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Ell
Ell
19:00
I wonder if government would be better if politicians but forward a plan anonymously
And then citizens voted on the plan
Instead of the candidate
Then the personality is removed from the equation
Ven
Ven
@Mysticial i don't see godwin's law applied here? :o
@Ven Title: "Stack Exchange Nazis"
@Ell This would make sense for legislators. It makes a lot less sense for the president. A large part of the president's real job (a lot of the reason the job even exists) is to have somebody who can react quickly to emergencies and other unforeseen situations. As such, when choosing the president it's a lot more about personality, and trust in that person's ability to make wise decisions in difficult situations.
Ven
Ven
@JerryCoffin ah thanks!
19:21
@JerryCoffin I think Stein feels like her base is somewhat anti-science, or at least tends to believe in quackery. Which means she places her political ambitions ahead of the greater good. So when people say she's the "lesser evil" compared to Clinton, well, she's just like any other politician.
Good to see this chat is still going strong and mostly off-topic. :)
Hey there
Is there any book we could get for functional programming in c++
user1804599
Hi.
user1804599
I'm in London.
user1804599
\o/
19:33
what does it mean you are from London,looking for any referendum or something?
@FallingFromBed You should write one and name it "func++tional programming".
i believe nationality is not a concern in this chat group
@FallingFromBed Pretty sure he's from the Netherlands.
Maybe he's on vacation in London or something?
@fredoverflow,sure i am tryna write yet before i get my hands into functional program, i just thought of finding any lecture/guide to start off with
You would probably be better off to learn functional programming in Haskell and then apply that knowledge to C++ ;)
Ven
Ven
19:42
@rightfold livetweet the con!
@Ven What con?
Ven
Ven
@fredoverflow haskell
user1804599
@Ven I went to the speakers' reception.
user1804599
Talked about stuff like Servant and stuff.
user1804599
19:45
@fredoverflow Nothing exciting so far.
i sometimes hear from people where they say i've written this code or that code as a way it will be async by passing lambdas as an argument to a function and then the passed lambda itself has some other callback..i wonder is this really a async because when we see it on the whole, things are just gonna happen one after another isn't it?
How was your travel? Any side effects? ;)
user1804599
Ryanair is awful.
user1804599
They tried to persuade people into gambling.
user1804599
At least they joked that if you won a million bucks you wouldn't have to fly with Ryanair anymore.
19:47
Ryanair sounds like Rihanna :)
Gambling on the plane?
user1804599
Buy lottery subscriptions.
may I ask about swift?
user1804599
swift doesn't have chat group?
no it doesn't
but my question is only about syntax
19:50
i see.
user1804599
@rightfold you don't want to check the syntax do you?
user1804599
@rightfold Never heard of it, so I checked it out
19:51
It seems like programmers can post questions there
should I ask a question about it?
he seems to be not
A wide variety thereof actually
Pretty neat, going in my bookmarks :)
is it just me
or did google chrome just overhaul it's appearance?
20:07
its*
not "just" for everyone, it's been rolled out for a few days now, but yes
Ell
Ell
@rightfold at the coding competition?
Ven
Ven
@rightfold cool
20:49
Hi guys!
Anybody use debian?
@EtiennedeMartel Has this ever actually happened?
When did the lounge get so spammy?
@Ramy There is no MySQL support for async. You can do it by depending on some undocumented implementation details, but I don't really recommend that.
21:05
@QuicoLlinaresLlorens No. Netcraft confirms it. Debian is dead! Umm...sorry, can't remember the rest of that ancient meme.
Hi Guys. Is it possible to create unique_ptr using method, returning some object. Like this: struct Builder { Item make_item() const } amd later unique_ptr<Item> ptr = make_unique<Item>((make_unique<Builder>())->make_item()) ?
no
I'm assuming it's not working since make_unique don't expecting to get real value instead of constructor param, right?
Ell
Ell
@Ph0en1x unique_ptr<Item> ptr = {new Item(Builder{}.make_item())} or sthng, idk
@Ph0en1x Why would you make a Builder just to throw it away? Why is Builder even a class at that point? Why not just have a free-standing function?
Also I'm pretty sure you meant to put that here: chat.stackoverflow.com/rooms/116940/c-questions-and-answers
21:12
It's example, I'm using lib which build object that way
ok, thx for your tip. Will ask in those room. Sorry for disturbing you guys.
21:30
@caps So i think i need to write myself a async mysql library using asio. Do you have some ideea which asio features should i use? I mean is there some examples on internet, i tried to search Google but don't found anything
@caps No but how the hell is such a system possible.
21:42
@Ramy This is the hacky, undocumented, unsupported way to do MySQL async queries: jan.kneschke.de/projects/mysql/async-mysql-queries-with-c-api
Qt has SQL functionality
21:57
@EtiennedeMartel In theory, you can postulate a situation where a candidate would win the presidency with an (almost?) arbitrarily low percentage of the popular vote. At least in most states, you only need a plurality of the votes to win that state's electoral votes. So, on a theoretical basis, let's assume there were 100 candidates who split the vote precisely evenly in every state, save for one candidate who (again, in every state) got one more vote than anybody else.
That candidate wins every electoral vote, so the pundits would call it a landslide--but in reality, his percentage of the popular vote is 1% + 50 votes.
this does happen slightly less extremely for real in the UK every election
For the moment I'm ignoring a few minor details like Washington DC having an electoral vote, even though it's not a state, so it'd really be 1% + 51, but you get the general idea.
22:24
@JerryCoffin DC has 3 actually. Not sure how big it is though.
user1593881
Sup dawgs? How's life treating you on this glorious... eeeer.... Thursday
user1593881
Yep Thursday it is.
user1593881
Speaking of UK. How's that Brexit coming along?
thread 'pin_0' panicked at 'Box<Any>', ../src/librustc_errors/lib.rs:694
note: Run with `RUST_BACKTRACE=1` for a backtrace.
thread 'pin_0' panicked at 'couldn't compile the test', ../src/librustdoc/test.rs:283
I broke it again.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Robot, the breaker of things.
22:36
@Mysticial Sorry, when I said "an electoral vote", I wasn't trying to talk about the number of votes they have, just that it's another district where you'd have to get one vote more than anybody else to get whatever number of electoral votes is allotted. But yes, the fewest any state gets is 3, and I s'pose DC is probably treated the same.
22:46
@JerryCoffin Even though votes in DC are worth disproportionately more, at least voting there is the most useless place to do it. lol
22:58
Rust compiles example code in docs.
To ensure it stays somewhat up to date
^^ Holy shit.
TBH, I'm surprised that didn't start happening years ago.
that's quite logical IMO
23:13
why should I pay for extra luggage if it weights nothing comparing to your mom?
I vaguely remember them trying and then someone suing them for it, but that memory may be manufactured, so
ah, not in the states
@Abyx I'd have expected the only fair policy is where the airfare is a function of combined weight of passenger and luggage as well as the size of the passenger.
But airplanes can be weighed by looking at the landing gear compression.
I need one of those miniature handscanner.
So you know if the entire plane is overweight. But not necessarily the weight distribution.
@AndyProwl Situation Normal: VC++ All Fucked Up
23:16
@jaggedSpire Basically.
@Mysticial Aren't they adjusting passenger seating specifically to optimally balance the plane though?
oooh!
this gathered its score of -22 in about four minutes today
@jaggedSpire That would be the point of weighing everybody. Otherwise, you can pick your seat.
They do it on small planes. But 737 and up are usually big enough where passenger weight doesn't matter.
@Mysticial Ah, I must have misunderstood your comment
makes sense
And if you're heavy enough to unbalance the plane, you're probably too big to fit in your seat. (in which case you need to buy multiple seats) Since everybody is made up of mostly water.
also makes sense
23:21
So the "mass density" in a plane can't be too upsetting even if you tried since conservation of volume applies to airplanes.
:3330167 Yeah--I'm not sure DC's electoral votes have ever gone to a Republican. Even in the 1972 election, McGovern only won a single state, but he still won in DC...
@Mysticial If memory serves, you can check weight distribution by measuring nose gear vs. main gear.
So what happened during that Reagan election anyway? Was Reagan just that good, or did the other guy royally screw up in the most historically amazing fashion?
@Mysticial Carter didn't so much screw up as get screwed. During his first term, OPEC had raised oil prices by a factor of 5 (or something), and Iran had a revolution and took essentially the entire US embassy hostage. I'm not sure anybody else in the same position could have done a whole lot better, but it still meant he was almost amazingly unpopular at the end of the first term.
@JerryCoffin I meant the 1984 election.
Or both actually.
23:41
@Mysticial Well, just after Reagan took office, the hostages in Iran were released. He got a lot of taxes cut, and spent a lot. Combined, they helped the economy a lot (at the expense of increasing the deficit dramatically). He was also very good at communicating, and Democrats complained that he was "teflon"--nothing bad (like people finding that his wife listened to a fortune teller) seemed to affect his popularity.
ah
See, I grew up in the age of close elections.
RIght, I need a hand scanner.
Lest this sound too one-sided, I feel obliged to point out that Carter mostly got elected because Gerald Ford had made himself extremely unpopular. He took over when Nixon resigned, and preemptively pardoned Nixon for any crimes he'd committed. I think it was the right thing to do--we needed to move on, not spend (even more) years mired in Nixon's wrongdoing--but it was basically political suicide.
user image
21
Here we go.
@JerryCoffin Carter famously refused to defend the Shah
23:51
@JerryCoffin That's sorta the feeling I get now. If Hillary wins it'll probably be because of how unpopular Trump is. She's far left enough that she might have trouble winning re-election if the republicans pick a moderate candidate.
@ThePhD nice title
@Mikhail He did, but there again he (largely) got screwed by circumstances. Although he was on our list of allies, and very strongly anti-communist, there were good reasons the Iranian people rebelled--even by the lousy standards of mideast dictators the Shah was a nasty piece of work.
The Shah would tell you he quit when he lost US support. People faulted carter for not having a good foreign policy vision while simultaneously defaulting on America's foreign policy commitments. When asked to solve America's domestic issues, his vision was to retreat to the mountains and ask other people. The USA wants a leader from its president.
@Mysticial I suspect that'll depend a lot on the economy. The economy is controlled in large part by consumer spending. In the '90s there was (famously) "irrational exuberance", which lead to a booming economy. Now we have rather the opposite: little technical reason the economy couldn't be better, but it's pretty stagnant anyway. If having a Clinton as president again gets people to believe in the economy, it could improve quite a lot pretty quickly.
@ThePhD Still can't use your real name, tsk tsk.
23:56
It's really hard to beat an incumbent if the economy is doing well.
@EtiennedeMartel Never ever.

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