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14:00
@RMartinhoFernandes you monster!
ok, I think I might do some JS coding
Oh, the guy is a string theorist.
String terrorist!
he plays string instruments
(In my mind that equates to quack, for some reason)
14:00
@RMartinhoFernandes If it quacks like a duck, it's string theory?
@RMartinhoFernandes are you scientifically educated?
@rubenvb What would that mean?
afk
@RMartinhoFernandes do you have a scientific degree (Math, physics, chemistry...)?
I don't want to use such stuff:

string str = "4562";
int number = atoi(str.c_str());

who can I do the same without pure-C functions as atoi() ?
In C++
and with not reinterpret_cast
@user1131997 int number = stoi(str);
14:03
@BenjaminLindley std::stoi() , thanks!
Theres also the more generic: boost::lexical_cast<int>(str)
Er, what?
Is stoi part of c++11?
@knittl yes
I remember using input streams created from the string in the past and reading into int/long variables
well, stoi probably does quite the same internally
14:09
if not C++ 0x will be used, what's the alternative without using %type_cast%_cast<T>() and atoi(str.c_str()) ?
@user1131997 stringstream
where %type_cast% - different type of casting
@rubenvb I have 96% of an engineering degree.
@RMartinhoFernandes why 96% exaclty? :)
Because I have completed 172 credits out of 180 total.
14:11
@knittl No, it doesn't. stringstreams is quite a bit slower, I think it has something to do with locales, though I'm not sure.
Or something like that.
@RMartinhoFernandes hmm, not quite what I meant. There's (at least in my courses) a lot of attention spent in saying where various theories break down, and what's missing. This is as much a part of Physics as is the development of an alternative theory, like M-theory (the mathematically generalized string theory). It's like playing with LEGOs until all the pieces fit.
@BenjaminLindley ok. I see
String theory is esotheric, but not without direction. There is a large effort underway to make the predictions measurable. So you can't just say string theory is "quack". (note: I know only as much of string theory as is described in Greene's book).
will read the source, when I have the time (and the brain)
14:13
@rubenvb Oh, I wasn't trying to say that. When I said "for some reason" above, I meant that I had no idea why I had that idea.
@BenjaminLindley you could de-locale-ize a stringstream, keep it as a function-local static etc... if raw speed is a concern
@RMartinhoFernandes lol, ok.
@RMartinhoFernandes will you get PhD or master's degree?
@rubenvb Can you? Huh. I've never looked into it. Locales confuse me.
@BenjaminLindley I would guess using the "C" locale would bypass all the hard processing?
14:16
@user1131997 That's an arbitrary line to draw. What does the name matter?
@RMartinhoFernandes bachelor's! 180 credits is 3 years.
@rubenvb I have no idea what it's called out there. Bachelor's degrees don't exist anymore here.
But yes, it's three years (even if it takes me seven)
@RMartinhoFernandes huh, I thought it was a European thing (Belgium changed the naming and duration of all higher level educational degrees to "conform")
@rubenvb thought so, too.
@rubenvb It is, but the Portuguese terms don't match up at all, so I have no idea what the English name is.
14:21
@RMartinhoFernandes ah, that's what you mean.
Lost in translation
Previously, we had this thing called bacherelato which was a 3-year bachelor's degree and a licenciatura, which was a 5-year <something-not-a-master>.
Now we have only licenciatura but it's only 3 years.
huh, our "licenciaat" was an extra year (or two) depending on the subject, after the "kandidatuur" which was really just bachelor
And I got caught up in the middle of the change and lost a freaking year because of it.
wow, that sucks.
@BenjaminLindley there different titles, of course for real knowladge it doesn't matter, cause I'm thinking many institutes are bad in many countries.
For example me
I have master's degree at Moscow Aviation Institute, bad weak knowladge
14:26
thank God the algorithm discussion is over.
Moscow Aviation Institute (State University of Aerospace Technology) () is one of several major engineering higher education establishments in Moscow (along with Moscow State University, Bauman Moscow State Technical University, Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology, and Moscow Engineering Physics Institute). Although the school is currently offering a wide range of majors and research programs well beyond just the aviation-related ones, the historical shorter name Moscow Aviation Institute is almost always used in reference to it. History Moscow Aviation Institute (MAI) was ...
@user1131997 cool.
what did you major in?
Maybe some places as Berkey, MIT or Standford are really storng
@user1131997 That's not the comment I was responding to. I was responding to when you said: "without using %type_cast%_cast<T>()"
14:27
@IntermediateHacker sorry for my bad english, do yo mean the yaer I graduate or what?
@user1131997 what subject did you graduate in?
Oh thank god no one tried another fruitless explanation of those crazy terms North-Americans use.
@IntermediateHacker bioinformatics
any way to prevent gchat idle status?
Much knowledge comes from extracurricular application of the stuff learnt
14:28
i want it to be green all the time
like answering questions on SO :]
@user1131997 bioinformatics? wait, do you mean the really cool stuff where you write programs that are used for decoding the human genome?
@IntermediateHacker really in institute there were only theory and no practise, that's bad reality :(
@IntermediateHacker not writing programs as in PC
bioinformatics is usually database handling and stuff
@user1131997 but still, you theoretically know how to decode the human genome. that's still pretty cool.
because biologists are sucky at computers
emulating finiting automates with chemical reactions
and learning algorithms for getting data from DNA/RNA/polymers
only we have did, was cromotography in pratcies
with DNA
also
did you learn to decrypt all those A-T G-C codes?
we often do the next stuff
The simplified molecular-input line-entry system or SMILES is a specification in form of a line notation for describing the structure of chemical molecules using short ASCII strings. SMILES strings can be imported by most molecule editors for conversion back into two-dimensional drawings or three-dimensional models of the molecules. The original SMILES specification was developed by Arthur Weininger and David Weininger in the late 1980s. It has since been modified and extended by others, most notably by Daylight Chemical Information Systems Inc. In 2007, an open standard called [http:/...
or the A-U G-C , in the messenger RNAs?
14:35
@IntermediateHacker there are like basic data structres , which hold data & making reactions , on reactions of DNA there are way to emulate simple calutions as multiply , addtiong and else
@IntermediateHacker there may be also all 5 types of nitrogen bases
for examples bacteriophages use all 5 nitrogen bases
@IntermediateHacker then you shoudn't say only pairs as A-U or else, cause there are different matrixies of DNA/RNA, which has different role
one for holding data
one for replication
and else
and in each there are these pairs ( A-T(U) & G-C )
but for different actions
It's unbelievable how some people say things.
0
A: how to use system("clear") in ruby

singhcommented: i did nt get u cud you repeat again

@IntermediateHacker for decoding genome it's referecing for research chromosomes
@daknok_t Woah.
bad as for today there a lot of problems with decoding, cause proteins are very-very large biochain
It's written right there. Repeating won't help.
14:44
haha
I'd like making explosotive-stuff at MAI with guys from another faculty
"i did nt get u cud you repeat again" — yeah wtf I didn't get you either.
-1
A: how to use system("clear") in ruby

JoshIf you are on a Mac you can clear your terminal window with "Command + K".

So this is how you clear the screen in Ruby.
Isn't scite a text editor?
so if you wanna to know, how to make bomb , you may ask me, I can give you how to make it
@RMartinhoFernandes it is.
14:47
> i am using scite as compiler
Sigh.
@RMartinhoFernandes A lot of beginners mix up their ide with their compiler.
Singh*
compiling ruby …?
@knittl MacRuby compiles Ruby into machine code. JRuby into Java byte code. Certainly possible.
0
Q: Getting First digit in double and storing it in an int C++

R. Martinho Fernandescommented: 3.89082e-316 is 0.000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000‌​000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000‌​000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000‌​00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000389082. Of course the integral part of that is 0.

:P
14:50
hm. But common ruby is interpreted
Oh noes, not this again.
@daknok_t MacRuby sounds like something that could be tasty, but often looks nothing like the picture
@knittl depends on the implementation. One can write a C++ interpreter (if it doesn't already exist).
okay, thanks. nevermind
You'll be hard pressed to find any decent "interpreter" that doesn't actually compile the code.
14:53
What have I done?! I didn't want to start a flamewar :p
how to draw a tree
@knittl It's not hard to do
Pen and paper!
C++ interpreter that uses JIT. :P
@WassimSboui define tree. Actually, this is not as silly as I first thought
14:53
@Collin Emacs sucks.
@RMartinhoFernandes Yes, but I use it anyway
thanks guys
@WassimSboui I usually start with the trunk and randomly draw branches from there
@RMartinhoFernandes that's just broccoli
user1182183
14:55
Yo everyone, hm, is it normal that sprinf prints negative values if they get close to 0?
@thecoshman No, it's not.
It's a...
Damn, I don't know English tree names.
It's a binary search oak tree, obviously.
try it in Portuguese, I might get it
I mean I do know several English tree names, but I have no idea what trees they stand for.
@thecoshman I do know Portuguese tree names, but I have no idea what trees they stand for.
I suck at tree identification.
@RMartinhoFernandes As a native english speaker I can identify approximately 2 types of trees
14:57
Oh, I know willows!
virtual (binary) trees and real trees? ^^
The only tree I can identify in Dutch is the gele treurwilg. :P
oh, make that 3
you mean, you know the translation for the Portuguese names, but have no idea what an elm tree or oak tree look like?
Pine trees.
@thecoshman Exactly.
14:58
@RMartinhoFernandes how does that look like a willow?
I'm sure I've seen those around, but I don't know which are which.
@thecoshman My drawing? It's not a willow.
@RMartinhoFernandes clearly :P
I can only know distinguish willows, pine trees, and others.
looks most like an oak to me
It's neither a willow nor a pine.
14:59
you classic BIG tree
It's broccoli.
birch is easy to recognize
user1182183
Hey folks, does anyone experience getting negative values when dividing a boost::posix_time by 1 000 000?
It's kinda weird my code shows negative numbers while it should be impossible..
http://pastebin.com/wquKwPZN
Oh, I can recognize fruit-bearing trees in the summer.
@daknok_t apparently not
15:00
There's a trick, but I won't reveal it.
@RMartinhoFernandes oak trees have acorns
@thecoshman whoops. Cauliflower then :P
@daknok_t lol
Oh, baobabs!
I know those too.
15:01
personally, I am a big fan of fractal veg
From The Little Prince.
@RMartinhoFernandes oh those are just stupidly big though
though not quite as stupidly big as redwoods
No idea what those are.
you tree drawing, was it meant to be any particular (type of) tree?
@RafalGrasman Which value is showing as negative? speedW?
15:02
@RMartinhoFernandes MASSIVE trees in north America, can grow nearly 12 foot across
@thecoshman An orange tree!
@RMartinhoFernandes oh... not sure what the proper name for an orange tree is, it's just an orange tree :P
@thecoshman Pretty sure it's just Orange tree
Right, that's why I can associate the name.
Hint: it produces oranges (I know, shocking)
I find it hard to accept that most species of orange do not produce orange oranges
15:04
it's titsing cold in here
Why do you associate tits with cold?
I don't
@RMartinhoFernandes oh, have I not told you theory on why we say "it's a bit nippy"?
sbi
sbi
@thecoshman More like an maple, actually.
I just normally don't type out the way in which I insert tits into every single sentence I say out loud unless it's cold
15:06
@thecoshman I'm all ears.
@sbi huh? acorns are the nut (I think they are nuts) that grow into oak trees
sbi
sbi
@RMartinhoFernandes Why do you think human milk is stored outside the female body? (Hint: It's the same with male testicles.)
@RMartinhoFernandes it's the exact point at which nipples decide to make them selves well known
sbi
sbi
@thecoshman Brainfart of mine.
@sbi so men have something to look at
@sbi mmm maple, if ever you where to show me some attempt at proof of m/[Gg]ods?/, that tree would be have to be it
@sbi Actually, I don't think so.
googles maple
@RMartinhoFernandes perhaps, though normally called Oak trees
for example, virtually all mammalian species have external testicles, whereas the enlarged breasts of human females is nearly, if not entirely, unique to humans
Oh, there's lots of maples in my hometown.
15:09
@RMartinhoFernandes maple syrup, the godly stuff you put on pancakes (and other treats)
sbi
sbi
@thecoshman Most of what you look at is fat tissue. :) Practically all women, no matter what size their breasts, have about one table spoon of mammary gland in each breast. If you look at female apes, you see what little is necessary to produce milk.
@thecoshman Not very popular here.
@sbi still, strangely appealing
sbi
sbi
@DeadMG You don't think what?
Also FUCK PORTUGUESE BRAZILIAN WIKIPEDIA.
15:10
@daknok_t you are ridiculously late to the party
@RMartinhoFernandes in Portugal?
@sbi that there is any connection between female breasts and male tescticles
@thecoshman Right.
@DeadMG big breasts tend to attract testicles
@RMartinhoFernandes your missing out man. Though I also like sugar and lemon
@RMartinhoFernandes Oak, redirected from 'Acorn Tree'
sbi
sbi
@DeadMG Whether there is any connection is up to your definition of connection. (The use of testicles tends to improve the odds of the use of breasts, for a starter.) What I was saying is that there's reasonably theories assuming both are placed "outside" our bodies because they need to be cooler that 37°C.
15:12
IIRC the theory behind boobs is that they can look like well rounded ass checks whilst a lady is standing up
I wouldn't really say that breasts are outside the body
sbi
sbi
@thecoshman That's but one theory.
as far as I'm aware, they're the same temperature as the rest
@thecoshman You can't check a lady's ass by looking at her breasts.
@sbi I am sure there are many
sbi
sbi
15:13
@DeadMG I was talking about the mammary glands. They are attached to the body at the outside in most/all mammals.
@RMartinhoFernandes the theory is that before humans walked upright, a large bum would be a sign of a well fed lady. When we started to walk upright boobs took over that role. Like Sbi said, it's just one theory
@thecoshman I guess that means my attempt at funny based on your typo missed you.
sbi
sbi
@thecoshman Another good one (IMO) is that humans do not have protruding snouts (or however to say that in English), as our closest relatives have, so protruding breasts allow breast-feeding without suffocating the child.
And they look pretty.
@RMartinhoFernandes yeah... straight over my head :P
@RMartinhoFernandes only because you/we have evolved to be attracted to them
15:16
Do I look like I care?
sbi
sbi
@RMartinhoFernandes Remember: What you find pretty in women correlates with what makes them more likely to help you spread your genes.
@RMartinhoFernandes it's hard to tell what you look like over the internet :P
sbi
sbi
@RMartinhoFernandes How would we know what you look like?
@sbi trying to think of some of jeans related joke :S
@RMartinhoFernandes :O that is kind of horrifying!
it took me so long to work out how to spell that :(
sbi
sbi
15:20
@thecoshman Get a spillchucker for your browser!
@thecoshman Why? That one went right over my head.
@thecoshman Why?
@sbi Jeans and genes are homophones.
@sbi I'm too bad for it
@sbi Genes -> your DNA. Jeans -> what you where on your legs
sbi
sbi
@RMartinhoFernandes Ah, right, in English they are. I forgot.
@thecoshman I do know the words. I didn't think of them sounding the same.
What does "spreading your jeans" even mean?
@sbi do you read this in German then?
@sbi someting along the lines of women stealing your trousers, I don't know
@RMartinhoFernandes probably a human response
Humans are horrified of machines saving damsels in distress?
sbi
sbi
15:24
@thecoshman No. But I guess seeing the word written makes them so different to me that I don't "hear" they sound the same. (I know it's not the same for you.)
@RMartinhoFernandes Too late for that.
@RMartinhoFernandes 'saving' huh
any ways, home time for me
sbi
sbi
@RMartinhoFernandes For all we know you have just kidnapped that woman, are carrying her to your secret lair, and plan to examine all her cavities with your broken manipulators, storing the images you capture doing so in that broken memory module of yours. Shudder.
@thecoshman Obviously. What else could it be?
see yall!
15:25
No, I don't want to know.
@thecoshman Bye.
... rape
sbi
sbi
@RMartinhoFernandes Too late.
user1182183
@Benjamin yes SpeedW
@thecoshman Gosh, what a pervert.
sbi
sbi
@thecoshman Why would a robot rape? It's not like they have an urge to have sex.
15:26
You see a female body and your brain races to rape.
user1182183
I changed it now to:
float speedW = sqrt(pow((Curr.X - PSaved[playerid].X),2.0f) * pow((Curr.Y - PSaved[playerid].Y),2.0f) * pow((Curr.Z - PSaved[playerid].Z),2.0f))/((float)remp.total_microseconds()/1000000.0f);
user1182183
seems to work
sbi
sbi
@RMartinhoFernandes Actually he was seeing a female body being carried away by a monster.
user1182183
But now when I'm trying to print Curr.X, Curr.Y, Curr.Z in sprintf then after a few prints the application crashesz
user1182183
without not
15:29
Robby is not a monster!
sbi
sbi
You know, yesterday this cow-worker of mine and I were discussing whether using C and C++ automatically leads to vulnerabilities, and today some blogger explains how the facebook app on iOs and Android stores the user credentials unencrypted on the device's file system. No buffer overflow needed, you could easily do such stupidity in BASIC.
sbi
sbi
@RMartinhoFernandes So your speech recognition module has problems, too? Oh my.
I blame the C++.
I'm spending Easter with my family, so I'll probably be offline until next week.
See y'all then.
15:44
how to make a pointer to operator() ?

struct
{
int operator() (int k, int x, int b)
{
return k * x + b;
}
} f;

int(*ptr)(int, int, int) = &f.operator (); // wanna smth like this to make in concept ( idea )
argh! I went to the fridge to eat some strawberries an they've gone of
bananas are all mushy too
huh?
@RMartinhoFernandes Noooooooooooooooooo, a trope
well, I need to eat but don't have anything good to eat, and if I buy new fruit it'll just go off over the Easter Weekend
plus I'd have to go to the foodshop and then I'd buy 999999 cookies
eat something decent
> don't have anything good to eat
15:58
buy something decent
not cookies
> it'll just go off over the Easter Weekend
oh well
I'm hungry enough to tolerate that loss, I think
@user1131997 f is an instance of the anonymous struct
nah… forget what I said …
maybe put parantheses around f.operator()? &(f.operator())`
16:05
@RMartinhoFernandes But but but I want to discuss my variant :(
@user1131997 The short story is that f itself is what you should use. You can use an std::function<int(int, int, int)> as an intermediary but unless you really, really need a binary delimitation then it doesn't bring anything.
16:32
guys do you also have that bug with SO. add c++ to your favourite tags, then wait till the "X new questions" popup comes up, click it and everything is marked yellow?
@bamboon I don't think that's a bug, I thought it was a feature I simply didn't understand yet
@bamboon SO tends to color things yellow if they're new/unread
@MooingDuck I thought colored yellow means that all of your favourite tags are in that question?
hm, from the perl docs: "You probably cannot mix alarm and sleep calls." what do you mean probably?
@bamboon if so, that would be a bug
if you go to your personal page, and click favorites/reputation/responses, the ones that weren't there the last time you looked are colored yellow. I think it's "unread"
@MooingDuck It's personal: you can't mix alarm and sleep calls. You're unlikely to know how to do it properly! ... or at least that's one possible interpretation.
@MooingDuck thats true, however I do get yellow questions when all my favourite tags are met
16:36
@bamboon never noticed that
@bamboon that doesn't sound right, because you can have more than 5 favorite tags.
@MooingDuck how do you mean that?
@bamboon I currently have 9 favorite tags. A question can only have up to 5, therefore it is impossible for any question to match all my favorites.
@MooingDuck yeah, that is strange
@bamboon how is that strange?
@MooingDuck the whole behaviour
16:40
@bamboon it seems to be questions that have changed since you first loaded the page, but haven't looked at? or something?
@MooingDuck not for me. I can even look at them and they stay marked, if my favourite tags are in there
@bamboon oh, when I removed my search parameters, any question with any of my favorite tags is yellow, rest are white.
@MooingDuck ah yeah on main page indeed
I think the favorites thing is "any" not "all"
@MooingDuck yeap
16:45
it's wierd that if you search for a favorite tag, they're all white, until you "load new activity", then they all turn yellow. That sounds like a bug
then however this "new Activity" stuff is broken
16:56
Hello people, I have a question regarding Qt, am I in the right place?
@HJosef if it is a yes or no question, then fire away. Otherwise: stackoverflow.com/questions/ask
ok, I will try my luck :) if an object emits a signal, can any other object (e.g. from a different hierarchy) receive the signal and act upon it?
@HJosef hmm, I guess it also depends on if anyone paying attention knows QT. I don't :(
@Moo ok, thanks anyways, bye
* @MooingDuck
@HJosef sorry.
17:12
@jalf I've mostly tested on Linux, and occasionally on Mac. I don't remember this particular error..
18:00
quiet today
*shhhh* I'm wooking for wabbits
@Collin rooking?
I can't remember exactly what elmer fudd says
-8
Q: C Program for creating symbol table pointers causing some strange behaviour

sehecommented: @JinuJD No doubt, the 'sf interface' isn't properly indenting your comments. (I wonder what the sf interface has to do with stackoverflow. Meanwhile, have a look at the 'help' link when editing on stackoverflow)

Hehe ^^
That comment oneboxing always makes me think you posted the question
18:09
@Collin yeah, it'll take some time to get used to
hi guys. I want to know, is the same v-Ptr is shared between all the classes in the inheritance hierarchy from the first class that use virtual function to the last one ?
@AlexDan: That's an implementation detail
The compiler is free to do whatever it needs to do to implement the standard behavior
I'm trying to understand how virtual functions work, I read that the compiler create a vptr that point to vtable of the correct type, so e.g : Base* p=new Der(); then first vptr will have the address of vtable of Base, and then it get override to the address of vtable of Der
is this correct ?
That's how it might work
If you're strictly interested in how virtual functions work then you don't need to understand vtables.
18:20
(and that might be how pretty much all C++ compilers work)
But the best way to understand virtual functions is to understand what they're used for
not to understand how the compiler magic works
(namely, they're how C++ implements polymorphism)
I'm always amused by question where they ask, "what's the C equivalent of this perl function" and then list strlen or printf or something.
@Collin it'll pass
ok thanks
18:43
Why do so many people forbid boost? It's just silly!
@MooingDuck: Especially since you can extract only the parts you need
agreed threading without boost is saddening...
What ends up happening is that because they can't/won't use Boost they make their own crappy version of the Boost classes they would've used.
It takes a lot of skill to make a useful library

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