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00:00 - 23:0023:00 - 00:00

00:21
TEAM CANADA
WINS THE FIRST RACE IN SGDQ
BECAUSE MOOMOOKAI CHOKED q_q
01:07
who what where
I'm more of a quantum states entropy kinda giraffe.
It feels a lot like the Shannon stuff with log N
Oh that.
<sips brandy/>
The Joker> I just want the world to have more entropy!
I should do more drugs.
but ... but ... drugs are usually for young people :'(
unless you are talking about medicine, then it's for old & sick people >_<
01:10
The sterling approximation is for young people.
just joking
Also giraffes live to very old ages.
I am semi old too ... & semi young
OMG it's so good to be tall, you can be 800kg and still under weight (for a giraffe)
I'm not sure what I should learn next. I have a nocturne I like, but no new tech I appreciate. I'm only about 1.5 ton.
you can always try to eat your neighbours tree over the fence
01:16
There is already a lawsuit pending.
or their fruit if they have fruit trees
The lawsuit is called "Apples for Apples".
The lawsuit has a lawsuit for trademark infingement.
you tried to eat your neighbours intellectual right over the fence??
you are one amazing giraffe!
Not only tried. I did. I'm interested how this plays out in court.
good luck
you know you have our support
01:20
I appreciate that!
 
4 hours later…
05:15
> internal compiler error: in tsubst_copy, at cp/pt.c:13911
ayy
actually a known one, but it had been a while so why not celebrate
 
2 hours later…
user1804599
07:02
@wilx NBA shouldn't be a comment.
user1804599
It's an identifier.
07:22
morning
Ven
Ven
07:51
yo
nwp
nwp
08:05
one more close vote and the C++17 question gets closed
Ven
Ven
we'll reopen it
lol someone voted to move it to server fault -_-
nwp
nwp
the question is clearly off-topic and clearly needs to stay. The problem seems to be in the rules.
Ven
Ven
It's C++17, it doesn't have nearly enough new stuff to be more than "a few paragraphs"
nwp
nwp
or maybe it doesn't need to stay there exactly and the rules are actually fine
maybe a blog post or something would be better
but you lose all the editing features... not matter what you do it's bad
I'd let it pass
Ven
Ven
08:30
seems a-okay to me
nwp
nwp
08:48
189
A: SQL injection is 17 years old. Why is it still around?

TessellatingHecklerBecause it's not a problem. When was the last time a company with a SQL injection vulnerability got hauled up in court, and slapped with a big fine for being reckless with user data, and the directors' warned, fined or locked up for negligence? When was the last time a company lost a big contra...

4
somewhat enlightening answer, I like it
I should really go to work and browse SE while getting paid
Ven
Ven
@nwp very interesting
user1804599
09:44
The only answer is incompetence.
user1804599
A competent developer can't introduce SQL injection vulnerabilities accidentally.
user1804599
They are unable to do it.
user1804599
They just can't.
user1804599
They are keenly aware of it and are very defensive.
user1804599
Even if it saves time to not prevent SQL injection, they won't do it. Because cringe.
Ven
Ven
10:01
195
Q: Upgoat or Downgoat?

DowngoatGiven an image of a goat, your program should best try to identify whether the goat is upside down, or not. Examples These are examples of what the input may be. Not actual inputs Input: Output: Downgoat Spec Your program should be at most 30,000 bytes The input will contain the full goa...

6
too cute <3
user6225166
10:23
hello. who know a good profiler in c++. i have used veryspleepy but it does'nt give enough information. i can't pinpoint the bottoleneck.
@Ven lol @ Mathematica's detect caprine animal
Ven
Ven
10:38
@ScarletAmaranth to be fair, it's image-based detection
10:55
public int depth(Tree t) {
  return t.match((Empty e) -> 0,
                 (Leaf l) -> 1,
                 (Node n) -> 1 + max(depth(n.left), depth(n.right));
}
nice!
Ven
Ven
cute :)
actually it's awful
11:15
Mathematica has a builtin for determining goats. I don't know how to feel about that. — Robert Fraser Feb 10 at 15:21
How to feel about goats?
Do you like them more upside down?
Ven
Ven
@fredoverflow not actually true at all
@ThomasKwa I thought this is just what Mathematica code looks like. — Alex A. ♦ Feb 10 at 23:32
lol
@Ven Because you always have to list all case in a specific order, without wildcards?
Ven
Ven
@fredoverflow because every subclass needs to repeat that
11:36
Are you seriously complaining about boilerplate code in Java?
Ven
Ven
Would you people agree?
nested trees are not easy to implement, for sure, but it seems to me like the cost is worth it
Ell
Ell
12:04
@Telkitty emus?
yeah
which is very similar to baby cassowary
Ven
Ven
ugh I'm so bad at code...
I want to do an if, but still execute the body the very first time the condition is false...
like an inversed do-while: an extra "last" time
nwp
nwp
@Ven use one of the shiny new ifs and see if the initializer can be static
Ven
Ven
doesn't even remotely make sense :P
@Morwenn I'm no longer skeptical about the block quicksort
it really does work, now that I've properly implemented it
with it, pdqsort is now demolishing std::sort in everything
however it did destroy the O(n) behavior on descending, but I think I can fix that
#demolished
nwp
nwp
12:19
if (static bool first = true; condition || first){ first = false; /*stuff*/}
still terrible, but new and shiny nonetheless
I wonder if that counts as a magic static and you get an implicit mutex lock/unlock there
Ven
Ven
rarely have I seen something so shite
but shiny
won't work though. my function is recursive. no reason for that static
@Morwenn although I still believe that performance is relevant, nvm me thinking I properly implemented it...
still bugged lol
@nwp Only on construction if your implementation is sane, though.
(Basically a simple cmpxchg is enough to check whether it has been initialized already or not, and while that's a somewhat serializing instruction... it's nowhere near a full mutex lock/unlock for the general case.)
user1804599
@fredoverflow bleh
nwp
nwp
@Griwes it has prevented inlining on otherwise trivial functions for me in the past, I'm really skeptic of statics inside functions now
12:27
@nwp Hmm.
Ven
Ven
CMPXCHG doesn't have a r%x version?
@Ven inherently no as it locks the bus, if it did the entire system could deadlock
nwp
nwp
> blank the alligators
@orlp Fuck, that's just great! :D
12:36
@nwp in the southern US... you do not blank the alligators the alligators blank you
@Mgetz oh boi
Guess that vergesort demolishes everything too with that new version.
@orlp Great job.
I have a bug-free version, but it's not optimal
(or well, I think it's bug-free)
> I wanted a random access data structure, somebody suggested linked lists and the performance was awful. Fuck linked lists! Use vectors instead.
Well, that will be fun once it works and it is optimal. Like « How to crush std::sort and humiliate standard library implementers ».
Ven
Ven
12:40
@Griwes ahk
@Shoe you're right. it was silly on my behalf.
@Morwenn I have two issues though
@Ven there's also this
one is a minor one: a small blow to my ego that pdqsort isn't 100% my invention anymore, and arguably the most important part isn't with this change :P
more importantly, are there patent issues with block quicksort
@Ven Silly? What was silly?
Ven
Ven
@Shoe one-size fits-all mentality
12:42
Well, the author made that mistake
inb4 you are the author
and a third issue: how does it perform on other platforms, in which the branch predictor is not as important?
Ven
Ven
@Shoe am not. :P
@Ven one-size shoe fits-all mentality? :p
Ven
Ven
Shoe can sure fit a lot in his hole.
2
A few different feet.
wow
nwp
nwp
nobody wants to be shoe: You get used all day for a while and then discarded. And while shoe is faithful, the user is not.
Ven
Ven
lol nested sets. ugly if in my while...
you guys are so mean
Ven
Ven
we're just joking around because we love you.
nwp
nwp
@Shoe I would say it's nothing personal, but even that is kind of a dickish thing to say
13:04
@orlp Also, how does it perform with bigger objects?
@orlp I don't think so. You can ask the authors, but they made it seemed that they just wanted to present interesting results, not patent them. They released the code with a GPL license but from what I understood, that's mostly because they don't know the difference between GPL and permissive.
@Morwenn shouldn't matter
@Morwenn I just sent an email to edelkamp
do you want the suboptimal bug free version to toy around with?
just don't upload to git n stuff
Ven
Ven
Optimal or buggy: tough choice.
@orlp I guess I'll wait then.
When I asked about MIT license, they answered « The code is under GPL-license (I guess that should be compatible...) ».
Also when you want to patent stuff, I guess you don't publish on arXiv .__.
I believe you can file a patent for one year after first publication
Oh, I was thinking of the author's intent :p
13:14
@Morwenn ok that's just marketing in action
"hey I need to choose a license for my open source project. everyone around me uses GPL, let's go with that"
13:30
@milleniumbug Yup, I guess that's what happened :/
@Morwenn ...
idiot level: dumb programmer
@Griwes Bah, more like university researcher.
isn't that almost what I said
(L)GPL, cancer.
14:21
#define PDQSORT_LBUF(i) (first + offsets_l[start_l + (i)])
#define PDQSORT_RBUF(i) (last - 1 - offsets_r[start_r + (i)])
            diff_t num = std::min(num_l, num_r);
            // This case pretty much only happens in the descending distribution, and we need to
            // have proper swapping for pdqsort to remain O(n).
            if (num >= blocksize - 1) {
                for (int i = 0; i < num; ++i) {
                    std::iter_swap(PDQSORT_LBUF(i), PDQSORT_RBUF(i));
                }
@Morwenn the stuff I do for speed :P
Goodness.
and yes, IMO a simple macro is appropriate here
writing out first + offsets_l[start_l + i] is super error-prone
14:46
@Griwes Hey, they were smart enough to develop an actually fast sorting algorithm :p
@orlp Generate the code and copy-paste in the source x)
maybe in a final version
but it's more readable and verifiable this way
Yeah, it would be pointless in a dev version.
How is the block size chosen by the way? I didn't really take the time to read the details.
@Morwenn they chose 128, which I'm benchmarking right now as we speak
I chose 32 so far
I think 32 is better
Is it related to cache line size or something?
yes
yeah 128 is not faster
this is what I have right now, adding some extra optimizations, but still not properly handling the last remainder block (it is bug-free though)
14:51
Can't you use std::thread::hardware_{true,false}_sharing_size to make the cache line size generic?
Well, obviously you can't since nobody implements it yet, but...
@Morwenn I prefer to just use 32
:)
@Morwenn lol
Well, it indeed crushes std::sort :p
The difference is actually quite impressive.
@Morwenn look at pipe organ
that's pdqsort doing its thing
introsort becomes much slower
pdqsort only takes a ~5% hit
Because heapsort is so slow :/
Do you have a test case where pdqsort actually ends up calling heapsort?
14:55
@Morwenn no
or well
it can happen
George
george?
1 min ago, by orlp
or well
14:56
confusion persists :P
Wrong copy-paste -_-
Ven
Ven
<.>
Dat pun.
@Borgleader Would be proud.
orwellp
Ven
Ven
EGOLFTHISNAME
15:05
@ThePhD I am :)
 
1 hour later…
16:28
/cc @Puppy @TonyTheLion ^ some semblance of good news?
It's like none of the old hats want to initiate article 50.
How about we don't leave the EU, but tell Leave voters we have? They believed all the other lies, after all.
16:45
Ouch
A good joke has a bit of truth at its core
I spent twelve hours fixing a unit test measuring the size of a textbox
17:05
RIP
indeed
Is it fluff time yet?
hmmm. Let's see checks clock
clock is pointing to an image of a fox kit taped over the 12
yes
yes it is
from my red panda selection today: feeding red panda cubs and apples are required
17:11
@JohanLarsson I've spent the same amount of time refactoring horribly duplicated code into a less hot mess. It's still duplicated now, but at least it's no longer stringly typed
and from my more general floof collection: fox kit, a swimming fox, a happy fox and a sleepy baby otter.
@jaggedSpire I wish I were that happy :o
it's something to dream of. A lofty (softy) goal
@Morwenn ask slaphappy to lend you some of his happiness
Guys, is there any other language which supports inheritance access modifiers besides C++ (such as you can make the parent you are extending public/protected/private)?
17:16
You mean those really specific things that almost nobody uses?
^
If you use private/protected inheritance outside of tricks, I somehow doubt your sanity
@Morwenn all right, it turns out it isn't even worth it to bother with the last iteration
here's a version you can play with
not 100% final, but should be pretty much done
(everything's permitted if you do tricks - but don't expose them in your public interface)
@Morwenn Obviously composition is prefered, I was just wondering whether there's another language with that feature.
17:18
That's cute indeed.
Ven
Ven
Ugh I need to practice my Jelly. I'm so rusty...
nwp
nwp
@Ven turn your weakness into a strength and go with rust instead
@Ven tmi
@jaggedSpire Not the first time I see that one, but it's soooooo cute :3
17:28
@Morwenn psst
@orlp It's bigger than the previous versions though. Thanks anyway, I'm going to play with it a bit :)
@jaggedSpire I'm meeeelting <3
@KretabChabawenizc hey tu peux apprendre la subtilité ici
@sehe you > me
I've created tickets and commit messages to accurately reflect what is taking the time here.
:(
17:42
lol, I opened Trump's Twitter feed and the app promptly crashed
it's protecting you from stupidity
@R.MartinhoFernandes Feature.
Ven
Ven
@nwp I already do rust: github.com/vendethiel/smallstack
@Morwenn around 40 lines is an unused function
I'd say it's ~70 lines bigger than the last version if we discount that
Yeah, I saw that later.
17:46
Also, lolwat, did I understand correctly that Farage quit UKIP but not his MEP mandate?
we won't have any MEPs soon enough
nor the country
Untied kingdoms
nobody cares about MEPs anyway as the European Parliament is a bit of a joke institution
@Morwenn the speedup is even greater on my desktop machine
@orlp That.. is an incredibly misleading graph.
17:51
@Puppy why?
cycles per element?
an incredibly roundabout way of measuring performance.
@Puppy yes, the best unit
it's like
this allows you to meaningfully compare between CPUs with different clock speeds
no, no it does not.
17:52
besides, it's not the absolute values that matter
different CPUs will have different cache effects that will penalize or benefit certain algorithms.
benchmark results are never comparable across processors- at least not micro ones like this.
@Puppy and the same goes if you measure by time
@orlp Except time is the thing I actually give a shit about.
cycles per element is just some thing that you're trying to stand in instead.
then tell me, why is this all in cycles per byte?
firstly, that's an appeal to authority.
17:54
keep in mind, that since this entire benchmark was ran on 1 machine
a simple and valid answer on my part would be "Because he's a fucking idiot".
it's literally a linear scale between cycles per element and seconds
and secondly
a simple instance of how his benchmark is more useful is because he gives cycles per byte on a specific processor.
you just have cycles per byte.
I have no idea if that has any meaning for my processor.
I guess I could put in the index my CPU and clock speed
and thirdly
one must ask if stream ciphers have any interesting algorithmic behaviour at all
or are dominated by micro-optimizations
or have any interesting memory usage characteristics.
17:56
micro-optimizations
or rather, pump maximum SIMD through
so totally aside from the fact that I think that that benchmark is still pretty shitty
there's a good number of reasons why your usage is far inferior.
shitty we can argue
but you said misleading
that's basically the same thing when you're producing a graph.
no, misleading is with intent to obscure some real truth
no
17:58
misleading is just information that's going to produce completely the incorrect conclusion.
@orlp Once modified a bit to handle proxy iterators and projections, it passes my testsuite without a problem.
@Morwenn See above about "cycles per element" being terrible.
@Puppy Yeah, I read your whole rant and to be honest I don't care .____.
There's a note saying "I stole those benchmarks somewhere", and that's pretty much it.
@Morwenn what is quick_sort?
I guess it's some median of 5 thing
that it beats pdqsort on pipe organ
18:08
@orlp Shitty median of 9.
@Morwenn yeah that'd explain it
Actually I used a median of 3 at first, but is was so slow that the tests didn't run to completion, which was a bit annoying.
I kept a quick_sort because it works with forward and bidirectional iterators.
But to be honest, I should replace it by an introsort backed by an in-place mergesort instead of a heapsort.
I should really use that program to tune spreadsort too to see how it is supposed to perform when correctly tuned..
@LucDanton Yes, you plonked most people here so your chances of getting an answer are pretty low.
5
Can't comprehend the code
@milleniumbug module-level privacy/accessiblity would go a long way to making this look sane
the facade/facade client/factory trio is intertwined enough that they need to share internals, but keeping them separate has its merits
yeah, this could be an episode of "compiler gets template friends wrong"
19:27
the maddening thing is that GCC is not very good at those sort of privacy hacks ime, it’s letting me do things I’m fairly sure it shouldn’t. but I can’t repro, so I turned to trying quick schemes to double-check with Clang and then this
19:58
Argh, I'm giving up on Gentoo for the same reasons as I gave up on Arch. Updating the package manager just one patch number up should not fail. Fuck this shit, I'm going back to Debian.
I'm in a catch-22 scenario: can't update the package manager cause it needs newer python, but can't update python cause the package needs a newer package manager.
And when I ask for help I get "update more often". Can't update more often than from one patch revision to the next. How much time has passed shouldn't matter.
nwp
nwp
@R.MartinhoFernandes what was the reason you went away from debian?
20:35
@R.MartinhoFernandes How is anyone supposed to complete the upgrade?
seems pretty fucking dumb for the package manager to depend on a Python version the previous package manager can't install.
@Puppy I'm guessing I need to force all dependencies to install specific versions that aren't the newest.
Or at least a few key ones.
Too annoyed to care.
yeah that's dumb shit
user1804599
21:01
@fredoverflow integer masturbation
Ven
Ven
@Borgleader did he really?!
Ven
Ven
21:23
@jaggedSpire why O.o
I have no idea
well I can guess
Ven
Ven
Yeah?
I assume he plonks people he finds non-conducive to the conversations he wishes to have, but I can't pretend to be an authority on Luc.
Ven
Ven
He'd have plonked me as well.
I have no idea which conversations he wants to have though
Ven
Ven
21:25
@LucDanton t'aimes pas la faune locale ?
because he hasn't plonked me, despite the many times before, oh, January that I got in silly conversations with Nooble and Nab
Ven
Ven
Oh. Well, since I'm never constructive..
I'm rarely constructive though
mostly I post cute animal pics and state ridiculous lies between terrorizing ThePhD with :3
Ven
Ven
(I myself don't find that very scary)
I think it's mostly the association at this point
@R.MartinhoFernandes Thats fucking stupid.
now that I think about it, I suppose restoring eta-conversion is a nice argument in favour of making elision more than an optimization
21:57
@jaggedSpire Constructivity in the Lounge is a lie :o
6
I'm plonked as well anyway.
@jaggedSpire plz never change <3
Ven
Ven
@Morwenn i don't actually understand how someone could plonk you
@Borgleader aw <3
@Ven That's easy: I'm never serious enough, even when I'm actually interested in things. And some people don't like smileys and hearts :p
22:12
fuck you and your smiles dude
I'm British and therefore permanently pessimistic
Is that what they call phlegmatic?
22:29
Ask Jung
2
Q: How to compute the sine of huge numbers

Oliver BorchertFor several days, I've been wondering how it would be possible of computing the sine of huge numbers like 100000!. I obviously don't use double but cpp_rational from the boost multiprecision library. But I can't simply do 100000! mod 2pi and then use the builtin function sinl (I don't need more t...

@Mysticial this looks interesting. Don't just take it for the title though, it's a short question
22:41
I thought there was some stuff about representing the intermediate states modulo 2pi and then you could skip certain parts of the calculations?
Can you imagine a world where everyone is always not-sober?
It would be messed up but aqwesome world.
@LucDanton this site is more interesting than I though. Funny little quizes too merriam-webster.com/word-games/january-wod-2016
@JohanLarsson It probably isn't.
@sehe Isn't everything? :)
*t
22:52
Is there anything better than ending a Reddit post with “Source: I am an STL maintainer. I am STL.” to justify a claim? I THINK NOT.
heh
Ell
Ell
@R.MartinhoFernandes I had troubles with python earlier in the year
@Bassie lovely
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