« first day (2228 days earlier)      last day (2947 days later) » 

00:02
@sehe Why did you want it?
@ThePhD I love you, but I don't believe that one bit ;)
Well, I'll be damned.
OCaml has proper classes and shit.
@FarhadSaadatpei ..............................................
This passage made me laugh loudly. Such a burn. #rekt #deception https://t.co/toycYnNFRV
@ThePhD ...
@ThePhD The O in OCaml stands for Objective...
00:04
Thats hilarious
@VermillionAzure O could have meant its shitty "record" structuring.
@VermillionAzure See: Objective-C and its "classes".
@Borgleader >_> You totally should believe me.
@ThePhD lol chill i'm sorry
@wilx lol
Nov 9 at 23:13, by sehe
Contact The Cinch - he actually had a decent start on that kind of intro.
I plinked you back than. You're just a sloth :)
user406009
00:36
@sehe Eh, I guess in retrospect it is sorta odd, but my gut reaction when someone asks for a lightweight XML serialization library is that they are using the wrong tool for the wrong job.
:)
Nothing lightweight about XML
user406009
JSON is so much nicer in almost every way.
biggest difference is that newtonsoft.json allows for writing nicer code
Ugh... just came across a question that read "Is it possible to initialize an std::vector in a single line using lambda functions?". Seriously, putting an "an" in front of "std" to make it sound like an STD...
as for the formats it is pretty meh imo
user406009
00:41
@Ultimater That seems like a really dumb question.
user406009
@JohanLarsson I mean, the nice thing about JSON is that it's extremely simple and maps very well onto your normal language tools. If you know how to use std::map, std::vector, floats, ints, and std::strings, you know how to use JSON.
std::map, std::vector are library classes, JSON is a format. you can't directly compare the two :p
Oh watch this space
@Lalaland JSON has problems with escape characters and Windows file paths.
user406009
@Telkitty Well, this is in comparison to XML, where you have to learn about tags, attributes, elements, and more. All of which don't really correspond well to existing C++ stuff.
00:46
@Lalaland I dunno any std:: stuff :)
but yes json is less noisy than xml
must sleep, najt
user406009
Good night.
@Lalaland if you think abstractly, Json is just like a map/vector which contains vectors and maps which might contain other maps/vectors
@sehe Ah I see
@Lalaland mmm I see
@Telkitty Aren't both closer to a tree format?
From what I understand, JSON and XML are both tree formats that make use of different node structures.
Ah I see
(grumble grumble but everything is a list, honey)
00:54
Can't have duplicate keys in json
`{
"test": "good",
"test": "duplicate_and_invalid"
}`
@Mikhail Oh that makes a lot of sense
Then yeah it's a map vs. tree structure?
I see
Oh. You see
SO, I thought json would be a good format format for my configuration files because you can't have duplicate keys. But I found that end users had a significantly more trouble with the syntax then XML, because of Windows file names, and typos. Making people type something twice reduces typos...
Also, uscilab.github.io/cereal is a good xml/json library
Ell
Ell
00:57
lol that's interesting
user406009
@Temptemp2 Sure, but we would have to move the conversation over to chat.stackoverflow.com/rooms/116940/c-questions-and-answers
user406009
Questions are sorta, kinda banned here.
@Temptemp2 We don't debug people code, especially if it isn't interesting.
When writing good C++ there's borderline no ability to leak mem
01:01
That is a tautology
@Temptemp2 No, ask a question on Stack Overflow after you come up with good background information
@Mikhail If T = T for all T then what is T for all T if T = T and T = T?
@набиячлэвэли T
@набиячлэвэли T
@Mikhail People code is usually interesting, but sorting out the cure from the symptoms can be hellish.
@JerryCoffin The solution is almost always botany, though.
@набиячлэвэли Botany involves a lot of solutions, but it isn't a solution in itself (it might almost qualify as a colloid though).
01:15
@JerryCoffin I meant as in slowly replacing code with botany to a point where no code can be found anymore
@набиячлэвэли How often do I take things as intended vs. some way they strike me as (at least mildly) funny?
I have no idea m8, I found my version more funny (probably because I know jack shit about "colloid"s)
01:53
@набиячлэвэли Oh. A colloid is the halfway point between a suspension and a solution. In a suspension, you have particles large enough that they'll settle out of suspension on their own. In a solution, you have particles small enough (usually individual molecules) that to remove them you typically have to distill, or something on that order. A colloid is in between--particles small enough that they won't settle out on their own, but can be removed from the solvent with something like a centrifuge.
Most obvious example of a colloid is blood.
 
3 hours later…
05:11
When will C++14 have MSVC support?
7
cackles
I'm throwing all of my time into this compiler....
I feel cheated, honestly.
I want to break ways from this group.
But what good will that do me?
It's far too late now.
I should have bit the bullet and talked to my professor while I had the chance.
That kind of situation will happen for the rest of your life
05:27
"Google joins Microsoft’s .NET Foundation"
@ProblemSlover This is normally done as [label](link):
@JerryCoffin lazy to figure that out
And in the latest news on HN, x86 is dead
ding dong
05:49
@Mikhail x86 was stillborn, deliberately crippled to keep it from taking the market while Intel developed the iAPX432. It was never supposed to do any more than keep Intel's foot in the embedded market until they could develop a desktop/server chip worthy of the job. Thank god they succeeded, and nobody used that x86 crap for anything but embedded systems (albeit, ones that might have needed a little more processing and/or memory than the 8085 could support).
I don't know architectures, what's wrong with x86?
@Mikhail As originally designed (8088/8086) almost everything. Extremely limited memory addressing (1 meg)--and worse it divided that into segments of no more than 64K apiece. It had no memory protection (at all). No support for virtual addressing, floating point, etc.
It has all those things now...
@Mikhail It has them, but it's still clumsy in quite a few ways. Booting, for one obvious example: the CPU starts up in real mode (i.e., doing a warped imitation of an 8086), and it's up to you to switch it from there to the mode you really want (which takes quite a bit of work). Still has fairly poor virtualization support compared to competitors (e.g., MIPS).
In fairness, every cloud has a silver lining. For years, x86 decoding (hellishly complex) was held up as a reason to prefer RISC (usually much simpler to decode). Instruction decoders are now a small percentage of a CPU, and the tighter instruction encoding means caches are more efficient (and caches are a large percentage of a CPU die, and growing all the time).
The booting thing is a non-issue. Why is MIPS better at virtualization compared to x86?
Remember when RISC chips ran faster :-)
06:02
I'm getting really good at this functional programming business.
@Mikhail Has what they call segment registers that make it fairly trivial to manage things like the page tables on a per-VM basis. Intel VT-X is basically catching up with what MIPS had ~20 years ago.
@Mikhail I do. And for that matter, they still can (and do) under just the right circumstances. But the circumstances have narrowed to the point of irrelevance. For that matter, it was almost never that the chips simply ran faster--it was that if you were willing spend 10x on the machine, you could build one that was faster (but doesn't sound very impressive when you look at it that way).
Anyway, I probably need to get to bed. G'night.
I hate to be an ass, but it seems like your complaints about x86 is that it lacks features which they at present have...
06:24
Tesla self driving video. I wonder how does Tesla recognize the road when it's repaired & lines are not clearly marked ...
 
2 hours later…
07:57
IIRC, RISC CPUs were deemed to be better because most if not all of their instructions were not microcoded while the x86 had complex instructions from the start that required that.
08:11
Well, the argument was that micro-coding slows you down.
Ven
Ven
08:38
Hi
@ThePhD don't
@Ven I think it'd be a great fit for my namespace lookup structure.
An example of bullshit article
Sam
Sam
hello<lounge>;
08:58
@fredoverflow no I had not, thanks :D
I've actually been a bit too busy recently to spend time on my little side project learning Kotlin
so TIL all of my circuits were missing bypass capacitors
@BartekBanachewicz bypass caps?
@thecoshman TL;DR they are power stabilization local to every IC
@BartekBanachewicz oh, the one's you have in serial with the power supply pins to help filter out noise?
@thecoshman they're between the power supply pins
Ven
Ven
09:03
@ThePhD a struct or record will do just fine :<
can you provide a diagram?
@Ven The whole globally-unique-name thing for a record isn't really up my alley.
And a tuple has no names and I have to use a match datastructure with ... or ` = function ...` pick it out into pieces every time I use it... which is a goddamn nightmare.
@BartekBanachewicz oh yes, in parallel (I got mixed up with stuff) I've known them better as 'decoupling' capacitors
09:04
I wonder if I can just do let ( part1, part2, ... ) = some_tuple
But that looks more like a function definition. =/
Hell, ocaml probably does mistake it for a function definition rather than me trying to tear apart a tuple
in C++ @ThePhD?
No, in OCaml.
Oh Camel
@thecoshman yep, same name
ah, thought it would be strange to talk about C++ here :P
@BartekBanachewicz well, same thing, different name :P
09:06
@ThePhD that works just fine in haskell. Are you sure OCaml doesn't allow that?
@thecoshman gagjfakjlaskj I'm still drinking my first coffee
@BartekBanachewicz it works like that in most languages that have tuples natively doesn't it
@BartekBanachewicz catch up :P
I've already had my ice cold walk to work and reheating double espresso :D
@BartekBanachewicz Gonna try it.
Ven
Ven
@ThePhD that one's fair :P
@ThePhD yeah no one's arguing that
@thecoshman eh, my cat jumped on me when I was trying to get up and I stayed in bed longer than I'd like
OTOH I got the news that my uni classes for monday are finished
which means I suddenly got 6 hours of my day back
09:11
yeah, more time for dabbling in arduino
tfw string has map but not fold_left or fold_right.
Goddamnit OCaml. =/
I need to finally get around to PCBs
Ven
Ven
LOLcaml
Your extreme type strictness isn't helping meee.
Thinking once I get my shit sorted out... I might just look at making a hex/ocoto bot
09:12
Algo.fold_left would have been just fine if the type system had a concept of templates or something.
Just plain duck typing would be fine...
probably look to use a pi and arduino together
sup guise
pi can handle high level logic like pathing, arduino just do low level leg movement. Probably just have it take points that the leg's should be at, and have it work out the IK to move the legs to that
@thecoshman doesn't Pi have GPIO pins?
it always seemed weird to me that people use both pi and arduino
@BartekBanachewicz it's not real time though. You could get away with using the pi for it, but it wouldn't be as good at controlling the servos
09:14
The fucking face
when String.map
returns a new fucking string
I might use the pi to start with
instead of just a fucking list
@thecoshman mm, I see
LIKE EVERYTHING ELSE
What the fucking hell, OCaml
so you're using the arduino as a realtime controller
09:15
@BartekBanachewicz basically yeah
I have a 22Ah power bank too, so if I can get servos powerful enough, and keep overall draw to under 2A it could be full wireless :D
Ven
Ven
@ThePhD what else would it return?
@thecoshman powerful servos and battery mean short life vOv
@ThePhD that actually makes sense
09:37
@BartekBanachewicz yeah, but I'd prefer if I could make it so that it didn't have to be tethered
Which means battery, which means need to up servo torque, which means power is used faster, so bigger battery, so bigger servos, so more power required, so before you know it, I'm looking at hydraulic servos :S
also OMG AYREON IS GONNA BE LIVE
what the fuck is happening
Gilbert and Govan on the newest album, which is due soon, and then this
musicgasm
o_0 le fook?
So @sehe @rightfold it seems I'm gonna visit the Netherlands yet again :P - Tilburg this time (15-16 sep 2017)
Ven
Ven
Tiltburg
with that much of a heads up we can't not meet this time
@thecoshman pfff, without experience, I wouldn't go there
also why do you need so much torque?
military robots used for mission-critical reconnaissance use electric servos just fine
09:47
well, there's something appealing about having OTT engineering :P
plus, then I could ride on it :D
also WRT software
can't you put an RTOS on Pi?
but yeah, I was only joking about going as far as hydraulics
@Ven The type of the sequence I hand it.
Ven
Ven
ah. :D
Algo.map func sequence_type empty_sequence_type
09:50
erm... might be able to get a RTOS for the pi... but iirc people have tried it, and you can get a few servos well controlled on the pi, but when you start to want 18, they start to jitter
Suddenly this scales like hell and I only ever had to write 1 map.
I don;t think the pi board has a decent enough clock for good servo control
I can also control allocation for that map, doing things analogous to C++'s reserve().
But apparently nobody in ML land thought that'd be a good idea.
@ThePhD Is "like hell" a good scaling or bad scaling? :)
@thecoshman wat
doesn't it run at like 500Mhz
how can it not have "a decent enough clock"
09:54
I've not looked into it that much
I'll see how I go with pi controlled servos
just don't install linux
get some CMSIS RTOS and you're good to go
CMSIS APIs aren't that hard to use actually
true
something to look in to
I've played with that on my STM board and it was actually much easier than dealing with hardware watchdogs and interrupts
btw @thecoshman you can always reduce the robot size as well :P remember that mass increases with the third power of the dimension :P
yeah but size is a hard thing to reduce
2
also structural integrity comes into play in bigger stuff
@thecoshman depends on what the thing is supposed to do
if it's just for fun, simply making it smaller can make a lot of things easier
09:58
I think the size of the servos will dictate a lot
@milleniumbug would you be interested in looking at building an AVR backend for terra? LLVM is p much ready AFAIK, but it would require doing a deeper dive into the language.
@thecoshman there's a lot of small servos available
and the power-to-weight ratio is typically gonna be the best on the smallest ones (I think, not 100% actually)
yeah brought a few a while ago, just to play around with
I found one lying in my closet recently
oh yeah, other thing against the pi, only has so many IO pins, so controlling lots of servos could be tricky
@thecoshman expanding IO pins is p much trivial
as in, you don't need another microcontroller for that
10:07
hey is there any plugin for sublime that shows class or namespace members?
Like if you use Java and Eclipse it shows you the fields and functions of a class ...I think code blocks has this feature for c++ too but Id like to stay with sublime for the moment
I'd just get Visual Studio or any other IDE
after you get completion you're gonna need a debugger
It's not for large scale projects, just for small programs where I want to compile using the command line and so on...school stuff
@Aresloom if it's for small projects, why do you need code completion?
anyway, I've been using PlatformIO recently - it's a plugin for Atom,. not ST, but has what you want
I dont have the time atm to become familier with a IDE...
Cuz its nice to have and Ive seen it in Eclipse and loved it
ok thx Ill give it a shot
@ThePhD why are you trying to write C++ while writing OCaml
that's how you fail at learning languages
10:14
@Aresloom it would take you less time to get "familiar" with an ide than to try and wiggle code completion into ST
@Griwes I didn't say I was trying to.
@BartekBanachewicz Yes, but you can't just do basic multiplexing, the server needs a constant signal
The argument I presented was entirely a functional argument.
@thecoshman shift registers can do that
@BartekBanachewicz thay can't do PWM
10:15
And one enabled by proper polymorphic types.
@thecoshman you could use a dedicated digital potentiometer
I think they are pretty cheap
@ThePhD well, to be fair, functional programming and polymorphic types are orthogonal concepts
Right. Someone should combine the two and get huge wins.
@ThePhD that's what Haskell does :P
tfw using OCaml and not Haskell
Ven
Ven
Ocaml sucks
10:22
#if LLVM_VERSION >= 38
CU->M->setDataLayout(TT->tm->createDataLayout());
#elif LLVM_VERSION == 37
CU->M->setDataLayout(*TT->tm->getDataLayout());
#else
CU->M->setDataLayout(TT->tm->getDataLayout());
#endif
ueuhguehguehge
Ven
Ven
:|
if only we could have something like different implementations of the same thing
Ven
Ven
dysfunctional programming at its finest
What's that concept in JS where you implement shit that should be fucking standard?
Polyfill?
That's what I'm gonna name my stupid file that has these dumb fucking routines that should be standard.
Polyfill.
ueh also I think that Terra has no cross-compilation
10:28
@BartekBanachewicz oh trust me
@BartekBanachewicz Tilburg, of all places. What is the reason?
Ven
Ven
@ThePhD or shim, yes
you shouldve just used Core or Batteries Included.
If I figure out how to include / compile with that without OPAM vomiting on me, sure.
But that'll come later.
@BartekBanachewicz but need PWM, not analogue signal. Unless I then use that to control a 555 and now we're just getting complex and expensive and big and may as well just use one big uC
Ven
Ven
@ThePhD ...
@sehe Seems to be Ayeron again
@thecoshman wait why PWM and not analogue
10:32
@ThePhD lol
also again look at dedicated ICs for servo control
lately I've been discovering that there are already ICs for every-freaking-thing out there
if you think you need to build it, someone has already made it into an IC
@BartekBanachewicz that's what servos take
@thecoshman I thought there's at least a few kinds of them
the bipolar ones need to be driven with this h-bridge thing for example right
Yeah, probably is an IC that can be used for servos... but last time I looked at how to control lots of servos, no one seemed to suggest such an IC
@thecoshman there's this
10:35
@Ven You try and handle OPAM freaking out about LLVM and Batteries and Core on Windows. =/
but actually this one looks ridiculously expensive
And on Mac.
Ven
Ven
@ThePhD oh yes, windows. Batteries included is not supported on windows.
But on mac, I have used Core successfully.
I think that servos basically all settled on the idea of using pwm, they just can't quite agree on the exact timings
@Ven I wish my teammates were as lucky.
Ven
Ven
10:36
"lucky"
Daily reminder that I love my teammates and they're wonderful people.
@BartekBanachewicz that's an IC for in a servo
@thecoshman no, this is basically H-bridge + some additional controls
An H bridge is an electronic circuit that enables a voltage to be applied across a load in either direction. These circuits are often used in robotics and other applications to allow DC motors to run forwards or backwards. Most DC-to-AC converters (power inverters), most AC/AC converters, the DC-to-DC push–pull converter, most motor controllers, and many other kinds of power electronics use H bridges. In particular, a bipolar stepper motor is almost invariably driven by a motor controller containing two H bridges. == General == H bridges are available as integrated circuits, or can be built from...
I have a servo with 4-pin input that needs just that
@thecoshman oh see this one generates PWM
told you, I guess.
> No additional components are required as it has its own built in oscillator clock circuit.
10:38
@BartekBanachewicz that's basically what a servo is :P
@BartekBanachewicz Oh that's a valid reason. Tilburg is doing well for pop
don't forget, there is an IC in the servo that makes the motor 'smart'
(Other than that it's mostly dead concrete)
@thecoshman well then, what I have is just the motor then
@thecoshman anyway, I'm p sure you could hook this up directly to the Pi without any problems using only two pins for the I2c
yeah, a servo is a motor, with a potentiometer (sp?) and then a tiny IC that takes in a PWM signal and adjust the motor position so that the resistance is what the PWM signal is 'asking' for
@BartekBanachewicz and then get a second one of those chips, as I want at least 6 legs, and 3dof on each :P
10:42
I'd start with something simpler if I were you
but then agian
@thecoshman I wonder if buying just motors and wiring them yourself would be cheaper though
I doubt it...
Ven
Ven
@ThePhD I'm incompetent. But still able to type the 3 commands needed to install OPAM+Core.
@Ven I'll talk to them again. vOv
don't forget, I want servos as I want the control the angle, I don't want just the rotation
10:45
The other thing in favour of using an Arduino for the servos is that they can provide a higher level interface. I could send commands to control six legs (the 3D point at the end of each), rather than controlling 18 servos. Plus I might be able to make it control movement over time. So the pi can just say "go to X,Y,Z over T ms"
But for sure, to start with, I'd just look at doing basic stuff directly via the pi
But form looks of it, that IC is just a pre-programmed uC
11:07
makes sense
which part? :P
@fredoverflow I like how excited Kotlin people are about operator overloading
lmao so damn complicated
and lengthy
@AlexM. yeah those all-in-one machines are super annoying to maintain
go figure why all good coffee places use regular manual espresso machines
also doing it manually gives you much finer control
I was thinking about doing a good deed and descaling my parents' machine
but hell naw
11:37
in C++ Questions and Answers, 1 min ago, by sehe
@ShahlinIbrahim When I type c++ read who then google autocompletes to "c++ read whole line from file"
Wow ^ lmgtfy.com has had an extensive update
String.split_on_char is not available even with Core...
Oh. It's implemented in like the latest version of OCaml.
@sehe eh, this problem is sadly way too common to be fixed by lmgtfy alone
Well. Okay, thanks OCaml.
people just can't look for information on the internet
cue youtube tutorials
"Lesson one, you don't need to Google for Google"
11:44
@BartekBanachewicz ah - we don't need to fix reality. We just need to deal with it
nah
ergh... field wasn't marked as mandatory, but was
how are people so bad at UIs
LBGTQ Muslims, auzubillah
plugin_uninitialized = not plugin_engine.is_initialized()
...
elif new_config is None and not plugin_uninitialized:
ugh who the fuck writes code like that
> OCaml supports a rather limited form of the familiar for loop:
Literally
A count-up loop
or a count-down loop
What the fuck, OCaml
You give me a shitty string with no fold_left and then you do this bullshit.
11:59
yeah, OCaml is pretty weird
lol
maybe that's why I never bothered to learn it

« first day (2228 days earlier)      last day (2947 days later) »