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00:00
timestamp set
those trumpets were found in his tomb
On the desktop chips, you have 2 FPU ports. But you can 4-issue. So you have 2 extra slots per cycle to do "other stuff" like loop counters, prefetching, load/stores.
so the last time they were played before the recording
was in 1323 BC
On Xeon Phi, you still have 2 FPU ports, but the core can only 2-issue. So there's no room for anything else.
Any instruction that is not computation wastes a cycle in the FPU.
So the idea is that 4FMAPs will let you occupy 4 FPU slots in one instruction. And free up the other 3 to do other shit.
Tree Fiddy
c belongs to null set
next
@Mikhail :+1:
00:13
[Shit Posting Intensifies]
:±1:
sorry, I decided to spend all day doing OGL
Woah, where's all this shit come from?
@AsafFisher Thankfully, nominations are closed and primary votes being cast. If you'd like, we could cast you out of here, so you could feel like you were part of the action.
17 messages moved to bin
10 messages moved to bin
@Mysticial No clue
00:26
@Mikhail Damn, the LRDIMM premium is almost 2x the price the registered stuff.
@Mysticial Have you checked Amazon? Its like $900
Not yet. I was looking Newegg.
@sehe praise the sehe
> This is the proposed Boost.Outcome library, a Boost C++ 14 library providing a factory and family of policy driven lightweight monadic value-or-error transports with the convenience ...
Oh boy. That starts off a bit heavy handed doesn't it
Desktop DDR4 16GB sticks have dropped below $700 for 128GB. And it comes with a pair of fancy fans...
00:31
OH, you're comparing to desktop RAM. Yeah then indeed, its going to be more expensive.
@Mysticial RAM with fans?!
RDIMMs are ~$800 for 4 x 32GB.
are heatsinks not enough anymore
@Mikhail Not intentionally. I've been resisting the urge to dump my 8 x 8GB for 8 x 16GB.
@Mysticial RAM is the only solution to IO
00:32
But instead of spending $700 on memory, I dropped $500 for a pair of 8TB drives.
You should have gotten this: lian-li.com/en/dt_portfolio/pc-y6
for the real fans
@Mysticial That sounds like a good deal
@Mikhail Oh nice!
0xFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF >> (64 - bits)
Creates a mask of 1's that's (bits) wide, right?
@sehe I was hoping for them to go under $200 per drive. But after watching it for a year now, no change. And I've delayed it long enough to the point that I'm spilling my backups into my compute drives.
00:34
@ThePhD another way is to start from static_cast<whatever>(0) and subtract one
@ThePhD UB if bits == 0.
@AlexM. They are if you don't overclock the ram.
It wasn't always like this though. Back in 2008, Intel servers used FB-DIMMs which had their own processor on it. Those needed fans. Otherwise, the memory module would get over 130C.
If it was water proof, it would've made a pretty good humidifier.
superannuation here is almost like government backed scam
but can those sticks of RAM run Crysis?
No, but some ram is, indeed, required to run Crysis
@AlexM. That server was my very first computer that could run Crysis at any settings.
00:38
nice I was never really able to run Crysis maxed out
I am getting 10% return on my own managed money and average of 2% on compulsory superannuation funds. 2% is below inflation, so in a way super is getting less and less
back when I got a capable PC I just installed Crysis 2
@Mikhail Is that UB?
Crysis 2 isn't that bad. But I haven't tried Crysis 1 in a while.
I liked 1 more 2 was more of a railway shooter kind of
1 was more like here's an island do what you want
00:39
@Mysticial Wait a 64-shift down of a 64-bit number doesn't produce 0 ?
@ThePhD Nope. Shift is only defined for 0 - 63.
On x86/x64, the shift instruction discards all the but relevant bottom bits.
maybe std::bitset, but I've never used it
... So how do you deal with the last bit?
> It therefore works perfectly with exceptions and RTTI disabled and its CI compiles per commit typical use cases of Outcomes and counts the assembler operations emitted by GCC, clang and MSVC to ensure code bloat is kept optimally minimal.
Optimally minimal. Yeah.
So even if the compiler wasn't an ass and compiled it as is, shifting a 64-bit integer by 64 bits is a no-op.
00:41
Like. Do I shift down 63, and then shfit down 1 after?
@sehe nothing worse than a mediocre minimal
by definition
I'd prefer the least minimal
@ThePhD ((uint64_t)1 << bits) - 1
Honestly, though, has anybody tried bitset?
^^ Actually. That just moves the problem. If you need it work with bits = 64, you're still fucked. The only standard compliant way is branch.
00:46
@Mikhail yes. It's inflexible but on point. Integral conversions are rotten IIRC
boost::dynamic_bitset is much more versatile (though surprising the order for LSB->MSB or v.v. cannot be configured). It also has more overhead because it can allocate
IIRC dynamic_bitset has the surprise pitfall that any mixing of bitsets of different capacities is a runtime error
@Mysticial ...and years before they, they used Rambus "RIMM" modules that were a bit the same way (not quite as bad, but in 2000 the idea of a memory module needing a heat-spreader at all seemed pretty ridiculous).
@sehe wow that’s rough
I've more or less taken to abusing ICL interval sets as bitsets
The compressed storage makes it quite efficient for many loads
Not sure what about if you need actual shifts (I usually just need masking/mapping)
> In usage Outcome is generally "stupid easy" to program with, especially if you're already used to std::optional
if(!unique.has_value())
  return BOOST_OUTCOME_V1_NAMESPACE::as_void(unique);
auto var(std::move(std::move(unique).value()))
Super simple stuff.
Apparently that's the only dance that ensures optimal codegen on all compilers
are Boost reviews still as severe as they used to be? that code definitively needs a stern talking to
I'm doing some weird shit for "aligned" access, lmao.
00:57
@LucDanton This is not yet peer reviewed. Niall is proposing it.
Regardless I'm not convinced Boost Review standards are high enough.
It seems largely to depend on the review manager/the level of community interest
that’s true
std bitset was useful to me
Hence we have libraries like Boost Iostreams
it helped me find a coliru bug
completely unrelated to bitset
but I was using bitset when I found it
What the hell is a coliru bug
00:58
something about caching and me getting invalid results
Ooooh. That's a bug
Nov 1 at 18:50, by Alex M.
this thing http://coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/9bbcf6a2d4bde533 doesn't output anything but this does http://coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/80598a355b0ca578
this was it
Sup lovelies
@jaggedSpire Hey <3
> (except unfortunately on the Dinkumware STL where fetching a STL error category e.g. std::generic_category() uses atomics).
Why aren't we surprised
01:00
@Borgleader <3
@JerryCoffin Actually come to think of it. The hard water would've made it a pretty shitty humidifier. There's so many nooks and crannies for the minerals to build up in a memory module.
And that shit is really hard to remove since it's like cemented onto the surface that evaporated the water from.
s/space/earth atmosphere/
I assume hard water is a problem for all humidifiers
01:05
@Telkitty I seem to have a different idea of "the edge of space". I'd say where the edge of space touches the beginning of time, not where it touches the fricking stratosphere :(
@Telkitty yeah. Hugely disappointing
@sehe for $75000? you wish >_<
@Mikhail In some way or another. The evaporative ones usually use filters. But they have ones that are specially designed to not need it. The minerals simply don't bond to the hot plate that well. So you just wash it out. UIUC is notoriously bad in that the water there probably has more (red colored) hard water than the water itself.
I destroyed 3 humidifiers while I was there.
I thought telkitty had a horse for an avatar now.
@Mysticial o_o I thought you needed the humidifiers while in California, how dry can Illinois be?
01:07
it's an un-horned unicorn
So I tried the ultrasonic humidifiers that don't collect hard water. But it kicks it into the air and condenses on everything in the room. All my computers and furniture got covered with hard water dust. So I stopped using it.
@LucDanton In the winter, Chicago is dry enough to cause static on everything you touch.
I've been running a pair of humidifiers for a couple weeks now. The hard water in Chicago is nowhere near as bad as in UIUC.
well shit
The Chicago winters are bad enough where I generally don't dare to open my computers or even get near the USB ports unless I have my humidifier running and the humidity is at least 60%.
I’m glad I stick to near the ocean, and I don’t even like seafood
@Telkitty nullicorn - I might change my SO handle to that. But I'm lazy
01:12
I am kind of thinking salted fish when I see long time residents of beach area
@sehe would you do it for a nullipop?
My main motivation for using a humidifier isn't the static or the inability to touch my computers. But it's my skin. I start bleeding all over my body. And it's really itchy especially around my hands and fingers.
@Mysticial myself it’s the nose, makes it hard to sleep
I become aware of my nose hair recently and it's not helping at bed time :/ - you can keep it short and it still itches when you lay down and about to sleep
the lack of thermal insulation means I have to crank up the shitty electric convectors :(
01:14
@LucDanton no clue
@LucDanton Forget the electric heaters, just pile up on humidifiers. Kills 2 bids with one stone.
@Telkitty It it trips you, that's a sign it's too long
I cut it regularly, thank you
when you are not thinking of it, it's not there so it feels
@Mysticial what kind is that, steam humidifier?
I suffer from hayfever so I think about my nostrils a lot lately :/
01:18
@LucDanton Yeah. The evaporative ones. Produces both moisture and heat.
I’ll be looking into it, thanks for the tip
The reason why the humidity is so low in the Chicago is that the winters are just fucking cold. It's below freezing outside and all the moisture condenses. But inside, the amount of moisture in the air is the same, but at room temperature. So the weather report says the outside humidity at 90% (Well no shit, it's below freezing. There should be nothing in the air.) But inside it's more like 10%.
I've found that I need at least 50% humidity to not have any skin problems.
At home in the Bay Area, it hovers around 40% all year. Which is still okay.
@Mysticial makes sense. I would have thought the lakes would offset the continental climate, but I guess it is far inland
I'm used to mild winters
oh and the no gulf stream thing
On the other hand, anything above 80% humidity becomes a breathing liability. I've gone above that a few times when I didn't keep an eye on my humidifiers.
God this is so fucking dumb.
static_cast<bool>( some_integer ); and it floods my screen with warnings in VC++.
Like I didn't goddamn intend for this.
Can't write any fucking generic code, for FUCK'S sake.
01:47
And whenever I get it above 90% humidity, it will start raining whenever I open the refrigerator or the window to the (sub-zero) air outside.
Question.
I have a 16 bit-packed struct.
I get it out somewhere else as an int32_t
16 of the int32_t's bits do not belong to the struct.
I do an OR where I only mess with the 16 bits that belong to the struct, but on the int32_t.
UB ?
I preserve the bits of the int32_t because it's OR'd with itself and then bits that are in the proper position for the 16-bit struct.
02:22
Bit complementing is ~integral_value, I think...
So that, and an AND...
02:35
Fuck.
Bitfields don't pack well when they're not on byte or word boundaries.
RIP 24-bit struct.
02:56
@Mysticial demineralised water, right?
> leau.bordeaux-metropole.fr
> leau
absolument dégoûtant cc @GundolfGundelfinger
@LucDanton I don't bother with distilled water. My humidifiers churn through about 4 gallons (15 liters) of water a day. Buying that much distilled water is completely impractical. Distilled water is only necessary for the ultrasonic humidifiers if you don't want to cake all your furniture. But the evaporative humidifiers will leave it behind in the humidifier itself. But you'll need to either replace the filters or clean it out on a regular basis.
@Mysticial I’ll be honest, I’m getting kinda lost. Way too many aromatherapy vaporizers etc., I could use a wattage target for my tiny flat
This is also increases the heat capacity of the air, making it more effective for cooling computer hardware.
@Mysticial ?? do you plug that into the water mains
@LucDanton There are generally 2 types of humidifiers: Evaporative and Ultrasonic.
03:04
hang on
@Mysticial it’s a language problem: humidificateur can refer to different types of devices :/ so if I had another keyword such as a wattage target I could weed out the irrelevant stuff
@LucDanton oh...
Evaporative does what it's name implies. It humidifies by evaporating water into the air by boiling it. Ultrasonic humidifiers use ultrasound to molecularize the water molecules and spit it into the air.
Evaporative humidifiers also produce a lot of heat (since they boil water). Thus they consume a lot more power. Because the water is boiled off, the minerals stay behind which requires periodic cleaning or replacement of the filters.
I actually did try with vapeur (steam) as a keyword but I still get ultrasonic results lol
Ultrasonic humidifiers use very little power. But they kick all the water and the minerals into the air. Those minerals will land on all your furniture and stuff.
@ThePhD needs more auto static const std::size_t , for example. Idk, too lazy to read more
or even void** jumper = static_cast<void**>(static_cast<void*>(&b));
03:15
> Humidificateur numérique
does it run linux
@Mysticial for some reason there are hybrid ones that can run hot or cold lol
> Genre : unisex
@Mikhail Ooh, that's an error. Thanks for catching that.
itsy_bitsy is a nice library name for bit manip.
@LucDanton No, I don't plug it into the water system. I manually pour water into it.
@Mysticial re: dust everywhere, there are ultrasonic humidifiers that claim to filter the output to prevent that
@LucDanton I've never tried them. So I can't comment on it.
Btw, ultrasonic humidifiers are also a lot weaker. Unlike the evaporative ones, they can't run through a gallon of water overnight.
Unless you get like 4 of them.
But I am definitely biased against the ultrasonic ones because of the mineral caking.
manufacturer sez a filter change every 3 months
03:29
It's one thing when it lands on my bed or my desk. It's another when it lands on my fucking motherboard.
@Mysticial heh, it’s a 2l capacity deal
But they're good for the environment. Minerals are an important part of nutrition :<
@Aaron3468 Not when they land on my computers or my Anime wallscrolls.
Are the ultrasonic ones cheaper?
@Aaron3468 I think so.
Not by much though.
03:33
I'd imagine a bedsheet spread over the top will work as a makeshift filter
@Aaron3468 looks that way on my end
But then you're back to the same problem of replacing filters with a bit less wattage
@Aaron3468 I'm not convinced that will work. Unless the holes in the bedsheets are smaller than the mineral molecules.
And even if that was the case, the minerals will probably start blocking the holes completely.
this may very well be a misconception of mine, but don’t the ultrasonic ones kick off a lot of mist? isn’t that bad for walls etc.?
relative to, well, steam
Its terrible, but I assume he rents
03:36
@Mikhail so do I but that’s not a reason to be a dick lol
@LucDanton Depends on where you aim it. The evaporative ones go straight up. But you still want to keep them away from the walls.
@Mysticial fair point. It'll cut down on lot of dust, but the dustiest dust will still get through
The ultrasonic ones can be aimed.
oh that explains the shapes and spouts
oh there are ultrasonic nebulizers, I think I was thinking of that
I upgraded from my 4 year old Galaxy S4 to the S7 Edge and I'm happy to say it's only been 4 hours and the only thing I need to finish transferring are 7,000 text messages. I've got all my important settings, data, apps, and root settings back :)
03:41
Didn't some of the S7 Edge's also blow up?
you’d think text would be among the easier things to transfer
@Mysticial sure, but only when they are powered
Note 7 was a bit higher than usual explosion incidences. Everything else this generation is about equal safety-wise
@LucDanton Some of them blow up even when not powered IIRC.
@LucDanton Yeah, I agree... Samsung at least gives a convenient way to transfer them. Otherwise I'd be in trouble
> Microprocesseur
why is that an advertised feature
03:48
I love it when I get served hard drive ads on MAL.
They sure know their audience.
Google adsense is tracking you .-.
@Mysticial noise seems to be a recurring concern with these products, do you sleep with yours on?
@LucDanton Yes. They definitely aren't quiet.
> No write dust
oh good
"write dust"?
Maybe it's referring to the room mineral deposits from the ultrasonic humidifiers. Evaporative ones don't have that problem.
I assume it’s a 230V device and yet it advertises the output in gallons
@Mysticial oh yeah I assume 'white dust' was meant
I think the Italian company hired an American intern tourist to do the translation
Yeah, it's advertising the one value that you can compare them by. Voltage etc is implementation detail that may/may not be important
@Mysticial so what with your needs do you use a ~800W beast or so? I’m thinking I want to run more of a 300W thing
I'm actually pretty happy about that bitfield code I wrote and how neatly it can interact with sol2.
Das nice.
03:59
:3
qq jagged pls
@Aaron3468 what? you def. don’t want to plug most 110V devices into 220/230V mains
or alternatively, you don’t want to use gallons for a European public
Well the detail of voltage and units is usually solved by brick and mortar stores, but I suppose it would firstly help to know which plugs it has
@ThePhD but I missed out of the catfacing earlier today because I was at work..
Either way, that product doesn't look like it was made to be sold internationally
04:02
@Aaron3468 heh, I don’t know how it is for humidifiers but usually consumer protection regulations dictate how and what information must be displayed
Not in China
the regulations are for items sold, not items made
Yeah, the same syllogism is still applicable. For example, my local asian grocery store sell expired items. How else do you explain that?
@jaggedSpire Good. Now get back to work. D:<
did you check under the store to see whether it was really made in China?
04:05
@LucDanton no but the owner was
@ThePhD nope already spent nine hours at work today
@jaggedSpire :<
more work comes tomorrow because tomorrow is another (work)day
@LucDanton I don't actually sustain my at max. But when you fire them up the first time, it'll take a while before they start to work since most of the stuff in environment will absorb all the moisture before any of it is left. I had to run both of my humidifiers at full power for several days pulling whatever the max wattage was before the actually humidity started to go up.
@ThePhD eh, it's voluntary. I get to arrange my schedule however I like provided I show up for several hours on every normal work day, and I wind up doing 40 hours
I get 4-hour Fridays :D
04:08
I question the devices which advertise an output of 8l a day when they have a 5l tank
that come with a handy built-in five hour buffer of "oh shit this needs to be done but it isn't" without me feeling exhausted
@LucDanton You just have to refill them more than once a day.
@Mysticial What did the FinTech interviews you go to make you whiteboard / do?
makes sense
04:13
@ThePhD They can range from easy to hard. Most of the harder ones are data-structure heavy or hardware-specific optimizations like caches and stuff.
@Mysticial Well, fuck me. I still can't implement a red-black tree from memory.
Maybe a hash table.
@ThePhD I wouldn't be able to either.
What data structures do you end up using in FinTech a lot anyhow? /cc @GundolfGundelfinger
RBT is more complicated. But you'll at least need to know all the basic stuff like hash tables, linked lists, vectors, run-time complexities.
@ThePhD Hash tables, lockless queues.
It also helps to have a basic understanding of the network stack.
04:17
Uh.
The ethernet port sends, uh.
Packets 'n' shit. ;;
tfw no networking courses here
And know how C++ maps to hardware. And basic compiler related stuff.
Like if someone asks you why can't virtual methods be templated, be ready to derive the answer by knowing how both features work at the compiler and hardware levels.
Isn't templated virtuals kind of like the export feature that got gutted from C++?
04:43
Holy shit, OpenGL race conditions are impossible to debug. My program might be yanking a buffer while its being rendered, but I'm just not sure. Is Vulkan easier? Is there some magic library that can give me useful error messages?
@ThePhD ARRAYS
and state machines
@LucDanton alleau ici bordeau
(also that GW2 OST you linked to is pretty neat, piano is a nice and unusual touch)
ikr, was pleasantly surprised
@ThePhD I can't either
I mean I know how it works but I really cba remembering the rotations
Same for AVL, even.
Actually implementing an AVL tree isn't too complicated if you go for a pure functional approach
That simplifies the rotations a lot
Probably true for RBT too I guess
But then that's ~inefficient~
@LucDanton Today I discovered that std::function allocator support is broken
I had a TODO list with:
- [ ] Add pooled alloc to callback-heavy paths.
rip
oh dear :( I don’t think anybody has any real solution to this
The real, clean solution would be to completely invert the control flow but code base is too large
04:56
if it’s any consolation rolling an ad-hoc solution if your needs are simple enough (i.e. allocate the thing, call it later) should be straightforward
Yes probably the way I'm headed
Also FWIG there is no current proposals to fix that broken support
@Mikhail OpenGL with shaders? That'll rely so much on your gpu debugging tools :/ The problem with shaders is that you've got to build an entire pipeline between the gpu and your code before you can do anything meaningful.
@GundolfGundelfinger it can’t be band-aided over, unless we’ve all been missing something
Rapptz mentioned this
lmao delegate colouring
05:01
Looks like the debuggers for vulkan are a bit easier to find than for gl shaders
@GundolfGundelfinger it’s been a while since I’ve been immersed in that stuff but IIRC that’s a different sort of optimization not related to allocation, is that relevant to your needs?
fun fact: C++1z makes it possible to have a nicer yet interface for this
@LucDanton Not really relevant indeed, but a good starting point for customization
@LucDanton There you go
@GundolfGundelfinger nah
> Send Firefox to your phone and unleash your Internet.
@LucDanton okay ._.
Android is a mess that reminds me of installing 5 or 10 linux packages to perform one task. Except that the programs on android are generally less polished and full of ads...
05:09
@GundolfGundelfinger it’s the literal opposite of customization, i.e. specialization of some use cases to improve the generated code
> Either way, we’ll be done in 2017.
oh I guess I can stop with all the 'C++1z' then
@GundolfGundelfinger fun fact: C++17 will make it possible to have a nicer yet interface for this
05:28
@LucDanton oh yes, I meant "a good starting point for my customisations"
Meaning that I can easily modify the thing
@LucDanton famous last words
@GundolfGundelfinger I kinda suggest against the std::shared_ptr<void> though
man, GCC7 sure has seen a lot of inheriting constructor regressions (also 6.1)
Fuck, do we have =default for equality operators in MSVC2015?
05:53
I bought a new screen for the phone, but youtube tutorial on replacing it seems to be really complicated ...
probably have to end up getting someone else to fix it
@LucDanton Why is that? It seems like a cheap way of getting the right semantics
@LucDanton but new fancy optimisations
@GundolfGundelfinger std::function<Sig> copies don’t affect one another (any more than the underlying things do)
06:10
But what if all my callables are immutable
one size can’t fit all
@GundolfGundelfinger immutable in the C++ sense doesn’t save you from spooky action at a distance
and no purity in the type system
Fuck. I spent the last 50 minutes debugging, tracing the problem to a failing equality operator overload, noticed the generated ASM didn't match, and the problem went away when I recompiled.
job well done, time for a coffee/water break
No, I want my time back
fuck, fuck, fuck, fuck, fuck, fuck, fuck, fuck, fuck,
So it was caused by some out-of-date object files?
06:22
I can't even
I don't know
Its weird, the comparison operator was in a .h file and when I changed the header it triggered a recompile of my cpp file. But this didn't fix the problem. But when I recompiled the whole program, the problem went away. Maybe MSVC does some kind of caching?
Happens a lot
@Mikhail Yeah, I see it occasionally in MSVC. Some modules which should be recompiled on a header modification don't. And shit happens.
So the guy who ran that 22.4 trillion digit computation of Pi said he ran out of disk space.
Turns out his drive array genuinely didn't have enough space to begin with.
That's hilarious
20 x 6 TB = 120 TB (decimal suffix)
The program reports that it needs 113 TiB (binary suffix)
he probably runs RAID?
06:37
113 TiB = 124.3 TB
124.3 > 120
The program estimated that it needed 113 TiB. But it actually only used 110 TiB.
But 110 TiB = 121 TB.
121 TB is still greater than 120 TB. AHAHAHA
I suspect he overlooked the TiB vs. TB part. I had a request some years ago from someone who wanted the clarification whether my units are binary or decimal.
That's when I changed everything to GiB, TiB, etc... to make it clear.
Shouldn't your program check that the user isn't doing something stupid?
The program currently does not have the ability to read disk space. That's something that's been on my to-do list for years. Just never got around to it.
int CaptureDialog::getDiskMB(const QString& dirname)
{
auto dirletter = dirname.at(0).toLatin1();
unsigned long long i64FreeBytesToCaller=0,
i64TotalBytes=0,
i64FreeBytes=0;
//todo whats is the encoding of ExA?
//auto pszDrive = std::to_string(dirletter) + ":\\";
auto pszDrive = std::string(1, dirletter) + ":\\";
auto grab_me = pszDrive.c_str();
auto fResult = GetDiskFreeSpaceExA(grab_me,
reinterpret_cast<PULARGE_INTEGER>(&i64FreeBytesToCaller),
reinterpret_cast<PULARGE_INTEGER>(&i64TotalBytes),
there
Returns int? ahahahaha
Thanks. I'll bookmark that for when I get to it.
I should stop posting code, it might jeopardize my future employment.
06:46
Wait why?
Ven
Ven
07:07
Hi
@GundolfGundelfinger welp, I’m putting it on since I have a bunch of compiling to do
Ven
Ven
07:34
@LucDanton c'est vrai, on parle plus souvent d'I/eau
ah bon ? jsuis pas au courant hahahaha ._.
@Mysticial Because it has //auto pszDrive = std::to_string(dirletter) + ":\\";?
sup buddies
Ven
Ven
yo
07:49
How I imagine this code came to be: "Let's use fancy ES6 destructuring" "Seems hard to read" "Fear not! I'll leave… https://twitter.com/i/web/status/798497274653503488
That's. Appalling.
Ven
Ven
:|
Remember when JS wasn't a real programming language?
Oh yeah. I remember when I wasn't sure if JS would be powerful enough to implement a multiple-choice quiz.
@sehe wow, I wonder what's the idea behind that.

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