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00:00 - 19:0019:00 - 00:00

user1804599
Wow, pgAdmin 4 is really bad.
user1804599
It's super ugly, it's super slow, and super cluttered. Almost like it was made by Atlassian.
user1804599
pgAdmin 3 was so much better.
loved the hairpiece at the end
user1804599
SELECT vertices.note, array_remove(array_agg(edges.child_id), NULL)
FROM vertices
LEFT JOIN edges
	ON edges.parent_id = vertices.id
WHERE vertices.id = $1
GROUP BY vertices.id
user1804599
00:19
Look at my query, my query is amazing.
@Puppy it being an alien would certainly explain a number of things
user1804599
@sehe That you don't have to group by vertices.note because vertices.id has a unique index is called a functional dependency, right?
@Puppy Yup. Awesome
@rightfold I'm not into legalese. I'd say it makes sense, but I'm not sure it's valid TSQL
00:24
@Mikhail ow, fuck
@Mikhail Vocabulary too small. Too small too high frequency of immediate repeats immediate repeats.
user1804599
@sehe It's mandated by the standard.
user1804599
> PostgreSQL recognizes functional dependency (allowing columns to be omitted from GROUP BY) only when a table's primary key is included in the GROUP BY list. The SQL standard specifies additional conditions that should be recognized.
user1804599
Ah, must be primary key. So I finally found a real difference between PRIMARY KEY and UNIQUE NOT NULL.
There you go
> The SQL standard specifies additional conditions that should be recognized
@rightfold ^ There's room for it to be non-different
user1804599
00:26
Yeah maybe. :p
user1804599
In my defence the SQL standard is written in English instead of mathematics, so it's unreadable and ambiguous bullshit, like the C++ standard.
user1804599
That's not a classical song
user1804599
Right; it's power metal.
user1804599
I'm pretty sure this is classical music.
00:29
It's a classical orchestra though :)
And it's certainly no song. Though I can't readily play it
user1804599
So many languages in my project. :(
Stupid spotify urls are useless in spotify
user1804599
Go, HTML, JavaScript, PureScript, Sass, SQL.
@TonyTheLion Clearly ^ flash wasn't even enabled for me
I see it
00:35
So @Spotify links are unusable in Spotify. The title cannot be copy/pasted. The web player requires flash… https://twitter.com/i/web/status/800135380729294848
/cc @BartekBanachewicz @Morwenn (I think you've been annoyed about this too)
user1804599
spotify:track:7I1UgrOuZdXVAiyN0hjmLF
Oh that one. I don't really like it. Glass harp rocks
user1804599
You don't like the URI or you don't like the song?
user1804599
I don't even recall which song it is.
12 mins ago, by rightfold
This classical song is rad: https://open.spotify.com/track/7gaWPhE7mPKOsWZGY3LU6w
user1804599
00:40
Oh, it is the same song.
user1804599
The what-looks-like-ID is different though.
@rightfold That works, but no one ever shares it open.spotify.com/album/2CwbALUU2JsbipyMj8H33x
user1804599
Oh it was a different song.
user1804599
00:42
That album is awesome.
user1804599
@sehe ever seen this? youtube.com/watch?v=8mcfeLK5YNs
user1804599
@Puppy does
What now
@rightfold I have now
user1804599
00:55
:P
I have no clue, @Exagon. I can make guesses, but based on the code you gave, they don't add up. My guess would be that you tried to use the actual iterators from inside the exception handler. That would be spectacularly wrong if they pointed inside the temporary string that you were parsing. (Note in my code I pass a reference to the variable input which stays alive long enough). Just my $0.02 — sehe 10 secs ago
grr
user1804599
01:12
TIL relations and equivalence classes.
01:32
Alright.
I just beefed up my parser seriously.
I still don't have a good character / line number thing for the tokenizer and shit
But at least I've gotten a decent part of the way.
@sehe You wouldn't happen to have a link to when you wrote the parser?
Nah. He's had linker errors reported on the mailing list and here, I didn't write the parser
Not that parser.
This is 4-5 years old.
nevermind, I got it.
01:51
Which parser where you referring to then (you replied to that quoted comment...)
user1804599
My code is amazing.
user1804599
C++ is the result of billions of years of biological evolution.
user1804599
How can an atomic bomb explode if it's atomic?
@rightfold fuck you
Oh wait, was that a genuine question, or are you referring to my dick?
02:13
Does anyone know of a simple library(light weight) to serialize an object to xml and perhaps with an usage example?
user406009
02:34
@Prix I would personally recommend using a header only json library like github.com/nlohmann/json.
@Lalaland I assume its c++11? I don't have it available in this specific project, 98-
wow it feels way later than 8:40 to me
user406009
@Prix There are many alternatives. github.com/kazuho/picojson is also good.
user406009
If that doesn't work, you can start going down the list: github.com/miloyip/nativejson-benchmark
@Lalaland thanks, looking into it
Ell
Ell
02:58
@rightfold well once it starts exploding, it will either explode or return to it's prior state
 
2 hours later…
04:45
@Lalaland Is it me, or is it weird to suggest a JSON library when asked for XML serialization w/usage example?
05:05
I'm writing a thing that lets you write sql queries in C++ templates. I'm not sure why.
it's hard
(backed by arbitrary containers)
@MooingDuck who isn’t
05:21
I wonder if there's a regex to recognize UTF8 characters.
2
I want hex literals.
And octal literals
and binary literals in my lexer
But they're not strictly necessary...
05:40
I was actually thinking of making one for fun too but it turned out it was v. complicated
and not so fun
@ThePhD look of delight
@jaggedSpire No.
No no no no.
:D
starred for remembrance
>.>
I haetchu.
aw
You're wonderful, too <3
05:47
Hmph.
really though
define "utf-8 character" in this instance
do you want the regex to work, just on recognizing graphemes in utf-8 encoding, even if they're multi-byte graphemes?
do you want it to look for a particular set of utf-8 characters?
and wouldn't you be able to adjust for utf-8 encoding for an ascii-targeted regex fairly easily?
Wouldn't it just be a question of treating the utf-8 character you're looking for as a string instead of specifically a character?
06:01
no part of a multibyte utf-8 character can be misinterpreted as one of the basic ascii set, so there's no worries about part of a utf-8 character getting misinterpreted as a character with special meaning in the flavor of regex you're using
don't you just love it when something isn't terribly designed?
when it's designed, properly, to be backwards-compatible with the tools that were used on its predecessor, without sacrificing a sane representation
On the other hand you need to bitmask test every character for a slash, a better design would have been to just have 16bits per character or get rid of Asian languages.
@Mikhail but you don't need that for utf-8 any more than you would for ascii
any character beyond the basic ascii set is represented with 11xxxxxx and 10xxxxxx characters, and the ascii set is the ascii set
every regex special character is in the basic ascii set. As far as regex is concerned you're just searching for a set of mixed basic and extended ascii characters.
06:19
@Rapptz yeah, like that
@MooingDuck Well, hello. Long time no C (or C++).
@JerryCoffin indeed
@MooingDuck How have you been lately?
@JerryCoffin excellent! New job is most fun
new
been there 1.5 years and its still new
despite the fact I've now trained 7 new teammates
@MooingDuck Sounds awesome! Very happy to hear it.
06:34
I did the biggest parts of that
er, we aquired an rcs engine, I did the biggest parts of hooking our UI into their engine
@MooingDuck Ah, so you're a Googler now? Which location, if I'm allowed to ask?
Kirkland
@MooingDuck Hmm...is that the one I heard people complaining they opened primarily to poach people from one or two major software companies that might be sort of nearby?
I hadnt heard that, but it makes sense.
But now that I think on it, there's an awful lot of ex-Microsofters...
@MooingDuck Hard to guess how accurate it is--but then again, anytime anybody opens an office even sort of close to an obvious competitor, the accusation becomes almost inevitable.
06:43
Yeah
As I recall, there was a time the same kind of accusations even happened about Silicon Valley--but it would be pretty hard now, with as many companies there as there are now. Then again, half the reason a lot fo people do open companies there is to poach--just from lots of people instead of just one.
If you want devs, go to where the devs are.
It's why I moved to Seattle/Redmond area
@MooingDuck Yup--and once they live there, it's hard convince somebody to move away, when they could have their choice of 17 different jobs within easy walking distance...
 
1 hour later…
08:09
> This is my first attempt to write something usable in Haskell.
…later…
> […] except that we have this DriveT transformer which turns a Monad into a "MonoMonad".
:)
puppypied
 
1 hour later…
09:34
that time of the month, I climbed a mountain, albeit, a small one
500 meters high, but my phone is telling me that I climbed 1 floor
probably time to change the phone
@Telkitty Or maybe you were just delusional and only made it to the roof of your house? :D
roof of my house is not 500 meter high, I wish I was that rich
09:51
> A dash is required in every component name to avoid conflicting with a possible HTML element, so rental-listing is acceptable but rental isn't.
so I have to do calendar minus ok
calendar-minus
-calendar
pretty sure I saw hyphens in custom elements anyway
Huh.
Sounds like a weird naming scheme.
I don't question the docs
fixed link
it probably removes the effort of disambiguation at compile time
or whatever the template expansion filling creation instantiation is called
cause that might also leak out to javascript
which queries the layout
so it just changes names unexpectedly
@sehe Not really, I never used Spotify.
L U L
Approve std::optional
Don't use std::optional.
10/10 A P I
maybe it's for people who don't like optional
10:45
here is a good track
Hehe, I found new sorting networks and just beat research.
You don't beat research, you contribute to it.
there might be a paper awaiting approval
that does what you do or better
:P
@AlexM. Maybe.
I need a biiiiikeshed.
10:50
@fredoverflow Yeah, I'm going to try the trick I found for the 17-32 sorting networks and see how it performs.
And then publish them for free of course /o/
Ven
Ven
\o/
@ThePhD >> or > > for closing nested templates?
is there a way to monitor pagefaults in linux? just curious. this is probably off-topic here. but where is it on-topic?
@fredoverflow Both. \o/
I think I got syntax for & down.
Hehe, I even have a better result than the ones found by evolutionary algorithms :D
10:55
@ThePhD Are you designing your own programming language?
@fredoverflow Yes.
Before you get frowny-face on me, it's for a class.
haha
Probaly offtopic: but im searching for a spriter
I'm searching for a Sprite
Therefore I am a spriter
AMA
lol
Here's your sprite
11:25
firefox debugging tools are so much slower than chrome's
I also can't figure out how to open a source file and keep it open
chrome looks and acts more like a proper IDE
11:37
I have been dumb the whole day
panicking coz the tiny chance of it being irreversible
Ell
Ell
what did you do?
too much alcohol last night :/
Ell
Ell
drink lots of water
you'll be right as rain by later
already did ...
no headache
just retarded
@Telkitty Is that you? :)
Hello everyone
I am havig a little problem with my current makefile.
I always get: make: *** No rule to make target 'build/Demo/test.o', needed by 'all'. Stop.

It has been a while and still haven't found the error, it must be something really stupid...
@ArneMertz yeah right :p
http://paste.ubuntu.com/23505871/

Any feedback?
@ArneMertz It seems you know C pretty well. Any idea's?
12:38
I don't know C at all, sorry. More of a C++ person. ;-)
And your problem seems to be more of a make problem anyways.
Had been years since I touched one of those
But it seems that you only told make how to build "all", by using all the object files. But you didn't tell it where to get those from
omfg
I spent almost an hour hunting a bug
in fullcalendar
when it was actually caused by my code
let me see if I can paste it here
7
Q: "No target" error using Make

ahmedI'm learning how to use make and makefiles, so I wrote this little file: %.markdown: %.html pandoc -o $< $@ But when I run make, all I get is make: *** No targets. Stop. What's going on?

the bug was the calendar sometimes not wanting to move next or back some unit of time, because the selected intervals were sometimes messed up
handleSelectedDateChange(view) {
  let newIntervalStart = view.intervalStart.startOf("day").toDate().getTime();
  let newIntervalEnd = view.intervalEnd.endOf("day").toDate().getTime();
the cause: startOf and endOf mutate, don't return new moments
--_--
#quality
so far in my incursion in webdevland
I discovered webdevs have a very alien and skewed sense of convenience
13:08
Ewwwwwww
@Telkitty the problem is a different one - not a missing target but a missing rule
Yeah, their sense of convenience is: "the API designer once needed this particular unorthodox behavior, so he assumed he needed it always.
Acute availability heuristic
funny, that no target error question is hosted on linux & unix, but no rule one is hosted on stackoverflow
Ven
Ven
@AlexM. it's absolutely terrible
I had to debug some stuff for $work. Took a firefox JS tools snapshot. PC becomes slow...
I run htop and see Firefox is now taking 32GB.
sbi
sbi
13:19
@fredoverflow That's nothing. Real romantics have a Z80, including SIO, PIO, CTC, 64kB RAM and an EPROM in their drawer. Everyone else is just a wannabe romantic.
30
A: Regex to detect Invalid UTF-8 String

ircmaxellYou can use this PCRE regular expression to check for valid UTF8 in a string. If the regex matches, the string contains invalid byte sequences. It's 100% portable because it doesn't rely on PCRE_UTF8 to be compiled in. $regex = '/( [\xC0-\xC1] # Invalid UTF-8 Bytes | [\xF5-\xFF] # Invali...

@Ven I'd switch to chrome
but I'm stuck on a 32 bit vm and chrome is 64 only
I have to enable some shit in the bios to be able to do 64b vms
didn't bother
14:07
just enable 64bit VMs
Chrome will be far from the only people going 64bit only
Ven
Ven
Maybe he won't need the VM for long
judging by my ability to break linux installations
I'll probably replace it soon :D
it's just FF that annoys me on the VM tho
everything else is fine on 32 bit
and I don't wanna give it more than 2GB RAM anyway
I only have 8 total
14:30
@Puppy ^ My first error handling.
It's token-based, but it includes all the source information so maybe one day I can do something like carat diagnostics!~
/cc @Borgleader
14:58
great success
15:21
Pffheew....
Alright.
Completed 1 day in advance.
I don't have to do jack shit now.
@ThePhD Check again, just to be sure. :)
Add more tests.
Ven
Ven
15:42
gg :)
Ven
Ven
15:53
> protected new Action _myCustomEvent { get; set; }
C#.
why did they add that "new" srsly
it triggers that warning
"Your shit is hiding other shit, use new if you want that."
which is helpful to me because I never wanted to hide anything so far
so if I did it was accidental
or sth like that
16:28
Oh wait.
I still need to bikeshed
How I allocate new memory.
@ThePhD Most people don't worry about whether memory is new or used. They allocate it all the same way.
Or are you dealing with something like an SSD where you need to do wear leveling?
... Uh.
It's more of, like. Trying to figure out how to do new[] in my language.
But without the uninitialized values and stuff.
I was thinking new [ size, function_that_takes_int_argument ];
So that each memory location can be initialized by the return value from that function.
@ThePhD new never does uninitialized values. Just a few kinds of values do initialization by...doing nothing. Orthogonal to new though. Don't allow that type of trivial initialization that does nothing, and new uses it.
Oh, and just eliminate any analog of the array form of new. It's worthless and shouldn't ever be used anyway.
user1804599
@Ven ew Action
@ThePhD Keep in mind that x = new T; is basically equivalent to: x = operator new(sizeof T); new(x) T;`. It just allocates a block, then invokes the ctor to create an object in that block. initialization is handled by the ctor.
Of course, you don't have to do things like C++ does, but (other than the syntax and name for placement new) this is actually a fairly clean part of C++.
16:36
Right now my language just has static initalization with a bunch of predefined values.
I kinda wanna do more than that.
In our language manual there's constructor / destructor semantics.
@Ven Because they stole Java's idea that you need to have new at least once in every statement, and preferably two or three times.
But hell if I trust my team to implement them. We've already cut structs from the language, and we also stopped doing GPU codegen entirely.
@ThePhD So every type has a ctor, and the "ctor" for your basic integer types (equivalent to int, long, etc.) initialize to zero. Done.
@JerryCoffin I'm just thinking in the long-run, if I wanted to constructor something more than "0" into all the things in an array.
I mean. I could make it so the built-in array type behaves more like std::vector, and this problem sort of solves itself I suppose.
@ThePhD Get rid of built-in arrays entirely. Provide enough facilities that a user can define something vector-like, and don't mess with it in the base language at all.
16:40
@JerryCoffin I don't have enough time for that, I don't think...
I don't even know how I'm going to do member functions (my team also just didn't include it as part of the lexer and parser, so it's +1 thing for me to implement).
@ThePhD You've already said you'll have ctors. Where you planning to leave out loops, or the ability to allocate a block of raw memory?
@JerryCoffin I have no syntax / handling for allocating raw memory (there's no pointers or anything like them). We have loops and stuff. We have CTors/DTors in the Reference Manual but because we're not doing structs we're basically getting away with murder right now by not implementing either CTors or DTors, even thought we say "they exist, totally".
Crap, I didn't think about how to handle just a block of arbitrary memory...
Fffff.
Chrome still uses Unicode 6.2 bidi rules.
Suxxorz.
@ThePhD Regex::new(".")
I need to make a primitive analogous to unique_ptr.
But if we don't have structs then having T* is borderline useless.
Fff THERE IS NOT ENOUGH BIKESHED IN THE WORLD.
Why tf do you not have structs
We cut them from the language because lazy.
@ThePhD: Can you write a function that swaps two values, i.e., std::swap?
Uh. Yes-ish?
I mean. Yes.
16:49
@ThePhD OK, cool. Your language is worthy, better than Python. :)
God this langauge really sucks without the ability to allocate an arbitrarily sized chunk of memory and do things with it.
And I'm just thinking about what it's going to take to implement that and to formally implement constructors and destructors and warble garble warble.
@ThePhD I guess if I were going to do a built-in array type, I'd think about doing something similar to Ada's.
why is caravan palace so good damnit
everything from them has these unique features
that are memorable
Ven
Ven
17:16
@JerryCoffin hahah
17:55
@wilx can't you just do a, b = b, a in Python?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yes, but that is not a function. :)
user1804599
18:08
def swap(p):
    return (p[1], p[0])
@fredoverflow good one
Can I do enums in OCaml...
@MooingDuck I have seen sqlpp11. I'm absolutely unconvinced it's a good idea.
18:25
@fredoverflow LOL
@sehe Im in the same boat.
@sehe so far the best I've come up with is that I can show off skills
Ell
Ell
@ThePhD of course :P
If it can do algebraic data types
Enums are juat algebraic data types where the constructors take no parameters
@Ell It actually can't.
Numeric Enums, anyways.
Ell
Ell
I don't know ocaml but in Haskell
Xeo
Xeo
I'm baaaaaack
18:29
I can't pattern match on an type and give it an instrinsic numeric value
So I can't do things like compare them and stuff.
Ell
Ell
data MyEnum = Val1 | Val2
I'll just switch on an integer.
Ell
Ell
Then myEnumValue :: MyEnum -> Int
@ThePhD you don't want to pattern match on a type surely
Yoi want to pattern match on a value
The different enum values
Okay, I want to pattern match on a value, but I can't do that AND also have a built-in comparison operator
E.g., I have a number of steps, and I basically want to do max(stepA, stepB)
And I would like to call them stepA, stepB, stepC, and have them be a distinct type Step.
Ell
Ell
Well, you can do that in Haskell at least
You have to manually assign them integer values but
Xeo
Xeo
18:32
data MyEnum = Val1 | Val2 deriving (Eq, Ord)
no?
Ell
Ell
There is no reason you can't do what you want
I don't think that's possible in OCaml, unfortunately.
Ell
Ell
@Xeo not sure tbh
@ThePhD you can still write an instance of ord and eq manually
Or whatever ocaml equivalent is
I don't think there's "deriving" in OCaml...
But I don't really know the language super well, so.
Ell
Ell
Well, does it have type classes? :P
18:34
I could do type MyEnum = stepA of int | stepB of int | stepC of int
@fredoverflow Also, when you forget to delete: my great discovery earlier today only worked because I forgot to comment two old lines of code.
But then I have to also remember the instrinsic numeric value of each Step when I make it.
so stepA(1) is how I would create it.
Ell
Ell
Why not just do what I suggested above?
Because I'm using OCaml and it does not have what you're suggesting?
Ell
Ell
And have a myEnumToInt or some such function
18:36
Oh, okay.
It solves my problem, yeah, but that wasn't really what I was sad about.
I was sad this wasn't a built in thing to OCaml.
Huh.
I wonder if I can have a reference to a function.
Ell
Ell
18:52
@Xeo right
But with ints instead of strings
Xeo
Xeo
@ThePhD This seems relevant for you: stackoverflow.com/q/17173101/500104
tl;dr OCaml sucks
00:00 - 19:0019:00 - 00:00

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