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00:39
@sehe Please keep foul language in this room to a minimum.
Hey. You're the one adding more language. We were very successful keeping it to a minimum
Out of curiosity, what am I misunderstanding about rust that causes me to declare generics with <K: Eq + Hash> everywhere? It bubbles outwards from the initial scope in the same annoying way that unhandled throwable code does in Java.
as long as it’s only on impl blocks and fn items it’s fine
not that it’s wrong per se on data, just questionable
True, data doesn't actually need to be generic. Just the operations. I keep trying to code in object-oriented rust when trait-orientation is... different
I really like it so far, but it's an adjustment
00:58
@PatrickM'Bongo So it's either shenzhen on 9th Oct, or if you are willing to travel, I will be in Wuhan for a week during the Oct long holiday. But I assume the airfare or express trains would be expensive/hard to get.
and you are probably going to travel to somewhere else
01:38
> Certains auteurs préfèrent aujourd'hui parler de diagonale des faibles densités car le terme « diagonale du vide » est à la fois péjoratif et exagéré […]
ils bossent pas dans le marketing eux
à quand la banane des hautes densités ( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
@R.MartinhoFernandes dunno if that’ll interest you but following a 2014 territorial reform the new Régions that were formed have had their names up for grabs. one of these names straddles the lines between land, language, and culture with predictable results
too bad Occitanie–Catalogne doesn’t sound as nice as the made up Occitanie–Catalonie could
although I think the renaming aims to avoid hyphenated names (and the polls follow that trend as well)
@Aaron3468 Holy shit.
01:58
@sehe Hm, I didn't delete it.
It's just gone :(
Were you in the breach? See hibp.com
Breach? Wtf is hibp.com ?
02:21
hey tomorrow is my birthday
what are the weird things programmers do on there birthdays ?
writing code of course
@StackedCrooked soz haveibeenpwned.com
Microsoft spammed one of my email addresses with 'we changed our system which is making your app incompatible', but when I tried to log in with that email address, it's telling me 'account not found'
@AbhimanyuAryan getting spelling lessons
a. how is that not incompatible
b. you fell for it
they added/changed some age rating thing ...
02:30
@sehe apparently I was
best to check that nothing reused that password and/or change :)
(of course you, like me, never reuse passwords... :wry~smile:)
The myspace account is very old. Back then I sometimes reused passwords.
But I don't remember for which sites I did it.
that's... not nice. Well. As long as you do know all current accounts are not using it... fingers crossed
@Rapptz I don’t get it, operator() won’t be parsed by Sphinx on stable 1.4.6 either
My oldest email was pwned, but my newer ones appear to be okay
does it not work?
the reference or the doc?
won’t build, chokes on the ref
what confuses me is that my docs used to build, so at first I thought regression but now I don’t know what to think
03:18
yay teambuilding today and tomorrow. yay suffering..
hopefully not too many "action" activities this time
> It also has a very interesting property as an adjective, and that is its impossible to use the word, dynamic, in a pejorative sense.
dynamic typing
just kidding :P
Came across this while reading random news stories: usatoday.com/story/news/nation-now/2016/09/11/…
@Mysticial lol
well, at least now they know that it doesn't work
I'll stop short of calling it a Darwin award candidate since the guy seemed to have gotten shot involuntarily. But still...
03:24
If Java had true garbage collection, most programs would delete themselves upon execution
03:34
@StackedCrooked Here's some happier news:
error: 'copyable' was not declared in this scope
note: suggested alternative: 'saveable'
that’s a weird suggestion, right? but it’s a correct one
interestingly I have no tuples::transpose algo on hand. but uncurry(tuples::zip, arg) works just as well cc @Xeo
Python fans may of course recognise this as zip(*arg)
03:55
so assuming there isn’t some sort of looping going on I don’t have enough RAM to compile this testcase
variants sure are great ._.
> Many multiplayer games seem to work on the premise that first you suffer and later, after you've invested enough time, you get to have fun. That is a pretty high hurdle to surmount when you're an adult with limited time to play games and facing off against people dedicated to the game or have all the time in the world to being good at it.
Pretty much how I feel any time I boot up a popular multiplayer game
@LucDanton Variants seem to work fine in rust, but that may be due to them and traits being the greater half of what the language does
well, without language support you have to compute a lot of things yourself which is resource intensive
that being said, it does look like a loop
oh nvm it’s linking
Yes, and C++ support for anything is made out of cardboard Q.Q
@Aaron3468 no it’s not
peak 4GB for a concatenation of 9 ranges, 2 minutes to compile and some change
the 'nice' thing is that the memory usage is predictable in that it grows for a while, then plateaus while compilation carries on. so once I'm sure that plateau is low enough I can go and do whatever while waiting
wokay, from 9 to 10 arguments compilation time balloons from 2 min to 4 min
I’m going to take a break and reflect on life briefly
04:13
Whoa, how does compilation time balloon so much for such a small change?
I’d need back of the envelope computations to make a guess
@Aaron3468 the gist of it, however, is that variants can be very taxing
Ah, I see. I suppose perfection can't be expected when compiler complexity is likened to that of developing an OS, and when either one can take years to be usable.
Unfortunately it's so easy for me to criticize what doesn't work well, yet so difficult to do it myself. I need to get a rubber band to break that habit, or something...
Hmm... Disabling prefetch instructions seems to increase the stability. But I won't draw that conclusion until it survives until tomorrow morning.
I'm now starting to get the itch to compare a literal type variant to a non-literal type implementation in the vain hope that it may yield better compile-times
@Mysticial Seems like it's been narrowed down to some sort of cache corruption with very fast code :D
04:23
Yeah. The unit test suite takes about 8 hours to run. It got to the point where both the AVX2 binaries would consistently fail within the first 2 hours of it.
When I ran them alone, they didn't fail. They require something running in the background to keep the CPU at 100%.
I have enough data points now to show that there isn't a single line of (non-trivial) code is present in all the failures.
Except for maybe the datatypes header.
That's fairly strong evidence that the problem is closer to the hardware than your code and that it's probably instructions executing incorrectly under the stress, so I think you're pretty close to finding a solution now
The same test binaries ran through cleanly on both my AMD and 4770K Haswell boxes overnight.
Definitely promising
But unfortunately, I can't actually narrow down the errors to a single bad load or store since there's no way to know whether an error even occurred until the results are compared against the expected results.
user406009
@Mysticial Run every function twice and be constantly comparing?
04:30
I also got the errors to repro on a binary built with MSVC rather than ICC.
@Lalaland Can't. The functions overwrite their inputs.
There's also too many of them. And way too many layers of TMP for that to be easy.
user406009
Yeah, you would probably have to cut down the failing test case to a very minimal example before being able to manually instrument comparisons everywhere.
@Lalaland It's not one failing test. Things are randomly failing in all the tests.
I have enough failure cases now to show that there isn't a single piece of code that is run in all the tests that have failed.
That doesn't necessarily rule out a software bug since a lot of my code is very similar. So it's possible I could make the same error in multiple places.
user406009
I think it would be useful for you to take one or two of those failures and find out exactly what is failing where and why.
@Lalaland Heisenbugs, so it's due to a leak somewhere. So far it seems to be the memory failing due to very fast execution on a stressed processor.
@Lalaland Not possible. Because the tests don't fail consistently.
user406009
04:36
@Mysticial Can you make it consistent by running the same test case 1000X times or so?
user406009
That's what I usually do when I deal with flaky tests.
@Lalaland There's several thousands of tests. Not a single one has failed twice so far.
The only pattern is that the tests only fail in the AVX2 binaries - which are also twice as stressful as the other binaries.
And it affects all the categories of tests that are memory-intensive. Multi-threaded, single-threaded. Integer, floating-point...
user406009
@Mysticial Ah, that sucks. It's almost impossible to deal with flakes like that.
And the failures only happen when the CPU is completely loaded 100%.
@Mysticial I thought you'd said one failed on your AMD box.
04:40
@JerryCoffin That seems to be a one-off case.
I've gotten my laptop to fail about 10 times since Friday night.
The BIOS update had no effect.
@Mysticial Oh, okay.
Neither did dusting out the fans.
@JerryCoffin It's not hard to imagine it being a memory problem since it fails consistently at 1600 MHz. And it's currently running at 1333 MHz. That's only one multiplier bucket.
Even if 1333 MHz is stock speed.
@Mysticial You just need to get JEDEC to standardize on your code as a conformance test...
@JerryCoffin lol
The fact that I'm to get the laptop to fail so many times means I know where I should focus my attention for now.
But this no-prefetch binary has been running for 4+ hours now. No failures yet.
If you're wondering what the tests look like:
^^ The two failing ones from last night's overnight run. Basically, thousands and thousands of tests stressing the program with almost every possible input configuration.
04:57
waves
How is everybody?
05:13
@Mysticial Just checked the temperature on my raid controller, says 92C which apparently is normal for this model
05:45
Oh, god, it's 11/9 again. I forgot how fucking annoying the Internet is on this day.
Maybe it can become a holiday like Guy Fawkes Night
So aside from ugly declarations like this: fn unwrap_test<K: fmt::UpperHex + Eq + Hash + Copy>(ef: &mut EmulationFrame<K>), I'm liking rust
With about 40 LOC, I made a program that stores a value using an identifier that can be any type. The value type I'm using is u8 and the identifier may be a u16 address, a char denoting a register, or a string denoting a special register. This also means that it will be very easy to declare ~15 general functions (ld, add, sub), rather than all 256 operations.
So I'm happy to say that I have the opcodes and rom loading left before I'm back where I was with python. I had known python was slow, but I was not prepared for it to emulate at ~20% the speed of a gameboy.
06:07
@Mikhail that'd make it even more annoying.
@JerryCoffin A while back I saw someone refuting the cliché "History is written by the victors" by saying "History is written by historians". There is a reason the Roman Empire is a "victor" (as in, they got to write History), and the barbarian hordes who defeated them aren't (as in, they didn't get to write History).
@R.MartinhoFernandes Romans are victors, barbarians are alarics
Actually, Alaric began as a soldier in the Roman army.
I don’t think that really runs counter to the pun
06:58
-2
Q: Operator '==' cannot be applied to operands of type 'string' and 'System.Guid' in MVC5

SusanPLEASE DONT GIVE NEGATIVE MARKS TO MY QUESTION ALREADY MY ACCOUNT GOT BLOCKED. THINK HOW I ASK QUESTION FUTURE IN FROM MY ACCOUNT. IF YOU PEOPLES NOT CLEAR WITH MY QUESTION AND MEANS ASK WITH ME OR EDIT MY QUESTION IN HELPING TENDENCY DONT GIVE NEGATIVE MARKS EASILY. UNDERSTAND OTHERS SITUATIONS...

2
/cc @Mysticial @Borgleader
@milleniumbug fucking kill me
absolutely #disgusting lounging
I really like how he prefaces it with 'MY QUESTION IS BAD, BUT PLEASE ANSWER IT AND DON'T DOWNVOTE IT.'
Xeo
Xeo
07:21
Gah, I wanna go home and continue working on that plugin.
Been a while since I last had the urge to code at home.
Ven
Ven
@Xeo been a while since I last had the urge to code at work.
07:34
    using product_list = meta::list<
#include "python_take_the_helm"
    >;
maybe 25MB of generated tyeps was a bad idea
3
I think the YCM daemon killed my desktop
07:51
@R.MartinhoFernandes Only on that day? :)
@R.MartinhoFernandes Sure. It wasn't meant to be taken seriously
At least not by me
 
1 hour later…
09:10
TIL Germany has felony disenfranchisement.
WTF.
not the automatic kind, is it?
I think it's abominable in all forms.
(But yes, only via court order, like France)
really? off the top of my mind over here it only applies in cases of electoral fraud
putting what’s actually on the books aside because I don’t remember, I don’t mind a limited-time penalty for that type of crime
Germany allows it for treason, electoral fraud, espionage or "membership in illegal organization" (which I assume is intended to cover the usual Nazi stuff)
wow that’s wide ranging
09:19
It's never a life-long ban like in the US, but I still find it disgusting.
I think it's particularly egregious if you're also incarcerated.
If you're not, you can always (try to) use the implicit opt-out clause in the social contract: go live elsewhere. If you're incarcerated, you can't opt-out.
that’s a good point
@R.MartinhoFernandes It seems to me for treason it is justified at least. Maybe even for espionage.
And IMO if you're forced into the social contract as an adult (definition TBD) you must have the right to vote.
@wilx Why? Treason can be extremely wide-ranging.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Treason is treason.
@wilx Er, so?
Treason isn't inherently wrong.
09:27
Whatever you have done you have betrayed your own country in serious manner.
@R.MartinhoFernandes which is why I consider the punishment could only be reasonable if you yourself tamper with the right to vote of others (doesn’t make the punishment any less steep though)
nwp
nwp
If you are incarcerated your vote is not gonna help you and there are never enough people incarcerated to distort the elections. That said the same argument applies to all the reason they take away votes: There are not gonna be enough enemy spies or traitors voting to have any influence, so they should just remove the possibility for disenfranchisement altogether.
@wilx Which again, isn't inherently bad.
Whistleblowing can easily be construed as both treason and espionage, but it might be a good thing if your country is doing things it shouldn't be doing.
@nwp "your vote is not gonna help you" doesn't matter. That's a very selfish view of suffrage.
@wilx "Hello, yes, today I brought millions of people out of extreme poverty and malnourishment, but can't vote in the new political system because I 'betrayed' the previous one"
@набиячлэвэли We are talking about Germany here.
09:30
No, you generalised to "treason is treason" which applies globally
@wilx Germany as a legal system isn't a static timeless entity.
@nwp Also, "enough people [...] to distort the elections" isn't relevant either. It doesn't matter if your voice isn't loud enough or not.
nwp
nwp
@wilx Arguably refusing to gas jews was once regarded as treason, now it makes you a hero. There are greater goods than serving your country.
@wilx After all, the NSDAP became the strongest party in the Reichstag via a democratic vote. Treason against NSDAP rule is still treason.
nwp
nwp
@R.MartinhoFernandes I consider selecting which people are allowed to vote on a per person basis much more dangerous than letting a couple of dangerous people vote.
Yes, there were systems where what could be considered a treason from the inside of it would be considered act of heroism or whatever from the outside of the system. However, that does not change that treason is treason against the system and one of the worst crimes against the system. As such it deserves severe punishment.
nwp
nwp
09:40
@wilx There still are such systems. Having the land of the free torture people is completely unacceptable and I would say that people who try to do something about it do not deserve punishment.
In Germany treason can already result in life imprisonment (and pretty much everywhere it can usually get whatever the maximum sentence is). I'm not sure disenfranchisement changes the "amount of punishment" much given that.
(Not wanting to discuss whether punishment is needed, so just accepting it as a premise for the sake of argument)
@nwp Well, I agree because I am outside of the system. You are barking at the wrong tree. The system protects itself by outlawing and punishing such behaviour.
My view on it hinges mostly on wanting to have a self-correcting system.
@R.MartinhoFernandes It does both punish more and protects the system from the perpetrator more. IMHO.
I think we disagree on the level of protection the system needs.
Disenfranchisement removes the (supposedly; ignoring practice a bit) most powerful legal form of dissent you have.
09:45
@R.MartinhoFernandes But to get there you already have to have had done something terrible.
@LucDanton that include name
@LucDanton eeek
relax, revised to 512k
nwp
nwp
@R.MartinhoFernandes In theory we have that. You sue the people in charge or the government and the court will rule in your favor if it considers the other side unconstitutional. Unfortunately in practice they find some loophole and it doesn't work.
@wilx Well, if we going to assume citizens can be considered hopeless after taking certain actions against the system, I would then argue for capital punishment.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Some countries do not like capital punishment, so they use other means.
09:48
@LucDanton how. Substring compression? Unicode identifiers?
IOW for me atonement is a core principle of a justice system.
@wilx That's why I'd argue for it. In countries with capital punishment, treason can get you that already.
@набиячлэвэли Could at best shave 1/4th
@R.MartinhoFernandes I'd argue not being able to vote is still better than capital punishment.
09:49
@sehe well I generated less tyeps
@wilx Better for whom?
@R.MartinhoFernandes For the punished?
@набиячлэвэли computer==boom
@R.MartinhoFernandes better to devalue the democracy
09:50
@LucDanton fols
@wilx Why care for them over the system in this specific part, though?
@Aaron3468 OMG!
I mean it already takes 6 minutes to compile
@LucDanton dirty or clean
dirty
no wait the other one
09:52
@R.MartinhoFernandes Because you want to seem humane? :)
@LucDanton How did you speed up so much? Dropped the Spirit headers :)
that’s confusing
clean compile times don't matter
@sehe I generated much less code
I maek joek
09:52
lol
@набиячлэвэли m8 I’m literally benchmarking compile times
gtfo
because they're slow?
use C++ and C# and compare your experiences
I want to check if reaching constexpr parity with std::variant is worth it
Basically I don't think the system needs protection from change. That would only hold under the assumption that all the better choices were already made and that the quality of such choices is also timeless.
@R.MartinhoFernandes The system does not need protection from change. That is why you have elections in those systems, usually. The system certain should be protected from influence of people who have already clearly demonstrated they do not want to respect its boundaries in reasonable manner.
09:57
@wilx That's begging the question!
Also, taking away their right to express dissent in the manner that respects those boundaries sounds like a stupid punishment for such crime.
@R.MartinhoFernandes How? TBH, I never entirely understood this fallacy.
@wilx Some kind of circular reasoning. It assumes the boundaries do not need to change.
@R.MartinhoFernandes No, it does not assume that. It just says your way of doing it is wrong.
@wilx Then it doesn't justify removing the right way of doing it.
nwp
nwp
@R.MartinhoFernandes Which is quite plausible actually, at least in germany. The german people are allowed to give themselves a constitution, overthrowing any existing rules. It is hard to imagine a situation where that is insufficient.
10:02
(Again, I argue here taking atonement as a core principle)
Fun fact: the Portuguese constitution explicitly forbids fascist associations.
Just "associations that follow the fascist ideology". No description of what that means.
Let's not forget that treason is, at least in Czechia, "awarded" only to those who either are terrorists or sabotage something or collude with foreign powers to subvert this republic. I am assuming it is something similar in Germany. Not allowing those people to vote (I do not actually think it is the case in Czechia), seems like a good idea/punishment.
@wilx My problem with that is that it assumes the republic doesn't need to be subverted.
@R.MartinhoFernandes It does not matter whether it does or does not need to be subverted.
Thinking about it, I'm kinda arguing from the same POV as 2nd Amendment defenders in the US, even though I find the 2nd Amendment stupid.
that’s funny it looks like it compiles faster with a recursive union
10:07
@wilx True, it doesn't. But I think it matters whether it considers itself as timelessly correct or not (i.e. whether it thinks it will never need to be subverted in some way.)
Hurting your fellow citizens in one way or another (not necessarily physical)? Bad. Having a dissenting opinion? Fine.
@R.MartinhoFernandes 'no bundle of sticks allowed'
@R.MartinhoFernandes In Germany, I am pretty sure you will not be accused of treason in court of law just for dissenting opinions. Germany allows a lot of ways for the system to be changed but it draws a line somewhere. The line is the treason.
@wilx What irks me is the assumption that traitors are bad/wrong/evil/something merely because they have a dissenting opinion.
@wilx Voting isn't treason.
@R.MartinhoFernandes You are constructing an unlikely case here. You do not get accused of treason just for dissenting opinion in todays Germany
You're removing the ability for those citizens to do it the right way.
10:11
@R.MartinhoFernandes Only after they have tried wrong way excessively.
@wilx I'm not. I have repeatedly mentioned the problem with the assumption that a nation is a static timeless entity. Today's Germany is gone tomorrow.
@wilx Which is unacceptable because it goes against the principle of atonement.
It's ok if you don't value that as much as I do, and if so that's the point where we truly disagree.
@R.MartinhoFernandes As I have said earlier, some people are unable to atone since they do not accept what they did was wrong.
@wilx Does "some people" include "all traitors"?
@R.MartinhoFernandes No, it is not. You keep strawmanning this with this static timeless bullshit.
@wilx Why is that a strawman? It's not a rephrasing of your viewpoint. It's just making mine clearer.
10:16
@R.MartinhoFernandes Very likely. I can imagine though, that after 30 years in prison and seeing their country change for a better, some of them might be able to atone. Hence I do not like capital punishment.
I disagree with felony disenfranchisement not based on today's Germany, but based on Germany as a liquid legal entity, whose future is unpredictable to a certain degree.
I.e. I agree that it isn't a big issue if someone gets disenfranchised today.
> g++: internal compiler error: File size limit exceeded (program cc1plus)
2
@LucDanton Heh. WTH are you doing?
maybe I’ll contemplate giving a try to switching my variant implementation
@LucDanton return std::move(alts).first;? Why? Shouldn't the right parenthesis be just before the semicolon?
10:24
@wilx But what I meant is that treason is bad because of its disruptive nature, not because of the opinion that someone championed when causing the disruption (unless perhaps that opinion was some extremist anarchist ideology; not sure what I think about that). Hence I do not think silencing that opinion is justifiable.
@wilx Pretty sure both'll have the same effect?
@wilx I usually like this better because it makes it explicit that we're discarding the whole alts object, not just one of its members.
@sehe so as it turns out on my initial attempt I cranked out 7^7 lines without thinking too much, which is around 824k. with 32 character long lines, that’s 25MB
@Griwes Dunno, I suck at this but it seems to me that std::move(foo).bar is lvalue while std::move(foo.bar) is rvalue.
@wilx I'm pretty sure you're wrong.
10:29
Nah, member access on an rvalue is still an rvalue.
@Griwes OK, I accept that without objections. In this case.
@wilx IIRC it used to be, but then they changed it
Haskell sucks ass. C++ is awesome.
10:30
@AndyProwl OH!
hey :)
I am currently a JSON programmer so
16
@BartekBanachewicz Is that now a thing?
@BartekBanachewicz Well, JSON sucks double ass.
@R.MartinhoFernandes not when accessing a reference member
@wilx Though now I think about it, I'm confused by what I read about German law on this. On one hand, a judge can disenfranchise you only up to five years, but on the other hand, you cannot vote if you're incarcerated for any of the crimes I listed. Given that treason can give life imprisonment, I don't know if that would mean lifelong disenfranchisement or just the first five years. Not gonna bother more with this, though.
10:31
@wilx dunno. Technically we don't have "researcher" titles or anything
@LucDanton Ah, true.
but I am not doing a lot of coding these days
nwp
nwp
@wilx not only that, it isn't even a programming language
It has been amended in the upcoming standard as of DR421, so that there is an extra 'otherwise, it is an rvalue', as Potatoswatter points out. According to the standard committee, while the wording is unfortunate the intent was there: anubis.dkuug.dk/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/cwg_defects.html#421David Rodríguez - dribeas Feb 9 '10 at 8:07
@nwp so, like C++
10:32
I see.
Man, I suck at C++11 stuff. It shows that I have not been coding C++ for some years now. :(
nwp
nwp
@wilx jump straight to C++17, it is fun
lots of new obscure features to try out
@nwp I do not have a thing on which I would like to try it.
nwp
nwp
well, make a 3D action MMORPG like everyone else
@nwp this means waiting two revisions until the new features are somehow stable
@nwp I suck at graphics stuff too. :(
;_;
10:36
@nwp Which ones are really going to matter? /cc @Griwes @Luc
(No sarcasm)
I have folds everywhere
5
@LucDanton Start exercising!
@wilx Just "normal" annoying on other days. Not "fucking" annoying :D
@R.MartinhoFernandes :D
@R.MartinhoFernandes constexpr lambdas.
10:40
Anything that affects interface design?
nwp
nwp
@R.MartinhoFernandes I like string_view, I can see this getting wide adoption in all interfaces that currently use const string &.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Aren't the concepts in it as well?
Err... noexcept becoming a part of the type system? Can't remember if that's fully in.
@wilx Voted out of the standard in Jacksonville in February.
thought people learn how internet never forgets by now ... but then again maybe some people will used anything to gain attention ...
10:41
@Griwes Oh...
@Telkitty Like you do use your chicken! We will never forget!
nested namespace definitions and structured bindings are the other big language features for my money. if constexpr if that’s your sort of thing, too. library improvements are too numerous and useful to bother listing
Structured bindings have very weird customization points.
@R.MartinhoFernandes probably the new vocabulary types, e.g. std::variant
Like, you have to specialize std:: members.
From non-freestanding headers.
Ven
Ven
Omg extension points!!1

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