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05:00
There we go
It's simple really, just a preview
Looks nice! :D
using bootstrap and a few custom edits here and there
Also one thing I forgot to say about PHP, it's bad unless you're using it for MySQL
Thing about bootstrap is that it gives you mobile support xD
in which case always use PHP for MySQL
05:01
Yeah that's the plan :P
Try shrinking the screen on the website
05:16
@MarfGamer I would, but it's too late at night.
@Mysticial If you add me on Steam I'll accept the friend request :) steamcommunity.com/id/MarfGamer <- My profile
It's 7AM over here
so i gotta go to sleep xD
Hopefully my employer will be happy o-o
Got vibrations working with XInput :D
Ima do it so it's proportionate to the RT trigger, right now it's just push B and the whole thing vibrates
Lmao xD
Tinkering with your controller?
Anyway
I'm off to sleep~
Wish my luck :P
@ReousaAsteron Yeah, having fun with XInput in C and C++
I've always wanted to make games in C/C++, and I thought playing with XInput would be a fun start. Soon I'll start with OpenGL
05:24
I'd really recommend just starting out with console games xD
Having graphics involved compilcates things quite a bunch
@ReousaAsteron I've been doing that with Java for 2 years now :/
*Well not games, but console applications
C++ is a whole different thing though
Mainly because of memory management (that was the difference for me from C++ and C# anyway)
and a bunch of other stuff that you might not notice
Inheritance is also quite different
learncpp.com this is where I learned my C++
Yeah but C/C++ have so many things that java does not
Especially native code
Mhmm true
For example, XInput
It took me an entire day to get XInput kind of working in java
05:26
Although, trust me on that one :P. Build a console game or two, you'll be quite pleased, then go on to whatever you want xD
It took me 1 hour to get XINput up and running (That's mostly just the cygwin instal time)
Also if your aim is to build a game that people can play, I'd recommend learning C# and unity3d
Yeah I'll get around to C# sometime, people seem to like it alot
What is the benefit of it?
Welllllll
It was supposed to be an improved C++ version
Uhm, basically
It's the java version of C++, well you could say that. Not very accurate but I think you get the point?
So it's like if Java and C++ had a baby
05:28
Pretty much.
A useless baby?
No, no not at all. Great language
ok gud
And much easier than C++ too
I want to learn C/C++ also because it's an industry standard
05:29
Also C# is supported by unity3d (game engine that takes away all the physics and networking hassle)
Well yeah, that one's true
Plus I want to work at Valve one day, actually make games and listen to the community
@MarfGamer lol
Something that they don't do (anymore)
Lmao, well if you wanna do something that they don't do, why would you join em? :P
@ReousaAsteron So I could at least try to improve it
05:30
Look up C#, unity3d though
See what's going on around there, why are they the way they are now?
stuff like that
I've built a dummy game there, was pretty neat.
OH Also, I think I've read this somewhere on the web; "C# is the managed version of C++"
Again, not very accurate but, kind of puts it in words.
Anyhow, learncpp.com these put me up to speed on C++
You'll get what it means when you start doing some memory management :P.
And off to bed I go~ Goodnight!
@ReousaAsteron Goodnight :)
06:17
Not Saturn. Still beautiful.
Hey
Are you guys also doing documentation
@R.MartinhoFernandes notice how it’s deliberately blocking the view of New Zealand
@Magisch No.
That's a single shot, not a composite.
It's amazing.
(DSCOVR took it; it orbits the Sun-Earth-Moon L1 point)
when zoomed in I think it would kinda give me a feeling of vertigo if it weren’t for the visual artifacts on the Moon
Yeah.
Also, lolwut, I meant Earth-Sun L1.
It makes no sense with three bodies unless one is in one of the points already.
06:27
how much push does solar system need before it's edging towards the black hole at the centre of galaxy
06:40
@MarfGamer C/C++ is not a language
> Referring to C/C++ is about as valid as referring to Italian/Spanish. You should be careful to whom and when you use such a term. But it's true that there is diffusion of ideas in both directions, and the similarities are more than coincidence.
06:56
@LucDanton I'm curious why it happened, though.
@R.MartinhoFernandes the artifacts or the near feeling?
Mostly that green fringe.
I'd think an observatory from 2015 would have lenses without chromatic aberration.
I’d wonder how chromatic aberration would be so 'localised' but to tell the truth it’s been a while since my optic classes
@R.MartinhoFernandes That is a Death Star!
@LucDanton AFAIK it's wavelength-specific.
Though I also thought it happened at the edges of the spectrum, so green is awkward.
(There's a less pronounced purple fringe on the left side, but that one matches my expectations)
07:02
@R.MartinhoFernandes I was wondering about anisotropy etc. (which it’s not going to be) but then I realised without knowing what’s cropped and what’s not it’s pointless
There's a small white dot on the left.
also I have near 0 experience on practical photography, astronomical or otherwise
Oh, got it.
The picture is a triple exposure, each 30 seconds apart, one for each of red, green, and blue.
The green bits is just the Moon 30 seconds prior.
It's motion blur :D
moon goes os far in 30 sec?
07:07
I really have no idea but the picture feels like a narrow depth of field deal
@LucDanton DSCOVR is meant to study Earth's climate, so I'd guess the Moon won't ever be in focus.
it’s not just that, it’s transit pictures in general
like a fly passing before a far object
@LucDanton Because you need smaller apertures to keep wide DoF, and that means longer exposures.
oh, I thought it was a cultivated effect
And long exposures don't mix well with transits given the movement involved. See above :D
07:13
it’s always made the picture interesting
@LucDanton There's probably a bit of that on top.
hii
can anyone help me with peg grammer for tcl?
no.
> The simultaneous occurrence of a transit of Mercury and a transit of Venus is extremely rare, but somehow more frequent than from Earth, and will next occur in the years 18,713, 19,536 and 20,029.
That's... good to know.
07:19
yeah it’s a very informative page
> No human has ever directly seen a transit of Mercury from Mars […]
frankly I hope that our descendants in those years don't need to view it from Earth.
throw a big rock it might be sooner than you think
@Puppy It's not a transit from Earth.
oh, IRTA "somehow more frequent from Earth"
Well, but then there would be no guarantee it would be a transit from <elsewhere>.
Transits depend on the observation point; you have to be in the shadow of the transiting body.
If Mars and Mercury are on opposite sides of the Sun, for the obvious example, there's no transit.
Well, not exactly "be in", but more like "cross". If you're constantly in the shadow (say, at L2), there's no transit, only a permanent occlusion.
January 0 is an alternative name for December 31. == In an ephemeris == January 0 refers to the day before January 1 in an annual ephemeris. It keeps the date in the year for which the ephemeris was published, thus avoiding any reference to the previous year, even though it is the same day as December 31 of the previous year. January 0 also occurs in the epoch for the ephemeris second, "1900 January 0 at 12 hours ephemeris time". 1900 January 0 (at Greenwich Mean Noon) was also the epoch used by Newcomb's Tables of the Sun, which became the epoch for the Dublin Julian day. == In software == In...
07:29
I'd like more people to recognise the concept of a modular clock
as in, '32:00 today' == '8:00 tomorrow"
Xeo
Xeo
Japan uses that for TV show times, I think?
yeah
it's pretty cool
@milleniumbug What's the benefit?
Ven
Ven
but maths!
morning
07:39
@R.MartinhoFernandes I'd say ability to say "hey, we're meeting at 26:00" without people asking "2AM or 2PM?" in response, but then again, people who understand modular clock probably don't use 12h time system
And that's not a very likely scenario anyway. IME it's clear from context whether it's 2am or 2pm.
"Let's picnic tomorrow. Meet me at one."
"Let's stargaze tomorrow. Meet me at one."
People keep peppering const && and && on their member functions and stuff.
And it bothers me deeply.
What if I want to keep a value around for a little bit?
Xeo
Xeo
> const &&
what
@milleniumbug In Portugal they just use "TV day" which goes from early morning (~6:00) till late night (~5:00). If a show is on "Monday 01:30" on TV, it airs on Tuesday 01:30 UTC (or +1 for Summer Time). Works just fine without needing to mentally juggle two clocks in your head.
Ven
Ven
07:44
yess
Well, now I can because you went and forced it so that I can't even have a scoped { auto thing = whatever.blah(); }
So in order to do multiple operations I have to create and re-create the temporary.
"That doesn't look like a fair benchmark" WELL MAYBE IF THE LIBRARY WASN'T SO DUMB.
A normal "day" is between early morning (when people wake up) and late night (when people go to sleep), anyway, not between 00:00 and 24:00.
A: "Today is Friday"
B: *checks clock* "Actually, it's already Saturday"
B is just a smartass.
Xeo
Xeo
It's not the next day until you sleep
Xeo
Xeo
So if you never sleep, it's never the next day, and you successfully stopped time!
07:48
and die when you are 5 because you only sleep once per 15 days
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes Shoulda been "absfinaent"
This is basically the same point I usually make about SI units.
Hi, is "Why do some compilers violates the defined language standard?" a good question to ask in stackoverflow?
No.
There's way too many reasons and it depends on the compiler.
@Unknown123 Difficulty of implementation, time, dubious utility of the standard compared to implementations in practice, ambiguity in the standard, misunderstanding the standard, bugs, ...
3
@R.MartinhoFernandes Thank you for your response sir, for example, I do not know if c++ has some compilers that violates the standard, but I do know some Pascal compiler has, i'm sorry if it's an out of topic chat

I don't understand, in Pascal standard iso 7185, pascal-central.com/docs/…, on 6.7.2.2 Arithmetic operators section,

it clearly says that, "A term of the form i mod j shall be an error if j is zero or negative ; otherwise, the value of i mod j shall be that value of (i-(k*j)) for integral k such that 0 < = i mod j < j."
07:58
Er. This is the C++ room.
Gentlemen. You can't fight in here. This is the C++ room!
I just picking some example, as I don't really much know if there is any c++ compilers that violates the standard
So you're about to ask a question on this without having any example in context?
Don't, the question is too broad, and the answer won't help you anyway
@Unknown123 C++ has only compilers that violate the standard.
@BartekBanachewicz That's from 2011, but he's actually made that point after announcing his run for President.
08:04
That's where I got it from I think
Mobile
@R.MartinhoFernandes yeah it's from here
he's literally hitler
I think he's going to win, but I don't think it matters.
All those people who support him were already there before he ran and will likely still be there after he loses (if he does).
@R.MartinhoFernandes they are literally nazis
but like modern ones
Those people are in Europe as well already. They just don't have a figurehead like that to give them a stage yet.
Well, almost. See also: Brexit.
back in the day good people killed nazis
08:22
I think he'll win for the same reason the NRA has so much lobbying power: their members are active.
@R.MartinhoFernandes, @Griwes, @milleniumbug

All right then, thank you very much for your advice and response

So in general, for example:

If there is a question "In C++, why does the -5 % 3 produce -2 instead of 1, isn't it modulo operator?"
I should answer 'That's because in C++14 standard
http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2014/n4296.pdf
on Page 124, 5.6 Multiplicative operators, no. 4 says that "(a/b)*b + a%b is equal to a"
Therefore, it is not a modulo operator, it is a remainder operator'
They go to important events (like public forums and shit), and they go en masse.
@R.MartinhoFernandes that's because normal people have more important things to do in life
lolcracy
@BartekBanachewicz More important than not having this dickhead running your country?
@R.MartinhoFernandes I was under impression the "active" members you talked about are active all year round
08:27
@BartekBanachewicz Primarily they're active when it matters.
I am just ignoring it and hoping that it'll all blow over.
I truly hope the Delegates and Superdelegates of each state cast the proper vote.
@ThePhD Exactly why I think he'll win.
The most I can do is maybe write a letter to the delegates that actually cast the real votes for the Presidential Election.
@ThePhD I don't think it won't
@ThePhD now this is a dumb system
IDGI why the US has so many levels of indirection
@BartekBanachewicz Like, when they have to vote for shit. NRAs flash-mob public forums and stuff like that. They always vote, and they vote for the same (they share semi-official lists of whom to vote for).
@BartekBanachewicz Historical artifact. It's a 240-year old system.
@BartekBanachewicz Basically, even if they are a vocal minority, they are very vocal not only on the Internet, but also in the ballots.
No way Hillary is gonna get people to go out and vote.
I kinda think Trump 40% - Bernie 30% - Hillary - 30% is possible
Bernie's not running, is he?
doesn't matter for his voters
WTF. That's giving Trump the Presidency.
Xeo
Xeo
08:37
I still have to think back to that "The last President" picture
Never tweet. https://twitter.com/realdonaldtrump/status/757777369272815617
if russia is supporting trump thru wikileak, you should be careful with who you are voting for
@R.MartinhoFernandes the democratic convention was full of people shouting Bernie or Bust when people mentioned hillary
> Donald Trump takes 5-point lead over Hillary Clinton in post-convention national poll
Ell
Ell
I think trump will win
Watch this video to feel better
@R.MartinhoFernandes found this finally
The "write bernie in" had this on their page
with the caption "powers of two"
08:51
... I think my conclusion is correct, isn't it hehe?
> If every pledge-signer recruits just two more citizens who recruit two more every day, we’ll have over 1,000,000 pledge-takers in less than a month.
lol, that's wrong.
That's powers of three.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I believe you just aptly summed the whole movement
user image
2
this is pretty sick
@R.MartinhoFernandes We have this at wall in one of our meeting rooms. But with the "war room" ofc.
09:09
Hmm. Why not just put up a better projection instead?
because this is a common one people are accustomed to
@CatPlusPlus I’m gorging and binging the latest season of Archer omg it’s the bestest
Ell
Ell
09:29
I still am not sure how big great Britain is
Maps show it as tall as Spain
@Ell well it’s not Wee Britain
@BartekBanachewicz Mercator projections are useful for navigation because they retain bearing lines as, well, lines. Cartography was original meant for nautical purposes so it was great, and then it stuck.
North is always a straight-line up everywhere. Northwest is always a line at a 45-degree to the equator (or to any parallel for that matter). Projections that don't distort areas tend to not have that property.
@Ell Check on an equal-area projection: upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/9e/…
Ven
Ven
time for some starrkrafft
09:45
@BartekBanachewicz sonic
how do you cram so many people on your islands
@LucDanton Immigrant scum.
2
OMG, we are so going to get flagged and escalated and then ejected...
> President Francois Hollande and Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve are on their way to Saint-Etienne-du-Rouvray to be briefed by police.
lolwut? Why do they need to be there?
@R.MartinhoFernandes I was thinking the same. It is obviously a PR stunt.
@R.MartinhoFernandes popular sport since I don’t remember which exactly
10:16
@R.MartinhoFernandes Best chance to change president sooner of course :D
Should we introduce them to... the telephone?
Not safe
Pony Express?
@R.MartinhoFernandes :D
ow
@R.MartinhoFernandes just makes me wanna go to Africa and smelt iron
and build my own civilization from scratch
@R.MartinhoFernandes because I'm obsessed with rebuilding civilization from scratch and Africa looks like it has a lot of free space
@BartekBanachewicz There's a reason for that :/
@BartekBanachewicz Played too much Civilization 2?
@R.MartinhoFernandes like what
@R.MartinhoFernandes TIL
@BartekBanachewicz Basically, most places in the world you'll find with free space are so because they're not suitable for civilization.
Also, were I to start civilization from scratch, I'd worry about endemic plant and animal species before iron smelting.
All great civilizations start with large-scale genetic engineering programs.
I would head the ministry of industry
you could take care of agriculture
@R.MartinhoFernandes the moist savannah looks promising
Ethiopia and Kenya look like they have reasonable temperatures to live in
> The sunniest and warmest part of the year is from December to March, when temperatures average the mid-twenties during the day. The mean maximum temperature for this period is 24 °C
and it's actually the same during the whole year
so you practically don't need neither heating nor cooling to live there
@BartekBanachewicz Few endemic domesticable crops, and no(?) endemic domesticable animals?
Camels perhaps? Not sure.
@R.MartinhoFernandes eh my kingdom would trade with outer states
I'd sell tools for food
10:36
How do you build tools in the first place?
first basic tools, then construction elements, more complex parts
I thought you were bootstrapping from nothing.
@R.MartinhoFernandes sure!
@R.MartinhoFernandes You start with a stone adze or an axe, gather wood, burn wood into coal
That's why you need to start with genetic engineering. That's how all significant "starter civilizations" started.
but that takes dozens of years
I don't have time for this
10:39
Actually, all our domesticated animals are so in part because their wild counterparts were domesticable quickly (i.e. at a human lifespan scale).
after you get coal and find iron ore you do need a bit of leather for the bellows but that's not much and maybe can be replaced
@R.MartinhoFernandes mmm
outside of leather, I can't see how they help you progress though
sure they provide food
but for such a dynamic civilization wouldn't hunting be enough
@BartekBanachewicz No, because wild animals lack many of the characteristics of domesticated ones.
They're usually smaller, for example. (That's where genetic engineering comes in: just make them bigger)
Dangerous, too.
They don't breed as fast, so you run the risk of overhunting.
And they can't do work like pulling carts.
mmm okay the last one sounds really convincing
OTOH I was initially planning on waterplants as a source of power
but you can readily prepare a field for crops with that
until you have the electric engine
actually growing crops should provide ample amounts of food
10:45
@BartekBanachewicz But unless you steal the domesticated breeds from elsewhere, you'll be disappointed with their wild varieties.
Wild crops are many many times smaller.
Many of them are also poisonous.
well I do admit I didn't research crop harvesting well enough
I mostly focused on the progress line from a flat stone to electricity
when you have electricity you can move much, much faster with everything else
in the end I think the optimal population size for such a thing would be a few dozen people at least
you need chemists, biologists, engineers, doctors(!)
my rough estimate for getting the industry moving at about 1900s pace is about 20 years
probably way too optimistic
> Though a number of its characteristic events can be traced to earlier innovations in manufacturing, such as the establishment of a machine tool industry, the development of methods for manufacturing interchangeable parts and the invention of the Bessemer Process, the Second Industrial Revolution is generally dated between 1870 and 1914 up to the start of World War I.
the thing is there is that you're gonna skip the steam age and oil dependency altogether
which just makes me wonder why water powerplants aren't much more common :F
@BartekBanachewicz For instance, wild (aka bitter) almonds contain high levels of cyanide. There's a mutation that causes an almond plant to not produce cyanide (and that makes them not bitter). Sweet almonds are only a thing because of extensive (accidental) genetic engineering programs that select for that mutation.
(1909, 1350kW)
10:55
yes the primary concern when it comes to levels of cyanide is bitterness
@LucDanton It just happens that cyanide and the bitterness compound are products of the same chemical reaction, so selecting against one also selects against the other.

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