« first day (2157 days earlier)      last day (3018 days later) » 
00:00 - 11:0011:00 - 00:00

11:00
No, this is computing in general I'm talking about.
And this being C or not doesn't matter, you can have an async I/O API in C.
Ugh. So you want to do this a la ASIO callbacks or such?
This mechanism IMHO predates those concepts/designs.
I'd want to do it with futures and continuations, but if it's C then I'm fine with callbacks.
Of course it does, but that's only because it's usually the mediocre programmers that design APIs that are later used for decades.
The sensible people would've seen that what you really need there is an async API.
I am not saying cancellation is ideal tool, just that it is useful.
It's a hack for a problem that was "solved" by it by an either incredibly lazy, or incredibly mediocre programmer.
@Griwes I do not see how is that true but OK...
11:13
Guys, I uploaded a new video :)
Not very programming related, though...
@fredoverflow ORIGINAL UNCUT RAW NEVER SEEN BEFORE FOOTAGE
@набиячлэвэли IN SOVIET RUSSIA, BAIT CLICKS YOU!
user4710450
@wilx Looks very nice :P
IN RUSSIA, SOVIET CLICK BAITS YOU
> For instance, we used to struggle with unmaintainable spaghetti code. Along came Dijkstra with his famous “GOTO considered harmful,” and the problem was solved.
4
Milewski Simplifies The World
@Telkitty -3/10
11:30
So instead of unmaintainable spaghetti code, we now have just plain unmaintainable code, without the spaghetti?
@fredoverflow Yeah. The claim as worded is ludicrous. However, the source is this answer, and it does make a point (or two).
I'm not sure programmers are much special in any way, though. For one thing, I'm almost positive that Trump is not a programmer.
There is /something/ special about Haskell believers. For example, I could totally see Bartek making that "GOTO solved spaghetti" statement.
Then again, I wouldn't be surprised to see Puppy making the same statement. So it's probably a particular character/reasoning mode.
How do you simulate GOTOs in Haskell? Spaghetti Monad?
7
Mom's Monad's spaghetti
Seriously, it should be easy to conctruct a state nachine with "line number"/"label" addressable states. There's your GOTO machine.
Finally some truth. beyrs.com/2016/08/blog-post_74.html I'll tell my wife
11:47
Heya
12:02
0
Q: Constructor and "this" pointer

nikos karampelasi started studying c++ and i found the class below in a tutorial. My question has to do with the constructor. the class is: class point{ private: double *x; double *y; public: point(double x=1,double y=1); //.... }; and the constructor is: point::point(double x,double y) { ...

...seriously
struct Point { double* x; double* y; };
:/
user1804599
12:18
@fredoverflow yummy monad
12:29
you know the best place for auto pilot cars? on mars!
user1804599
13:19
-1
Q: pattern regular expression for digit and slash

mohamadRezaSamadiI use bootstrap 3 and I am trying to create a pattern that will accept values like the following: ex: 2016/12/10 => It is a date and it separated by / I tried to use this pattern " [0-9]{4}/[0-9]{2}/[0-9]{2} " but it's not worked for me. my html is : input type="text" class="form-control" id=...

user1804599
sometimes I wonder if theres a bug in the post preview
13:34
Hey guys, quick question: Does calling std::packaged_task with operator() return immediately?
13:46
@TheQuantumPhysicist I do not think so. It IMHO invokes the packaged task.
What happened in the 70s?
I can explain the first rise, and the first spike as the result of nationalistic war propaganda for WW1 and WW2.
Not sure about the 1970s peak
Maybe just the height of the cold war.
Makes sense
14:17
maybe someone discovered a delicious recipe
@R.MartinhoFernandes foreign workers?
@LucDanton lol
user1804599
14:58
localhost
15:24
@R.MartinhoFernandes Based on the timing (especially dropping off before 1980) I'd guess it was more likely related to the Vietnam war "conflict" than the cold war.
15:48
A more careful look (I think) pretty much confirms that guess. It looks like it was rising pretty much throughout the conflict, then starts to drop in 1975, when Vietnam was reunified. I'd guess most of the continued growth from 1973 (when the US exited) to 1974 is primarily due to the lag between writing and publication.
> The minimum length of the data field of a packet sent over an
Ethernet is 1500 octets, thus the maximum length of an IP datagram
sent over an Ethernet is 1500 octets.
I hope that's a typo (in an RFC document), otherwise I am confused af
16:12
@Columbo Sure looks like a typo to me. Also note that with jumbo frames, the MTU can go up to as high as 9190 octets.
16:28
Since nowadays, other than making/maintaining apps, I spend quite sometime on renovating various family properties. Since things not shared are not known done, and this chat is moaning 'spam me' ...
water leaking made wall collapse, had to change the gyprock and repaint ...
kitchen at another place, re-tiling ...
did quite a few other things, but no good photos to support visual effect
@Telkitty That's your cats moaning for food.
16:48
@R.MartinhoFernandes Perhaps it refers to literal melting pots used in industrial processes for metals that weren't common before, like aluminium or titanium
interestingly the case-insensitive search shows quite a different reuslt
Melting Pot usage pretty low but massive peak in 70s
other case variants all low usage
 
1 hour later…
17:59
hello all
Ven
Ven
Helo
Karl Agathon
18:20
It refers to max(1.0, 2.0). because the arguments are double, it's "double evaluation". However if you say max(1, 2) it is not a double evaluation. Therefore it only "can" result in double evaluation, it doesn't have to — Johannes Schaub - litb 5 mins ago
do you like it
nwp
nwp
@JohannesSchaub-litb confusing the poor people
@nwp i don't see why it's confusing
nwp
nwp
because double evaluation refers to evaluating the arguments twice and has nothing to do with the data type double
your comment makes it seem like that isn't the case
but I suppose you have the proper profile picture to get away with it
I don't agree. I heard people say "prvalue evaluation" for example. Why is it less valid then to say "double evaluation" for expressions of type double. They could have meant both and I was leaning towards what seemed more likely to me
nice trolling as usual
as expected from the troll who works in the background
@StackedCrooked BuzzFeed, omg.
I like BuzzFeed. Occasionally.
Though sumo is cool, from a distance. I have seen some professional tournament in Tokyo in 2007. It was awesome. Some of them were incredibly quick. And there was one fight that was like 3.5 minutes long which is eternity in sumo.
 
1 hour later…
20:14
Why does include-what-you-use suck so hard?
@Mikhail What does that even mean?
It means whatever-I-choose-to-represent-my-pet-peeve-today
Its wrong so much I can't use it. Often I got a class MyClass : public BaseClass and it removes the header for BaseClass and also just weird shit like telling me to add #include "new"
@Mysticial Haha, was that really what it was? Nice
20:19
@Mikhail #include <new> isn't that weird, that's a standard header. :P
Yes, but do you ever include it?
Include shit like <__detail/mutex> or whatever is the libc++ path for that is weird. :P
You just need to look at it with a grain of salt.
It just feels like we've known that includes have a palpable effect on compile time for 25+ years, and nobody has figured out how to correctly, and automatically arrange them. It would seem this is a well motivated problem, and yet there isn't a solution.
Solving this problem is counterproductive really.
What everybody should focus on is modules. :P
Modules are nice. Modules are fun. Join us.
20:24
Well, your modules would compile faster, and code hinting tools would also run faster. And maybe you'd realize that some wacky include was replacing a standard function.
Ven
Ven
@Aaron3468 does the catface approve of modules however?
import :3 is the only module that matters
@Mikhail That's always scary when I realize that an include has overwritten something ):
Ugh.
user image
5
@milleniumbug I'm so sorry I completely misjudged that reference /cc @Mikhail
@Griwes bad pixels, but nice thought // source?
@sehe stolen from Facebook
20:30
@Aaron3468 Don't leave us hanging i.imgur.com/KwdwNU3.png
@Griwes Does it do that for -isystem includes?
11 hours ago, by Mysticial
@Aaron3468 Updated my laptop's BIOS to pick up the microcode update which fixes the Skylake bug. Wanna make an guesses on whether it has any effect on the errors?
@sehe It does so for -stdlib=libc++ includes. :P
@Darkrifts That thing was a failure Q.Q Somewhere, an instruction pops more/less values than I expected from the documentation. And, like all failures, it needs an adoptive parent
@sehe great joke 9 out of 11
hehe. Obviously should be 11/9
> If this story has taught me anything, it's to always sleep through my alarm. src
21:27
Or to get drunk the night before
@NicanBun Funny that you seem to have capture that with a YOLO-lens
Oh my. I think I've noticed the foggy lense on his ... phone (?) before.
sigh I spent a day trying to solve a calculus problem and it turns out the lecturer spent 30 seconds of a 2 hour lecture explaining the one tool that makes them absurdly simple.
@sehe Condensation usually. Sometimes a thin layer of skin oils.
@StackedCrooked oh noes, you deleted your myspace
I do really like the IDE's touch where it converts >= into the proper character though :)
21:49
Its worse when you think about it, looks like they implemented correlation with a sliding window, rather then lets say a DFT. Also the function refers to some global state. What if the manually unrolled version is 10x faster than the reference?
I see...
I may have to check out vim. I've been using notepad or IDEs, but never really anything in between
@Aaron3468 Sublime Text 3 or bust, boi
@Aaron3468 It's not in between. If anything, IDEs are in-between Notepad and {Vim|Emacs|....|realeditorXXX}
You don't need an IDE for anything really. Just need build tooling. And those come in much better flavours than self-imposing proprietary tools
@sehe Fair point. IDEs are jack of all trades, master of none in that sense.
21:59
But better than a master of one
True, but the combined capabilities of many specialized programs will exceed one special-purpose program. The greatest disadvantage is when there is no standard format, and every specialized program is incompatible with its competitors
The point is, that's frequently not the case. There's a lot of vibing between free tooling.
@Aaron3468 My biggest surprise was when I had to start using CMake for work in February, and it just MAGICALLY works with YouCompleteMe's compilation-database features.
So, instead of taking me time to learn, it saved me tons of time hand-tuning YCM configs. Literally haven't ever written a line of config beyond the one:
compilation_database_folder = '../build'
That, and clang-modernize, clang-tidy work with the same feature.
Just wait until you are cross-compiling with GCC.
Ell
Ell
@sehe whaaat
Those tools are not related. They just chose to use a "standard" format for build config settings
Ell
Ell
22:11
TIL
I have got to try that
Then you suddenly need a shitload of flags passed to clang to find the most basic headers.
@Ell I was soooo pleasantly surprised. I should probably still tweet about it.
Ell
Ell
My YCM is broken at the minute
My YCM isn't broken, because my makefiles aren't horrible and all the files are compiled in the same way. :P
@Griwes Does CMake even have it?
22:13
@sehe You can make it work with not much trouble.
Not bad. CMake has impressed me more than I care to admit.
Also since 3.0 or 3.1 there's CMAKE_SYSROOT that makes everything so much easier.
I still hate that syntax. Makes ZIMBU look pleasant
I really dislike cmake's idiosyncracies.
I've fought with it waaaaay too much over the past two years.
@sehe I've yet to find a person who likes it
22:14
Granted I'm one of the build system guys, not one of regular users of these build system, but eh...
The compilation command database is a nice feature, that's granted.
But... it doesn't make me actually like cmake.
And doesn't convince me to use it for anything I'm personally doing.
Oh. I stopped hating it. And I do think it's quite productive
@Griwes I still use GNU make myself :)
For simple projects? Oh yeah, it is productive.
Hell starts once you're not so simple anymore.
As with all intrusive frameworks/convention based tools
I'd consider using CMake if it had syntax that wasn't as bad as Haskell's or even worse than C++'s
@sehe I generally have the same makefile everywhere.
22:16
@Puppy Huh. Haskell's syntax is Holy compared to CMake's
At some point I'll start using my thingie for everything.
@Griwes Me too. No need to change the winning team
Also I think I'm slowly hitting a roadblock with Vapor, which means I'll get back to Despayre soon. :D
Maybe I'll even make it more fully usable this time.
Like, with compiler detection and shit (and rebuilding when anything in a specific file's command changes).
22:37
@sehe Using CMake was a magical experience, but I'm still angry they haven't fixed this 2 year-old bug
OTOH, if I didn't use IDEs, I wouldn't have the problem
OTOH, if you didn't use IDEs, why would you use CMake
lol
@набиячлэвэли It brings a tear to my eye how well Sublime Text 3 works. Now I just need to find the auto-format button and see if it doesn't cost too much to stop evaluating
@Aaron3468 It's not an IDE so you're gonna need to install packagecontrol.io and an autocomplete plugin
@набиячлэвэли Oh, not too worried about autocomplete. Mostly I like having a program that can clean up my whitespacing to meet language style specs.
22:52
I mean autoformat
@sehe D: Coworkers pranking you again?
For C++ I use ClangAutoFormat + clang-format
The wife. Another deep-fried dinner
23:11
Polar bears need to be healthy
23:36
@Mikhail does it find the standard library headers? I never used the tool before you mentioned it before, but it seems to run nicely on my system after I worked around the Issue #100 thing mentioned here: github.com/include-what-you-use/include-what-you-use/blob/…
So, I built iwcyu and copied it into ~/bin. Next: mkdir -pv ~/lib/clang/3.8.0/ && ln -sfv /usr/lib/llvm-3.8/lib/clang/3.8.0/include ~/lib/clang/3.8.0/
None of the issues you mention. (Before the fix, I got non-compiling results)
00:00 - 11:0011:00 - 00:00

« first day (2157 days earlier)      last day (3018 days later) »