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13:00
And while you still have the inefficiencies of speed changes in the cars, the cars have a lot less momentum so it's better to have them start and stop than the bigger train.
that makes sense, a train would eat up a lot more energy than a car starting/stopping
especially if it has heavy cargo
@AlexM. But it's more weight, and more space used. Tradeoffs.
also the logistics of it, cos you need a car at the destination if you don’t want to just be tossed off the train
What the devil are you on about?
rollercoasters
13:03
@LucDanton I guess the cars would be included in the train ticket.
you know what would be a really cool thing for vehicles to have
self-cleaning everything
especially public buses
they get dirty and stink very fast
when it's up to people to clean
nobody will do it until they have no other choice
@R.MartinhoFernandes wouldn't have to be? If there was less friction when something was at a complete stop than when it was moving things would never stop? The dynamic friction would slow them down, then suddenly the friction drops because they are 'stopped' so they speed up again...
@thecoshman you’re on thin ice
perpetual motion, solved
@LucDanton yeah, the weather's been crazy, almost 0 degrees tonight
(actually ~2)
ba dum tsch
13:06
@Griwes nicked it. github.com/tmux-plugins/tpm is a better indirect find though, cheers!
Xeo
Xeo
This is @Mysticial-level stuff.
12
holy hell
13:22
you subtle way of calling others nerds
why call 'em nerd? just call 'em Mysticial-level person, surly everyone here will understand ...
@Xeo Nice.
That awkward moment when you realize your coworker's son takes violin lessons from your sister. #small world
@sehe piano > all.
Certainly not
@Ell What cool stuff are you guys doing this year? HDLs, too?
Certainly yes.
user1804599
13:28
Violin is great.
user1804599
Piano is boring.
user1804599
Violin sounds nice with electric guitar.
@rightfold Vice versa.
user1804599
And flutes.
user1804599
13:29
And drums.
Ell
Ell
@Columbo we're doing VHDL, transistors
Err
@Ell Transistors?
Ell
Ell
BJTs, MOSFETs
@Ell We are doing SystemVerilog and synthesize it onto FPGAs
@Ell Did that last year in DigElectronics
Ell
Ell
We only did op amps last year
13:30
@rightfold rightfold is misguided
Instruments aren't boring. People are boring
user1804599
Piano sound is really shit.
Ell
Ell
I just spent literally 3 hours trying to get a potentiometer biased emitter follower circuit to work
Changed every variable, apart from cable s
Finally works >.<
Depends on who is playing which piano.
actually this version is sadder youtube.com/watch?v=VzBXJB_otlc:
@rightfold Hmm, I find Steinways sound really, really cool when you hear one live, in tune and open
user1804599
13:31
The sounds don't go well with the discreteness.
Wtf are you on about
user1804599
They should be continuous.
Ell
Ell
Violin us discrete too
@Columbo also doing Signals and Systems, DSA, Language Engineering
How about you?
@thecoshman friction doesn't speed you up. Period.
The expressiveness and range of dynamics on a piano is really hard to beat. E.g. can you play fugues with 3 or 4 voices on a violin? I don't know, but I would guess not so easily
13:35
fugus are expensive and hard to get the poison off of anyway
@Ell Semantics of Programming Languages, Prolog, Software Engineering, Computer Architecture, C/C++ (:D), Further Java, Graphics and Image processing,
user1804599
fungus is easy to remove from a piano I grant you that
> Boolean variables are overdetermined in the sense that all operators that have Boolean variables as input check if the inputs have any other value than 0 or 1, but operators that have Booleans as output can produce no other value than 0 or 1. This makes operations with Boolean variables as input less efficient than necessary.
TIL
from the books found in the mysticial-like answer
Ell
Ell
@Columbo sounds very compsci focussed
@R.MartinhoFernandes but if friction is reduced, you speed up... no?
user1804599
13:43
ooooooooooooooh my value wasn't negative zero
user1804599
it was a very large negative number so it got rounded to -0.0 while formatting
smooth
user1804599
The fix: abs($number) < 0.05 ? 0.0 : $number.
user1804599
XD
user1804599
14:03
I can watch this all day.
nwp
nwp
all room owners got hypnotized
user1804599
FOR SCIENCE
@rightfold now add tan
and everything will explode
thanks for the warning
I'll get some sun lotion
@thecoshman No, friction doesn't speed you up.
You accelerate, you speed up. That's it.
Friction doesn't accelerate you.
@rightfold How did a very large negative number become -0? You mean very small?
user1804599
14:11
@R.MartinhoFernandes A small negative number would be -1000, a large one would be -1.
user1804599
-1 is larger than -1000.
@rightfold large/small is magnitude and is sign less
a large negative number is -1000, a small negative number is -1
user1804599
Cocktail shaker sort looks funny, and bogosort sounds funny.
@R.MartinhoFernandes at first I thought there was overflow
large/small are different concepts than largest/smallest and larger/smaller
14:13
-1000 is a larger negative quantity
than -1
that's how I see it
you wouldn't say: the U.S. has a small national debt
@thecoshman And if you are accelerating for some other reason, you cannot get perpetual motion unless that source of acceleration is also perpetual.
@R.MartinhoFernandes you can, if you have no negative acceleration
Hmm, I can't use ngrams to see which usage is more common.
e.g. frictionless
then even if your burners run out, you stay in motion
not in our universe though
user1804599
14:15
> In computing, a Las Vegas algorithm is a randomized algorithm that always gives correct results
@orlp Right, but the context was for having more or less friction.
1 message moved to bin
@R.MartinhoFernandes since friction is negative acceleration, according to @rightfold of course having more friction is better for going fast, of course
user1804599
Maybe I should have said "small, negative number" instead of "small negative number".
you said "large negative number"
user1804599
14:16
Right, that.
you should've said "small negative number"
user1804599
No.
user1804599
The number is huge compared to most negative numbers.
so
there's this thing
Cursory google indicates "large negative number" most commonly means far from zero.
user1804599
14:17
That holds for every negative number. :D
where communicating in a way where everyone else understands you
is more beneficial than the opposite
strictly speaking, every real number has the same amount of numbers above/below it
user1804599
Is every positive number smaller than most positive numbers?
so they're all 'small' or 'large'
@rightfold Yes. Proof is trivial.
14:19
@R.MartinhoFernandes no?
for any real number x, the sets {r : r < x} and {r : r > x} are equally large
Oh, sorry, I was thinking of integers.
My mistake.
and this doesn't change even for just positive numbers
user1804599
I want a zip list of all real numbers.
there are just as many numbers in [0, 0.000001) as there are in (0.000001, inf]
@rightfold zip list?
@Griwes I know of this, but I find it of limited use for me.
user1804599
14:21
@orlp struct ZipList<A> { List<A> before; A current; List<A> after; }
user1804599
Here, the before is the elements before the cursor (in reverse order), current is the element at the cursor, and the after is the elements after the cursor.
@rightfold I'm unfamiliar with this syntax
can you describe it in plain english?
You can do that, but not with ordered lists
also
you can't have current
because a number is defined exactly by which numbers come before it, and which come after it
user1804599
You can't do it for real numbers, what is the smallest number larger than current?
@rightfold that's why I said you can't do it for ordered lists
but you can do it with sets
@rightfold I suggest you read Knuth's Surreal Numbers
user1804599
You can do it for integers though: ZipList<Integer> { before = range(-inf, current); current = current; after = range(current + 1, inf); }.
14:25
In mathematics, the surreal number system is an arithmetic continuum containing the real numbers as well as infinite and infinitesimal numbers, respectively larger or smaller in absolute value than any positive real number. The surreals share many properties with the reals, including a total order ≤ and the usual arithmetic operations (addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division); as such, they form an ordered field. (Strictly speaking, the surreals are not a set, but a proper class.) If formulated in Von Neumann–Bernays–Gödel set theory, the surreal numbers are the largest possible ordered...
they are the largest possible ordered number system
they contain the integers, the rationals, the reals, the hyperreals, and more
and are super simple
user1804599
ZipList<ZipList<A>> is super fun.
user1804599
It's a 2D field you can navigate through efficiently.
@orlp Aren't all of those subsets of the one that follows it?
@R.MartinhoFernandes yes, I presented it as such
user1804599
Zip lists are nice for implementing Conway's Game of Life.
14:27
No, they suck.
user1804599
You suck!
@R.MartinhoFernandes but you have a given momentum... ah... you don't speed up, you just slow slower
Hashlife is much better.
heh, that reminds me I've got to implement hashlife some time in my life
@milleniumbug heh allows me to make your daily reminder of fleeting life and existential dread
14:29
@orlp As much as this is interesting theoretically, are they actually useful for anything?
@wilx they're used in combinatorial game theory
like analyzing Go
@orlp yeah I'm like "hey I'm <insert my age here> and I still haven't implemented hashlife"
@milleniumbug how old are you?
damn you're ancient
like half a foot in the grave
14:32
~~existential bread~~
22 Best Cheap DIY 3D Printer Kits in 2016 all3dp.com/diy-3d-printer-kit
very recently updated
nice that they're getting cheaper :D
@orlp Ehh, that's what they say on wiki but I see no further evidence thereof.
I do not even have a 2D printer. What would one do with a 3D one?
user1804599
14:48
@wilx Print white sheets of plastic with black 3D letters on them.
user1804599
15:05
As I entered the building: "You must be the doctor?" Me: "Sorry, not the kind you're looking for."
user1804599
lol
I must be broken. I don't think it's funny. What makes it funny?
user1804599
Doctor degree vs healing people.
hey, it's the Pragmatic Bookshelf guy!
heyyy
user1804599
Venkat Subramaniam is a funny guy.
15:10
I once tried to read this by him
but I'm not sure what happened because I stopped
nwp
nwp
@sehe There was a Dr. Who episode where someone was looking for the surgeon. The Doctor thought it was close enough, but then it wasn't.
ah
@rightfold still missing why it's funny then.
user1804599
Because you lack a sense of humour.
user1804599
git gud
QtCreator trying to be funny.
15:15
@sehe it's not funny, but I can see PhDs laughing at it
user1804599
0 files both saved and not saved at the same time!
@wilx I pimp my board games.
user1804599
The one thing every API designer should learn is monoids.
@rightfold Nah, it actually saved 1.
This is what it outputs every time I do :wa (vim keybindings).
user1804599
If you save 1 file, you also save 0 files!
15:19
@R.MartinhoFernandes Such geekiness
I wish I had a laser cutter so I could make wooden insets to organize things inside the boxes.
Board game box insets are terribly space-inefficient, and it's almost always feasible to carry a game with its expansions in the original box, instead of N separate ones, if you're creative.
nwp
nwp
I'm doing the same thing over and over expecting a different result. Should I be worried about my mental health?
@Xeo Oh nice! I knew it was Peter Cordes before I even started scrolling.
@nwp Is it rolling a die?
nwp
nwp
@R.MartinhoFernandes it is restarting the device and see if the start screen appears
it worked 5 times before it didn't, and now I have a problem
I suppose I had the problem before, but now I know about it.
15:30
@EtiennedeMartel I should probably actually finish all the pimping projects I have underway and post pics somewhere.
Playing with half-painted components is weird.
nwp
nwp
should have just stopped testing after 5 times and called it good
@Mysticial meanwhile I get 180+ upvotes for short answers
182
A: How does the + operator work in C?

orlpTo be pedantic, the C specification does not specify how addition is implemented. But to be realistic, the + operator on integer types smaller than or equal to the word size of your CPU get translated directly into an addition instruction for the CPU, and larger integer types get translated into...

@orlp His is only 9 hours old. It's got a long way to go. :)
@Mysticial I actually wonder
if you take the number of votes an answer/question gets over time
for all answers/questions combined
what sort of curve does it look like?
exponential drop off?
linear start?
It's r/programming worthy too. And I don't see it there. So it got 100 upvotes on SO alone.
Nor is it on HN.
15:34
@Mysticial at some point it was hacker news worthy as well
but all they care about nowadays is politics and funding
:(
not sure why I keep visiting that website
been a long time since I saw something cool on it
@orlp I have graphs for several of my older massively upvoted answers. Just not in front of me atm.
It's definitely an exponential drop off with spikes from the various "linking" events.
@AlexM. lol
@orlp Come to think of it, Peter's answer is the first post I've seen in at least a year that has reached 100 in that short of a time without the help of Reddit or HN. This sort of thing used to happen once a week back in days of the old multicollider.
@Mysticial multicollider?
@orlp The hot questions list used to be in the drop-down in the upper left corner. And it wasn't randomized like it is now.
So when something got hot, it stays pinned to the top of the list for a very long time.
15:43
ah
So the "viral" factor within the SE network was a lot stronger back in those days.
The branch prediction question was in and around the top of that list for something like a week and half. Konrad's transatlantic ping question was there for even longer IIRC.
But so did all the silly typo and JS typing-fail questions.
user1804599
> But to be realistic, the + operator on integer types smaller than or equal to the word size of your CPU get translated directly into an addition instruction for the CPU
user1804599
Or constant folded, or vectorized, or distributed, or completely removed. :P
user1804599
TIL "⌀" is used for "average".
Ven
Ven
16:08
What a lifeless starboard.
6
nwp
nwp
@BartekBanachewicz fix it
Oct 14 at 11:36, by sehe
@Griwes room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: Things are bad and generally disappointments. And then there's C++ [c++] [c++11] [c++14] [c++-faq]
nwp
nwp
> Want some horror for Halloween? Try C++!
unfortunately too late
ah, on in a professional company would you get both the heaters on as high as they go and the air-con as cold as it'll go
nwp
nwp
only for cloud based companies
I'm bored, I should tell my boss to hire a tester.
16:36
@R.MartinhoFernandes errata
I actually took the Uber from my apartment, not from the cab station
it was $1 cheaper than the cab
just realized when registering the expense
so there's that :P
I saved the price of bottled water
Well.
This is ass.
I went to get help with my OCaml code.
Turns out they couldn't help me with it.
Granted, it's just toy code so nobody has to give a shit
nwp
nwp
They couldn't help you as in "We don't do your work" or as in "It is not possible to express that properly in OCaml"?
@ThePhD you want of piece of it
16:54
@nwp Moreso "We don't know why this error comes about and we can't help you fix it right now."
So, uh. They told me to abandon ship and just hack it up some other way.
@sehe I wish it was that kind of ass.
nwp
nwp
17:09
-7
A: Is there an illusion in the tutorial area?

SolaireOfAstoraThere is totally an illusion there, you're actually being trolled by SE. what do you trust the most? The upvotes on SE or the upvotes INSIDE THE GAME? Keep switching between "bow" and "praise the sun" in a 2:1 relation, and eventually the illusion will give way to a secret bossfight that is a re...

@GundolfGundelfinger Lena did a thing, available on soundcloud
Docker is like systemd.
Don't bow.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I am not going to. :)
Ven
Ven
From the Department of Bonkers: ARMv8.3 will bring you one or more new instructions for "Improved Javascript data type conversion".
@Ven wut
Anybody knows how i can get this lib: github.com/google/double-conversion to spit out a .lib file when building with cmake/VS ? Only .dll, .ilk and .pdb are created....
user1804599
17:53
@Ven C++ code can use these instructions as well, probably.
user1804599
It is very reasonable to add instructions that make JS code run faster, because there is shittons of JS code.
Ven
Ven
So then they should add instructions that make jQuery code run faster
this seems to contain the explanation and justification
user1804599
@Ven not enough shittons
user1804599
They probably evaluated common patterns
18:11
hey there!
Managed to get .lib file somehow...
Ven
Ven
@rightfold 92% of websites with JS have jquery installed. JS VM should definitely add some :P
nah
we have jQuery installed in our project at work but we hardly ever use it
Ven
Ven
:P
it's still loaded
every browser should include jquery versions.
yeah, but that doesn't mean instructions for jQuery would be even remotely useful for us
Ven
Ven
18:19
instructions to load jquery :)
user1804599
jquery isawful
Sounds like this should go on CodeGolf? — Borgleader 6 secs ago
/cc @Mysticial
Xeo
Xeo
@Borgleader That should be closed as off-topic
because wtf nobody has a real problem that involves those constraints.
That's a really retarded interview question.
Xeo
Xeo
18:32
I hate interview trick questions like that shit
"please do something that under no circumstances will ever actually need to be done"
I think I'd plain refuse.
There is another solution that works.
Xeo
Xeo
Yes, drop the pen and leave the room.
:P
write it in assembly to amaze the interviewers
fits in the constraints
Xeo
Xeo
lol
Ven
Ven
you're supposed to xor
18:35
inline assembly seems to be the only other solution. Assuming asm() doesn't count as a function call.
anyway shitty question yea
these if you ask me are most likely questions by clueless people who just got some book titled "puzzles for programming interviews"
and thought that it's a good idea to add them
The way that I prepare for interviews is:
1. Learn the address of the place.
2. Learn what time to show up.
3. Have appropriate attire ready.
4. Get sufficient sleep.
sounds about right
I don't do anything else before an interview either
what would I have to do?
I didn't turn off my brain
didn't forget to program either
Xeo
Xeo
@Xeo - interview questions are real problems in that context. Of course its a stupid question, but thats generally not a valid answer — pm100 1 min ago
Interview Questions should not be on SO vOv
@AlexM. I did do one extra thing for my February interviews. I had an explanation ready for my termination from my previous job.
But those are usually asked during the phone interviews.
But they usually ask again during the onsites.
18:43
I prepared one too but then decided to take a 9 month sabbatical
until I get my degree
best excuse :')
"I failed to get my degree 2 times so this time I decided not to work anymore"
(it's actually 3 times if you consider the regular college years)
Oh good lord, these function parameters
-1
Q: When I read in the file for some reason it changed the position in the file by it self

Note Ngernkuakulwhen I read in the file for exits, for some reason it skip the exact same amount as num_rooms I know there a bug somewhere after finished calling the the function read_rooms and going into next iteration of while(input.good()) int read_world( std::ifstream &input, char rooms[MAX_ROOMS][MAX_ROOM...

@Mysticial Yeah thats really dumb /cc @Xeo
@AlexM. so are you working now or are you still on the sabbatical?
@StackedCrooked starting it tomorrow
@Borgleader Oh yeah, that's real_world right there. aha
18:46
getting my degree next year July
does it get optimized out or something?
I'd expect it to output the bitsets of zeroes too
in the first case
@Borgleader Weird question. What about the answer?
actually optimizing it out does not make sense
because it has side-effects
Xeo
Xeo
-O3 prints stuff again
only -O2 doesn't

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