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user1804599
@rightfold Namespacing, Zipf's Law and stuff
@jagdish shrooms
user1804599
Namespaces are one honking good idea--we should do more of those!
Ell
Ell
@nwp it broke by itself
@R.MartinhoFernandes critiquing isn't the same as complaining though. And it's entirely different from complaining you didn't get your way, which is what the saying on about
Ell
Ell
Did apt upgrade and grub has no entries
16:04
@sehe I have to disagree. Neither of these constitutes a victory.
If you never voted, how can you get away with moaning not getting what you wanted
Ell
Ell
I tries doing Linux mykernel, initrd myinitrd, boot
But I get "no video modes"
"Booting blind", then nothing
nwp
nwp
@Ell Thanks for telling, I will try to be careful with my next update.
Ell
Ell
Debjan didn't want to install in the first place either really
user1804599
Kernel Sanders
16:07
@nwp Don't bother with what @Ell writes about Linux, he has unique problems that even my manager manages to avoid.
Ven
Ven
your manager manages?
to avoid Ell-level Linux problems
He has his own unique problems though.
Like he installed Arch recently and then his sound started to break at random moments, until he jumped to console and back... which is apparently some obscure gdm bug.
A&&(B||C) <-- do I need those brackets ¬_¬ I think so... probably better for clarity sake really...
@Griwes I thought puppy was the linux boob?
@JerryCoffin It wasn't an opinion. I'm not good enough with psephology to think of the better term for the result/selected nominee
@thecoshman Did you miss all the Ell problems on Discord? :D
16:15
usually, yes :P
I don't really read discord much
user1804599
@thecoshman Yes, you do.
user1804599
&& has precedence over ||.
user1804599
This is because && is like * and || is like +.
@rightfold My rationale for this would be "if you need to ask this question, then yes, you do need them".
mmm chicken with bacon
tastee
16:18
@Griwes my conclusion too :P
I prefer verbosity of uncertainty
yeah
nwp
nwp
But how can you be sure it is complicated and not just that you are bad?
...how is that relevant for anything
@sehe Okay. I guess I can live with that.
@nwp does that really matter?
nwp
nwp
16:22
@Griwes Because if you are bad enough everything always requires parentheses and you get bad effects.
...
if you are bad, clarify and later you might no better and can improve it, or realise it really is complicated and thus it is better to keep it
@nwp not really...
You should add parens if you have the slightest suspicion it might be uncertain for someone.
user1804599
0 && 0 = 0; 0 * 0 = 0
1 && 0 = 0; 1 * 0 = 0
0 && 1 = 0; 0 * 1 = 0
1 && 1 = 1; 1 * 1 = 1

0 || 0 = 0; 0 + 0 = 0
1 || 0 = 1; 1 + 0 = 1
0 || 1 = 2; 0 + 1 = 1
1 || 1 = 1; 1 + 1 = 2
Obviously *, /, +, - don't need any of that, since everybody knows their precedence.
nwp
nwp
16:23
I have a slight suspicion that someone would write a + (b * c) + d; and I would not be ok with that.
vOv I kinda like that clarity of those brakets
Do you have a suspicion that a + b * c + d might be uncertain?
user1804599
APL has the best operator rules.
If so, then you're just bad.
user1804599
Everything same precedence, everything right-associative.
16:24
And since noone would be uncertain about that, no-one would add the parens around the multiplication.
I find that I can read what is going on faster with the brackets
don't write complex boolean operations without parens
always use parens to make intent obvious
And for what it's worth, the 2016 cognitive bias codex:
Oops. I'm pretty sure that wasn't visible. Let me try again.
name portions of complex boolean expressions and use them like that
but really stop thinking in terms of people being bad or not lol
nwp
nwp
@JerryCoffin worked fine
16:25
if a bug makes it in the app it's the whole team's fault
that includes you
the guy who wrote it
and the guy who failed to see it at CR time
user1804599
There is no I in "team", so no, it's not my fault.
the guy who had to write tests
etc.
user image
5
@nwp oh-oh well.
nwp
nwp
The "if it might be unclear add parens"-rule doesn't seem useful because "might be unclear" isn't precise enough. The rule effectively says "go with whatever you feel is right at the moment", which arguably isn't even a rule.
if it were my call, cosh's A&&(B||C)
would be
meaningOfBorC = B || C
A && meaningOfBorC
depending on the case obv maybe B and C are already single concepts
nwp
nwp
16:30
STL's rule was "if you need to look up precedence rules add parens", but the situations in which you need to do that change and the rule should be independent of when you last looked at the table.
@nwp I prefer a more clear-cut rule: assume everybody (even non-programmers) have memorized all 15 levels of precedence in C++ (plus the niggling little places where precedence can't really be portrayed accurately in a table).
userRequestedLogOut = contextualLogOutWasClicked || topMenuLogOutWasClicked
^ example of 2 concepts that together mean sth else
nwp
nwp
Someone talked about a language where superfluous parenthesis were a syntax error to enforce a clear style.
if you inline the two ||ed vars and paren them you make it more obvious that you mean them to mean a single concept
@thecoshman Have you been in the UK lately?
16:32
@nwp probably a language in which nothing gets written ever
@AlexM. Even if I argued vehemently against what led to the bug, and my opinion was overridden and ignored?
aside from posts on /r/programming and hackernews
@JerryCoffin hey, if the blame gets to you you have message history :P but I've yet to meet people who disregard proofs that they're wrong
nwp
nwp
@AlexM. Or a language where people hat to learn the precedence rules and code is easier to read due to uniformity. Who knows.
as if anyone has time to think about precendence rules and apply them every time they see a complex expression lmao
that'll slow down your debugging to a crawl
nwp
nwp
@AlexM. I just listened to the extern C talk where the guy explained that that happens all the time, even with scientists that are good with numbers and clear evidence.
16:34
just write code to help you work on it
now and in the future
@R.MartinhoFernandes not since last xmas
why?
@nwp lucky me then
@thecoshman Gee, there even if you actually voted you're supposed to shut the fuck up and let the bus driver take us down the ravine because we voted it so.
@AlexM. Instead of parens, we should use spacing, so A+B *C is the same as (A+B)*C. :-)
@thecoshman What you said might be the meaning under which the adage makes sense, but it's not at all how it's used.
16:36
@R.MartinhoFernandes true :P that's what freedom is all about, blindly following a bad decision till the bitter end :P
@R.MartinhoFernandes oh yes, ti's a horribly abused expression
@JerryCoffin It's a thing of beauty. Will have to find time to digest
@AlexM. At work right now, I have a coworker (who's sort of in charge of things because his dad is the CTO) who insists on a particular database, even though it's substantially slower for our real use, because in theory if we ever need to distribute the database across at least 32 nodes, it might be faster...
Though even then, I'm not sure it makes sense. Whether you vote or not, the reason it didn't come out the way you wanted is the same: the people who wanted otherwise were more.
@R.MartinhoFernandes But it's trying to counter the defeatist attitude of "my opinion isn't popular, so may as well not even vote". Even so, you should express your vote, as it shows that the winning party should consider that views (and yes, this is more applicable for things like party politics than simplistic choices)
@thecoshman But how does that matter? If you already have the majority you just need to hold it. You don't need new voters. If you keep the ones who voted for you happy, it's enough to get reelected (modulo births/deaths).
16:42
@R.MartinhoFernandes but if you are a minority, it shows you are there and that others could join with you in furture
@thecoshman And FWIW, you can show that in civilian polls just as well.
@R.MartinhoFernandes only if people vote in those polls
@R.MartinhoFernandes people change their mind
what do you Catch folks use for checking ranges? I’m used to Boost.Test’s BOOST_CHECK_EQUAL_COLLECTIONS( a_start, a_stop, b_start, b_stop )
Ell
Ell
I wonder if the windows subsystem for Linux can chroot into a real Linux
Well I think I've had a very productive day. Sorted out some very important and highly messed up data wrangling issues but also listed to the entire discography of Avatar
@JerryCoffin TMI
17:02
@JerryCoffin sounds awful if he's indeed wrong
@thecoshman Most often because the elected officials don't deliver on their promises.
Ell
Ell
okay I'm going to boot into my linux via virtualbox from inside windows, wish me luck vOv
@thecoshman I for one am more likely to answer one of those polls than to vote.
I only voted once.
Funnily, it ended up being a non-binding referendum whose result was quickly adopted by government.
he he he
Took like just two months to get the law ratified.
Ell
Ell
17:14
> The I/O cache encountered an error while updating data in medium "ahci-0-0" (rc=VERR_ACCESS_DENIED). Make sure there is enough free space on the disk and that the disk is working properly. Operation can be resumed afterwards.

Error ID:
BLKCACHE_IOERR
Severity:
Non-Fatal Error
oh I hope this means my disk isn't ruined.
Ven
Ven
i hope it is rekt
@thecoshman Though if the poll is over "who will you vote for?" I will just answer "not".
Those polls are only useful for the candidates to track score and for you to vote strategically (which sadly is a necessary evil).
If it's over a specific issue I'll gladly answer, even if I'd probably not vote for MPs that agree with me.
Ell
Ell
it's alive!
@R.MartinhoFernandes which is why voting should be proportional thingy
@AlexM. The comforting point is that it'll probably work reasonably well whichever things go. And I'm just contrary enough I might follow the old line about "why build one when you can build two for only twice the price?", and just build it both ways, so I can honestly say: "yes, I wrote the code you wanted" (and who knows--it's possible it'll work out well under the real load, in which case I'm fine with using it).
user1804599
17:32
I wonder what languages would look like if people were incapable of understanding texts with spelling/grammatical mistakes.
@rightfold Ideagrams, perhaps (I.e., something that captured a much more complete idea as a single entity)?
@rightfold They'd be more concise I think.
user1804599
Yeah
user1804599
"What do you mean?" would be one letter
Whether that's "more concise" is debatable.
You can make a lot of things a single symbol, but that increases the number of symbols needed.
17:44
-5
Q: How would I go about creating my own operating system?

Josh BrownWhat would be the requirements and how would I go about making my own operating system? I think I'd need to know C++ (which again because of my interest I am currently trying to pick up). But what do I need to do to get it working and is there any software in which to test it? (Maybe VM?)

/cc @Mysticial
I wonder if it's worth getting a 4k monitor.
Probably not.
I'd take one if it was for free
If you got one for free, would you sell it or keep it? :)
depends on the diagonal size
if it's small so I have to zoom in to see anything I'd sell it
otherwise I'd keep it for work
can't play games at 4k so it would be useless there :P
@Borgleader :33855043 I can't tell if that's too localized or too broad. It's too localized because no single person with the right mind would attempt to do that. It's too broad because it is too broad.
17:48
24" is what I consider ok-ish for 1080p
@StackedCrooked If you intend to use it to code, I don't recommend anything beyond 1440p unless you have very strong eyes.
Ven
Ven
ah no just messaged moved
tbf I think even if it were a huge 4k
it would just make my other monitors unreadable because I'd have to sit way behind them
However, I could increase the font size. So I'd get readable text but with finer detail.
17:49
so a 4k would be a bad idea for my desk regardless
@StackedCrooked That kinda defeats the purpose of 4k. So unless you plan to do other thing benefit from the 4k, it'd be too much for me at least.
Don't forget that a lot of the fonts are single-pixel wide. Those have no room to scale.
(a sign of a bad buy)
(is that you're already thinking about workarounds if you get it)
user1804599
@R.MartinhoFernandes make symbols a semigroup 😜
@rightfold With the operation being... concatenation?
17:57
@JohannesSchaub-litb Hello. Are you trying to stymie people about variadic templates again?
@JerryCoffin :(
@JerryCoffin i need your help my friend
Oops turns out we elect a parliament to make better decisions than the general electorate
Oops indeed.
@JohannesSchaub-litb I think others (e.g., @Xeo) can probably provide more help. My own use of variadic templates has been fairly...mundane (though if I had to guess on which is more likely to have gotten this right, my immediate inclination would be that clang is right and gcc is wrong).
user1804599
@R.MartinhoFernandes arrangement in a spiral!
> Guys I'm seriously just trying to create an operating system and I'm very new to this. I just wanted to know how I'd go about doing it. – Josh Brown 19 mins ago
this is painful to read
18:09
redirect him to the raspberry pi OS tutorial
> This course takes you through the basics of operating systems development in assembly code. I have tried not to assume any prior knowledge of operating systems development or assembly code. It may be helpful to have some programming experience, but the course should be accessible without.
nwp
nwp
redirect to includeos.org
@GundolfGundelfinger even more anet qa
@Borgleader But you should be used to it by now.
Also good evening everyone <3
Ven
Ven
Ahoy
18:19
hi
@Ven That's the name of one of our songs.
18:35
@Borgleader Hmm...if it wasn't deleted already, I'd give him a decent link:
@JohannesSchaub-litb Btw, what's your opinion on the use of advanced C++ techniques (template trickery etc) in application-level code? Do you think it's fine? Or do you think it should be minimized?
@StackedCrooked depends on the crowd
if your colleagues can grok it, why not :p
That's a good point.
In practice they usually won't though.
@StackedCrooked Assuming it's something you're going to maintain long term, it becomes a question of benefit from using it vs. cost of having to hire (or train) developers to know C++ well enough to maintain it.
When I look at the code I've written over the past few years there's a only few places where I do tricky stuff. And in many cases the code could be greatly simplified but at the cost of introducing a little bit of code duplication.
Recently I've been thinking a lot about this kind of trade-off.
18:45
@StackedCrooked How much complexity vs. how much duplication?
Hm, that's kinda hard to quantify.
I'll check the codebase tomorrow and see if I can find a real example.
Just a few days left before the next standard committee shitstorm :3
If you're writing 10 lines of really tricky templates to avoid duplicating one line of code, it seems pretty obvious that it's a loss. If it's 10:1 in the other direction, chances are decent that it's a win--but in between, it's often hard to judge (especially if both pieces of code are somewhat tricky, but in entirely different ways).
sometimes i think i have done something cool, but months later i have trouble following what I have coded :p
@JohannesSchaub-litb The competent programmer is fully aware of the strictly limited size of his own skull; therefore he approaches the programming task in full humility, and among other things he avoids clever tricks like the plague. (Dijkstra, 1972)
18:52
Take for example take a serialize function that accepts a tuple<T...> and returns a string. And a corresponding deserialize function. The implementation does some nifty stuff that nobody but me understands. I could make it understandable by implementing it using overloading for tuples with up to (say) 5 number of elements.
So I'd have 5 overloads.
really depends on how complicated the logic is
@Morwenn It should probably be noted, however, that Dijkstra himself was not especially noted for being humble. Rather the contrary, I've seen one semi-joking claim that the unit of arrogance should be the "nano-Dijkstra".
@JerryCoffin Says the guy who designed smoothsort.
And made sure it only used O(1) space.
@Puppy Let's say that here in the lounge that code would be considered not complicated at all.
then do it
18:54
However, at the workplace people aren't as good at C++ as your regular lounger.
Xeo
Xeo
as soon as it has dotdotdot, it's usually deemed "complicated" by the average coworker.
it'll be easier for people to think about the generic version as "That, but for more arguments"
@JerryCoffin To be honest, I didn't know.
@Xeo Exactly :)
@StackedCrooked The obvious measure of whether it's reasonable is me. If I find it easy to understand, then you obviously haven't used anything excessively complex. If it could be written in half as much code using techniques I'd easily understand, then you've been foolish. All the world needs to do is figure out how to clone me, and perfect judgement on such matters would be easy. :-)
Xeo
Xeo
18:58
You'd just argue yourself into a corner.
@Morwenn In the other direction: "Don't blame me for the fact that competent programming, as I view it as an intellectual possibility, will be too difficult for "the average programmer" — you must not fall into the trap of rejecting a surgical technique because it is beyond the capabilities of the barber in his shop around the corner."
I remember some teacher once saying that « C++ designers didn't understand anything to object-oriented programming » when his covariance/contravariance example failed because he didn't know that overloads in a derived class may shadow those from the base class.
@JerryCoffin A few weeks ago a colleague who I've been working with for 6 years asked me what mutable means.
that's what happens when you encounter obscure features
@Xeo Probably--but then we'd all think of some stupid pun, and laugh about it.
Xeo
Xeo
18:59
I've had one person ask that - but about the mutable after a lambda
@JerryCoffin Strange man.
@Morwenn lol
@JerryCoffin Ok. I'll do that from now on :)
@StackedCrooked I guess he was more angry about the fact that I could spot the problem with his example and prove him that C++ had the expected behaviour with an additional using while he was in the middle of bashing the language, but that's another story.
That's cool. I only started learning C++ "seriously" when preparing for an internship at a gaming company. Before that my knowledge certainly wouldn't have surpassed that of a teacher.
Well, I still never had the opportunity to use my C++ skills at work .____.
I guess I could be quite counter-productive.
@StackedCrooked Depending on the teacher, it might be easy though :p
19:16
@JerryCoffin Hmm that seems neat
19:49
Oh wow.
Supreme Court of UK ruled that Parliament will have to vote on whether or not to enact Brexit.
And that the executive branch can't just pull the trigger.
@ThePhD Have you read the stars? :p
Yeah, I'm just getting to them. ;;
I'm allowed to be slow, okay? ;~;
^_^
Unlike Sol :D
q_q pls no remind me
Also
> which depicts the "pollen-amorous" relationship
@ThePhD No, it's the High Court.
19:52
I like to tease you because it's easy :3
the government will appeal to the Lords
tfw pollen-amory is a thing.
> ecosexuality as a means of moving beyond the "depressing Al Gore stuff"
Yeah, you know.
The shit that matters.
@ThePhD Impossible: « pollen » yields no results on Rule 34.
@Morwenn I don't know, I'm sure someone has sexualized "tree" or "plant" in some way.
Hell, there's probably a sexualized mountain out there.
@ThePhD That's called « tentacles ».
19:55
@Morwenn Wouldn't the more correct term be tendrils?
Like. Tentacles have to be on a creature of some sort and have some additional critera, no?
... Fuck, now I want to look this up.
> (zoology) A hair-like tentacle.
Welp.
@Mysticial I'm really worried about this election.
I don't believe my fellow Americans are going to make the right decision and I think the electorate is going to vote for Trump.
I... really, really don't want to live in a Trump America.
user406009
20:11
Luckily, the odds are against Trump.
user406009
35.3% for Trump as of now.
Some put it a lot closer than that.
Like 44% v. 44%.
Ell
Ell
@ThePhD you're doomed either way
Xeo
Xeo
Best course of action is to nuke it from orbit withdraw all life and start over from 1492
with a modern mindset
@Xeo Can I room with you in Germany after I graduate? :D
Xeo
Xeo
20:14
We're always hiring!
Nice!
So far I'm hearing nothing from like the 8 lines I put out to get hired.
And 3 already said "Fuck you".
Ugh, is the llvm's apt packaged clang somewhat broken again? Telling me it can't find #include_next <stddef.h> :|
@ThePhD 8 lines? Doesn't sound a lot.
@EtiennedeMartel I'm looking for more, still.
More lines or more places?
20:17
Oh. Places, obviously. I've applied to 8 places.
MAY I REMIND YOUUU that Ludia is hiring like crazy?
I tried getting hired at Ludia, remember?
There were problems obtaining a Canadian Visa to allow me to work there.
And then the recruiter went quiet after telling me he'd talk to them, after I contacted him a few times wondering what was going on.
I ended up picking the other internship in the end because of all the quiet.
@StackedCrooked More seriously, I honestly do try to be careful about ensuring that I don't push the envelope too far, and that when I use a technique others may have difficultly understanding, that I'm getting some real benefit in exchange for making them deal with it.
@Borgleader It actually is in a way--along with OS/2 1.x, pretty the only things ever written that try to use x86 hardware the way it was really designed to work.
No, * doesn't mean anything. It's a comment decorator, effectively, e.g. //* This is a comment */. You can also use it like (*****printf)("Hello world\n"); to decorate the page nicely. — Kerrek SB 2 mins ago
@ThePhD Same. I have a very strong feeling it's gonna swing red because Trump supporters are very enthusiastic and Hillary supporters aren't. So it's gonna be an issue of turnout.
20:28
sarcasm detected
Trump has mostly supporters who buy into all the racist rhetoric. Whereas Hillary is so far left that most of her "supporters" are actually Trump haters (like me) and are less enthusiastic about showing up. Btw, I voted already. But my state doesn't matter.
Xeo
Xeo
did you vote Hillary or a third choice?
Hillary. Voting for a 3rd party candidate is a waste. I'm not a huge fan of Hillary myself since I don't like some her economic plans. (some of which - if passed will potentially negatively affect my job) But anything is better than someone's who trigger happy with nukes.
Hillary has some downsides, but she has no actual competition this election cycle
I voted third party, not because I really like its candidate, but simply because I can't stand either Trump or Clinton (and living in California, know there's no chance of my vote making a difference anyway).
20:42
Depends on state. Here in Washington you can pretty much safely vote third party if you want to show your support to someone else, at no risk of changing the state outcome from Hillary.
Race condition. :) What Jerry said.
@GManNickG Optimistic, non-locking, non-blocking protocol.
My "wish" for this election is for Hillary to win. And the house to remain split. Democratic majority in the senate and republican majority in the house. Socially, I'm extreme left. But I care about my job. And the republican house will block any of the extreme far-left measures that threaten my job.
nwp
nwp
following the logic from Michael Moore the email-thing might win the election for Hillary
@GManNickG I think my state (Illinois) is even deeper blue than Washington. lol
I didn't vote in the 2008 and 2012 elections because I didn't care enough. Even though I've been left-leaning all my life, the republican candidate was tolerable.
Not this time.
nwp
nwp
The logic being that the way Trump wins is Trump voters voting and Hillary voters not voting, because they don't actually like her and she will most likely win anyways. A scandal like that might scare Trump haters enough into voting for Hillary.
Xeo
Xeo
20:48
@JerryCoffin Pessimistic, in the case of elections.
@Xeo I'm pessimistic. The protocol should be more pessimistic, but isn't. :-)
“Beryl Lieff Benderly” — What part of the name is family name and what part is given name? It is probably a Jewish name.
@wilx Yes.
Mars: Inside the High-Risk, High-Stakes Race to the Red Planet
If the trip doesn’t kill you, living there might. http://www.nationalgeographic.com/magazine/2016/11/spacex-elon-musk-exploring-mars-planets-space-science/
massive and interesting looking article
going thru it now
@wilx I get a lot of emails for "Etienne De". A lot of people don't know what to do when presented with a name that has more than two words.
20:55
@Mysticial Extreme left? Are you a communist? Do you have a Stalin shrine or how extreme? :)
@EtiennedeMartel Yeah.
@wilx Extreme economic left is communist. I'm social left.
@wilx What's "left" in the US is the middle elsewhere in the world.
@Mysticial Social left?
@wilx Gay rights, gender equality, etc...
That's how Bernie managed to call himself "socialist" despite pushing for mild social democratic ideas.
20:58
@Mysticial Oh. I am surprised you do not have me plonked yet then like @Ven. :)
@Mysticial To be fair, part of those "far left" ideas is better job security and a stronger welfare safety net. Your job is less well protected if you leave everything to the market.
Ell
Ell
@Mysticial that raises the question

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