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00:16
@Columbo Crap like this was once a staple of trojan horse distribution. Depended on the fact that (by default) Windows hid extensions it recognized, so britney_naked.jpg.exe would be displayed as britney_naked.jpg.
@JerryCoffin Yeah I read about it (and the author also expressed his incomprehension for that "feature")
@Columbo Simple. Apple didn't use file extensions at all at the time, and quite a few UI designers were convinced that "be like Apple" was a good UI design guideline.
Apple had a stand in our Uni's career fair. It was a table with one Mac Book and a load of spaced out apples on it
Imagine if frszilst had respected the devils copyright. Then 'La campanella' is a copyright violation, by punishment of death.
(the work, not the actual person you silly you)
@Telkitty And this is the first time you've heard of somebody taking something to a ridiculous extreme?
01:45
Extreme, hardly ever - I totally expect British billionaires getting lost in the dessert all the times with nothing but bags of $5 pound notes pondering the ethical consequences of eating animal fats containing notes
@JerryCoffin You have never eaten notes before? Like ever?
me neither ...
you're missing out. Just add a little salt and steam them and mmmm
@Telkitty You still seem to be missing the point. Serious vegans worry not only about what they eat, but anything and everything else containing animal products. Many years ago, I completely ruined life for a vegan photographer when I pointed out that film emulsion was made from animal fat. Fortunately, it wasn't a great loss--he wasn't a very good photographer.
"did him a favor"
02:01
@Mikhail Probably. Then again, I was never entirely convinced that either the photography or veganism was entirely genuine. I at least half-suspected it was just his idea of how to pick up women.
@JerryCoffin What, convince them of a private photo session in his apartment?
Well, whatever works, heh.
@JerryCoffin Btw., fuck you for I am jealous that you don't have to sleep right now. I am building Clang and it's 2am. I will not falter.
@Columbo Yeah, something on that order anyway.
The computer builds the software, you're most likely watching console output
02:03
No, I am literally compiling the source in my head.
@Columbo I'm still at work. Haven't eaten supper yet.
For ARM x86.
;)
@JerryCoffin Ok, then I do not envy you. Have a good day!
@Columbo The worst part of it was that he didn't have the self confidence to hit on women who actually looked like models. Pretty sure a lot of the women who turned him down thought he was being sarcastic when he told them he was going to make them supermodels.
@JerryCoffin That guy sounds cringey.
@JerryCoffin I'm still at work too, but I have eaten supper. My team is doing overtime (paid, of course), and we're ordering food on the company's dime.
@Columbo I dunno--he was on vacation or something, so I ran into him a few times over the course of a week or so, then never saw him again.
hot pizza into hot woman, don't you love today's technology?
@EtiennedeMartel What is this "overtime" of which you speak? It almost sounds like you're implying the possibility of being awake, but not at work, or something like that...
@JerryCoffin one of the best ways to pick up women is to having a really cute dog and constantly walking it
I would totally recommend samoyed, husky, border collie or the likes ...
02:32
@Telkitty I've walked a Samoyed many times, but never picked up any women that way (and the fact that I was less than 16 at the time shouldn't have any effect, should it?)
if you want to pick up a pedophile, yes
@JerryCoffin women are too large for the jaws or such a dog
@StackedCrooked Hmm...I dunno. I'd probably have been fine with petite women.
@JerryCoffin on a scale of 1 to cotton fluff, exactly how fluffy was this samoyed?
@jaggedSpire She was quite healthy, so she was considerably more fluffy than mere cotton could hope for.
02:45
@JerryCoffin :D
03:15
Lua 5.1 has so many design oversights wargleblargleargle.
04:02
Argh
I need help defining the syntax for a general for loop
Right now, the language can do if (var a = 20; var b = 40; a < b) { ... }
But I'm having a hard time making that apply in the for loop
for (var x = 20; var y = 40; x < y; ++x; --y;)
How do I separate the statements? Which one is the condition? Which one is meant to be the post-loop statements?
Maybe I could multi-paren?
for ( init ) ( conditions ) ( increments ) { ... } ?
 
1 hour later…
05:30
@Luc this would be hilarious if it weren't so sad
05:53
@ThePhD That's how Tcl does it.
> Tcl
RIP
I know :P
06:06
I'm partial to simply { init; for(...) }
06:54
@BartekBanachewicz That's not pimpl. It's something akin to "strategy" pattern.
pimpl is meant speed up compile times and/or preserve binary compatibility
@GundolfGundelfinger God, should we link them Luc's paper of yesterday?
@StackedCrooked and to hide implementation details from the header (which is more than just speeding up compilation) but we digress
I'd call what @BartekBanachewicz shared more like tedious, bare-knuckle type erasure.
pimpl also requires you to explicitly define the destructors in the cpp file. (or at least explicitly "default" them in the cpp file)
I'm really confounded why he'd do that in "embedded" code.
@StackedCrooked where "explicitly" could mean T::~T() = default;
07:01
yeah.
Oh, I see you edited :)
@sehe I used that pattern a lot back when I wrote UI components with platform-specific implementations.
I remember the days where people would have to wax over pimpl implementation for days on end and still not get it right. C++11 sure made things simpler
@StackedCrooked I still use it, for hiding implementation details from headers (like library dependencies, or choices of atomic vs. thread locking)
I occasionally do too.
Been a while since I did the cross-platform thing. Today I'd just use Qt for the UI and be done :)
Ven
Ven
Hi
07:14
@R.MartinhoFernandes I kind of want to do that too, but then you've gotta do another pair of brackets after the for (...). I'm trying to get the shortest, most cromulent syntax I can.
Apparently, there are protests in the US to get minimal hourly wage set to 15 USD. That is about as much I make in my fairly qualified programming job. FML.
Ask for more or change jobs?
Ven
Ven
@ThePhD COMMAS NOT SEMIS. :p
@fredoverflow uni doesn't give, uni taketh
07:30
@Ven Why not semis? :<
Hi lounge
@wilx Never gonna happen.
@StackedCrooked Oh no need for cross platform. Just when I e.g. take a shortcut implementing something with Boost Multi-Index or Serialization, use use something else specific that I might not want in my header, I just stick in the proxy so I'm free to change it
@ThePhD Just allow a block {} inside the first and last parts classical C for?
@wilx Did you compare cost of living?
E.g. recently there was some klnd of survey on programmer income (on SE somewhere?) and it was clearly stupid for me to stay in Europe. I should move to the US /immediately/ and at least triple my pay. But I'm not gonna
/cc @fredoverflow ^
07:40
@sehe This is pretty true. In where I am (New York City), a shitty little apartment room can run you 1500+ in rent EASY. 2000+ for anything nice. And that's just the goddamn rent.
@sehe Obviously not. But that is not the point. The point is that the legally lowest paying jobs there would make as much as I do here. :(
@sehe Yeah, I can understand that. However I wouldn't and couldn't move there either. TBH, I do not want to visit the USA even as a tourist, let alone live there.
@wilx How much do you have in taxes? What do your bills end up looking like? Do you have to pay for your own insurance or are you compelled by the state to pay for (Home, Car, Health) insurance?
Ven
Ven
@ThePhD both.
@wilx The point is, they don't make as much. The money is literally worth less.
Ven
Ven
Don't you have a comma operator?
07:44
@ThePhD The money I get on my account is about 36 % less than the amount listed in my contract.
@Ven No... I don't think it needs to be an explicit operator, no?
Ven
Ven
"explicit operator"?
I mean comma operator like in C.
in Sandbox, 8 secs ago, by sehe
@Mysticial desperado
@Ven No, nothing like that I guess.
No default sequencing operator.
Guess I should get on that.
Oxford comma operator
08:12
@Telkitty Let me guess, now you think you are harassing me. — peterh 17 hours ago
posting this after this request?
Hereby I ask the SE Team to network-wide suspend my account for my own request until 12/31/2016.
08:30
> The Windows 7 Whopper, A Whopper sandwich with seven patties that was an LTO product tie-in with Microsoft in Japan for the introduction of Windows 7.
how do you eat that omg
user1804599
Yeah, looks disgusting.
user1804599
Just like everything Burger King.
Arrgh.
I can't make this shift-reduce error in the parser for my preprocessor go away. :(
user1804599
Should've gone with S-expressions.
should've gone with a different profession
user1804599
08:39
botany
@AlexM. like anything, one bite at a time
user1804599
I am writing a diaper, which is a wrapper function that absorbs inconvenient outputs.
@GundolfGundelfinger I want ¬ to be used as the new delete operator
¬_¬
Ven
Ven
09:09
@thecoshman what if I told you l know languages where it's an operator. :P
if you told us the names of those languages
you'd actually be saying something!
WOO.
It works.
Or.
... It COMPILES.
Let's see if it works.
Ven
Ven
@AlexM. I'd but then I'm afraid Bartek will insult me...
getting insulted by bartek
Ven
Ven
I know you like it
09:18
or living with the knowledge that you wasted many bytes on a server
I'd take bartek any day
Ven
Ven
well, ok. In 05AB1E, ¬ is the function head (so xs[0]). In Jelly, ¬ is the not operator.
here, @thecoshman, just for @AlexM.
so much salt
Ven
Ven
salt?
is that a joke on Jelly or 05AB1E?
I think he messed up his food.
user1804599
05AB1E is shit.
09:32
@R.MartinhoFernandes no, he edited his message multiple times
to ping me repeatedly
adding and removing periods
Ven
Ven
@rightfold mh?
@Ven you'd be more than just a cock tease
Ven
Ven
@AlexM. yeah either that or stackoverflow repeatedly told me "you must wait another second" when it'd already done the edit ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
but hey nice victim syndrom
How do I join the GMT chat?
Man.
This is fucking dumb as bricks.
ocamlyacc doesn't natively understand returning multiple tokens
So there's no automatic destructing of a returned tuple of tokens or a list of tokens
So instead I have to go through every place in my parser and wrap it in a [] return, JUST so I have have the ability in one or two places to return multiple tokens
Then I need to write a goddamn custom token splitting function to handle this, just so I can serialize the tokens into little itty bitty pieces
Ven
Ven
09:43
lolololololololool
You know how this could be avoided? SOME STATE WITH A List.add mytoken tokenlist
BUT NOOO. ~~FUNCTIONAL RETURNS~~.
Fuck all this. Fuck all of this.
Ven
Ven
your sadness is greatly appreciated
It's appreciable how tough you happen to be about that. Most people would have been broken, and would have just learned the language they were using.
But you never gave up! You never tried to learn functional stuff!
I don't get what you're talking about. I'm already doing the way that works: piecing apart the return value using pattern matching. What else do you want from me?
Ven
Ven
less complaining
As entertaining as it once was it got pretty stale
09:53
Yeah, sure.
Ven
Ven
we understand that ocaml sucks
Annnd this doesn't work.
Can't have 2 types in a pattern match, it's just a cruddy switch statement after all.
Ven
Ven
well you can
just pattern match a tuple?
I can't have a runtime-polymorphic return type, is basically my problem here. I don't want to sprinkle (single_token_return, []), ((), [token_1, token_2]) all over my code just to have multiple returns, and I don't want to encapsulate every return value in [single_token_return] and [the_few, multi_token, returns_i_need].
I want to return token_1 for 1 token, token_1, token_2 for 2 tokens, and just handle it like that.
Ven
Ven
I think you're looking for Ocaml's polymorphic variants?
09:58
I still have to go through and annotate all my source. polymorphic variants are only a smidgen better than the solutions above.
Whatever. Time to bite the bullet.
you need to return the 2 tokens at that time?
you can't return the tokens from 2 different calls?
No, because ocamlyacc gives you 1 semantic action, you get 1 return value, and that return needs to be the same across all semantic actions.
Ven
Ven
@ThePhD dunno, I've written line 15 lines of code of Ocaml in my life, and 10 of those were for you :P.
Best I can do is the 2 things I listed above, or a...
but can you use that action to just cache the second token to return it when the action get called again?
10:00
type maybe_multiple_return =
| Single of token
| Multi of token list
Ven
Ven
youmightbedoingitwrong.jpg
@ratchetfreak That might work. But then I'd need some global state with a ref None in it, and then set it to Some([Extra, Tokens]), and then intercept that at my toplevel call to empty out the "extra" tokens.
Unfortunately, doesn't sound very ~~functional~~.
Ven
Ven
you should be returning something from an ADT
good thing: you can have multiple things that way!
proper functional should be that the parser passes you a custom context variable that you modify and return and the next time it gets called you get that modified context back
I am unfortunately not allowed to pass any custom state into the Lexer.
At least, for ocamlyacc (or menhir)/ocamllex.
I'll just return an ADT or whatever. I still have to go through and manually update all of the code to do that, so it's really not ideal, but shrug.
It'll work.
Ven
Ven
10:07
arguably that's what you should've done at first
your lexer returns tokens, your parser returns an AST...
Right, but I was just retaining a straight Token.
Token itself doesn't have a definition for a token list, and I can't define one (it's defined by ocamllex/ocamlyacc).
So I can't hijack Preparser.Token to include a self-list definition.
AS SWEET AS THAT WOULD BE and as AMAZING THAT WOULD BE AS A DEFAULT.
Because if it was a default then I could get REALLY close to what I want with just t returns, and then also do [t1, t2] and it's Just Work™ like magic.
callbacks 101: allow the callback code to have custom context state
Tell that to the Ocamllex/yacc devs. :<
10:10
callbacks 101: wait at least a couple of days before you callback lest you look desperate
7
@wilx I want to visit North America as a tourist, but not the United States of America :/
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah.
@wilx CZ officially 3rd world :P
@R.MartinhoFernandes Canada (further referred to as "best country")
@R.MartinhoFernandes Wagewise, definitely.
@AlexM. Couple as in two?
user1804599
10:14
> +++++++-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
user1804599
Now that's the kind of diffstats I like.
May 15 '13 at 10:28, by R. Martinho Fernandes
> What the fuck is a Canada?
@rightfold Are you sure it will not end up falling like in teh GIF with the pink panther and gardening scissors? :)
@R.MartinhoFernandes I believe I am like top 5 % in CZ wage wise.
@wilx Yeah, not surprised. It sounds impressive, but I'd wager it's not really that impressive in most western countries.
The variance is very low, so small deviations from the average bring you quickly to high percentiles.
Salary percentiles for single people in Germany:
90th percentile is EUR 3,800
95th percentile is EUR 4,780
99th percentile is EUR 7,500
Even the top 1% percent threshold isn't astronomical.
@R.MartinhoFernandes no, not exactly. More like the impressive salaries are very extreme outliers. That's what I meant.
Don't use Firefox until an update is available. Meanwhile, marvel at this beauty of an exploit code: https://lists.torproject.org/pipermail/tor-talk/2016-November/042639.html
3
Sploit of the day
@R.MartinhoFernandes lol @selfreply
10:26
@sehe Looks like a bitcoin miner perhaps.
> "New Firefox update is now available"
Cool, I can use FF again. *opens Firefox*
*clicks "Update Later"*
nwp
nwp
I don't have a kernel32.dll, so that is somewhat of a relief.
@wilx For reference, 3800 euros/month ~= 22.5 euros/hour.
Hrm. Returning lists doesn't work...
@StackedCrooked Or just a generic botnet.
Xeo
Xeo
11:08
@R.MartinhoFernandes 4k here
11:20
That was goddamn hard.
But now it works. Even if all the tokens are fucked up beyond belief.
ewww :P
ewww preprocessor for modules
The preprocessor is not a module.
you use preprocessor to import modules
And does not provide modules.
The directive for importing modules is just import libname
...why do you need import "file" then
11:23
Because textual include is useful.
Is your module system so broken you couldn't split a module into two files without that? :D
No it isn't.
I think it is.
#import` to paste in a file, and #import string to paste in a file-as-string I think are pretty good.
Give me one use-case for pasting a file in (not talking about "as string", as that doesn't require preprocessor either).
(One that isn't solved by a proper module system.)
Generated code.
...?
11:27
When some tool or other generates a blob of code for something your language can't do very easily.
...put it in a module and import it like a module, then.
That forces a function boundary (in the case of dynamically linked library code) or forces you to match build conditions (in the case of a static lib).
no
With a sensible module system, you could do cross-module inlining at compilation.
At that point, the module is just a canonical representation of source or some intermediate representation.
...that's what a compiled module is.
11:32
what else would it be?
So why not just have source code at that point?
(And this doesn't stop you from having module definitions that don't contain the IR and just interface information gained from compilation of that module, if you don't want to share the code.)
@ThePhD Because the compiled module can be as optimized as possible, and all type checking and other analysis can be done a priori (and once per that module, not multiple times).
Ven
Ven
@rightfold you should learn sed!
Mmmn.
Guess I'd better make a whole module system.
Oh wait I have less than 2 weeks. #import it is.
because compiling could be turing complete (aka take a unbounded amount of time) depending on the metapogamming used
11:36
#badware
I'm okay with #badware, because my group was going to make #noware
Ven
Ven
Sed is great, you stargazers.
I mean. Sed is an unreadable mess. But it does thing differently, and it's not hard to learn, so why not.
je sed ; t’as raison
Ven
Ven
sed -e 'ha\ ha\ '
11:59
I am NOT a grammar Nazi! I'm alt-write.
10
^ /cc @EtiennedeMartel @Ell @wilx
Also /cc @Borgleader @jaggedSpire ^
Ven
Ven
?
Oh, your screenshot.
KEK
My preprocessor isn't recursive.
Gooooooddamnit.
Ven
Ven
Gut jerb
and now you're descent (recursively) into madness
I've been there.
12:18
Done that.
user1804599
Hah.
user1804599
We have this app at work to keep track of who has to pay whom for their groceries.
user1804599
I'm thinking of optimising by displaying transitive payments.
user1804599
It's a weighted graph problem.
my company's ads are getting weirder and weirder
12:21
@rightfold lolwut
user1804599
If A has to pay 20 to B, and B has to pay 20 to C, A could just as well directly pay 20 to C.
@StackedCrooked well, it has other benefits, right
@sehe I guess that could be solved better with regular type erasure, but I'm not sure why having it on an embedded target is such a problem
I mean, linking boost for arduino does sound like an overkill
@rightfold You also forget that A might not know about C, B might want to hold onto that money, or C could not know about A.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Nice! :D
Then again, I don't know what your platform actually is, so. vOv
user1804599
12:24
@ThePhD Everyone in the network knows eachother.
@rightfold Well then, optimize away I guess.
@rightfold Yeah.
user1804599
Right now the output of the app is kind of a mess: lpaste.net/3256538770417123328
I tried to explain this to some friends once and apparently it's not obvious? :w
user1804599
12:26
TOTALS should remain invariant under the optimization, so that would be a nice check.
> C : EUR 0037.49
lol
user1804599
However, I will have to rewrite the app in not-AWK, because graph algorithms in AWK are pretty much PAIN.
do you display this in octal or what
user1804599
@Griwes printf "%-7s: EUR %07.2f\n", total, totals[total]
My tests are lying to me.
Because docker can't propogate its errors up to the toplevel shell.
12:28
@GundolfGundelfinger B could charge different interest rates to C than what A charges them.
/troll
And I can't figure out how to get it to do that.
@rightfold can't it pad with spaces somehow? (yes, I know you do it that-ish way, the octal thing was a joek)
@ThePhD erm what
user1804599
It can, but then signs will look odd I think.
@rightfold unless C also has to pay 20 to A
user1804599
Yeah, that's the fun. :)
12:29
@Griwes When I launch docker run bash -c "{ BLAH }" it doesn't pass up anything that happens inside of { BLAH } up a level.
which is the case in real-life trade between countires
Maybe it's not docker, but Bash that's hiding the errors.
@ThePhD ...why the hell do you even have {} there.
@Griwes It's a goddamn example.
Also set -e.
It's not docker's fault, it's your inability to use bash properly.
AKA PEBKAC.
12:30
also inability to bash properly
$ docker run alpine false || echo "failed"
failed
$
@ThePhD You mean the output?
@R.MartinhoFernandes I see the output, it was just not stopping when stuff failed and not propogating it up a level. It only occured ot me just now that it was bash that was hiding things, not docker.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I'm like 99% sure he needs to add set -e.
Which is still bash 101 I believe.
@Griwes It's ThePhD
Do they give out PhDs without the 100-level courses?
12:32
Docker probably opens the default shell... which should be bash on latest ubuntu.
@ThePhD bash -c "set -e; rest; of; your; commands"
I think bash -e also works, but eh, set -e is more nicely explicit.
user1804599
@Ven yeah indeed
user1804599
someone wrote an optimizing brainfuck compiler in sed
@ThePhD Hah!
@Griwes "It's not docker's fault" triggers me.
12:39
@R.MartinhoFernandes But it's not docker's fault this time!
All dockers matter?
Ven
Ven
@rightfold nice!
sup @GundolfGundelfinger?
@Rerito nm, chaining muscle ups ez now
and you?
135kg on the deadlift but I'm becoming a heavy piece of shit
12:46
how elegantly put
@GundolfGundelfinger No grinding no kipping?
All my lifts increased but one: overhead press
grinding yes kipping no
But since I only do 3 workouts/week now, I must perform it in the same session than the bench press
I tried ATG paused squats yesterday for the lolz
Did some sets of 8 with 80kg
Adenin Thyamin Glucin?
ass-to-grass
Ven
Ven
@rightfold look at my sed, my sed is amazing. sed -e :a -e '$q;N;11,$D;ba'
Hrm.
WEll, now it fails properly.
But now I need to figure out how to potentially separate out the commands passed to docker -run so I don't get a log file thousands of lines long.
I mean, really, the scrolling is just a minor inconvenience but I think I can figure something out.
Any of you guise plays warframe?
I don't play warframe, but I play flame war, in real life, on the internet all the times
And you do get burnt most of the times yes we know that
12:59
0
Q: Can't call functions from another header file when not in main

SomeoneWithAQuestionSo I have test.h which contains: #ifndef TEST_H_ #define TEST_H_ class test { public: int value; }; #endif /* TEST_H_ */ and my main.cpp: #include "test.h" class Magic { test x; x.value = 2; // Syntax error }; int main () { test y; y.value = 2; // Works fine retur...

Oh boy... OP could hardly be more clueless...

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