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4:00 AM
#define put_this_here_tokill_floating_point_performance 0.000001f
#define duke_nukem true
 
@LucDanton Why don't you use aligned_storage?
 
#define do_computers_have_souls true
#define answer 42
 
@stdOrgnlDave Are you thinking denormals?
 
@RMartinhoFernandes IIRC my intent was to test if my (very poor) emulation of alignas was working. Because 'unit' test means testing several things at once, of course.
 
@Mysticial yes indeed, denormals suck
 
4:01 AM
@LucDanton Ah.
 
@ScottW but what if that's not the correct behavior?
 
@LucDanton That's a lot of Boost and advanced C++. Is there a quick summary?
 
Didlidooo
 
seriously nobody gets my fluffy bunny loop? because bunnies multiply like rabbits...i.e. they have sex a lot and have lots of babies exponentially..come on, it's not rocket science
 
@stdOrgnlDave You'll need to get down to 10^-44 or so to hit denormals on float.
 
4:03 AM
what is the best development environment for mobile applications? am a newbie
 
> bunnies multiply like rabbits
 
FINE!
int rabbits = 2; for (int fluffy_bunnies = 1; fluffy_bunnies < 32; fluffy_bunnies *= rabbits) {}
 
@newbieLinuxCpp The one you know.
 
@R
I dunno
 
@newbieLinuxCpp What kind of mobile applications?
 
4:05 AM
@Mysticial lol, advanced. tl;dr version: grab memory, point an arena to it, use a standard container with an arena_allocator associated to that arena, enjoy high-level C++ (exception-safety and so on) with tight control of the memory. I even throw in support for not initializing where it makes sense (int and so on). Although of course that's more of a proof-of-concept more than anything, I have no idea if the generated code would stand up to your standards.
That's a terrible tl;dr.
 
int rabbits = 2; for (int fluffy_bunnies = 1; fluffy_bunnies < 32; fluffy_bunnies *= rabbits) { printf("%d ", (int)sqrt(fluffy_bunnies)); } // output: 1 2 3 4 5. bunnies multiply like rabbits
 
WE GET IT.
2
 
I don't think he gets it, he's just saying that to avoid embarrassment.
 
Damn, the Robot just activated its rage circuits.
 
4:06 AM
You're taking the square root of a fucking fluff-bunny?
 
OK @RMartinhoFernandes, here's how it works: to predict future bunny generation sizes, we use an exponential function
@Mysticial EXACTLY
 
@stdOrgnlDave lol
 
The time horizon on @greatdismal's words coming true has shrunk to one day: http://twitter.com/#!/GreatDismal/status/196982191295696898 and then: http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/story/2012/05/01/bc-tsunami-motorcycle-owner.html
 
Todo: write a formal Arena concept, rename arena to single_arena and write a double_arena. That should be it I think.
 
@RMartinhoFernandes since we are using this exponential function we can do it iteratively to perform work
@RMartinhoFernandes we are using 'cute variable names' to demonstrate a real-world concept
 
4:07 AM
(@greatdismal is William Gibson, for those who know him)
 
@RMartinhoFernandes at i=16 we are at generation 5
@RMartinhoFernandes and we are taking the square root of fucking fluffy bunnies
@RMartinhoFernandes so do you get it NOW?
 
@EtiennedeMartel My professor did not specify. He want application that search recipes according ingredients, recipe name, ect. and should be accessed on mobiles, tablets or PDAs. am new to this, wat do u recommend?
 
@newbieLinuxCpp Android would make sense, I guess.
 
hmm, I'd say good old-fashioned AJAX would do you well
or even, google
 
@RMartinhoFernandes The guy who wrote Neuromancer?
 
4:09 AM
@LucDanton What does 'arena' mean?
 
@EtiennedeMartel Yeah.
 
@Pubby 'Untyped memory pool with very minimal or non-existent bookkeeping' I suppose.
 
Woa. It's one of the few sci-fi books I actually read.
 
#define named_poorly std::vector##
 
@EtiennedeMartel so i just download android sdk? do I need a database?
 
4:10 AM
@Pubby Stack.
 
@newbieLinuxCpp Android has native support for SQLite, but I guess you should first try to really check what are your requirements.
 
Oh man... if this was C or C++, I'd be all over it:
29
Q: Why does adding local variables make .NET code slower

Edward BreyWhy does commenting out the first two lines of this for loop and uncommenting the third result in a 42% speedup? int count = 0; for (uint i = 0; i < 1000000000; ++i) { var isMultipleOf16 = i % 16 == 0; count += isMultipleOf16 ? 1 : 0; //count += i % 16 == 0 ? 1 : 0; } Behind the...

 
@RMartinhoFernandes Queue.
 
named_poorly<bool> a = { fuck_yeah_baby, fuck_yeah_baby, fucking_no_way };
 
@EtiennedeMartel okay thank you. I will do.
 
4:11 AM
@Pubby It's a place where you can play hockey.
 
I think I like this 'cute variables' thing
 
@Pubby It's similar to a garbage collected heap, except there's no garbage collector.
 
So it's just a heap then?
 
@Mysticial Out of curiosity, is there a particular bit that prompted you to call my code 'advanced C++'? Now I feel like I have unnecessary complexity I need to extirpate.
 
@Moshe thank you for the gift, this will be great of the next IOCCC, there will be lots of square roots of fucking bunnies and such floating around
 
4:12 AM
@EtiennedeMartel No.
 
@RMartinhoFernandes Why did you say "Stack" then? :S
 
@Pubby To throw you off.
 
are you all geeks in c and c++, I wish i can be good as u guyz :(
 
@LucDanton I was referring to R's stuff. I mean, "garbage collected heap" without "garbage collection" is pretty much just a heap.
 
4:13 AM
@newbieLinuxCpp We're not born this way, you know.
 
@RMartinhoFernandes speak for yourself, my parents put an std:: in front of my damned name
 
@EtiennedeMartel Oh yeah, that makes sense.
 
@RMartinhoFernandes Except @Xeo.
(I love throwing random plinks to people)
 
@newbieLinuxCpp Less wishing more doing
 
@RMartinhoFernandes I know, how can i improve?
 
4:14 AM
to call me by a nickname everyone first has to say "using std::OrgnlDave" which sets a bad precedent: people use me too much
 
Read. Talk to people. Write code. Not necessarily in this order.
 
Damn it. I just spent 10 minutes confused as hell. Turns out when you debug this in Visual Studio: int i; { /* stuff */ int i; /* more stuff */}, once you reach the inner scope the debugger reports the value of i as the value of the second i, even if it doesn't yet exist in the scope. Sitting here wondering how the hell the first i is changing randomly.
 
@newbieLinuxCpp Contribute to open source projects except not GCC
 
@LucDanton I'm trying to see where you actually do the allocating/deallocating. I only see a counter decrement in your deallocate function?
 
4:15 AM
@stdOrgnlDave am not good in coding how can i contribute to source code, I'll ruin their projects
 
@GManNickG what's the word? there's a name for the points of time in between statements
 
@EtiennedeMartel Just one?
 
@GManNickG intervals? that's why it reports it that way
 
@Pubby Edited because I knew one of you smartasses would comment about it.
 
@stdOrgnlDave Huh? I don't follow.
 
4:16 AM
@EtiennedeMartel thank u :)
 
god what's that thing called? it's the point between statements...
 
@LucDanton Don't forget that I'm mostly a C programmer. And I don't know much C++ beyond the basic STL library functions.
 
What's -3 % 2 in C++?
 
@EtiennedeMartel Just doing my job.
 
@RMartinhoFernandes Pain.
 
4:16 AM
SEQUENCE POINTS
 
@Mysticial The arena gets a hold of the memory but doesn't own it. In one instance the memory is from alignas(int) unsigned char storage[500]; (i.e. it's aligned), in another it's alloca(500 + alignment) (i.e. it's not).
 
there we go
the debugger stops at the sequence point
 
@RMartinhoFernandes -1?
 
The debugger stops where the fuck he wants to.
 
4:17 AM
@Pubby I dunno. I'm asking.
 
The debugger doesn't take shit from anybody.
 
I feel too lazy to check the spec.
 
@stdOrgnlDave Let me clarify: the debugger is in no way conforming to the C++ standard w.r.t. scope (which is fine, better than nothing, but confusing). Sequence points have nothing to do with it.
 
@RMartinhoFernandes Well IIRC it's the remainder, but I'm too lazy to remember how to divide.
 
I know some modulus operators out there give 1, and some give -1.
 
4:18 AM
@RMartinhoFernandes The one that you expect least between remainder and the other possibility.
 
modulo should give 1, remainder is different
 
@GManNickG yes it is. it reports on the value of everything at the last sequence point, not at the next one. the next one hasn't been evaluated yet.
@GManNickG the scope resolution and variable declaration hasn't happened yet, even though you've stepped in
 
@LucDanton From what I can tell, you're incrementing a counter on allocate and decrementing on deallocate. All memory allocators need some sort of data-structure to keep track of what's been allocated - since memory can be freed in a different order from when it was allocated. Or perhaps I'm missing something?
 
@stdOrgnlDave ... Let me write this a different way.
 
@LucDanton Why static_cast<T*>(static_cast<void*>(ret));? Wouldn't a single reinterpret_cast be less verbose?
 
4:20 AM
Ah, ID in C++98, same sign as dividend in C++11.
 
int i = 5;

{
    float j = static_cast<float>(i);

    int i; // uninitialized
}
 
@EtiennedeMartel That would be UB for non-PODs.
 
In that code, if you put a breakpoint on the line float j = ..., VS will report the value as i as garbage, not 5.
 
Do you REALLY need to static_cast primitive numeric types?
 
4:21 AM
@RMartinhoFernandes What? It was ID?
 
@Mysticial I avoid implicit conversions pretty much everywhere.
 
is Qt SDK good for mobile application?
 
@GManNickG I meant like over C-style casts.
for primitive numeric types.
 
@Mysticial And I prefer to specify my cast method. :)
 
@Mysticial Yeah, there's no expensive bookkeeping. This isn't meant to compete with the free-store. If you remember the discussion we had, the basic usage that was mentioned was resize-ing to some size and then using the sequence.
 
4:22 AM
@newbieLinuxCpp Everyone seems to hate on Qt here, dunno if there's a better alternative though.
 
@GManNickG that's odd. variables still need to be allocated onto the stack. you're referring to a location on the stack that hasn't been initialized. it should pop a warning saying garbage uninitialized variable
 
Although the interesting bit so far is what usage looks like, not arena which is almost but not quite throw-away code. This is the unit test for arena_allocator, not arena.
 
@LucDanton In which case, it's only supposed to on a very specific pattern of allocs/deallocs?
Which is completely fine if you know the behavior of what will be calling it.
 
@Mysticial Yes. auto p = grab_memory(size); arena a(p, size); vector_type v(how_many_elements);.
 
@stdOrgnlDave What? Nothing in my code is UB if that's what you mean.
 
4:23 AM
Practically tied to std::vector, too.
 
I'm merely commenting on debugger behavior, way outside the scope of language semantics.
 
@GManNickG my point is that the compiler treats it as if int anonymous::i was already declared at the time you reference j
 
Or to look it the other way around, this is about using std::vector on top of some memory you want to manage.
 
wait
nevermind
@GManNickG it is entirely correct, anonymous::i exists on the stack, it was created when the function entered. it hasn't been initialized, but the debugger still sees that there's a variable anonymous::i.
 
4:25 AM
@RMartinhoFernandes Unspecified, no?
 
@stdOrgnlDave I'm not sure what you're arguing about. What's correct and what's wrong? I'm merely stating that at the line float j = ..., the second i does not yet exist, so the debugger ought to report the value of the first i. It doesn't, probably out of simplicity of implementation.
 
@GManNickG the second i does exist, when the function was entered, stack space was allocated for it. the debugger shows the value of the i in the scope you're using. anonymous::i, which is on the stack but not initialized
 
@LucDanton ERm... and that's what the U in UB in that message means... whistles
 
@stdOrgnlDave The C++ standard has no concept of the stack, if you're going to get pedantic.
 
@GManNickG inline variable definitions do not actually occur inline, they all get put at the top with name mangling
 
4:28 AM
@stdOrgnlDave: Are you really trying to tell me this code is UB? int i = 5; { int j = i; int i; }
 
@RMartinhoFernandes Tsk, you've made me check to just to see if it weren't implementation-specified so that I could bust you on that, but it is unspecified results. Ah well.
 
it is equivalent to
int i = 5; int anonymous_i; int j = i; (void)0;
 
@GManNickG Someone once tried to convince me that #include <unistd.h> was UB in C.
 
@RMartinhoFernandes Did they succeed?
 
4:30 AM
In convincing me? No.
They succeeded in making me leave the discussion.
 
@stdOrgnlDave Sure, and all I said was that when I ask the debugger for the value of i in the statement int j = i;, it reported the value of anonymous_i instead, incorrectly.
@RMartinhoFernandes lol, on what grounds? That it's non-standard?
 
@GManNickG are you sure about that? where in the standard does it say that, in order of execution, it must use the i in the "above" scope? i.e.:
 
@stdOrgnlDave ?!?!?!?!?!?!!??! I give up. I don't know what's confusing you. Yes I'm sure. This is really basic stuff.
 
int i = 5; { for (int e = 0; e < 10; e++) { j = i; int i = 10; } }
what should j equal each time?
 
5.
 
4:32 AM
and how does that make any sense to you?
 
Variable scope is from the point of definition to the end of the block that defines it.
 
2
A: How to get file size in ANSI C without fseek and ftell?

KazThe article you cited is clueless. The advice against using fseek is predicated on the idea that even for a binary file (opened with fopen(..., "..b") the call fseek(f, SEEK_END, 0) is "undefined behavior". Strictly speaking this is true because the standard says: A binary stream need no me...

 
exactly
wait
 
The second i doesn't exist where the assignment is done.
 
seriously?
where's it say that
 
4:33 AM
@stdOrgnlDave: Seriously dude, just try it: ideone.com/b2Fyx
@stdOrgnlDave It makes sense because the second i does not yet exist.
 
> You attempted to reach ideone.com, but the server presented an expired certificate. No information is available to indicate whether that certificate has been compromised since its expiration. This means Chromium cannot guarantee that you are communicating with ideone.com and not an attacker.
 
Am I the only one getting an expired certificate error on ideone?
 
I got it too @RMartinhoFernandes
 
@Pubby Guess not.
 
@RMartinhoFernandes Wow.
 
4:34 AM
> The certificate expired on 01/18/12 13:37.
This makes no sense.
 
@GManNickG does the program you're debugging output the correct thing?
 
Wait, my ideone link is erroring on you guys? Weird, sorry.
@stdOrgnlDave Yes, I was just confused on the debuggers values.
 
Why is Firefox using middle-endian date format if I'm not using a stupid locale?
 
@GManNickG you're right, the debugger can't tell that it "doesn't exist in the scope yet," and is showing you the i in the scope, even if the program is using the i outside of the scope.
 
@RMartinhoFernandes I facepalmed so hard my ass flew out of my nose.
 
4:36 AM
Here's what my ideone code was:
#include <iostream>

int main()
{
    int i = 5;

    {
        for (int e = 0; e < 10; e++)
        {
            int j = i;
            std::cout << j << std::endl; // prints five *every time*

            int i = 10;
        }
    }
}
@stdOrgnlDave I think it could tell, in principle, but for practicality sake it's not worth the effort to do so.
 
@GManNickG from the debugger's point of view, though, at that point in time, it thinks it should show you the scoped i. it isn't a syntax parser, it doesn't know that the program isn't using the i that it is.
 
@stdOrgnlDave "it isn't a syntax parser, it doesn't know that the program isn't using the i that it is." But only contingently, not necessarily.
 
If a debugger uses primitive or broken parser, it's debugger's fault. What does have to do with anything?
 
@GManNickG if you look at it from the point of view of the debugger, it makes sense. remember it has to match up symbol names to source lines and such, and make decisions about scoped name collisions. the simplest solution is to display the symbol from the current scope
 
It doesn't make sense from any point of view other than the lazy implementer's POV.
 
4:41 AM
I'm not sure it's possible without deep code inspection to do better, though. I mean, for the debugger - which doesn't see the source code, it sees things happen in a completely different order - for the debugger to be able to tell that j is actually assigned the first i, that is a complex task. look at the assembly of that function
 
@stdOrgnlDave But still a doable task.
 
Debugger does see the source code.
That's like, one of the points of having debug symbols.
 
@RMartinhoFernandes I'll take over the argument for you. :P
 
They point to the source.
Which can be parsed for current frame and IP to determine correct scope.
If it reports 10 for i in that first assignment, then it's broken.
Simple as that.
 
I agree that it's broken, I'm saying how it's broken and why it makes sense for it to be broken this way
just look at the assembly, it will be self-evident why this is a complex problem
 
4:43 AM
@GManNickG Oh boy. I'll patiently watch from the outside.
And keep laughing.
 
I'm going to bed
 
It's not complex.
 
@CatPlusPlus look at the assembly output
 
If debugger knows the currently executing line in terms of source code, it should be able to print locals correctly.
Who cares about assembly output. You're debugging on source level, not assembly level.
That's the whole point of debug symbols.
Translating IP to function + offset is trivial, any debugger can do that.
Eh, off to boring classes and then finally to sleep. Bye.
 
Yow, you start early. Or have a long commute.
 
4:47 AM
Isn't it almost 8 o'clock in Poland?
 
6:47.
Lecture at 7:30.
 
Oh, that is early then.
 
Yeah that's early.
 
I can guarantee that if I had a class at 7:30AM I would show up 0% of the time.
2
 
Although maybe it's not that bad if you're eastwards.
 
4:49 AM
Only gas stations are open before 8:00 here. Everything else just doesn't exist before 8.
 
Right, but you're pretty much on solar time, aren't you?
I must check a map D:
 
I broke my perfect even rep to downvote that header guy to oblivion.
 
~8 degrees West, GMT.
 
Let there be justice!
 
Not sure how that translates to solar time.
 
4:50 AM
And cake!
 
Damn, Lisbon is one degree wester than Braga.
("wester"? WTF)
 
Westerer.
 
> Under the system [of nautical time zones], a time change of one hour is required for each change of longitude by 15°.
 
So, I'm actually halfway.
 
So -30min approx.?
 
4:53 AM
Yeah.
 
@GManNickG You and I are one alike. :P
 
> @CatPlusPlus Your conclusion is correct. Few C programs are "correct" according to ISO C (where the term "undefined behavior" comes from). Therefore, pedants who cry about "undefined behavior" are mostly useless windbags. Like the author of the article which this question is about. Of course vendor headers and libraries have defined behavior, just not ISO-C-defined behavior. – Kaz just now
Ahahaha.
 
lol
This is fun.
 
Warsaw is 21° East (I forgot which city @Cat usually mentions). So not quite 30min ahead.
So I suppose that makes 7:30 in Warsaw almost 8:30 to you. And why did I spent so much time figuring that out.
 
@LucDanton Wroclaw (sorry, too lazy to type the special l thingy), which is at 17º.
(Too lazy to type a proper degree symbol as well)
 
4:58 AM
Closer to 8 then. Would you consider that early?
 
That's when classes start here.
My last job started at 9:30.
 
@CatPlusPlus What post did you downvote?
 
Scroll up, latest oneboxed answer. Read it. It's fun.
 
Quick question: I can't find it in the documentation for CreateProcess, but do I need to ensure the string/buffer I pass as the command line lives as long as the process?
 
@GManNickG I'm pretty sure it doesn't become shared memory.
 
5:00 AM
@RMartinhoFernandes As in Windows internally copies it?
 
I'd expect something like that.
But I'm not a WinAPI expert.
It just doesn't make sense to me otherwise.
 
Reading about British Summer time: "This proposal is referred to as "Single/Double Summer Time" (SDST), and would effectively mean the UK adopting the same time zone as central European countries". It's like they're avoiding using the same name for the same scheme as continental countries on purpose, lol.
 
@RMartinhoFernandes Yeah. That's what I was thinking, but then it notes that for Unicode "CreateProcessW can modify the contents of this string"; is that just the call to CreateProcessW that can modify it, or the resulting process? Bleh. I'm going with "it copies it, and it can modify it during the initial copy in Unicode."
 
I'd say this is typically British, but that would be typically continental of me to say.
 
Btw, on the matter of undefined behaviour, this series of posts is interesting.
@LucDanton lol
I like WEST for Western European Summer Time.
 
5:10 AM
Do you like WET as well?
 
WET is... funny.
Anyway, we won't change anytime soon. Our timezone seems well tuned.
> Portugal moved to Central European Time and Central European Summer Time in 1992, but reverted to Western European Time in 1996 after concluding that energy savings were small, it had a disturbing effect on children's sleeping habits as it would not get dark until 22:00 or 22:30 in summer evenings with repercussions on standards of learning and school performance, and insurance companies reported a rise in the number of accidents.
 
What about summer time though? What's the general opinion on that?
Each year there's the usual cohort of "Aren't we supposed to get rid of that?" over here.
 
There's some complaining, but mostly in the order of complaining that in Winter, kids go to school at night and come back at night.
Which is stupid because no timezone adjustment will make daylight hours last longer.
Oh, and the usual "but we sleep one hour less some night in March" thing.
Look, you invite all your teenage friends to downvote this; I'm not deleting this perfectly good, knowledgeable answer based on 23 years of C experience, N-re-readings of the 1990 standard (lost appetite when C99 hit) and numerous technical documents in this area. — Kaz 11 mins ago
You guys were merciless.
 
5:29 AM
I admit nothing.
 
I didn't down vote it.
 
My downvote was there since March.
 
Does the 1990 C Standard provide different definition of undefined behavior?
 
@GManNickG it's copied to the the new process image. in that process GetCommandLine just retrieves pointer to the copy. you can change it if you want (within the original size), and since that's the only copy of it tools will report new value as command line.
 
@CheersandhthAlf Awesome, thanks.
 
5:40 AM
if you want to investigate the process image you can start with GetModuleHandle(0) which retrieves pointer to the start (start of the DOS header). then just follow the layout in winnt.h or whatever that header was named.
i did that once just to get efficient access to the version info... :-)
 
@CheersandhthAlf That sounds messy.
 
5:59 AM
Having my cockatoo chase my mouse pointer was all fun and games until he decided the best way to get to it was to chew the edge of my new monitor. Lucky it didn't break.
 
6:20 AM
lol... wat?
-1
Q: Adding two nos. without any operator

mSick CodesAny1 know how to add two no. without using arithmatic & logical operator... plz provide the code with explanation

 
Chat's gone bonkers.
 
I thought it was a good answer myself.
Although it doesn't handle negative arguments!
:P
 
Is there a "push_back range" algorithm?
I have a feeling there is.
Oh, insert.
very unique ... can you please explain this !! i have no idea what is this :) — wannabeApro 55 secs ago
 
@RMartinhoFernandes keep both versions in your answer.
 
It's only a matter of time before someone taking things too seriously goes "but insert uses arithmetic operators!"
 
6:28 AM
@Mysticial Feels gratuitous.
I think I prefer the loop.
 
11
Q: Adding without using a + or - sign

PhiNotPiThere have been many "Do __ without __" challenges before, but I hope that this is one of the most challenging. The Challenge You are to write a program that takes two natural numbers (whole numbers > 0) from STDIN, and prints the sum of the two numbers to STDOUT. The challenge is that you must...

 
100 rep bounty for anybody who can do this in Brainfuck. — Peter Olson Dec 1 '11 at 5:57
lol
 
2
Q: How do I add two numbers without the + operator?

Viswanathan IyerHow do I calculate the sum of a and b without using the + operator? int a = 10; int b = 10; int sum = a + b;

 
Is there a digraph or trigraph for (?
 
111
Q: Programming challenge: can you code a hello world program as a Palindrome?

gigantt.comSo the puzzle is to write a hello world program in your language of choice, where the program's source file as a string has to be a palindrome. To be clear, the output has to be exactly "Hello, World". Edit: Well, with comments it seems trivial (not that I thought of it myself of course [sig...

 
6:42 AM
Hmm, no.
0
A: Adding without using a + or - sign

R. Martinho FernandesC++ 0 +/-, 12 tie-breakers int add(int x, int y) { std::vector<int> v(x); std::vector<int> u(y); for(auto n : u) { v.push_back(n); } return v.size(); }

Suggestions for cutting on the tie-breakers are welcome.
 
You should probably make those unsigned instead of int.
 
@RMartinhoFernandes #define lparen (?
 
Ow.
@Pubby Ok, fucking ugly now, but a much better score :)
 
6:58 AM
Yay
-2
A: What is corresponding c++ data type to SQL numeric(18,0) data type?

IceHave a look at www.youjizz.com and click on the SQL button on the left

Ha
-1
A: How to obtain a description of a Java exception in C++ when using JNI?

IceI believe there is something similar on www.CplusplusTutBlog.com/tutorial5.html and click on the C++ menu

This one too
 
@Pubby Is that a phishing link? Afraid to click on it...
 
Na, just some gay porn
 
Wow. Please vote to delete the first one, it needs two more.
 
> faggots banned me from asking a question
 
(That said, I really needed to lose 2 rep. to make it a multiple of five, so yay!)
 
7:06 AM
@GManNickG and when it gets deleted, you will get it back. :)
 
What, really? :( Dammit.
 
Apparently, I cast the last spam flag on the first one.
It got deleted immediately.
 
I can downvote you if you want nvm I'm on a multiple of 5
 
0
A: Writing a function in MIPS with global variables?

IceYou are just using your code from here: I came across this on http://www.planet-source-code.com/vb/default.asp?lngWId=3 If you are using someone elses code then please acknowledge the source. But the website has the answer to this question so check it out.

When the mods wake up, they're gonna be like WTF?!?! when they see these...
I already spam-flagged all 3 of them. Only one has been deleted so far.
 
7:21 AM
This guy is nuts.
 
ya... clearly someone has lost it...
 
SO is not the kind of site you'd want to get banned from
 
I just deleted the second one and cast a delete vote on the 3rd one.
 
7:41 AM
I think they're all gone now.
 
One good thing about SO is that mere mortals like us can clean up if there are enough of us. :)
 
Mere mortals? I'm past 20k, I am a god.
 
Pfft, demigod maybe
 
Only 20k? :)
 
When post gets deleted by Community and locked, we can't edit out the links.
Maybe we should feature request that a post deleted from spam/offensive flags also remove all links on the post.
 
sbi
7:46 AM
@GManNickG He started out answering C#, so he's at a disadvantage compared to us C++ guys. :)
 
C# gives more rep than C++... I'd think...
 
@Mysticial I'd upvote that, even though only 10k+ers can see it.
 
@RMartinhoFernandes The feature request?
 
@Mysticial Yeah.
 
k, I'll make the meta post.
 
7:47 AM
Yeah, crappy wi-fi timed it out.
 
sbi
@Mysticial That was, you know, kind of my point. :-/
 
0
Q: Remove links when a post is deleted by Community from spam/offensive flags

MysticialRecently a user had completely lost it after getting question banned and he posted 3 spam answers: 10k only - No mods were on at the time to process our flags, but we mob-deleted them from the Lounge<C++> chatroom. What is corresponding c++ data type to SQL numeric(18,0) data type? How t...

 
sbi
I think there's a test room somewhere, @bamboon.
 

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