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00:00
You do?
That's bullshit, no way the guy owns a bed.
I take my datetimes to bed.
@sehe so... average humans are being average humans?
@rightfold Bullshit. Pics or it didn't happen. :P
user1804599
@sehe I've had one and only one date, and it involved bed
user1804599
00:02
#ImagineIf user accounts were a commutative monoid, so you could use a service anonymously, or sign in with multiple accounts in any order.
should've add BREAKING
user1804599
Abstract algebra-driven UX.
You took your bed out for a date?
@Abyx trololol. I guess from your vantage point that would be almost correct.
user1804599
Fellatio took place.
user1804599
00:03
It was fun.
user1804599
Less a date and more a one-night stand.
I don't think any bed was ever involved in felatio in my case.
@sehe welp I should have say "rednecks" or another term for such trash
Ok, I'll concede that for humour value
Oh. Dayum SE finally fixed robots.txt
user1804599
00:06
That when you need a a big vessel. A relation ship, so to say
hubris
user1804599
@sehe The relation shrinks after a VACUUM.
Also when the water is particularly cold
user1804599
@sehe I learned about this SQL killer feature recently.
You already mentioned that, I suppose
Unless is wasn't about the "random" data sample
00:09
@sehe what was the concern?
user1804599
WITH ORDINALITY
Nothing. Just that it was scary easy to use google to dragnet SE chats
@rightfold One more time, with ordinality!
@rightfold WITH 90KG PROJECTILE OVER 300 METERS
user1804599
Appends an incrementing number to each output row of a sproc in a FROM clause.
@sehe I’m not sure it’s any different. /rooms/dd is the 'live' room, but everything ends up in the transcript at /transcript/dd
00:12
@rightfold postgresonline.com/journal/archives/… It's nice. But "killer"? Mmm. Not convinced
@LucDanton Did I make this rookie mistake... Oh my
That's silly of me. Thanks for pointing out.
user1804599
@sehe ok ok how about LATERAL
user1804599
It's obscure but super useful.
@rightfold I linked you to that
@LucDanton :)
user1804599
00:14
I use it for doing a limit in a join IIRC
Wait. That's the onset of dementia. Lobster not exactly recollecting specific applications of (obscure) language constructs
4
Hackathon standards for success over the years: 2009: Built a prototype 2012: Rendered Hello world 2016: Configured build pipeline
I thought hackathons were mostly hookup parties nowadays. /cc @Mikhail
user1804599
@sehe Ik krijg huilbuien van de codebase in kwestie.
I'm afraid that's burnout. Unless it's hyperbola
About 350 people worldwide have been cryogenically frozen since the process was invented in the 60s, though there is no proof that it would be possible to bring any of them back to life
TIL
00:27
a Donald comic [de] to lighten the mood
2
00:39
@Mysticial "Hookathons"
hookerthon ... kinky ...
Yeah, if you have a sexual fetish for loosing your money
Did you guys see that one? What do you think?
00:54
I can't tell anything from that data
just look at 2016
Do you think ice levels are linked to human lunacy, like the full moon?
world population is still growing, more people = more energy required to sustain them at current technology level if we were to maintain our lifestyle
@Mikhail Oh theyre linked to lunacy alright. The lunacy that we can keep going like this :P
no one has anyone else to blame
00:57
I blame the Chinease
Youre secretly Donald Trump arent you?
only that China has 5 times more people ...
@Mikhail The graphs are pretty clear. And damning. However, the trend gap is so huge I can't help but assume error
yeah, by mass only 3 times more ...
like I said: more people more emission
let's not ignore the elephant in the room
01:03
Here is a more recent one:
You can see its ~2:1
2 mins ago, by Telkitty
like I said: more people more emission
U.S. Population (LIVE): 325,027,425
China Population (LIVE) 1,384,749,797
Average US weight 80 kg, average Chinese weight 60 kg
Oh god. More "us" and "them" noise
Sorry, I feel for the shit posting
do bigger cows emit more green house gas than smaller cows?
01:17
Can you stop. Focus. Climate is not about you.
01:29
Did they fix casting integers to enums? So that the integer is always sandwiched into the enum range?
Lmao
You know what's amazing?
@Mikhail What do you mean. "sandwiched" is not on my list of mathematical or logical terms.
The F# default syntax analyzer in Visual Studio can handle Ocaml's syntax fairly well.
The highlighting isn't there but it actually errors proper on some bits.
@sehe Like qBounds, or that new thing they added to the std... Like a sandwich...
01:37
Very interesting stuff there
I just want a runtime error if I'm about to convert to an invalid enum, but the only way I can see of doing that is implementing a switch for each time, by hand, that runtime errors on the default (not implemented case). Or some flag in clang.
enums do not work that way
fix them
flags have their uses, what’s to fix?
I need a run-time error when I'm converting from some dangerous GUI control value to my enum.
01:41
you have to write the function, there’s no one-size-fits-all for enums
I want language support, like maybe dynamic_cast could do it for me
@Mikhail if it’s any consolation, that sort of stuff is typical fodder in reflection discussions
if it’s any desolation, I don’t know when reflection will ship
Oh man. Some of these are too nice
@Mikhail Have you been drinking
@Mikhail Write your logic
@Mikhail Yep, you've been drinking
01:59
> If enough votes are earned in a tag with 100+ total questions, the badge will be automatically created and awarded.
How long does this take? 3am UTC?
02:21
It turns out that implementing multiple dispatch is more complicated than I initially thought.
6
02:47
Multiple dispatch for what?
woah
> Improved code generation of loops: Support for automatic vectorization of division of constant integers, better identification of memset patterns.
^^ That's not good for me...
The "better identification of memset patterns" part.
@Mikhail well that's horrifying
That's an optimization that almost always backfires when you're manually optimizing.
Still no AVX512. I have a feeling Microsoft will never support it even when the hardware becomes available. They probably won't even have the XSAVE support for it in the OS.
Does Windows actually support AVX512? Doesn't the OS need to be able to save the AVX stack, etc...
03:09
I have no idea. ICC has been able to generate AVX512 on Windows for the past 2 years. But there's been no word at all from Microsoft. And there's been no word of Windows running on Knights Landing.
Yes, it needs OS support.
Which I have a feeling Microsoft hasn't done it yet, and may never will if they think AVX512 will never catch on.
And that's a reasonable assumption at this point since Intel still haven't gotten AVX512 out to consumers.
And AMD has no intention to do it either. (if you still consider them as players)
On the other hand it seems like a relativity easy thing to do, and they pushed those AMD FMA instructions quite early on.
Yeah. And they got the FMA3 + AVX2 intrinsics out before the hardware was released IIRC.
I care less about MSVC having support for AVX512 since ICC can already do it. But you can't get away from Windows itself not supporting it.
Yes, I can understand how AVX512 will be a pain in the ass to implement since there's so many fucking instructions and variants of them.
There's so many intrinsics that ICC disables the headers by default and makes the compiler recognize them directly. That way you don't need to parse the headers.
Idk, all you need to do is implement the trap/interrupt/exception so that when somebody calls an avx command in the kernel, the context is saved...
But at the same time, it fucks up intellisense.
I haven't upgraded to VS2015 update 3 yet because it breaks intellisense with AVX512.
@Mikhail Yeah. I don't think the OS support is difficult to do. But I haven't seen any confirmation of any Windows running on KNL.
I think it can run as a host, though, right?
03:18
It should. My hypothesis right now is that either Microsoft doesn't care about KNL, or they are running into problems with their processor group system.
I suspect the former.
Imagine a dystopia, where you have to pay for the instruction set support!
I won't be at all surprised if it's restricted to Windows Server or Enterprise.
no no no
But if they do that, they're gonna have a hard time getting HPC customers. Not that they ever had any in the first place.
Except for like me.
Yeah, and I also header from people that Windows ran the lapack benchmark like 3% faster...
` In June 2015, that was the only Windows machine left then ranked 436, just barely made the TOP500 (with Windows Azure dropping off earlier), and in November 2015 it dropped off the list with then all the machines on the list running on Linux (98.8%) except for six AIX Unix machines, where the top ranked of the latter at number 208`
 
1 hour later…
04:28
@Mikhail But did you header only? ( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
04:56
but what did it see
@Mikhail That's actually genuinel... oh, what @jaggedSpire said, yeah.
@ThePhD yeah it's really something, isn't it?
I knew their implementation was bad in places, but I really had no idea it was that bad
I mean, that's terribad territory there
Pff.
It's always facebook's fault
because facebook is teh evuls
I guess the fact I didn't notice their vector implementation was terrible is an indicator I am still a skrublet
05:09
I'm surprised emplace_back crashed.
also, that I've not used their C++ compiler in a serious manner in 11 (!) months
Then again, I used push_back most of the time.
@jaggedSpire Praise be, you are clean.
I don't remember what I tended to use
Doing codegen in a functional language is bullshit.
other than the assumption they automatically generated move constructors fuck you fuck
05:10
If I was in C++, C#, or even C this would be done by now. .-.
maddened gibbering
@jaggedSpire Yes, yes.
increasingly violent gestures
Let the insanity consume you, let the full terror of your catface ways scare you towards the Light.
okay, it looks like I'm still not over that
05:10
Where we have cookies and endless fields devoid of catface.
also, no
@jaggedSpire Welp. You can't blame me for not trying.
Catface gives me the strength to face terrible APIs and implementations
SPEAKING OF
guess how I spent work today
Telerik comes with theming support
all very nice, it comes with an editor for your own themes happy day, etc.
it's nice with winforms
...
Apparently, setting the theme in the constructor of a form, will introduce a bug where the form won't render outside of a specific clipping area
the layout will act like it's there, but nothing will render
the minimize, maximize, and exit buttons will just...sliiide out of view
The wages of your catface sin are deep.
This is only apparent with user-made themes
05:14
You must stop before it tears your code apart.
and only with user-made themes that are created from scratch
it is also never mentioned anywhere
I spent hours today trying to make a minimal example of a theme that displayed the bug before finding that the simplest theme possible displayed the bug
also, trying to hunt down what made their themes special
fuck
the best part is their sample themed application that they offer for you to see what your theme looks like, also displays the bug
which is why I figured the problem wasn't with my code
this
this is exactly the sort of thing that made me seek refuge in the ways of Catface
catface u say?
.... Kill me.
eeeeeeegh
05:59
You know what this language could use?
Not-shit tools.
 
1 hour later…
07:21
Haha what, SQL Server for Linux is the Windows NT kernel ported to user space with the Windows version of the appl… https://twitter.com/i/web/status/799097696959287296
6
Ven
Ven
07:47
Hi
@ThePhD it's so easy
@Ven :l
Ven
Ven
I actually don't see how codegen is any harder. If anything the pattern matching features make it nicer
Not with the LLVM API it's not.
If I was just dumping out assembly or something then sure.
Then I could just attach a blob of assembly instructions to each thing.
wadahwdk And I CAN'T CREATE RECORDS EASY SO I CAN'T SEPARATE THIS STUPID CODE OUT
LET IN LET IN LET IN LET IN LET IN
One big nested CLUSTERFUCK.
Whatever. I'm just writing this whole thing in some local definition. .-.
So I can have it hidden in a "module"- wait fuck the onyl way i can do that is with continuous let in
Ven
Ven
I do believe you're doing it wrong...
Probably.
I'll post the code here so you can tell me how shit it is... AFTER I actually have something printing out. :v
Kek.
I have to add error reporting and line reporting and crap to this parser and semantic checker at some point, so I can better understand the problems I have in my own compiler.
Uugggh and now I'm getting it again.
"Syntax Error"
Fuck you, OCaml.
This is one of those stupid things where it's some very small error in how it's supposed to be written...
08:07
hello, could anyone tell mi what is equivalent for that -> if(cin >> myInt) { ... }
morning
Morning.
are any loungers at MeetingC++ this year? :-)
Uh.
Maybe. That's the Berlin one, right?
right
I thin @sbi will be here, haven't seen him yet though
08:12
/cc @Xeo @R.MartinhoFernandes @sbi and... uh. There's other German people but I don't think all of them are even going.
I would go if I could have submitted on time.
well, @AndyProwl was here last year, so it's not only Germans
Guess I should ping all the Europeans.
heh
Bjarne Stroustrup is here this year, that's pretty exciting I think :-)
And lots of other well-known people
@Ven Does this look immediately offensive to you?
I keep getting syntax errors.
And I'm not even doing anything complex yet...
will Peter Sommerlad be there
08:18
It seems weird. I can't have multiple let expressions inside of my function.
@LucDanton he was planned to be here but he'S ill
So either Bjarne will do his talk or I'll have to move to the big hall O.O
(and that's scaring the shit our of me to be honest)
sbi
sbi
@ArneMertz Nope, I'm not this year. You can find a few of my colleagues, though, if you know who to look for. :)
But I'm all up for a beer tonight. Please drop me a note when you have decided where you go to.
@sbi well tonight is speakers dinner and the big party. So everyone will be at the Andel's.
sbi
sbi
@ArneMertz Well, there's relatively few speakers to be at the dinner. And last year we skipped the party and went to some Mexican restaurant instead, IIRC, where we had lots of fun.
Wait
Are you not allowed to have let statements in a function that don't chain with in?
08:25
@sbi nope, the Mexican restaurant was Saturday after the conference was over.
sbi
sbi
@ArneMertz Really? Well, I'm free tomorrow as well. :)
Well, if everybody is at Jens' party tonight, I might just have to crash that party. :)
Ven
Ven
@ThePhD correct
(Sorry was in the subway)
sbi
sbi
Look at these two having a candlelight dinner. Who says elderly people can't be romantic. :)
I don't see any candles ;)
sbi
sbi
@fredoverflow That's because you aren't romantic. :)
08:40
@Ven (That's fine.)
@Ven Well, that explains why all this code is kinda shit. =/
Now I don't know how I want to structure this.
Whether I just make a shitload of global variables or keep chaining with let ... in and pray for the best.
the table is empty, I am disappointed ...
I mean, dinner implies food right?
you can do without candle, how can you do without food/dinner?
Also, fuck OCaml for not allowing me to break lists up in any other way than single_element :: rest_of_list
Now I have to build a list up in reverse, and then reverse it later. Which is pretty fuckin' DUMB.
Ven
Ven
What
@Ven predefined_list :: single_element is not allowed
The way to do it with vanilla OCaml is to do predefined_list @ [single_element], but this apparently has super shit performance implications (not that I care, because I wrote exactly that code).
sbi
sbi
Dec 8 '15 at 20:32, by Tobias Langner
anyone here who's been with me in the mexican restaurant on Saturday after meetingcpp?
Seems you're right.
08:45
@ThePhD That seems similar to Haskell. Those lists are single linked lists. It makes sense that they do not allow you to append to the end if you only have the head.
Ven
Ven
:D
@ThePhD of course, it doesn't make sense
You have a 'a -> 'a list -> 'a list
Uh-huh.
Ven
Ven
Missing a list. Anyway...
@Nican This is pretty awesome. :)
Ven
Ven
09:01
@ThePhD oh but don't feel like you need to repeat let in all the time.
I mean, yes, you can't use let x = y; and carry on, but you can still write let x = y and z = y.
user1804599
@ThePhD Singly linked list append is obviously O(n).
user1804599
List reverse is also O(n), but building up by appending is O(n(n+1)/2).
user1804599
If you want both fast prepend and fast append, you can use Vect.t instead of list: batteries.forge.ocamlcore.org/doc.preview:batteries-beta1/html/…
@rightfold I'm gonna guess that's not included in Vanilla OCaml...?
I really miss C++. =/
Ven
Ven
09:17
:>
This would have been better if the class just let us use Haskell instead.
At least that has sensible libraries and a not-shit compiler.
Ven
Ven
haha
no one would've helped you tho
.-.
I should not be modifying the AST or the parser or the lexer.
This is dumb as bricks. This should have been taken care of already.
I'm so fuckin' peeved.
Ven
Ven
you should mostly be unsurprised.
I managed to successfully skirt all sorts of group work and keep 0 friends for a very, very long time.
@Ven He doesn't pay me enough to basically write and debug his code for him.
Ven
Ven
09:28
answer this. :-)
wow, 248 issues closed. nice job
Oh now really! A method that has a the caller pass in a StringBuilder! for the love of all that is satanic, why?
I gave him extensive support the first time he used my library, literally giving him a line-by-line review and converted his code from his own lua wrapper her wrote to sol2. I don't think I should be pulling, compiling, and debugging his entire OpenSource codebase too.
scissors, heli, grass patch, trapeze act, coffee cup, pencil;
I think the last two are really well drawn
@ThePhD This is excellent preparation for the work force. The sooner you learn that unless team effort¹, nothing is going to yield results...
Is typeid(T) the same as typeid(const T) and typeid(const T&) ?
¹ Where team effort means that the most motivated person is leading and setting the bar
@StackedCrooked Excellent SO question that. Free rep (or dupe)
09:35
@StackedCrooked I'm willing to wager no, actually.
wat
Ven
Ven
> In Python 2.x, a trailing , in a print statement prevents a new line to be emitted.
Fucking dogshit language for braindamaged monkeys
@ThePhD What I worry about is that this behavior might be different on different compilers.
@StackedCrooked Time to test on VC++...
gdi
They all report yes.
09:42
How did it not get at least skull or light bulb?
Ven
Ven
you're still stuck on this?
that's 0/24 for me now ¬_¬
> Refers to a std::type_info object representing the type type. If type is a reference type, the result refers to a std::type_info object representing the referenced type.
maybe I don't know what these words mean :S
That answers that.
A reference type == just the plain type.
So it's like sizeof() in that regard /cc @StackedCrooked
09:43
@thecoshman the obvious achilles heel of this self-learning AI is ... trolls
@sehe true...
but surely the AI would be able to learn that when every word get's the same 'dick like' drawing, that maybe it should ignore such things
hmm... how to teach AI to learn from crowd sorced data; have it learn what trolls will do first
mmm sauce
"records" in OCaml is so blisteringly stupid.
Rather than being scoped under the name of the variable that is the record, they instead have to be names unique in the module.
Which means if you reference a field of a record in another module, you need to do...
obj.Module.Name.Here.field_name
So you're saying they are like Haskell records, just... somehow even worse?
Probably.
Ven
Ven
well...
ocaml has structural typing.
i still consider them to be superior to haskell records. but inferior to lenses
09:51
I don't know what haskell records are like.
Do they need field names which are globally unique too?
Ven
Ven
no
@Borgleader Good morning you sexy hunk of handsome. ♥
Ven
Ven
@Borgleader <3
@ThePhD Good morning bby /cc @Ven
user1804599
tikz is really cool.
user1804599
09:55
I can now make shiny diagrams like this:
user1804599
0
Q: Comparing typeid pointers

StackedCrookedIn this program I use typeid to check the derived type of an object: #include <cstdint> #include <memory> #include <cassert> #include <string> #include <typeinfo> struct Wrap { explicit Wrap(int64_t id) : mImpl(new Impl<int64_t>(id)) {} explicit Wrap(std::string id) : mImpl(new Impl<...

I should probably just use type_index.
user1804599
You should use boost::variant.
However, I wasn't sure if the older C++0x buildservers will accept that. But apparently they do.
@StackedCrooked Yes.
type_index is goodware.
@rightfold That only works when the set of types you will be storing is closed.
That doesn't cover all use cases.
user1804599
09:58
If it isn't closed then you shouldn't special-case any of the types.
I could use variant. But this will be in a header that is included everywhere. And including variant adds like 5-10 seconds of compile time for each cpp file.
@ThePhD sounds as dumb as Haskell records
@rightfold That... makes no sense.

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