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23:00
@CatPlusPlus If it's not the right term, then: does it include an optimization step?
There's usually an optimisation step.
CPython optimises bytecode when run with -O.
As I understand it, a straight interpreter won't optimize.
Ah, I see.
That's why interpreters compile first.
Compiler + VM is a superior approach to just 'read source part by part and act on it'.
@sidran32 What's a straight interpreter?
Must be a function of newer interpreters. My main experience with interpreted languages was back in the day in QBasic, which basically just read each line of code and ran it. :)
23:02
lol a lot has changed since then
@LucDanton One that interprets with the opposite sex.
2
@Hoxieboy Apparently!
There are interpreters that do it this way, but anyone who knows anything about compilers knows that it's just inefficient thing to do.
@sidran32 I still have a functioning copy of Qbasic and quickbasic on this computer
back when you had to literally hand code your images into the program LOL!
@CatPlusPlus Of course it's inefficient. Though computers are fast enough that I figured that scripting languages, which aren't necessarily meant for high performance tasks, aren't often required to worry about it. I guess it's just a function of my background. :P
@Hoxieboy I probably do somewhere... I actually did most of my hobbyist coding in highschool in QBasic, since the tools were free and everywhere. :P I used a library I got from online that gave me a lot more tools to use that someone wrote in ASM.
23:05
ugh I need to stop looking at the chat and finish the basics of this game
Computers will never be fast enough :(
Humans will never be fast enough.
Used that to code things like a full Tetris clone, experimented with sprite-based parallax sidescrolling, 3D graphics, and window managers, all in straight QBasic, using the library.
@sidran32 you're one of a kind :]
@RMartinhoFernandes We can rebuild them. We have the technology!
23:06
QBasic is fun, except it's 16-bit, so I ran into memory limitations quite a bit.
@Hoxieboy Am I, now? :P The fun thing about that is that while it was an old language, it forced me to learn all about optimization techniques (my fastest machine I did this on was a Pentium @ 90 MHz), proper coding and memory management, etc.
@sidran32 I think I was either hyper when I was young(er) or had some sort of disorder but I could barely seem to learn anything programming related :P
but yeh... things like that flew over my head, I'm just barely learning all these technicalities :P
@Hoxieboy Oh, my favorite project was using the library's mouse and graphics capabilities to reimplement, best I could, the functionality of Java's swing library. I created code that basically let me create a paging full screen interface, buttons, text boxes, drop-down lists, progress bars, number selectors, radio buttons, etc, all through single funciton calls, place them anywhere on the screen (and on any page, which I could switch to).
Then I had a main loop with an ActionEvent function call that returned whatever you clicked on and whatever associated data was with it.
in qbasic?
lol
23:10
Yup.
:P
wow
my brain hurts suddenly
I tried changing something in the back-end, but ended up breaking it. Never really took it further. I don't even know if I still have the source. It's probably somewhere... :P
you must learn python or C++...
I actually wish I had kept the working version. Would have been something fun to release on the net.
@Hoxieboy I know C and C++. C is my favorite compiled language. :)
lol
really?
23:11
@RMartinhoFernandes Would you mind quickly checking if boost::filesystem::path work with UTF-32 stuff? Something as basic as fs::path p = U"foo"; should compile, but it doesn't on my end and I'm not sure it's because I'm still using 1.48 or I misconfigured Boost.
Yupper.
I really want to learn C++ but with python I don't know if I ever will :P
Did QBasic, VB, Java, and C++ in highschool. Then went to college and learned a lot more. Along with whatever I do on my own time, and at work. :)
Speaking of.. I need to get to work. Have some C++ coding to do. :P
practically a computer glued to your eyebrows as my dad would say
@LucDanton error: conversion from 'const char32_t [4]' to non-scalar type 'boost::filesystem3::path' requested
Nope.
23:13
:)
what do you work with? @sidran32
@RMartinhoFernandes Oh well I'll investigate that some other time. Probably a case of overzealous docs and the feature simply isn't here just yet.
@Hoxieboy Hah. These computers I was working in highschool on were hand-me-downs. Had the Pentium with Win 98 on it. Also had a 486SX that I eventually busted with static, a 286, a couple 386 laptops, and an old IBM XT that we inherited after my grandfather died when I was in 7th grade..
My first computer was a Commodore 64. I still have it!
lol you definitely know your computers :P
I have an old dell optiplex somewhere buried in my room, runs dos
First computer I ever used was an Apple ][+, 32K of RAM.
23:15
@Hoxieboy I'm in design verification, but my tasks also extend into actually writing tests for automated testing equipment which are in C++ using some libraries to poke registers and drive pins and stuff.
There were 53KB of digital memory in the world in 1953.
Entire life on PCs here.
@FredLarson Our first computer, I'm told, was an 8086 of some sort. All I remember was DOS, CGA graphics, and the fact that it didn't have an autoexec.bat, since we had a paper with a list of commands we had to type every time we booted it up.
@RMartinhoFernandes technically more if you counted human brains, which have an estimated 64 mb :D
23:17
Win3.11, then 95, then 98, then 2000, then XP, then 7, with some Linuces here and there.
Yeah, probably an original IBM PC or clone.
@Hoxieboy According to who? I've seen much larger figures :P
I don't know about you, but I don't count human brains as digital memory.
@sidran32 nobody really, a few neuroscience webpages :s
Who needs credibility.
23:18
@RMartinhoFernandes true, since they can constantly grow and accumulate
@Hoxieboy lol
I keeps getting distracted! must... finish... IF
@CatPlusPlus List of operating systems we've had (that I've identified versions for), and that I've gotten myself when I finally got my own computer, DOS 3.0, DOS 5.0, DOS 6.0, DOS 6.22, Win 3.1, Win 3.11 for Workgroups, Win 98, Win XP Home, Win XP Pro, Win Vista Pro, Win Vista Ultimate, Win 7 Starter, Win 7 Home, Win 7 Pro
Different editions don't really count as different OSes.
And then I've played with Win 8 Dev Preview & Consumer Preview, Haiku, Mandrake/Mandriva, Ubuntu, a few other Linuxes, and ReactOS.
@CatPlusPlus Sorry. :P
Was being complete
23:21
elif input == ('grab', 'take', 'loot', 'pocket'): <- works?
@je4d hi - still around, shouldn't you be sleeping at the same hours as I do?
@CatPlusPlus Some people have cared in the past. Though I get what you mean, since they have the same kernel.
@Hoxieboy Only if you expect the input to be a tuple.
And only a few differences (though Starter Edition really is the most dramatically different version compared with the others)
death!
oh yeah forgot its IN input, not input is equal to sorreh
23:24
@sidran32 (a) overkill (b) not very creative list
Also, what did you do in between Win98 and XP Home?!?! No WinNT4? No Win2000? Did you go into hibernation?
erm, if ('grab', 'take', 'loot', 'pocket') in input: ???
Only if input is a container and you expect that tuple to be in there
traceback: TypeError: 'in <string>' requires string as left operand, not tuple
@sehe Delete it if it hurts your eyes. :P What happened was we used Win 98 until we needed to upgrade. I couldn't buy a computer as I had no money, and we stopped getting hand-me-downs. That was the first one my family actually bought and didn't get from someone else.
"as left operand" ? sorry again :P
23:27
Also, Windows ME sucked. :P
I've used many other OS's. Those were just in my posession at one point or another.
That's not a traceback.
yes I know
XD
Left operand is an operand that's on the left.
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "C:\Documents and Settings\Alex Hoxie.ALEX\Desktop\gamedev\zorklike\game.
py", line 126, in <module>
    handleinput()
  File "C:\Documents and Settings\Alex Hoxie.ALEX\Desktop\gamedev\zorklike\game.
py", line 83, in handleinput
    if ('n', 'north', 'forward', 'forwards') in input:
TypeError: 'in <string>' requires string as left operand, not tuple
if input in (...):
left in right
Not that hard.
23:28
oh
I learned the difference between types of trees yesterday.
Balsam fir, spruce, eastern hemlock...
Haha, bad joke
@CatPlusPlus for me, it is very hard, I've been on my computer far too long today and last night lol
@EmileCormier conifers, broadleaf evergreen trees, broadleaf deciduous trees
@EmileCormier funny thing about that, we were arguing earlier today about programming a map using a graph, and that a tree is sort of graph
cedar, cypress, douglas-fir, fir
23:31
@sehe: broadleaf evergreen? Don't have those over here here.
juniper, kauri, pine, podocarpus
spruce, redwood and yew
@sehe: Ah west coast trees
@EmileCormier That's types of trees
corkscrew willows are my fav :D
@EmileCormier Merkin?
23:32
@sehe: canuck
> Temperate coniferous forest is a terrestrial biome found in temperate regions of the world with warm summers and cool winters
Temperate coniferous forest is a terrestrial biome found in temperate regions of the world with warm summers and cool winters and adequate rainfall to sustain a forest. In most temperate coniferous forests, evergreen conifers predominate, while some are a mix of conifers and broadleaf evergreen trees and/or broadleaf deciduous trees. Temperate evergreen forests are common in the coastal areas of regions that have mild winters and heavy rainfall, or inland in drier climates or mountain areas. Many species of trees inhabit these forests including cedar, cypress, douglas-fir, fir, juniper, k...
@EmileCormier Ah. I'm in the Netherlands. We don't have trees because we need places to build houses.
Really, there is deplorably little forest left here
Haha!
> In good temperate broadleaf forest appear: Satyr, Unicorn
23:36
@RMartinhoFernandes: Is that some kind of RPG?
Not quite, but yeah, it's a game.
Anyways, just spent my wages as a pianist booking train tickets across Germany for a concert trip
I'm really betting that the journey is worth it, because I won't net much money after expenses :)
its classified as a roguelike
But the good news is that most rides have reserved seats and booking 1st class cost only 10EUR more for a one way ticket (how's that possible on 599 km? - oh well)
DF has a roguelike mode, but Fortress is not a roguelike.
23:38
I've always wanted to go cross-country on a train
@sehe Lucky cock
@CatPlusPlus (why does that happen :P) on roguebasin anyways
in the UK, first-class ticket is £300 or more
@DeadMG Why thank you
compared to £60 for first-class ticket
23:39
@DeadMG Likewise here in NL
Quantum first-class tickets.
It may have to do with making reservations ahead of time (trip is 20th of april) and being a reduction card holder in Holland.
I have a sneaking suspicion that they actually treat the whole of the international express trains as first class anyway.
@DeadMG That doesn't make much sense.
Unless the cat is making sense.
Impossible.
The outward journey takes 8 hrs with only 1 change of trains...
23:42
Why do I keep eating stuff first and then checking the expiration date.
@sehe Time to read!
@DeadMG For 60 eur you'll have 2nd class unlimit train ticket for a day in the Netherlands
@RMartinhoFernandes Exactly! I had the option of traveling by bus with the choir that's hiring me for the trip, but I'll gladly pay the extra money to get a bit of peace :)
I opted for 1st class, coupé, silence area. Muhahaha. Oh, window-side
@CatPlusPlus You will until you die
Also tabular for vim is awesome.
@CatPlusPlus What do you use it for?
Aligning stuff.
23:46
Is it better than Align.vim? How?
Didn't use that one. But it's simple. :Tab /= and done
I wonder for how long we'll still have trains over here. They keep turning abandoned railroads into nature trails.
I really only use surround.vim, repeat.vim and (recently) threesome
@CatPlusPlus with Align.vim, that would be normal mode \t= or ex :Align =
@EmileCormier Start worrying when they turn active railroads into junkyards
Does it figure out the range on its own, or do you have to make it explicit?
@CatPlusPlus Align.vim is mad configurable (:AlignCtrl to specify multiple (optionally cyclic) delimiters, space policy, indent preservation, column left/center/right alignment and or justification)
23:50
@sehe just got back from the pub..
i was logged in, but not here
@je4d Oh you are trying for the 'frequent room users' status, then?
@KonradRudolph glad you got it fixed :)
@sehe So, you link to a video with the word "threesome"?
I'm not sure if I should click it.
Does Tabular do that kind of kinky
@sehe no, I just leave my laptop on and go to work :P
23:51
@RMartinhoFernandes You should
@sehe Just being here doesn't count. Or if it does, it doesn't count much at all.
@RMartinhoFernandes Oh good. I preserve power by switching my PC off, sometimes
@RMartinhoFernandes there's a disappointing lack of threesomes, I wouldn't bother..
I think I have to make another dictionary just for my players inventory D:
@RMartinhoFernandes Threesome is a pretty awesome git merge tool if you (a) like vim (b) have big monitor(s)
23:53
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "C:\Documents and Settings\Alex Hoxie.ALEX\Desktop\gamedev\zorklike\game.
py", line 131, in <module>
    handleinput()
  File "C:\Documents and Settings\Alex Hoxie.ALEX\Desktop\gamedev\zorklike\game.
py", line 119, in handleinput
    print 'Your',I.name,', Description:',I.desc
AttributeError: 'str' object has no attribute 'name'
right?
user457812
My parrot is a lousy tactician...
I really like how the plugin is done - with the keybindings to navigate buffers and cycle through the useful diff combinations.
Shit, I flooded the fortress.
oh noes
@nil ... wait for it ...
user457812
23:55
He saw a cracker bowl and rather than approaching it sneakily, he decided to just barrel towards it
@sehe it looks pretty interesting... code merging has always been lacking in tooling imo
and having vim-style control is always a plus :)
oh I'm trying to put my input into my... oh dear
my list..
erm
python is very evil
2
@je4d I love it. Haven't used it for many merges, yet, but on the occasions where I did, it surprised me how much 'overview' that plugin delivers
Overview is the thing that is hard to achieve during merges.
@sehe I've only paid about 50% attention for the first three minutes so far.. so i've not really seen enough to form an opinion yet
YES! I took a candle from room1, looked at it in my inventory(bag), moved to room2 to the north, took it out of my bag and set it down :D
23:58
@sehe I know.. p4v was really good at giving an overview in merges, but it was unfortunately proprietary
It's one of those plugins that requires hands-on testing to get a feel. There isn't a lot to remember, thought, that's a big achievement and made it easy for me to get used to
the problems of merging annoyed me enough that I became maintainer of kde's Kompare for a while, and got quite a way towards making it do merges
but that never got finished, due to me leaving uni and getting a job :/
@je4d Reminds me to checkout Pastic XMerge one of these days. I hear it is teh awesomez.
But it's not Vim
So I'll probably like it and forget about it
@sehe I'll watch the full vid at work tomorrow, right now i've gotta sleep

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