour and yeast and water and salt. White bread I think.
Oh, I see.
I sometimes made bread a few years ago. I had a special flour with many seeds in.
@Borgleader On the other hand, it must be nice to live common-addictions-free.
@R.MartinhoFernandes thanks /cc @Ven
14:37
@Morwenn I guess
> Yes, I vote for unconditional acceptance of Boost.Fiber.
[...]
I happened to have studied Boost.Fiber recently because I came across
limitations of the inter-coroutine interaction in Boost.Coroutine, and
Boost.Fiber addresses these limitations rather nicely. I especially
like the message passing channels, which makes Boost.Fiber an obvious
choice for building a coroutine-based actor framework.
/cc @rightfold Making C++ Great Again!
So boost.coroutine is out boost.fiber is in? sigh good thing i hadnt started looking at that yet
?! Nope not at all
That's a weird conclusion from one - not even formal - review
Boost.Fiber could just have other problems it traded for not having those problems
could easily be worse problems.
Obviously
Ben
Ben
14:49
@sehe I've never had to use Boost in its entirety until recently, with using the cinder library.
Nice. Do you use it cross platform?
Ben
Ben
@sehe Not really, I'm not that familiar with Boost.
therefore, I haven't used it on other platforms yet.
not being familiar with boost is sort of orthogonal to writing cross platform code
@Ben cinder, I meant
Ben
Ben
@sehe I'm not familiar with cinder either, I can't even make a basic cinder application to link with MSVC, cause I have the wrong versions of the Boost libraries.
14:55
@Ben What did you mean by "with using cinder library"?
Ben
Ben
@sehe it really is one static library.
@sehe woah, I'm incoherent.
um, what I meant to say is that cinder also links to various static boost libraries.
@sehe Does that answer your question?
is sundog sleeping?
ah
highlight.js fails hard on binary literals and digit separators.
15:17
That was to be expected.
Well, it seemed pretty decent until there.
fuck.
I bought MGS5 on the PC.
those shitfaces didn't even bother to make a mouse UI
what is this 1997?
Youre saying that as if half the pc ports on steam didnt do this :P
yeah
that's one of the reasons why I don't buy many games anymore
user1804599
MGS5 is fun until you get to the point where you have to do the side-ops before you can continue the story and the side-ops are all pretty much the same.
15:31
MGS5 was fun until it asked me my birthday and I couldn't click on the fucking UI control.
user1804599
16:10
Yummy, kroepoek
16:29
41
Q: Will flat earth society membership affect my graduate school application?

TataJust to be clear, no, I don't believe flat earth theory. However, a few years ago I thought that the flat earth society forum is good place to practice my debating skill and to have fun. Therefore I joined it and made an online id that's closed to my real name to debate on the forum. It just mad...

I suspect almost every member of the flat earth society joined for a practical joke or for trolling. — vsz 2 days ago
I had to deal with projections often enough to painfully know that flat earth isn't a thing. It would simplify a bunch of things.
user1804599
17:00
Ok, so I'm going to implement doors.
user1804599
data Tile = ... | DoorTile DoorState
data DoorState = Open | Closed | Locked
Doors = Windows clone? Are you into operating systems now?
user1804599
Also, my world generator generated a golden swastika:
user1804599
0
Q: unique_ptr becomes empty after moving

jy wI'm trying for the first time to use unique_ptr to grow a binary tree, which basically works like the following: void growTree(unique_ptr<Node> root){ //do some calculations root->value = "some value" for(int i=0;i<2;i++){ unique_ptr<Node> child(new Node); growTre...

lol
17:04
brilliant
user1804599
@fredoverflow lol, languages in which you can read moved-from values
What's next? std::vector bigger after push_back?
@rightfold Rust fanboi?
user1804599
Rust <3
user1804599
17:28
user1804599
Doors!
@rightfold those aren't doors
those are chocolate bars
user1804599
I am thinking of using three.js instead of SVG.
baked AF?
oh, baked as fuck?
hehe
nah
probably not worth it
@QPaysTaxes Are blackouts common in your area?
or spikes or...?
user1804599
18:13
user1804599
!!!
18:23
@QPaysTaxes yeah, UPS are worth it... You can get them for pretty cheap, and it might save bits of your computer which are touchy to power fluctuations, especially if power isn't reliable where you are. UPS have the added bonus of 'cleaning' power supply, according to one of my friends who is a professional generator mechanic.
user1804599
It's a video game.
why would you care?
the game's just as fun
user1804599
@QPaysTaxes yes it is github.com/rightfold/dungeoff
@QPaysTaxes lol, yeah, there's pricey ones out there... But if you just need power for long enough to perform a clean shutdown, you don't need to go expensive. If you need hours of off-grid power, then you're talking some serious $$$$.
Never mind all the other features the premium UPS have that the proletariat generally don't need.
Hello, i read on internet that static_cast function was introduced in C++11 but i want to know what is the function for old C++ for changing type of variables
4
18:38
Hey everyone!
@DeNiSkA static_cast was not introduced in c++11, you should using wherever that was from as a source of information.
its been there forever
@DeNiSkA wow is this a contest for how many things you can get wrong
user1804599
@DeNiSkA static_cast is not a function, and it has been in C++03 already.
@QPaysTaxes Like for remote sites, you can have server connectivity and control, as well as regulated power distribution (not sure that's the correct phrase) so make sure critical systems are the last to lose power.
@QPaysTaxes :P
18:39
My high school follows turbo c++ compiler and static_cast doesn't work on it
@QPaysTaxes you're welcome!
My school doesn't do C++. It barely touches on Python.
Goes about as far as if statements :I
@ICantCode that's terrible
@DeNiSkA sigh you know that compiler is 20 years old rigt? that compiler pre-dates C++ being standardized, its by definition wrong.
18:40
@DeNiSkA Turbo C++ is 23 years old
@milleniumbug what do you mean by that?
Whoops, @QPaysTaxes At least your school does it.
C# is probably better with Unity
Ohh, thanks. I signed up yesterday ;-;
Our school is 49 years old and our curriculum is utter shit
dirty secret of Java, it runs on top of C/C++
2
#JavaExposed
18:42
lol
@QPaysTaxes @ICantCode one of the companies I worked for had an entire 'DevOps' team who could barely code in python, or bash... lol, called themselves 'DevOps Engineers'
@QPaysTaxes I'd probably consider that a very good thing, depending on whawt they know instead.
and that's different to basically every other teacher how?
Come to India and you will know that high schools are only interested in marks ! No technology
My school is absolutely rubbish when it comes to CS. When it comes to programming, they only have Python installed with the IDLE as the IDE..
@QPaysTaxes @Puppy well, that's not so bad, knowing programming and not knowing Java isn't a show-stopper
I'd consider it a pro
18:45
@QPaysTaxes lmao how'd you know
@ICantCode you said rubbish
also dont all caps, tia
ooooooooh..... not so good :(
you're making it sound like that's some kind of revelation
but I'll give you a pro tip
that happens basically everywhere
about 90% of this room had the same experience at professional university courses.
@Puppy that's so disappointing though
it's very disappointing
18:47
I mean, is that high school or university? I could understand HS, but university is a different issue
absolutely at university.
I paid a large sum of money for that course
That's crazy
we regularly get people here whose universities teach Turbo C++ or Dev C++ or just plain C as C++
and the rest of the courses are little better
Then again, there's a lot of CS majors who've already graduated sitting in some of my classes, and they've barely touched any code
programming as in doing useful shit, and programming as in getting marks at your educational institution of choice, are completely independent things that bear very little relation to each other.
in fact it's legendary now how many people have CS degrees and such things who can't do shit that we literally had to introduce the FizzBuzz test.
18:49
@Puppy I'g guessing the learning curve is pretty sharp then in the 'real' world
@QPaysTaxes that's hilarious
lol
yeah, but none of those things should be programming shit you could easily be taught
Is it normal to get 10 rep for one comment upvote (sorry, I'm new)]
@QPaysTaxes No. Those people legitimately got degrees or even masters or PhDs.
18:52
@QPaysTaxes That's what I mean, I said the wrong thing. Thanks.
nah
well, yes.
nwp
nwp
you should not confuse a CS degree with a programming degree
really it's for paperwork pushers who don't have a brain and can't figure out whether or not you're good by just looking at a number
@nwp Yeah, it's just that real programming degrees don't exist, at least here, and basically all the employers do get them confused.
@nwp @QPaysTaxes @Puppy definitely think that degrees aren't a waste of money for hard workers who ply their trade, but people to shoot for high marks and don't work/study.... then it's a waste of money for them... degree is really just a piece of extra paper that tells companies "you can really trust me to do X"... ++ the really's for each higher degree
@QPaysTaxes laters
@NonCreature0714 Nah, they are a complete waste of money for everybody involved.
the companies have to run fizzbuzz on everybody, degree or not, it doesn't imply any kind of skill or competence
18:56
@Puppy I was speaking from more of an HR perspective (sister-in-law is HR exec)... basically people with degrees are harder to fire...
Ell
Ell
@Puppy It depends on the institution
nwp
nwp
I could be productive in the real world, instead I waste my time on courses on how to use google and "HeidiSQL"
@Ell That's the whole problem that makes them useless.
nwp
nwp
but if I don't do it I take a 30% pay cut or so
@Puppy totally agree that it doesn't guarantee a good programmer
18:57
there's a big difference between "doesn't guarantee" and "doesn't even correlate"
it's not really usefully correlated at all.
@QPaysTaxes there is that point too... School or any learning - it's really about persistence and dedication, however you achieve the skill is meaningless.
@NonCreature0714 No, that's a silly view.
19:00
because
Ell
Ell
@Puppy I guess degrees in general could be useless then
people should only be measured by their dedication to worthwhile causes.
Ell
Ell
but degrees from X are useful
where X is some set of worthwhile institutions
dedication to a worthless cause is a flaw, not a benefit.
@Ell A pity that that set is, as far as I can tell, zero.
nwp
nwp
@NonCreature0714 I agree. A degree proofs you are resistant to the pain that dumb work causes, and that is valuable.
Ell
Ell
19:01
@Puppy MIT?
no.
Ell
Ell
wow :V
did you never see that guy in here asking about his MIT coursework?
he was using a lecturer-written graphics library
@Ell agree with you there... It does hold some weight, at least socially, to say "I graduated from X", where X is Ivy, instead of some unknown place.
e.g. setColour("RED"); drawTriangle(3, 3); or someshit
how fuckin' stupid of a lecturer do you have to be to write such shite?
Ell
Ell
19:02
I guess that was first year stuff? hopefully :P
that's even worse, not better.
having a degree from X is fundamentally an appeal to authority argument.
"I'm great because X said I am!".
it's not a valid argument.
nwp
nwp
@Puppy but if you get through that you can use pretty much any library because it just doesn't get much worse, which again is useful
@nwp Thanks. Degrees are frustrating, and are of way of testing dedication at the least. Not to say they are the best way of indicating a person is good at their job/coding.
Ell
Ell
it's not "authority" though is it, it's appeal to experience, knowledge etc.
@Ell All of those things are worthless authorities.
"knowledge" means "you can present a good argument".
if you're not actually going to present that argument
it's meaningless.
if you have a degree from X, and you don't call up the fucking lecturer and insist on details of everything you ever did, it's an appeal to authority.
4 mins ago, by Puppy
dedication to a worthless cause is a flaw, not a benefit.
19:05
@Puppy Simply because something is an appeal to authority doesn't invalidate the argument if the appeal is to a valid and recognized authority.
yes, it absolutely does.
nwp
nwp
also I think I finally figured out my link errors to clang:: symbols. There is no library to link to, you are meant to include .cpps in your project
no, you're absolutely wrong (on a completely orthogonal note to the main conversation here)
@Puppy Even saying that you are "good" at something based on your past performance is a form of appealing to authority. And past performance is no 100% guarantee that future performance will be equal or better.
19:07
@NonCreature0714 It's not an appeal to authority, assuming that you have some valid proof of your past performance.
it doesn't guarantee you will perform, but it does prove that you can perform.
@Puppy Validated history is a type of authority, I think ā€“ if something is a fact, it holds sway over our reality.
nah
it just proves something slightly different to what you actually want.
19:09
it's just that it's impossible to prove that you will perform in the future at this company, so the fact that you can perform for some company is the best substitute
Agreed there ā€“ though in this case you're referencing yourself as the authority to guarantee performance.
"Yourself" being whoever is using their past to defend their future.
@NonCreature0714 Yeah, the key bit here is "assuming that you have some valid proof of your past performance"
@Puppy Lol, totally agreed there ā€“ not having a reference-able work history makes things difficult for everyone.
@Puppy good talking with you, but I've got to go; later!
19:37
Iā€™m starting to see how APL and other array languages are elegant #FamousLastWords
nwp
nwp
@sehe some day you should explain to me how that or any other tweet you post is interesting or relevant
We have some esoterics lovers here.
For one thing, Ven, Rightfold and probably at 3 others would appreciate someone "getting" the elegance of APL
@StackedCrooked Nice.
Rare events like that ought to be amplified, so the networks can connect.
@StackedCrooked TBH, I have not seen the show once in my 36 years of life.
19:42
I haven't seen it in the last couple of years. Maybe I should watch it next year if it has a live stream.
nwp
nwp
@sehe ok, I guess I'm just not among the target audience
Also, I suck, how do I do the tag style of text?
Yup
@wilx [tag:stuff]
@sehe :D
Try again. Practice makes perfect.
Imitation of idols is a great motivator. Thanks for leading, @nwp
hm
today is the first anniversary of my first post in the Lounge
Ell
Ell
aww
celebrate
You guys have been pretty great <3
@jaggedSpire you're green
19:54
@sehe like kermit and new growth
@jaggedSpire I think you came after the great depressions :)
Only a moderate bit of drama over the last periods
nods
The most dramatic bits were the start of December and the introduction of Discord, I think.
Yup. Where the latter was very much helped by the former.
nwp
nwp
there is a streamer on twitch who knows what variadic templates are, that's a first I think
It showed quite a bit of scar tissue, when loungers overreacted so badly to a meta intervention
@nwp All the real guruü are on livecoding.tv :)
nwp
nwp
19:58
@sehe can't watch, not willing to install flash
That's long gone m8
@nwp Also, interestingly he's using the one compiler that demonstrably doesn't
oh my god i just got 200 rep
v. nice
nwp
nwp
@sehe what is long gone?
grats on hitting the rep cap for today

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