« first day (2068 days earlier)      last day (3107 days later) » 

00:00
You have to anyway because internal version number is not very interesting information to print out
Guess I need a get_colloquial_windows_version function. :B
This thing ran on Windows 6.3 wait which one was it again
Esp that service packs are denoted by build numbers
Honestly the best way might be going through WMI because there's a Caption property that just describes the OS like you'd want to do anyway
WMI?
> Windows Management Instrumentation (WMI) consists of a set of extensions to the Windows Driver Model that provides an operating system interface through which instrumented components provide information and notification.
Sounds neat.
1 min ago, by Shoe
oh boy
00:11
@CatPlusPlus Holy shit that's amazing.
But that looks like stuff part of the DDK.
Does MinGW work with the Windows DDK?
Time to go google and find out...
> MinGW has no support for WMI. There are some efforts in MinGW64 but it still can't be called complete (for example, wbemuuid.lib is missed).
He's a nervous wreck
Shit.
Okay. I think I'm going kick this person before we reach "asl" level
@ThePhD It's COM, fairly sure you don't need any headers except for the IDL compiler
> Another solution for getting device UIDs for your concrete task may be using of Windows Setup API that is well supported by MinGW.
It all comes back to Windows Setup.
How could I not know this concerto yet.
SetupAPI is the non-WMI way to enumerate or do anything with devices yes
13 messages moved to bin
I'm gonna go with adding a name to the kernel_info_t
So that we can at least have something more useful for printing than the internal version.
00:16
17 messages moved to bin
Beautiful music. Vintage Prokofiev.
Makes me want to try my hand at the piano sonatas again.
I think I recognize the main theme from one the violin/flute sonatas. That's. That's what was so familiar
> When everyday programming might use things like “profunctors”, “injective type families”, and “generalized algebraic datatypes”, you would think that dealing with strings would be a well-solved problem.
Not if UNICODE consortium had anything to say about type or category theory
oooh my that's quite a lot of binning
Just the noise.
you could say you've been binning :D
00:25
My eyes. What the fuck is in the bin?
lol
It's bin laden, so the lad got binning
@Mysticial That. A lot of that.
at that sarah troll?
14 mins ago, by sehe
He's a nervous wreck
00:28
I haven’t used mutable in ever, I don’t remember if there are pitfalls to look for
What's the best way to quickly concatenate integers into a string?
My gut says std::to_string stuff.
Meh, just pile on the std::to_string
By quickly you mean "how fast can I type it"?
Yes, actually.
I just ended up with...
friendlyname += std::to_string(major) + "." + std::to_string(minor) + "." + std::to_string(patch) + "." + std::to_string(build_number);
:B
If so then with a limited number of integers, I'd use std::to_string, but if there's more, I'd use std::stringstream
friendlyname << major << "." << minor << "." << patch << "." << build_number;
...see?
00:42
> Ghostbuster: A Tool for Simplifying and Converting GADTs
heh @Ven @ScarletAmaranth (no, I haven’t read about it)
Good enough.
re: yesterday’s bikeshed, maybe something such as as_foo would work
@LucDanton I use it for synchronization object members (and for lambdata of course)
@sehe I’m interested in your lamb-datum cases, since I may be in a similar boat
Erm. That's []() mutable {} right
00:49
oh, not the kw as such but an actual mutable data member
I don't think you can control that :) It's all-or-nuttin'
can’t I? I’m the one writing the code (iow I don’t get what you mean)
Damn.
In [a,b,c]() mutable {} all members are effectively mutable (since this is unspecified_type*). In [a, b, c]() {} all members are const (since this is unspecified_type const*)
I can't make a new partial template specialization when someone instantiates a template.
RIP me.
00:51
@sehe well, yes and no
I know.
they’re mutable in that they’re not marked const, but they’re not marked mutable either
"effectively" is the operative weasel word
disagree, 'mutable' is being overloaded here
(I only mentioned I use the kw in a lambda context too)
@LucDanton Precisely. Hence my weaselwording
00:52
it’s not that I have a non-const data member (what’s interesting about that), I have a data member marked mutable
@sehe but it doesn’t weasel you out of anything, your statement is just as correct without
It did for me :)
I know what I meant, and clearly you understood it - because you picked up flawed wording.
I still don’t get anything
Behold! a hoard of red pandas! /cc @Borgleader @Ell @ThePhD @Ven @Xeo @набиячлэвэлиь
@LucDanton I know that the mutable keyword in lambdas doesn't actually change the declared type of the members (except the function call operator member function...)
the all-or-nothing remark
what’s that about?
00:57
I did never whish to imply it. Tell me why you were interested in my "lambdatum" thing (as personally I thought that was irrelevant to the meaning of mutable you seemed after)
@LucDanton It was about the lambda case only, which, again, I don't think was relevant. Also it had the flawed wording. Let's forget about that and get back to the question.
@sehe never mind the tangent, I thought we weren’t talking about the keyword but data members
o.O lambda typed data members? Can that be :)
I'm getting more confused now
struct foo { mutable int lol; }; those
ikr.
13 mins ago, by sehe
@LucDanton I use it for synchronization object members (and for lambdata of course)
yeah but that’s the keyword
01:01
I don't know why you say "but" there...
Are you not talking about that.
because I’m not interested in the keyword, I meant to ask about the pitfalls of mutable data members
So. What did I tell you? I didn't exactly tell you about the keyword, or any of it's more boring properties.
I also didn't give you any pitfalls, because (a) I don't know any (beyond the obvious) and (b) I didn't want to answer that. I just responded to your "I haven’t used mutable in ever"
@sehe you said you used the mutable keyword for synchronization members and in lambda expressions
Well. I can't help that the compiler requires me to use the keyword to make a member mutable.
@sehe I’m concerned about bad API design e.g. subverting const-correctness
01:05
Ah. Let me fink
@sehe sure. 'I use the static keyword for static function members' is not really relevant to e.g. 'hey what about the pitfalls of static initialization order' though
See (b)
yeah that’s where I meant mutable data members, not the keyword
I haven’t used mutable data members in ever
I didn't know I was obliged to answer your question (that wasn't a question in the first place)... :(
well, you’re not
01:08
@LucDanton Hmmm? How do you have them without the keyword? Or do you mean: any non-const data mmember?
@sehe you do have to use the keyword
Ok. Clear on that now.
To me there should not be a valid use case for mutable, outside the mentioned things that are technically mutable even when logically const and safe for concurrent access.
Are you thinking of the std::set/std::map conundrum again? The case where the key-part should be const, but it's inconvenient to have the whole object const?
And the fact that std::map<K,V>::value_type is K const?
Then really, I don't think I can think of a use for mutable data members right now
I wanted to start writing about that tonight but my mind is kinda in pieces so I put it off for later, I can’t even begin to describe the situation (if I could, I’d rather be writing than coding)
I consider it’s a hint towards a clearer separation of concerns of the different parts that make up a range
01:14
Ah. Now there's something. I do have a fleeting recollection of using mutables in iterators. But that's been while gone and I'm not at all sure I'd do that again.
cos e.g. operator* is const
unsurprisingly I ran into the problem for at(flatten_range, position) i.e. pretty much the same deal
Toddlers have shot more people in the U.S. than muslim terrorists in 2016. https://t.co/6TEqEESdCO
There's a stat that might need amending
juuuust a little
it was a narrow margin when it was posted IIRC, and depended on how you defined "mass shooting"
also, in mass shootings, you don't actually have to kill anyone
@jaggedSpire It doesn't even mention mass shootings.
01:21
the original article did, I think?
lemme go see if I can dig it up
@LucDanton Yup. Reminds me strongly of the map conundrum. What is the use of having operator* const? Also, that could be fine, right. If the range encapsulates a pointer-to-mutable, then operator* being const would not prevent returning the pointee as mutable?
I think the common metric is four fatalities, potentially the shooter, though I guess I could be remembering the number required to be shot
muslim terrorists ... are there christian terrorists or buddhist terrorists?
@sehe for that last point, yes
as to having operator* const in general, that’s an API decision
Ah.
@jaggedSpire Again, I don't see anyone referring to mass shootings there. It's toddlers vs. muslim terrorists. None of them are required to have engaged in mass shootings (although it is allowed they count)
01:24
nice original phrasing there :P
:)
and yeah, seems you're right though that's on the matter of 2015
> In the first five months of 2016, there have been at least 23 reported shootings by toddlers, as compared to 18 in the same time period last year.

In 18 of those 23 incidents the children shot themselves
2016 was going stronger sauce
Maybe if we enlist the help of all youth shooters, then the terrorists might not have won just yet:
> As for all kids under 18 years old, there have so far been 77 cases this year alone in which a child accidentally shot someone.
@sehe if you’re still interested, I can’t quite yet put it into words but I can put in into loops
I don’t have an as clear separation of concerns between context info and position info in what corresponds to the inner loop, in my case
(why there is a need to distinguish context and position info to begin with is made clearer with uses other than forward iteration, e.g. midpoint search ;)
Arrrgh. It's too abstract for me. I always think I'm missing a gene for getting the context. Maybe Robot would have a useful insight
01:32
oh, I kinda like expressing it with loops cos I’ve written these things a hundred times (e.g. in Python, even if it still has a plethora of iteration tools)
@LucDanton Sounds so logical. Still, I'm only guessing what "context" could mean
@sehe ya know, like you have a list of offices and each office has a list of employees, and you need to go over all the employees of all the offices
I could pretend to be very smart and "guess" that context and position form a tensor
@LucDanton Ok. I'd totally dig that kind of feature. However, what does that tell me about context and position?
Do you mean context is actually like the outer iterator?
@sehe now pretend you only want to go over Europe-based offices and employees that have been with the company for less than 5 years—that’s contextual information you need for each loop to go over the right offices and employees respectively (and yes, those are filter operations)
i.e. you’d go int year_upper_bound = 6; for(…) { if(employee.years < year_upper_bound) consume(employee) …
So, now context holds the predicate? I'm almost certain that's not what you want to say.
01:36
@sehe nah, it matters even for the one loop
@sehe sort of, there are different kinds of loop and this particular example is a filter case
predicates and filters do go hand in hand
incr(context, position) will compute the next valid position—to do that for an employee, it needs to know about the upper bound one way or the other
Ok. So going out on a limb, are you trying to make ranges composable in a way that doesn't grow their types unnecessarily?
@sehe I’m trying to make ranges that compose
(As in Boost Range you'd have filtered_adaptor<sliced_adaptor<...<Range> > > which could become quite unwieldy)
I do have more requirements than just that, but it’s actually still a lot
@sehe Boost.Range doesn’t let you flatten things, it’s a non-starter
Yeah. I'm afraid the language has some high impedance against true functional composition.
In the end it always stops at the inability to perfectly proxy
01:39
@sehe I have good news and bad news
they’re actually the same news, it’s a glass half-full/half-empty situation
the situation sucks in every language I know of
so C++ is actually not that worse off than anything else!
@LucDanton In fact, that's a splendid example, yes. If you keep joining ranges in Boost Range (e.g. join(join(join(join(a), b), c), d)) the result indeed become unwieldy and likely very inefficient
@sehe that’s something else, i.e. pre-variadic code vs variadic
it’s of course still important in practice
btw I have a testcase that takes 40s to build
to tamper expectations
@LucDanton This would be a simple offices.SelectMany(o => o.Employees).Where(emp => emp.years < year_upper_bound) though in C#
@sehe I can show you maps/filters/flattens in loops, Python, D, Rust, Haskell
@LucDanton Same for join(a, b, c, d) which would likely just be compiled into the same nested range composition. If not, that would just mean the library design was changed. I don't think Boost can do that (Boost Hana might have it)
@LucDanton Why do you say it's bad everywhere then? Seems to me that C++ is worse off (unless you mean that other languages are cheating with dynamic polymorphism)
01:44
@sehe variadic code doesn’t mean just variadic function calls but also variadic data: e.g. contrast old Boost tuples to std::tuple
@LucDanton temper*?
5 mins ago, by Luc Danton
I do have more requirements than just that, but it’s actually still a lot
@sehe I want more than just forward iteration, if it’s possible (which is not a given)
yes those languages let you compose, but then you can’t e.g. find the midpoint without temporarily leaving the world of loops/ranges
You mean, without reifying the sequence? (Or counting at the very least)
@sehe both work! although one is not as nice
@sehe that’s the common shortcut yeah
Ok. Got it
01:47
sheesh we’ve talked so much about ranges/iteration in this room I’m surprised so little of it has rubbed on you :)
you should have had accepted flat_map into your heart by now!
Oh I do. But that's a container to me
:)
I’ll file you as a concatMap rebel then
Better
I've on occasion thought of creating generic iterators for hierarchical data. However, I don't think I'd find it enjoyable to even start without c++17 generalized folds
I actually considered asking about you and Haskell, since you once said you may be interested in looking into it. I didn’t because I’m under the impression you have a lot on your plate these days though.
The holy grail would be Linq-To-Objects in c++ but fully statically instantiated
01:51
there are worse way to start than with filtering/mapping/flattening lists
In C++ or in Haskell?
@LucDanton Sadly I do.
@sehe oh dear, Haskell
Phew. Yeah. Should not be too hard there right. Maybe I'm naive
@sehe it does lead to impressive code generation, sometimes
Anyhoops it's past bedtime for me.
01:52
ciao
@LucDanton You mean as in: "the compiler will stall" or, you've seen implementations and it generated nice code?
@LucDanton Night!
@sehe it cuts both ways—e.g. on top of the 40s testcase, I’ve seen a concat + reduce be entirely optimized out to the result (that was long ago though)
0
Q: boost::range::join many ranges in one custom call

CodeBricksThe Solution section in gnzlbg's SO question boost::range::join for multiple ranges implies it can join many ranges in one client code call to a custom function variadic template that calls boost::join and boost::make_iterator_range. According to that question, answer, and comments, the prior can...

Look at that
The whole world is buzzing with it
@LucDanton Nice. That's indeed what I'd want from a modern C++ approach.
Does Haskell run into the same compiler "crunches"?
@sehe I haven’t used enough it to have an opinion for myself, but GHC is considered to compile relatively slowly
I thought so. I didn't exactly use Haskell enough to know.
I'm really off to bed. That question is eerily related. Funny.
02:02
@R.MartinhoFernandes @Xeo can you believe this guy missed out on all our fun
02:18
@sehe night
02:28
0
A: boost::range::join many ranges in one custom call

ThePhDThe Solution: Make sure you have proper base cases. The Problem as I imagine it with no Standards Quotes To Back Up My Silly Musics: g++ and clang++ are a little wonky in that they require a base implementation. That is, you're trying to recursively call a function that hasn't fully been insta...

:B
Lookit me, answering SO questions like a pleb.
@sehe Nighty night.
@ThePhD A+
Xeo
Xeo
02:49
@LucDanton Hah, would you look at that. How the times have changed.
yeah it was fun looking back
 
1 hour later…
03:51
@Xeo did you just sleep type
Xeo
Xeo
Nah
all-nighter
gotta finish up some stuff before I leave for Uncon
very well carry on
when's uncon again? who is going?
Xeo
Xeo
I would pose the same question to you, but we all know how fucked up your sleep cycle is. :P
I don’t pretend to be able to write while in bed though, I do the one or the other
Xeo
Xeo
03:54
you either pretend to be in bed or pretend to be able to write?
indeed
maybe I should try it your way, when it comes to the things I want to try my mind is busiest while in bed
l’esprit du lit
04:18
My mind is the busiest when I jog sometimes
are we alive
04:34
vintage cinch
4
04:57
@Telkitty Busy in a good way?
My mind produces regrets when it is idle.
Dude
if fishes cry in the deep blue sea, does anyone know
deep
@wilx yes ... sometimes I can not think in a confined space :p
@Telkitty Well, watch your step, don't fall into a ravine while jogging...
05:14
local park doesn't have ravines, lol
I feel like I lost 20 IQ points from this video
 
1 hour later…
Ven
Ven
06:29
Hi
user1804599
Hi
user1804599
06:42
I wonder if statisticians ever visit astrologers.
@rightfold Some do for sure.
> At some point, shouldn't we consider an intricate type system like this as part of a general theorem proving tool and not expect nice completeness results?
> Please read the "Safety and securty" section below!
@orlp man. dat fake accent. "Piyaki Ohyute"
then why don’t you put it here in the document structure ya git
Don't tell me that's from the git documentation!
06:55
I promise I won’t
Linus is a self-professed pragmatist. Type theory is a load of horse shit and doesn't work at the kernel level!
jokes aside, the quotes are unrelated
:)
I was still going with my linus-style rant. But I'll refrain
@wilx I see what you did there
@VermillionAzure Nope. Only if they do in the emerald sea
@sehe lol, actually, that was unintentional. Thank you for noticing though. :D
@Telkitty Ha. That's what you think. You heard about sink holes yeah? That's the "ninja ravine program" that the Chinese government employs to get rid of annoying citizens while not attracting too much attention.
06:58
> A hideously unsafe store. Only for use if you are suave.
@wilx It seemed to lay it on thick :)
and they say the Haskell ecosystem is badly documented
@sehe You keep thinking I am more cunning than I am actually. :)
@LucDanton Are we bashing mongodb again?
@sehe why no, this is totally safe suave Haskell
06:59
suave* Haskell
good point
they’re stealing our stores, too
The 80s bore rich cultural fruits
Fuck me.
My friend forgot his wallet so we don't have tickets.
07:09
@sehe there’s a sax offender, too
@R.MartinhoFernandes Oops. Tickets for the train?
Does it mean you have to rebuy? Can you think of identifying information if they were registered to name?
The train is 70 minutes late, though, so he went home to get them.
Oh. I thought you were still 400 km away :)
07:11
No, this is the train that would take us away.
I hope he makes it in time!
@sehe so if want to be rid of a bunch, you just create a massive earthquake or tsunami?
Sinkholes happen spontaneously
Chinese should know this. The famous vids are frequently from there
07:27
What can we say.
Ive seen this picture before and noticed the darkness of North Korea.
user1804599
They are very energy-efficient.
What I didn't notice was the lights of fishing boats in the Korea strait.
user1804599
We could learn a lot from them.
It's crazy around Jeju island.
There's more light pollution from Jeju fishermen than from the island itself.
07:39
aka eye of sauron island
someone from the bushwalking group message me today, something along the line of 'we both like adventure, do you want to meet up for coffee?'
well, do you?
has not replied yet ...
that wasn't my question
those are some pretty steaks
they are looking at you too >_<
07:48
how?
it's a photo
are these some spooky ass ghost cows?
I took the picture because the cows were looking at me
morning
Ven
Ven
08:07
meuuuh
08:27
No train for us.
Gonna say, fuck it and just cycle elsewhere
Anyone here using youcompleteme alongside Vim?
Ven
Ven
nope
Anyways, its a wonderful tool but i'm trying to get autocompletion to work with headers and source files in different folders. I have tried some modifications to "youcompleteme.py" without success. If anyone has got this working i would very much appreciate your reply : )
user1804599
08:42
lol C++ tooling
well probably it already was posted here
09:11
lol
nwp
nwp
apple doesn't steal, apple improves, can't you see?
Ben
Ben
hi telkitty
Hello
Ven
Ven
hi
user1804599
cronjob
09:22
@LucDanton Express @KretabChabawenizc input: "En fait, un timestamp en Rançais ça n'est jamais rien d'autre qu'un tempspon"
Ven
Ven
hah.
Ben
Ben
ok
user1804599
user1804599
super rad
10:36
LMAO
Luc answered the same question I did.
And with a better-explained answer.
Or at least, worded much more properly.
Fuck my answer.
Luc's answer does however show perfectly why C++ needs to be H-M.
Ell
Ell
let's see it
10:52
You can find it by looking through ThePhD's latest answers.
@набиячлэвэлиь money well spent
11:37
@Griwes H-M?
Ven
Ven
@ThePhD Yours was still interesting. I upvoted both.
Please undelete your answer, as it's a good one.
user1804599
Zach Bublil is a twat
Ven
Ven
@rightfold he has a very nice 'stache

« first day (2068 days earlier)      last day (3107 days later) »