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21:00
it feels like a lot of fine ground pebbles to the face and knees, mostly
Free birthmarks too.
user1804599
@sehe klinkt goed haha get it
21:15
@ChemiCalChems of course you can - just find the related compiler defines.
@sehe He wasn't the most tech savvy guy
user1804599
DAL = baklava code
Fuck. I just learnt about what's happenning in the Philippines and that's... downright horrible.
?
more crazy stuff?
@ChemiCalChems so, we lie to them?
21:18
@sehe Well, no.
@ChemiCalChems 100'000 deaths impending.
what
@Morwenn !?
oh hell
21:19
no
Maybe not.
maybe not?!?
Well. Just link or tell, mate
Still, the current president has a way of dealing with drug users & dealers which boils down to « kill them in the street and dump them in the ocean ».
He promised to kill 100'000 drug dealers & users within six months of presidency.
what the fuck
21:20
Currently there are "only" ~200 such people killed.
But already 60'000 in prison wited to be put in « rehab camps », or maybe just killed depending on what the president actually decides.
this world is fucking insane
user1804599
Don't kill people unless necessary for defense
user1804599
It's bad
Apparently that president guy tends to keep his crazy promises when it comes to killing people. I've read that he set up death squads to kill drug dealers & users when he was still mayor of one of the country's main cities.
If he does kill that amount of people, it'll be nothing short of a genocide.
Nice constitution they got there then
21:25
In context, Singapore has similar drug laws.
user1804599
Is culture
Well, we probably have to take into account the fact that they have severe drug problems over there, but still...
user1804599
Please refrain from being a racist
@Mikhail Aren't their laws against dealers but not specifically users?
They have a bigger policing problem, the laws actually say that drug traffickers are sentenced to death. It just hasn't been enforced.
21:27
Drug lords and corruption always come in pairs
user1804599
NL has the best drug policy
Or Singapore?
Unless you like to smoke weed...
@Mikhail well. Like I said. Nice constitution then
user1804599
Death sentence is bad and Singapore should feel bad
Oh yeah, let's remember that the 60'000 people imprisoned actually turned themselves in, fearing for their lives.
21:29
all of them? makes no sense
user1804599
XTC XTC XTC XTC XTC ๐Ÿ˜๐Ÿ˜„๐Ÿค‘๐Ÿค‘๐Ÿค‘๐Ÿค‘๐Ÿค‘๐Ÿ˜›๐Ÿ˜
user1804599
What does a struck-through emoji look like? ๐Ÿ˜€๐Ÿ˜ฌ๐Ÿ˜‚
user1804599
Looks awful lol
It would appear that their new wave of enforcement has been rather successful
@sehe When police and militia start killing drug users in the street in broad daylight and leave the body there with « I'm a drug user » signs, I guess you actually start fearing for your life.
21:31
Still doesn't make sense
>>The Philippinesโ€™ Dangerous Drugs Board counted 1.3 million drug users nationwide in a 2012 study, but lawmakers have said the true figure may be nearer 10 millionโ€”one-tenth of the population. The U.N. statistics suggest methamphetamine use is more common in the Philippines than in neighboring countries.
what an excellent way to get rid of a political enemy
>>To see drug suspects surrendering to police or users seeking rehabilitation en masse is a โ€œhappy problem,โ€ said board chairman Felipe Rojas. But resources are urgently needed to treat them, he said.
@sehe What would you do? Risk getting killed, or turn in voluntarily and maybe survive?
@sehe Well, I'm only reporting what I read from several sources. I don't have first-hand experience of the situation nor extended knowledge about the country :/
21:32
@ChemiCalChems Irrelevant. It's not about that.
It's about the presumption that all of the 60k imprisoned drugs offenders turned themselves in
I seem to recall that Indonesia started enforcing death penalty for drug dealers a while ago though.
The country hasn't had the "rule of law" since the American's left, holistically this move appears to have drastically curbed the use of crystal meth.
user1804599
Awful
> holistically
user1804599
The worst punishment for drug (ab)use should be health insurance not covering any of the results
21:36
You mean, like revenge killings "holistically" prevent adultery?
nwp
nwp
I just watched pikmin3, now I want to make a game where there are small thingies gathering resources and building stuff
like, many lemings clones
I don't consider adultery a problem
nwp
nwp
unfortunately I have no idea, no time and no talent
farewell cruel world
seriously, fuck this world
21:37
@Mikhail what a way to completely side step the issue.
Thank you
I don't consider any words a problem. It's not about that
Certainly, the country has at least two issues, no "rule of law" and "drugs". So, he decided to solve the drug problem, and appears to be successful.
user1804599
@nwp look up The Powder Toy, now combine your idea with that and make the sickest game ever
user1804599
(The Powder Toy is rad, everybody should give it a try.)
user1804599
21:39
It even has various cellular automata and is Turing-complete
@Mikhail I've not seen the evidence for that. I completely agree that it /might/ work. Just like burning down the family village of desertes cures others from deserting...
Drugs like meth are a terrible thing, in the US where those who go to detox have a 88% relapse rate (somewhat high because US detox programs sucks) - I'm not sure what's more important "due process" or stopping drug users.
user1804599
Better prevention
They are a 3rd world shit hole, one way to prevent drug use is to kill the dealers
user1804599
No, I mean tell children drugs are bad
21:42
lol
user1804599
And show them what you end up like when you do them
user1804599
And do lots of ads and stuff
user1804599
Have former users talk to them
@Mikhail There's still a line between killing the dealers and killing the users. And doing it in the street. In broad daylight. And leaving their corpses there with signs on them.
user1804599
21:43
Do it every school year
user1804599
Also make it less scary to get help
^that
user1804599
Make it less taboo and people will talk about it more
user1804599
Fuck all taboos ever
@Bassie presupposes an education system and information infrastructure
user1804599
21:45
The US has that :v
user1804599
It's like the fourth most developed country in the world
Has what
It's not about the US
user1804599
Oh I thought we were discussing the US&A
... sigh
21:46
Philippines are a bit different
user1804599
Yeah the Philippines is a shithole like post-EU Europe
However, senseless agression never works.
It always backfires
user1804599
Drug dealers pay politicians for establishing such policies to get their enemies arrested/killed
user1804599
rightfold's razor: corruption by default
To call it senseless is hardly true, they have a an extreme social problem. The Chinese went through similar to get opium out of their country.
21:50
Is this:
std::shared_ptr<int> x(new int(1));
fn(x, std::shared_ptr<int>(new int(2));
exception safe?
user1804599
Yup
does new throw?
user1804599
Well depends on the signature of fn
@Shoe fn(std::make_shared<int>(1), std::make_shared<int>(2)); I'm fairly confident this is bulletproof.
std::bad_alloc
user1804599
21:51
If the copy ctor of the first parameter type throws then it's dangerous
user1804599
@Morwenn not applicable
void fn(std::shared_ptr<int> a) {}
void fn(std::shared_ptr<int> a, std::shared_ptr<int> b) {}
user1804599
Shared ptr takes ownership before bad alloc can happen
user1804599
So it will call the deleter in that case
user1804599
@Shoe yeah then it is safe
21:53
It appears that `new` has a more complicated signature than I expected:

`throwing (1)
void* operator new (std::size_t size);
nothrow (2)
void* operator new (std::size_t size, const std::nothrow_t& nothrow_value) noexcept;
placement (3)
void* operator new (std::size_t size, void* ptr) noexcept;`
user1804599
And shared ptr copy ctor doesn't allocate
ie MyClass * p2 = new (std::nothrow) MyClass;
user1804599
@Shoe use make shared anyway since it's more efficient
Also:
nwp
nwp
@Borgleader in C++17 yes, before no
21:54
std::pair<std::shared_ptr<int>, std::shared_ptr<int>> pair(std::shared_ptr<int>(new int(1)), std::shared_ptr<int>(new int(2)));
fn(std::get<0>(pair), std::get<1>(pair));
is not exception safe
right?
@nwp Why isn't it before 17?
@Borgleader Interleaving.
@Bassie Since you were talking about USA, the USA has advertising campaigns about the harder drugs, actually. the Meth: not even once campaign was posted around Colorado when I was a kid.
nwp
nwp
@Borgleader wait, with make_shared it should be fine. Ignore me
with new int version it makes sense, but not make_shared imo /cc @Morwenn
21:56
Function parameters being unsequenced.
I believe it was fairly common across a number of states
@Borgleader I don't know. I remember examples of such patterns being unsafe but never payed much attentio to it.
user1804599
@Shoe implementation-defined
Can someone double check this: coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/b5e175b30204e11d for me?
@Bassie why?
nwp
nwp
the problematic example is foo(std::shared_ptr<int>(new int(1)), std::shared_ptr<int>(new int(2)))
user1804599
21:58
@Shoe all correct assuming "not safe" means "implementation-defined safety"
user1804599
@Shoe evaluation order is implementation-defined, i.e. you need to consult the implementation's manual.
there's also D.A.R.E. but it's pretty much a joke
user1804599
An implementation may first evaluate both news, then call both ctors
nwp
nwp
@Shoe in theory a pre C++17 compiler could execute new int(1), then new int(2) which throws, then leaking the first allocation. In practice that never happens.
user1804599
new, new, ctor, ctor (unsafe) instead of new, ctor, new, ctor (safe)
22:00
^that
Evaluation was totally unsequenced.
user1804599
Use Rust it has no new
what is up
user1804599
Leaks impossible*
user1804599
* unless refcycle :DRUGS:
@nwp I believe the order is also undefined
nwp
nwp
22:03
yeah, it could do the second allocation first
user1804599
@Morwenn wrong; there is one guarantee: the function body is never evaluated before all arguments are fully evaluated
But in the glorious C++11 std::future we now live in we (std::nothrow), which I assume guarantees the memory is allocated :-)
lol
@Bassie I meant « evaluation of parameters », but I guess that what I meant doesn't matter anyway ._.
user1804599
Strict evaluation sucks
user1804599
22:06
Wolfram Language master race
@Mikhail noโ€ฆ you get a nullptr if allocation failed
Wolfman Alpha
user1804599
The one true term rewriting
@Bassie I see
So the ones marked as "safe" are guaranteed to always be safe by the C++11 standard?
user1804599
Yeah
22:07
@LucDanton I see, so I need to wrap it in a while(ptr!=nullptr) statement
user1804599
If new fails, no leak. If ctor fails, delete will be called
Thanks
that should do the trick
user1804599
The shared ptr ctor catches 'em all, then does a delete, then rethrows
nwp
nwp
herb sutter said in cppcast something like they looked at future.then where everyone expects the first thing to be evaluated before the .then, but the standard kinda didn't say that, so all the .then implementations were broken
user1804599
22:08
Don't do then. Do map and flatmap
user1804599
Then is way too ambiguous and ill-understood
std::vector
user1804599
vstd::ector
Also boost::fatmap
boost::fastfap
22:11
fapmap sounds like something cool.
Also FapReduce.
optimal algorithm for a multi-tiered circle jerk
user1804599
I once did a MapReduce in Minecraft
user1804599
With hoppers, mine carts, and furnaces.
user1804599
Distribute, smelt, accumulate
user1804599
user1804599
22:14
My very favorite.
user1804599
Ell
Ell
All I know about wolfram language is "symbolic"
I watched a talk he gave
He said "symbolic" every other sentence
AnywY might
I knew a math major who worked on it, his job was to add symbols and such in the hopes that in the future somebody knew the results of the specific integrals. I can just imaging the terrible, terrible if ladders in their codebase.
user1804599
@Ell It just means it's like, expressions are objects
user1804599
Write Sqrt[2] (a call) and you get back Sqrt[2] (a call) because it can't be further reduced
user1804599
22:21
Unlike other languages that try to give you a number or an error
user1804599
It's nice because you always get the exact result. You never get approximations.
user1804599
The square root of two is exactly the square root of two.
user1804599
Write Sqrt[2]^2, however, and you do get back the number 2.
user1804599
Because the system knows that Sqrt[x]^2 == x when x is real
This can not be the norm anymore. Half-mast for yet another tragedy. https://t.co/VGcFC0BJgw
Ell
Ell
22:26
@Bassie but that's only the same as having a function in c++ returning a trancendental or something such
You can write some system giving only exact answers I'm c++ too
I guess it's about the library
But sleep time :3 night
@Ell I think the significant part is that the relationships of the value with other functions will be preserved exactly
Except it can become a cluster fuck, for example the FourierTransform[] can solve certain integrals that Integrate[Exp[-I*w*t]...] won't (even though I explicitly wrote the Fourier transform)
i have began my crusade against flat earthers! i have joined the flat earth society forums and am glad to announce i'm not the only fighter of truth and science in these lands
@Mikhail Who nose y?
22:30
Would there be a reason for such behavior?
Yeah, because those two parts of the code base aren't mutual?
...Interesting...
I would figure that it would be data-based, not hard-coded in.
The symbolic manipulation is hard coded
Terrible
If anything. it should do compilation based on external data that describes such relationships
...What languages have that feature, anyways?
welp looks like i've been abandoned
Who here drives a Tesla? Which model? Business-car or self-buy? Are you working in IT?
23:01
@O'Niel Why do you want to know?
@Borgleader nsa probing
23:19
@VermillionAzure that's my fetish
nasa probing
23:39
@Borgleader Because I've heard that in the IT-sector loads of people are getting Tesla cars from their owners, and I've indeed seen some Tesla-cars from IT-businesses on the street. Wondering if this indeed is true.
owners = boss*
I would want a auto pilot car too - when the technology is mature
mean while catch 22 of the situation: too dangerous to completely trust auto pilot & if you don't, why fork out whole lot more for the same functionality

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