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11:08
@R.MartinhoFernandes Oh you don't have to look far. In Poland there's e.g. a minimal amount of money you can be requested to give back to the tax office, which is IIRC twice the amount it costs to send the basic mail through the national post.
The thing is, there's a shitload of correspondence related to bureaucracy like that and this limit doesn't hold everywhere. I've heard of cases where people got bills for 0 PLN with multiple warrants, which ceased after they've sent a transfer for 0 PLN.
So it doesn't necessarily have to be large amounts; large quantities are also grounds for dismissal.
11:22
@BartekBanachewicz sounds more like some programmer forgot to check if(debt > 0)
11:34
@BartekBanachewicz How do you even do that? I would think the bank IS would not allow that.
will this work?
storing function object's address in an integer
@sehe Well, I did promote that both on Roddit and Twatter
and then using the address to later call the function
But I didn't expect people to casually tweet it out :O
{"", FUNCTION_TYPE_BUILTIN, &equal_to<int>()}
I am going to get an error
how do I get the address of that equal_to object?
11:37
@Morwenn Thank you, thank you.
No problem <3

C++ Questions and Answers

Solve problems and approach solutions. Just ask and lurkers wi...
@wilx some weird transfer method
prolly via post office
C++ Q&A is always empty
so what I'm wondering is
given that the A2 licence limits maximum power of a bike
Ven
Ven
11:41
praying for #paris
ScY
ScY
c++ really is a simple, elegant language. No need for a Q&A room
10
Ven
Ven
nice memes
You can get 35kW either with 35Nm at 1000 RPM (maybe times some constant) or with 70Nm at half that rpm
@ScY lolololo
now what I'm wondering is what gives you more top speed and acceleration
an electric engine has ridiculous amounts of torque but doesn't spin very fast
I guess you'd need to integrate the power curve to get actual energy produced, but then the gearbox comes in and starts messing that up
gearbox really only messes things up at shift times
but you can have different lengths of gears
11:47
you only need to know the output power curve for the gears for the time it's in each gear and then integrate the discontinuous graph
@BartekBanachewicz electric engines aka. electric motors actually spin ridiculously fast and have very low torque. At least the common ones. Dont know whats used in cars tho.
well, the opposite
most of the electric cars don't have gearboxes
just a fixed gear ratio
@BartekBanachewicz are you sure? not having the ability to shift gears does not necessarily mean that there is no gear box at all.
@MarioDekena I'm pretty sure
11:51
tesla has gears
there can still be a gear train, to get a better power curve for the speeds
@MarioDekena well a fixed gear is hardly a "gearbox" in my book, but sure
@BartekBanachewicz gearbox means box with gears, refering to the fact, that its a rigid system with bearings and gears inside. Thus, a gearbox with fixed gear is still a gearbox. But i searched a little further. You are right, e-motors of cars have incredible good characteristics especially regarding torque.
And tesla doesnt use gears anymore. They tried, but the high torque ripped the gears off lol.
 
1 hour later…
13:10
Am I the only who's sad OP referred to his code as C++?
I really "like" how people are taught C++ that way, that is adding some random features of C++ to C curriculum
the result is people being both bad at C and bad at C++
The best part is the using namespace std; which not only is bad practice in general, but in this case, the code compiles without it because OP using C headers.
@YashasSamaga Because you're never there.
Ven
Ven
Wow, reading youtube comments on a video defending trump's batshit insane crap is scary.
13:26
I specially said 'boolean not null default 0' but mysql converted the field to tinyint & regardless whether I inserted "TRUE" or "FALSE", it puts 0 in the field
@Borgleader Eeww!
> If that's the case, the Stackage folks should probably look into a more reliable notification system, for example email…
Ven
Ven
ouch
hehe, "email" and "reliable" in a single sentence
hilarious
@Ven Link plz, share the fun
Ven
Ven
13:38
@Rerito la vidéo que l'autre raciste a posté plus tôt. youtube.com/watch?v=JNu4xU9qOEM
ScY
ScY
@Ven you didn't lie.
@Ven I expected more fun :(
Ven
Ven
@Rerito the comments are a trainwreck
nwp
nwp
@Telkitty according to this "not null" is a lie
@Ven Comments like:
> we need a french trump and we need him fast because things are getting ugly.
it’s just a tiny bite, don’t want to get stuffed
tu dirais pas ça si tu l'avais dans le cul ! (source, probablement)
ah, the dreaded single entendre
5
@Rerito tu vas me donner envie de ouiche
13:56
@LucDanton J'ai gagné le concours du meilleur cuisinier asiatique en leur préparant un méchoui
14:21
Guise, someone here gets bad_alloc thrown at the face while trying to allocate 2M doubles (either using new or through a vector)
what can be the cause? Memory fragmentation? Coz 16MB doesn't sound that big to me
nwp
nwp
Because they didn't standardize std::running_on_a_toaster_exception yet.
custom allocators?
woops, looks like GCC is now being strict about its []<typename Blah>(Blah) {} extension for lambda exprs cc @Xeo
> error: ISO C++ does not support lambda templates [-Wpedantic]
Ven
Ven
How many hours after starting to chase you down a bug are you allowed to set "Archive - Fuck You" on repeat?
Well standard allocator
But the code is called from excel so that may be memory restrictions from excel or smth I really dunno
3
Ven
Ven
14:29
Well allocated m8.
@Rerito OH SHIT
wut why
Ven
Ven
hi jaggy
Ven
Ven
got any more of 'em red pandas?
lemme see
14:30
@Ven Heh, traders..
Ven
Ven
@Rerito starred for empathy
You know it's really serious when even loungers get empathetic.
got one
have a red panda video /cc @Borgleader @TonyTheLion @ThePhD @Ven @Xeo
Ven
Ven
@jaggedSpire <3
I paused "fuck you" for this.
@Ven <3 I hope it satisfies
Ven
Ven
My mood is lifted by that tail's dance
14:34
^_^
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton awww
Ven
Ven
@milleniumbug holy fuk
hey now, a mega application requires mega initialization
14:37
activeTransferPriority[MegaTransfer::TYPE_UPLOAD] = 0xFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFULL; :D
Ven
Ven
:D
@milleniumbug wtf
@thecoshman uranium best metal
@Luc do you write all your Sphinx docs on their own, or do you extract stuff from C++ sources?
@thecoshman Dude, Bielefeld doesn't exist.
The Bielefeld Conspiracy (German: Bielefeldverschwörung or Bielefeld-Verschwörung) is a satire of conspiracy theories that originated in 1994 in the German Usenet, which claims that the city of Bielefeld does not actually exist, but is an illusion propagated by various forces. Originally an internet phenomenon, the conspiracy has since been represented in the city's marketing, and referred to by Chancellor Angela Merkel. == Synopsis == The story goes that the city of Bielefeld (population of 323,076 as of 2011) in the German state of North Rhine-Westphalia does not actually exist. Rather,...
also what the fuck
14:51
@thecoshman Also shiny metal best metal
Python C api is retarded af
void Py_Initialize();
@R.MartinhoFernandes 1, 2, it’s crude but I’m very happy about both the workflow and result
nwp
nwp
@R.MartinhoFernandes you shouldn't refer to that satiric encyclopedia copy, use the real one
@R.MartinhoFernandes I consider the docs to be 'their own', but I .. include:: parts of stuff extracted from the sources. I’m aping how it works with Python if that rings a bell, although I’m limited to the file level unlike it
parts of why I’m happy about it is that it works well with files that have nicely separated concerns
@R.MartinhoFernandes That's pretty cool. :D
@R.MartinhoFernandes Have you been there? :)
Xeo
Xeo
14:58
@R.MartinhoFernandes Gotta admit, I never heard of that one before someone linked that page here.
@R.MartinhoFernandes what Sphinx + autodoc usage looks like: you write your 'high-level' docs separately, while embedding the API-level details as desired. while those API-level details are programmatically available on the Python side. (example credit to @Rapptz)
Ven
Ven
15:17
def handleBookNode(bookNode: Node) = bookNode match  {
    case <author>{author}</author> => println(s"Author: $author")
    case <title>{title}</title> => println(s"Title: $title")
    case <description>{desc}</description> => println(s"Description: $desc")
    case _ => println("Oops")
}
TIL Scala has XML patterns. O_o
// WAT
stocks match {
  case <stocks>{stocks @ _*}</stocks> =>
    for (stock @ <stock>{_*}</stock> <- stocks)
      println(s"stock: ${stock.text}")
}
impressive
@R.MartinhoFernandes btw whether you end up using Sphinx or something else or nothing at all I’d love to hear your thoughts, docs are my jam
apparently python can't accept a string with a -31 character
nwp
nwp
@BartekBanachewicz did you confuse python's unicode string and byte string?
15:47
@milleniumbug activeTransferPriority[MegaTransfer::TYPE_DOWNLOAD] = 0xFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFULL; // of shit
@nwp I'm not sure
look
PyDict_SetItemString(processPropDict, key.c_str(), PyUnicode_FromString(value.c_str())).get());
should that work
@BartekBanachewicz What do you mean with "-31 character"?
@wilx the byte value is -31
> Create a Unicode object from a UTF-8 encoded null-terminated char buffer u.
is the string valid UTF-8
@BartekBanachewicz Well, that means high bit set and that should not be a single character but part of UTF-8 sequence. What is it actually?
15:53
@wilx we suspect some garbage data
it crashed our app
the thing is, if it's garbage, I kinda need to know what kind of garbage to protect myself from
@BartekBanachewicz What's that in hexadecimal?
e1 unsigned
Isn't it one byte?
So E1.
it's -1f if signed
@BartekBanachewicz I think you might be missing some error handling between the calls to the different Python C API functions. Maybe sprinkle it with PyErr_Occurred()?
15:57
That's valid, but it's a starter for a 3-byte sequence.
@wilx oh. hmm.
@R.MartinhoFernandes ah
Maybe it's not at the start of a sequence?
@R.MartinhoFernandes -31 12 112?
E.g. E1 E1 is invalid.
@BartekBanachewicz Hex please :D
But E1 0C (-31 12) is not valid.
@R.MartinhoFernandes oh.
15:58
All continuation bytes are 80-BF
there we go. So this garbage got treated as invalid unicode
time to test @wilx's proposal
Why aren't you using some bindings instead?
@wilx sigh
I inherited this codebase.
@BartekBanachewicz Oh. Heh. Schadenfreude.
I have to get this thing to be built as C++14 first
16:03
TBH, I do not know if Boost.Python is still usable or not.
then I can think about a rewrite
^ Dunno if they do it right but it seem reasonable minimal error handling.
hehe on error resume next
nwp
nwp
@BartekBanachewicz I would take a byte string as parameter and then .decode("utf-8") which may or may not throw a UnicodeDecodeError.
So I got an email from someone that seems to be complaining that my Pi program, "takes too much memory", because their text editor can't open a 1 GB text file with a billion digits of Pi. I don't even...
17
16:16
inb4 notepad
or
inb4 atom
notepad will actually open a 1GB text file if you disable line wrapping.
@BartekBanachewicz: If it is trully only ever UTF-8 then you should probably be using PyUnicode_DecodeUTF8
Ven
Ven
:o
@Mysticial lol
The person also said that he/she prefers to use PiFast (which is a 15+ year old program for Pi) because it uses less memory. But it crashes now. (presumably because it can't do 1 billion digits in memory on x86)
16:19
@Mysticial Don't be gentle. Tear 'em a new one!
Ven
Ven
Open source is very useful, considering how costly zoos are nowadays.
s/Open source/Trump/
@wilx I usually don't troll someone on the first email unless it's obvious they're being malicious as opposed to clueless.
@Mysticial You are a good person. :)
16:28
If the person stays clueless into the 2nd or 3rd emails, I delay my responses and eventually stop responding. If it becomes the person is a troll, I usually weight my options on whether it's worth my time to counter-troll them. So far that has only happened once in the past few years.
nwp
nwp
@Mysticial you should send them a python script with print("3.14") and demand money for getting the program to use so little memory
That one time was someone who tried to preach FOSS evangelicalism.
That actually happens a lot, but they usually back off after one response from me. They rarely persist.
@Mysticial Delaying responses is a great strategy. Just keep doing that using exponential back-off.
16:44
@wilx I think the error checking will be fine for now
16:58
@LucDanton Ooh, manual extraction.
I assumed you tried the existing "smart" doc extractor stuff and didn't find it compelling/workable.
@milleniumbug Not to mention the minor detail of a ~175 line ctor.
@R.MartinhoFernandes which one is that?
I've only found this.
Having to use both sphinx and doxygen sounds like too much, really.
oh yeah I’ve avoided that on purpose, although to be fair I absolutely didn’t try it
17:16
@LucDanton My choice right now is mostly between sphinx alone or sphinx+comment extraction.
Extracting comments is nice because I can keep some docs in the code without duplication.
nwp
nwp
Why is there no operator == for const std::unique_ptr<T> & and const T*?
because you haven't proposed it
nwp
nwp
one could make a version that works with pointers of different types if the types have a common base class and it might actually be worth proposing
@nwp Because nobody in their right mind would use const T *. You obviously need to write it as T const *.
@R.MartinhoFernandes indeed, and having the API-style docs close to the code helps making sure they don’t become stale as the codebase evolves
docstring-style comments, that’s what I had in mind all along but it was on the tip of my tongue
17:27
@LucDanton But it could be even better if we added a code parser to the mix, so it could generate errors (or at least warnings) like: "You've documented four parameters, but the function only takes three."
Rust treats code in doc comments as tests.
So you can write your examples with asserts (which I always find helpful in documentation examples), and have automated tests running that make it a lot easier to keep everything in sync.
I think the Twitter account "Rogue Sean Spicer's Christmas Ghosts" is fake. Let me explain. My degree is in quantum mechanics [1/27]
Well. Fucking. Played.
@R.MartinhoFernandes that sort of thing type deal, right? not just tests but also runnable code examples
I think so.
Granted, the text surrounding it may still get out of sync, but as long as you have tests running automatically, you know that the code examples in the tests are authoritative.
so, is that a challenge to implement it for Sphinx + C++? :)
17:33
@LucDanton It's hard without modules, I think.
Moreover, doc comments are exported as attributes, so even without an automated test setup, the user can just run those tests themselves as validation before using the library.
Would it hurt to be so stupid?
THE most famous whistleblower of the Obama period, if not of all time.
Whether he should not have been a little more critical of the government policies at the time. Facepalm.
fud don’t gotta make sense
17:48
@wilx none of these are microaggressions except the second one
@wilx See e.g. things like this twitter.com/cateia97/status/826166932122509312 - it's a parody
@LucDanton I just offered exactly that point seconds ago
@wilx My eye fell on "Just being yourself is something that is challenged daily". I should hope so. Stopped reading.
I get back from a quick stop at the shop’s and notice that the tests I launched but forgot about are still running, way past the point where they should have terminated. I interrupt and try it in the debugger and without, but they run as usual. that sure inspires confidence :(
@LucDanton Heisenbug.
@sehe Read the whole strip.
@wilx I tried. But why. Wasn't the domain name trigger warning enough?
18:01
@R.MartinhoFernandes oh yeah, I actually did add a test module just to copy-paste example code precisely because I got the examples wrong :/ obviously the whole manual setup is wholly unsatisfactory though
@sehe I did not know you were a misogynistic pig! :D
nwp
nwp
@wilx misogynistic ice bear, check your facts
@nwp I stand corrected.
thanks I'm not sure why you,re thanking us. We won't do your homework for you. — Borgleader 21 secs ago
/cc @Mysticial
nwp
nwp
@wilx While we are on that topic, someone mentioned that multistory stores put women's cloths on the bottom floor and men's cloths on the top floor. Might make a good story to counter the pink tax.
18:10
@Borgleader ahahaha
burn
user1804599
@sehe this train stops at NOI
@nwp Whoa. I have never heard about that. Though when I think about it you are probably right.
@rightfold /Sad (I'm still here)
@nwp that's true, but it doesn't counter shit.
user1804599
XD
18:12
@nwp Does it work? I think the upshot is that everybody gets bored and fed up
user1804599
To Vlissingen.
And it's annoying as fuck.
@rightfold And beyond! What brings you there
user1804599
The stop at Roosendaal
user1804599
I ain't going to that shithole
18:16
Btw I'll be in The Netherlands in April.
nwp
nwp
@sehe Work as in make feminists feel sorry for systematically oppressed men? I cannot imagine it. But thinking about how to force stores to randomize their layout gets so stupid and boring they might stop arguing about other things that are stupid and boring.
@milleniumbug it's really annoying.
Also misspellings.
Not too often do we get short but valid answers:
8
A: Why am I getting an unused lambda capture warning?

YakkYour code is valid. Clang's warning is nonsense. Report this as a bug.

user1804599
18:32
16
A: Is there a shorter form for Go for range loops

rightfoldNo.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

@nwp lol. ya think
0
Q: ANDROID- SELECT A FILE FROM FILE EXPLORER

RajI am new to android development. I need to implement a file chooser/ Open-File-Dialog in my project. But I have found that android do not provide any built in support for this. So what is good solution on this? Should I use any Library or Manually build code for this? I have taken overview of an...

@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah I noticed that probem/proben
says android, but judging from the all caps it's probably COBOL
Ven
Ven
OMG COBOL. /cc @rightfold
18:36
huh dunno what to make of this regression
it disappears if the base is private >.>
user1804599
@Ven COBOL WHERE OMG
more precise showcase, dunno what to think of it. maybe -std=c++1z -fno-new-inheriting-ctors is doomed for failure in light of C++17 aggregate rules (was there any change? I don’t recall)
18:58
@Xeo I forgot how to write a tuple with tight privacy access lol, the upcast_by_index(element<Idx, Elt>& self) sort of deal has to involve a public derived-to-base implicit conversion for it to work with late return decltype. or so I think, it’s been long
Xeo
Xeo
soz, playing Factorio, no time to think :(
@Xeo how come I’m the one writing code and you’re the one playing, where did we go wrong
Xeo
Xeo
lol
nwp
nwp
19:20
@rightfold I believe this is the kind of math you would enjoy.
although in my actual code I get 'template argument/substitution failed:'
19:41
dang my left mouse button is starting to die
I half-hoped variadic using would be SFINAE-friendly(ish), but no dice
Like, seriously? Guess I can't use it then...
heh, can’t fool GCC although the diagnostic could probably be improved
20:11
eh never mind surrogate calls suck anyway, no big surprise here
If that was the code you inherited, you're probably better off throwing it all away and writing it properly from scratch. — Mysticial 11 secs ago
^^ /cc @Borgleader
20:33
@Mysticial what in the name of c'thun is this
welp, that left mouse button is now dead
And I know the code is bad, but that's kinda what I inherited. I am new to C though, so what specifically is bad about it? — user3735221 15 mins ago
Everything?
As in: You need to burn it with fire?
We’re planning to aggressively use C++17 “if constexpr” to improve compiler throughput and simplify STL code. No ETA yet, but it’s coming.
YAY
Does VS 2017 already have constexpr if?
20:48
@Mysticial not as of the writing of this blog
but he may be referring to C2
I won't be able to use it until the Ubuntu mainline picks up at least GCC 7.
@Mysticial at least VS2017 should support C++14 constexpr fully out of the gate... in theory
@Mgetz I care much more about constexpr if. So for I've been relying on the compiler DCE to deal with it. But it also means the stuff in the not-taken branch needs to compile.
@Mysticial fair enough, it'll be interesting to see how it affects build times
I also need ICC to pick it up as well. Basically, for my personal code, before I can use a language features, I need all 3 of these to support it:
- MSVC
- ICC
- Ubuntu's out-of-the-box GCC
Micro-optimizations are exempt since they can be enabled/disabled on a per processor/compiler basis.
20:57
so it looks like MSVC updated the clang version they'll be shipping to support it, C1XX and EDG have it on the near term roadmap
@Mysticial so you'll be using it if you're lucky in 2020
Ell
Ell
@Mysticial why? :P

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