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20:00
@nwp flash is no longer preferred (or I just don't know what HTML5 means)
@wilx apparently we're almost the same age
@VermillionAzure If we were cruel, we could mass upvote now so you don't get any rep from it
I'm from 1980.
@StackedCrooked I just watched E.T. with my kids. That's from 1982 :)
20:02
I had never seen it myself. (Beyond the classic fragments)
@sehe wow
Also, I can't believe I got a top answer by explaining what a trie is
@VermillionAzure that's a nice answer
@jaggedSpire aw thanks :)
@jaggedSpire You're a nice person!
@VermillionAzure It's a bit weird. I bet the hand drawn tree adds to it
@sehe "weird" how?
20:03
@VermillionAzure :3
nwp
nwp
@sehe that's what I get when trying some stream on livecoding and livestreamer doesn't support it either
@VermillionAzure I'm not sure how much the answer actually helps. I find it nice and informative
@sehe I see; I know what you mean
@VermillionAzure congratulations
@nwp support.livecoding.tv/hc/en-us/articles/217085508 No clue what prevents if for you
user1804599
20:05
My code is as great as I am.
@milleniumbug yay! :)
user1804599
I.e. it is fucking amazetastic.
my experience with SO is that if you want rep, you need to be in proper place at proper time
@rightfold What are you coding right now, lambda?
it seems you hit the jackpot with that answer
nwp
nwp
20:06
@sehe they said it works only for chrome and safari, maybe I can mess with my referrer
:D
@milleniumbug or be willing to lower your standards and use the shotgun approach :P
user1804599
> 15 yrs experience
user1804599
I thought the highest option you could select was labeled "5 or more"
???
Why can't you apply a const qualifier to a reference?
wait a minute
dumb question
20:11
const int& means the reference refers to const int, not that the reference itself is const
IT'S HAPPENING https://t.co/FrTVZ619V6
nwp
nwp
references are always const
@nwp Right... Right?
idk can you have f(type& a, type& b) and have a == b in reference?
well you can call it with f(a, a)
@Borgleader Wait is that kung pao
nwp
nwp
20:14
@VermillionAzure a == b compares the objects and &a == &b compares the addresses. Comparing the references is not possible
I don't think comparing references would be useful anyways
Because they're literally the places, not the values that can refer to place locations I see
Makes sense.
user1804599
In Rust == compares pointees.
user1804599
It's impossible to compare addresses.
@rightfold So... how do they compare reference?
or the address?
user1804599
20:18
:D
nwp
nwp
@milleniumbug pretty sure that checks T and not the reference
@rightfold Difficult or not possible at all?
user1804599
Impossible.
user1804599
There's no such feature.
nwp
nwp
references are not real object, just a built in hack
20:19
@nwp It checks what's between < and >
you can't actually do any operation on the reference, so it doesn't really matter whether it's const or not
user1804599
I want to be happy.
Get laid a lot, ask @thecoshman
Oofff savage
100% true, though
Tatsoryk semi-died because @thecoshman gets laid a lot
20:30
This all makes so much sense that it hurts
nwp
nwp
what is that referrer ID http request thing called where my browser sends who it is?
You mean referer? That's just a header
And "who it is" is User-Agent
In computing, a user agent is software (a software agent) that is acting on behalf of a user. For example, an email reader is a mail user agent. In the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP), the term user agent refers to both end points of a communications session. In many cases, a user agent acts as a client in a network protocol used in communications within a client–server distributed computing system. In particular, the Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) identifies the client software originating the request, using a "User-Agent" header, even when the client is not operated by a user. The S...
nwp
nwp
ah, user agent is what I needed, thanks
And yes, referer has the hillarrious typo
user1804599
Toadstool clouds are beautiful.
user1804599
20:36
Nuclear weapons are marvelous.
user1804599
@sehe saves Google terabytes of bandwidth per day
nuclear weapons are pretty inventive
user1804599
War is childish.
@rightfold good thinking. SPDY and HTTP2 are unnecessary. Just obfuscate all the headers
21:01
the designers coulda just used a binary protocol if they wanted to save space there
Ven
Ven
@rightfold :P
Hello, I just wanted a advice. I have been using vim for writing C++ code(for practice and competitive coding) and I am using GDB for debugging my programs. However, I am feeling like GDB is not a right choice for that purpose(because I have to write commands to do some simple tasks; I am from visual studio background so this process slows me down). So, should I use any GUI based debugger or improve my skills in GDB ?
user1804599
Write code in such a way that you don't need to use a debugger to debug it.
user1804599
You shouldn't be good at using the debugger.
nwp
nwp
@xordux if you like gdb watch this, otherwise get an IDE
21:10
@rightfold Often you need to debug others code, you can't just afford rewriting.
nwp
nwp
I personally like got used to Qt Creator
user1804599
Don't work with people who write shit code.
ok @nwp I am watching it now.
@rightfold It is even can be code of third-party library, not your coworker.
user1804599
Work with competent people exclusively.
21:12
@rightfold sometimes you get bugs, no matter how hard you try.
5
Ven
Ven
In the end, it doesn't even maaaatteeeer
user1804599
You don't need debuggers to solve bugs.
Ven
Ven
Today is not a good day to read the lounge
user1804599
Debuggers make it easier to solve some classes of bugs that rarely occur in well-written code.
user1804599
You shouldn't need them often, so you don't have to be good at using them, and they don't have to be easy to use.
Ven
Ven
21:13
Wow now that's a new level of retardation.
6
nwp
nwp
@rightfold thats like saying "I don't need const, I know what I can modify and what not"
@rightfold Arguably, (really) well-written code has no bugs in the first place.
user1804599
@nwp No, it isn't.
Ven
Ven
Introducing the "Rightfold elevator pitches" - "you'll think I'm retarded in less than 10 seconds!"
21:14
@rightfold thats a beautiful thought. I'll try to do that.
@Ven TOTAL RETARDATION IN C++
user1804599
The lack of const on anything is itself a bug.
user1804599
Immutability master race.
meh fuck const
I use debuggers even when not searching for bugs
user1804599
21:15
#define proper_auto auto const
const auto peasant ;p
It's the simplest way of figuring out what does the code do
@rightfold Breaks proper_auto&&
You can read it, or just run it under debugger
@milleniumbug not enough declarative
user1804599
21:16
Rust ftw
Ven
Ven
We have a few const_cast in our codebase, to keep us fully awake at all time (and on the verge of crying).
@Ven I thought that's what C casts are for
nwp
nwp
there are good const_casts
the problem with const_cast is that to need it, you first have to be using const
@nwp Not really. There are horrific APIs that don't offer a const correct interface.
21:17
@nwp Haven't found any IME
Ven
Ven
@nwp i sure didn't need to const_cast my soul to sell it to the devil
@ScarletAmaranth not allowed to use those
const_cast should require 60 mana
nwp
nwp
const_cast<const T&>(t) requires 0 mana
@Ven lol; ok, I will just manually decompose to static_cast -> dynamic_cast -> reinterpret_cast -> const_cast ;)
@nwp terrible
std::as_const
nwp
nwp
21:19
@milleniumbug nice, didn't know about that one
Ven
Ven
@ScarletAmaranth :D
user1804599
Always use Rust instead of C++.
Ven
Ven
Except when life is going too well and you want to hate everything.
A.k.a. Pulling a cat
... Out of a bag of ICE
nwp
nwp
I should make a comic about the levels of a C++ developer. Noob -> Memory Leaker -> Inheritance Hierarchy Architect -> ... -> Avoids C++ at all cost
just got to fill in the dots
@xordux the set of commands required to proficiently use gdb is quite small IME. there are some advantages to text based debugging (i.e. automation)
OTOH if you find that gdb has issues with debugging something, all the other tools that use gdb underneath won't help you either
21:24
lack of const is one of the great things about C#
lldb is the best candidate for a linux debugger and a gdb replacement, but it's not as widely used, so...
there are some, I'd say, social issues
@milleniumbug No issues with gdb itself. But I do find myself less productive in it. I am watching a video shared by @nwp , it is very cool.
@milleniumbug This video youtube.com/watch?v=PorfLSr3DDI
@xordux That's because Visual Studio debugger is usually more helpful
yeah
when you have a bug, it's better to just use VS, instead of fighting GDB
Sometimes I wish they had VS for linux too.
21:29
run it in a VM :D
user1804599
Stop whining and start Wining.
nwp
nwp
@xordux here you go (no it is not the real thing, but close-ish)
@nwp I don't think it is close. It is just a editor without any other feature.
user1804599
Why would you use an abhorrent editor like that when editors as dazzling as Vim exists?
It dont even have debugger I guess.
nwp
nwp
21:32
@rightfold because you don't need to learn and type horrendously complicated strings to do simple things
@rightfold I use Vim, it is very nice. But VS is a very good IDE.
user1804599
You want to, however, because in the long term you will benefit from it.
user1804599
My IDE is called GNU/Linux.
@rightfold And what are you called ? Chuck Norris ?
user1804599
rightfold
21:34
as an aside, this chat has "respond to the message" feature
use it @xordux
@nwp how is it close
It has "Visual" in the name
@xordux Try CLion.
@milleniumbug Irony of not using it
@sehe because that one wasn't targetted at a specific message
:D
user1804599
21:38
CLion is an abhorrent editor.
user1804599
It's neither Emacs nor Vim.
Ven
Ven
Nor both
user1804599
Exploding playing cards are amazing.
Ven
Ven
Exploding kittens is a very good card game
Writting functional programming code without pipes |> is like replying emails with top-posting: back(back(forward(step))) #flamewar
Ven
Ven
@sehe except for do-notation I guess :p
21:50
That's cheating
Ven
Ven
But writing a n-ary ->> function isn't?
The door's there ->>
Ven
Ven
@QPaysTaxes Clojure
Oh, "do"? No, haskell.
user1804599
->> is a macro, not a function, you silly fool.
Ven
Ven
@rightfold it needn't be
user1804599
22:03
do x <- f
   y <- g
   pure (x + y)
user1804599
@Ven it does
Ven
Ven
not in a curried lang
user1804599
->> works with lists, not functions.
user1804599
No, Haskell is pointful.
user1804599
Befunge is point-free.
22:04
@QPaysTaxes Indeed, theres no point in learning/using it.
Ven
Ven
Haskell can be written in pointfree style
heyooo
Ven
Ven
But it's definitely not pointfree
@rightfold could just reduce-apply
user1804599
You can write the identity function point-freely without any libraries in Haskell. :)
Ven
Ven
fst . (,1) :^)
user1804599
22:06
{-# LANGUAGE MagicHash #-}
import GHC.Prim (unsafeCoerce#)
id :: a -> a
id = unsafeCoerce#
Ven
Ven
This could be a new YAPH-style contest
(Yet another perl hacker)
Whats YAPH?
user1804599
GHC.Prim is arguably not a library.
user1804599
Also MagicHash arguably makes it not Haskell.
Ven
Ven
@Mikhail i just did
user1804599
22:07
@Ven >=> and >>= are the underrated Kleisli equivalents of >>> and &.
user1804599
Amon Amarth is so nice.
user1804599
As Loke Falls is a beautiful song
@Mikhail You Are Pretty Honest
Or: You Are Pretty, Honest!
user1804599
> Science flies you to the moon. Religion flies you into buildings.
Keeps goals reasonable.
22:20
A more interesting interpretation is that science distracts otherwise intelligent people from making real societal changes, thus helping to maintain the status-quo.
More like they don't have the kind of intelligence needed to do anything else than science, so it doesn't change things.
What if they have both?
@rightfold Without science, 9/11 would not have happened for many many reasons
@Mikhail That's probably a minority.
@sehe Because of that numeral system thingy? :D
That too
@Morwenn Your Honour Art Petty
user1804599
22:25
I'm so hungry
Eat a bucket
3
user1804599
No I want a pizza
You can have both?
A bucket full of pizza
Bucket full of chicken.
22:31
pls, pizza full of buckets
A pizza full of buckets.
Fuck man
I suck
9
user1804599
Plofkip
I'm like "oh, a discussion! I'll throw in a joke!"
And then I write it
And then I realize that someone already did it
sealbucket.jpg
nwp
nwp
22:34
@EtiennedeMartel and then you explain your failure, documenting it for all eternity
We still like you :3
Some of us may love you
user1804599
Say you do taboo work for five years, what do you put on your CV?
buckets full of buckets
user1804599
22:35
Totally legal but taboo
@rightfold buzz-words. Lots of them.
nwp
nwp
replace the critical words with words that are higher level
Like replace C by Java?
Working at my current job for 2 years, I feel like I am getting good at it.
nwp
nwp
such as "I programmed drones to murder people for the military" -> "I developed software for the government helping homeland security"
user1804599
22:38
So instead of saying "cam whore" you'd say "entertainer", got it
"I moved files to a floppy disk" -> "I offload data to a remote storage, to help provide redundancy"
nwp
nwp
right. Not sure how you replace Java. Esoteric language?
Hi I heard you guys are selling buckets of pizza?
nwp
nwp
@Nican you are doing it the wrong way around
Ah
nwp
nwp
22:39
@KristopherIves sold out
@nwp I have yet to see an actually interesting esoteric language no derived from Brainfuck, Malbolge or INTERCAL ._____.
nwp
nwp
I just stick to C++ and occasionally some python
Oh, and Entropy. Entropy is awesome ♥
nwp
nwp
maybe I should get around more
user1804599
22:41
@Morwenn Befunge, Funciton
@nwp I'm in the same boat. 99.9% C++.
pick the right tool for the job, not pick tools and find jobs
user1804599
Especially the latter. It's functional reactive programming under 90° invariance.
Maybe a little more ...
nwp
nwp
TIL if you scream "Entropy, I summon thee!" you actually increase entropy
user1804599
22:41
Super rad.
@rightfold I don't like Befunge and don't know the other one :/
@KristopherIves I wish I could. I am only allowed to use ASP.NET
user1804599
So look it up
Nica, make a transpiler if it upsets you that much
@nwp depends a bit on how hard you scream. Also, if you don't scream at all, entropy increases
22:42
Al Dente was built on an interesting concept too.
I have some shared servers that only run PHP for example, but I've recompiled many programs to run on that server
@rightfold Will do.
nwp
nwp
@KristopherIves doesn't work for me. fumbling around with a language I'm not familiar with is less efficient than just using the language I know best
user1804599
@KristopherIves lol shared servers
Can't beat $10 a year
22:43
Also, there are like 3 or 4 useful programming languages, and being fluent in all of them is not too hard.
They price the servers assuming you can only run X on them, but I've ran complete copies of Tor on them.
Aannnnd Esolang just died -_____-
user1804599
That's like saying McDonald's is superior to a proper restaurant because it's cheaper.
Well there is a reason McDonalds is the largest grossing food business in the world
AHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH
OH MY GOD I HAVE A FREE DAY TODAY YASSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS
22:44
Free day today. Spends day doing nothing in the Lounge. Day well spent.
user1804599
Advertising
@VermillionAzure How much do your other days cost?
@Morwenn like in Office Space "I want to do nothing, and it will be awesome"
user1804599
If they did as much marketing as proper restaurants do then nobody would ever go there since it is fucking disgusting
@VermillionAzure That's an interesting and unexpected direction ... !
22:45
@rightfold McDonalds is a superior restaurant by cost
and speed
and availability
user1804599
@KristopherIves I like the quote "I did absolutely nothing and it was everything I thought it would be"
@JamesAdkison Doesn't mean you can't enjoy what you didn't expect
Are we really explaining basic economics right now?
@KristopherIves BUTT BUTT BUTT YOU MUST EXPLAN OPPERTURNIP COSTCO
22:46
Also nutritional value, the 99 cent burger is the most cost effective menu item known to man kind.
lol exactly
user1804599
Also "it's not that I'm lazy; it's that I just don't care"
Watching office space when I work a 9-5 job is depressing as hell
Practically like calling in sick the next day just by opening the file
@Morwenn I'm not doing nothing though; I've been playing Go and going through a compilers textbook
God I miss Rising Thunder
@VermillionAzure you reading the dragon book?
22:48
@rightfold Do you like eating at "Chachkies"?
I have a hardback copy I am willing to get rid of
@KristopherIves Why do you call it the dragon?
That's what it's called, because it has a picture of the dragon being slain on it
Yes I am though I think so the answers I like to look at come from a GitHub repo labeled as such
Yes I am reading the dragon
22:49
Oh that's a dargon? ah. never really wanted to think about that one
@KristopherIves What do you think about that one?
user1804599
@JamesAdkison no, at the Italian
This is the one I have it's almost the same: i.imgur.com/5E7nBkT.jpg
I'm using it because UC Berkeley uses it for their course
user1804599
I wanna try extreme fajitas though
OH MY GOD THAT DRAGON IS SO CUTE
user1804599
22:50
@KristopherIves worthless book
It's a great book very thorough
@rightfold Why
Dont feed the troll
user1804599
It's so boring and outdated
He hates everything
22:50
@KristopherIves What's the useful parts?
@rightfold It's a good fundamentals book nevertheless, I'm guessing, right?
I can't read papers on parallel parsing without having some basic knowledge
@VermillionAzure the book is good at getting you to understand how compilers work and how to write one - flex and yacc being good tools overall
@KristopherIves Hmm you see I'm not sure if I should use either right now
@VermillionAzure granted if you write a compiler today you may not chose to use yacc, flex, or bison - the tool you do pick will almost certainly use the grammars and forms described in the book
For example if I write a compiler today I may choose Java because it has some tools that are easier to write BNF grammars
@KristopherIves Of course, but my goal is to adopt a Lisp-based system for all parts of the compiler
But if you have learned how to use flex/bison/yacc using javacc for example is easy
user1804599
22:52
Every part of the compiler is highly input language specific. You can't write a general book.
@rightfold But what about grammars?
And AST?
he probably has never used these tools to be honest
let alone any BNF tool it sounds like
user1804599
Also yacc and bison are utter shit.
@KristopherIves Why do they focus so much on context-free grammars anyways?
@rightfold Oh yeah, now I remember Funciton. It looked fun but so painful to type :o
user1804599
22:54
Funciton is a great example of a language that doesn't fit the typical parsing guides.
Nice stackoverflow has an ignore user feature
Makes my life easier
I can't look up Funciton
Esolang is kinda broken tonight.
Anyway, I need to sleep. Bye.
@Morwenn night
@VermillionAzure the focus on context free I think is to describe the types of grammars that are possible to write parsers for effeciently
@VermillionAzure in theory even very bad parsing methods can parse a language, but they may do so requiring more memory (lookahead)

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