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00:37
@Columbo me_irl
@Barmar: Fluent, not fluid. Unless you want to pump your interface through a pipe. — Kerrek SB 2 hours ago
01:17
> file_status class: wraps a file_type
incredulous MSVC rage intensifies
or would that be abject MSVC hatred
“We’re sending surrogates to places where we think it makes sense to promote our agenda." <--ACTUAL WH QUOTE http://www.politico.com/story/2017/01/trump-cnn-press-234455
I bought a copy of 1984 today.
@Borgleader It's all sorts of fun isn't it
Didnt read it yet, but apparently it's relevant to the current US state of affairs.
Most of today's activites for me involved attempting to get the canonical path for the target of a symlink on windows
Cost me a dollar on Google Play store
01:29
noice
I wound up writing out what didn't work, with links, for whatever masochist decided they wanted to try
It's going to be me
57
A: Can Google Mock a method with a smart pointer return type?

πάντα ῥεῖA feasible workaround for google mock framework's problems with non (const) copyable function arguments and retun values is to use proxy mock methods. Suppose you have the following interface definition (if it's good style to use std::unique_ptr in this way seems to be more or less a philosophic...

what an excellent answer
be a shame if a bounty happened to it
And now I'm back where I was before the rep fairy visited
and I'm pretty sure he's gone to bed and won't notice for hours at least :D
01:58
edit warz
oh boy howdy
Isn't the status as an opinion implicit in it being an opinion post
 
1 hour later…
03:14
I am recording my ios game in quick time, so maybe I can find out why it's crashing 1% of the time
not crashing
just ... behaving wierd
03:36
@JerryCoffin Come to think of it, I don't even need to rely on a web archive. I can just put the hashes into a 3rd party site that doesn't allow me to tamper with dates. (gmail, gist, or even a deleted SO post)
04:03
trump has not done much this week
no news of him saying or doing stupid things
This week has only just begun. It's only been a day since his last exec order. Sean and Kellyanne are still making fools of themselves during interviews, but they've toned it down.
17. Defeating ISIS (January 28)
marking that in bold ...
17. Defeating ISIS (January 28)
3 days and counting ...
in 3 years I will come back pointing and laugh
user406009
04:23
@Mysticial If you want to be "hip" about it, the ultimate solution is to post your hashes to the Bitcoin blockchain by putting it in transaction metadata.
user406009
At the current Bitcoin transaction rates it wouldn't even cost you too much, maybe 50 cents a message.
05:02
@Lalaland This whole topic actually has this wondering. Has a case like this ever happened? Has cryptography ever been used to prove a prior-art to invalidate a patent? /cc @JerryCoffin
If I google for cryptography + court, I get nothing but the US encryption/surveillance war and the export of encryption.
user406009
@Mysticial I don't think Bitcoin has been used to prove prior art, but people have used it to prove timing for other unrelated reasons.
05:28
True. The point of the cryptography is only to prove the date on a prior art.
0
Q: Binary search in an array with boolean values

pyramidPeakI have an array with boolean values. But sequence of elements like these: first go true values, and then false values. For example, boolean[] booleans = {true, true, true, true, true, false, false, false, false, false, false}; The task is to find first false element. I created ...

Am I missing something here or is my answer correct that binary search is not guaranteed to give the correct answer for all possible inputs?
usually when people mention 'binary search', they don't mean searching in an array of binary values
user406009
@Code-Apprentice The binary search will need to be slightly modified, but the general concept will work.
user406009
I think there is a bug in his code anyways.
user406009
I think it should be else high = mid; instead of else high = mid - 1;
05:41
@Telkitty I don't think the OP means that, either.
since he uses "boolean" in the question to refer to the values.
@Lalaland ooooh, not only do you check if mid == false, but also mid - 1 == true
err...with the correct indexing of course...treat that as pseudocode.
user406009
@Code-Apprentice Yes, that's the general idea, but you can actually just terminate once your low and high converge.
user406009
And that works better in case of an all false array.
I'm not sure what low and high are...I didn't actually read his code.
Is low searching for true and high searching for false?
also my tuition says that binary search method is rather inefficient when finding the first of in a binary array
space vampires!
user406009
05:46
@Code-Apprentice They are both searching for the same thing, the first false after a true. Low searches from below, and high from above.
user406009
I realize that there is an edge case he probably needs to deal with where the array is all true.
user406009
This is a pretty standard interview/homework/exam sort of algorithm problem.
on an array of boolean variables?
user406009
Yes, this exact problem.
never seen it before...and maybe I'm too tired right now to figure it out...
05:51
I usually come across the problem of finding the minimum or maximum value or a specific object in a normal array using binary search
user406009
@Telkitty You can't do that using binary search though.
I mean a specific number or a particular object not minimum or maximum value ... in a normal ordered array
> The standard of correctness and completeness necessary to get a computer program to work at all is a couple of orders of magnitude higher than the mathematical community’s standard of valid proofs.
@Code-Apprentice What? :)
@Lalaland Falling edge detection? Low is searching from index 0 and high searches from the last index?
06:02
Just a quote I came across. I find it amusing with my amateurish mathematical background
user406009
@Aaron3468 pretty much
Fairly straightforward. The hardest part is remembering to upcast/promote the index type to the next signed type so you have the option to return -1 as "Not found".
posted on February 01, 2017 by Scott Meyers

New printings of Effective C++, Third Edition and Effective Modern C++ have recently been published by Addison-Wesley and O'Reilly, respectively. Both printings include fixes for all the errata that had been reported through December, though a couple of bug reports for EMC++ have since trickled in, sigh. For EC++/3E, the new printing is number 17. For EMC++, it's 10. If you purchased digital

> is too sleepy to remember how int types overlap
dammit, I still haven't read EC++...not sure which edition I bought several years ago
06:23
is there a site which fails the Certificate Transparency check? badssl doesn't have such page
 
1 hour later…
07:26
Any git-foo masters online?
I've been using directory-like names for my branches, but I don't remember where I first learned about this. I know there are some commands that allow glob syntax or something. Any pointers on where I can read more about it?
Is there a name for this syntax? e.g. git branch issue/123
yah, maybe that's it
I thought there was more to it. Maybe other commands allow a pattern as well.
07:58
@Code-Apprentice Sometimes it's like git SUBCMD ... -- --glob=refs/heads/*
I suppose it's just a ref-spec
08:12
sup guise
@BartekBanachewicz @Shoe did you vote, if so, what did say for the silly question?
08:42
so my current app looks ok on iphone 6 6s & 7 but a bit weird and not at all on 7s
I think that's good enough
Life is so much easier if you have low standard
@thecoshman I don't remember
Ven
Ven
I'm supposed to find some materials to learn OO for students. sigh
Hi, btw.
09:02
(set! files (append! files (list filename)))
^ Is there any easier way to do this? This is Scheme.
@thecoshman see discord
std::map<int,int> m;

// ERROR! Too many arguments to BOOST_FOREACH macro.
BOOST_FOREACH(std::pair<int,int> p, m) // ...
lol
Ah, commas in macros...
Ven
Ven
; D
Ven
Ven
09:14
@rightfold that's oh-so-very-useless
user1804599
@Ven You mentioned COBOL yesterday. What about it?
22 hours ago, by ScY
c++ really is a simple, elegant language. No need for a Q&A room
user1804599
@Ven Better than bad education. As a professional you should reject any command to do harm.
Ven
Ven
@rightfold twasn't me :/
user1804599
Oh :v
Ven
Ven
09:15
@rightfold even if I were to reject commands (they're not commands, they're people asking me for tutorials), they wouldn't pass their classes
I'd get rid of all BOOST_FOREACH from our code if I could
user1804599
@Ven Yes it was.
re-macro it as foreach
Ven
Ven
@rightfold look at the 2 previous messages
user1804599
15 hours ago, by Ven
OMG COBOL. /cc @rightfold
Ven
Ven
09:17
27 secs ago, by Ven
@rightfold look at the 2 previous messages
user1804599
@Ven Oh I see, I plonked the author of one.
Ven
Ven
aaah, oke.
user1804599
It does look like it could be a COBOL dialect, yes. :-)
user1804599
All-caps grammatically correct English, and very domain-specific non-library.
09:35
@BartekBanachewicz I must say I have a use for it sometimes. Until c++17 structured bindings, at least.
> BOOST_FOREACH(boost::tie(P, p_hashes), boost::combine(P_vec, p_hashes_vec)) {
I couldn't bring myself to degrade that by replacing it with c++14 style ranged-for
seen in a component using our lib: std::map<std::string, std::auto_ptr<stuff>>
I don't even
nwp
nwp
@Rerito maybe someone couldn't figure out std::piecewise_construct
And of course something goes wrong when such an object is destroyed
Well, to be precise when the second object of that type is destroyed
Do you smell it?
twitter.com/gitlabstatus Gitlab timeline is a mess
@sehe they screwed up bad
I'm not so sure. But they screwed up playing panick football in response to a DoS attack, apparently
It's especially sad when they go from "back online" to "oops we deleted data". That's the tipping point
@AlexM. s/for cars //
I'm changing this python api function to a safe one
but I need to make it nonstatic in order to get to the logger
thanks for being shitty OOP
Well. Even in FP that would require some tactics
State Monads (disclaimer: I have no clue). It's never free. That's because intrinsic complexity shall be intrinsic complexity
Well duh. Never heard of big bang? Everything is pushed out
@sehe State monad is only a problem if you're not fluent with it. It's a base block, it's almost like a for loop. What really hits the nail on the head is a "Logger" monad
Guise, I have a little question
I need to circumvent my msvc restrictions (I cannot use auto return type deduction)
And I have a function returning an std::bind(stuff...) result
How can I declare its return type
Xeo
Xeo
auto ... -> decltype(std::bind(....)) :P
other than that, std::function, really.
pyUnicode :: String -> UniString

safePyUnicode :: MonadLogger m => String -> m UniString
safePyUnicode s = do
   case pyUnicode s of
       NULL -> log $ "failed at str" ++ s >> return NULL
       x -> return x
Ven
Ven
10:10
auto f() -> decltype(f()) { }
Lemme craft you an example
@sehe can't do the above if I can't say I just need the logging context
Ven
Ven
@BartekBanachewicz don't you have a void function at hand?
I mean: your do is useless, replace it with return.
@Rerito Let me make a list of all the classes in our codebase that pretended to be RAII "wrappers". Every single one of them violated rule-of-three.
ScopedBoolSetter
ScopedBuffer
ScopedCounter
ScopedDirP
ScopedHandle
ScopedIconv
ScopedLockBase
ScopedLoopbackDev
ScopedLoopbackPoolLock
ScopedMemBackedMnt
ScopedMmap
ScopedMount
ScopedMutexLock
ScopedPointer
ScopedPointerVector
ScopedReadLock
ScopedRegex
ScopedRSAObj
ScopedRWLockBase
ScopedSmbMount
ScopedSocket
ScopedSpinLock
ScopedStatsCounter
ScopedWriteLock
@Ven actually you can just get rid of do
Ven
Ven
10:11
@BartekBanachewicz and put return there
Never mind that 60% of these never should exist. Let's assume the got writen long ago
Ven
Ven
so you can remove the two return
@Ven no?
but then I can't log
@sehe better spin around and start removing them
Ven
Ven
bah.
10:12
As you can see the bind is to circumvent the fact I cannot benefit from generic lambda capture (c++14)
@LucDanton Oh. That's my favourite pastime
and 0x01A4 blaze it
@BartekBanachewicz That's a bit like saying that "Hello World" is shortest in HQ9+ or Hello
@sehe yeah, except making your own monads actually makes sense
And I suspect doing std::function<bool(int)> stuff = std::bind(...); will in the end copy the set that was moved into the std::bind functor
Ven
Ven
10:14
@Rerito it needn't
even if the resulting monad is a composition of existing ones (which is usually the case)
Idris' effects are possibly even closer to that idea
Ven
Ven
Idris effects are just unordered monad transformers.
@BartekBanachewicz That looks interesting, but indeed, I have no clue how it simplifies (it looks to me like it's basically as complicated as a function that takes the extra logger argument, but you use it partially applied)
@BartekBanachewicz I agree
@BartekBanachewicz I don't know what this sentence means (in context)
@Ven but that's rather obvious, isn't it
Ven
Ven
I just got starred for rightfolding.
5
@BartekBanachewicz depends to who, I guess?
just like the difference between T | Null and Maybe T
10:18
@sehe Having an extra argument requires much more boilerplate when calling.
with my imaginary MonadLogger I can, e.g.:
Not if partially applied. Which is what I said
@sehe it's much harder to partially apply if you have multiple such contexts
When I see that Logger monad, I /know/ the logger is still gonna come from somewhere. Looks to me that it's mostly syntactic convenience that it comes "out-of-band"?
@BartekBanachewicz Yup
also this is polymorphic by default
brb
Ven
Ven
@sehe it's composable, which is pretty nice :P
10:19
@Ven Oh you mean if I do something like std::function<bool(int)>(std::move(bind_result));?
@Ven Yup. I love that. Also, your assessment of what happened :)
Ven
Ven
@Rerito I mean "write a move ctor that prints and test it out" :P
Just did
I'll end up with 2 moves instead of one, which is ok
So std::function it is, thanks guise :D
Ven
Ven
@sehe oh well, I'll take those...
@BartekBanachewicz to be fair, only you would give such an arogant answer :P
10:29
well, in the end I'm "forced" to do return std::function<bool(int)>(std::bind(...));to benefit from copy elision
Then I get a move inside the std::function ctor
Well I hope MSVC is not retarded in that regard
Ven
Ven
famous last words.
Oh ffs city msvc
@Rerito is casting really necessary?
Ven
Ven
@sehe please cleanup
The bindcall does not even compile with msvc 10
Lol guise
Ven
Ven
u sad?
I must wrap the lambda into an std::function otherwise msvc is not able to deduce its return type because it's broken beyond despair
Ven
Ven
do a barrel roll
you rolled 1. you're now stuck with MSVC for eternity
Yeah, I end up with ugly code like:
auto base_ftor = std::function<R(Args...)>([](Args...) { return shit; };
std::bind(std::move(base_ftor), ....);`
Ven
Ven
10:41
>tfw you still believe SO.chat does markdown correctly
@Rerito that doesn’t sound right
Lemme show you the code that did not compile
I’m going to guess my psychic crystal ball sez you’re being bitten by the way the result of std::bind passes args to the underlying functor
Ven
Ven
FUNctor amirite
10:43
@ratchetfreak It's just because I'm too lazy to write an actual valid code example
one of the C in SSCCE stands for 'crystal' btw
And my balls are broken like crystal dropped on the floor with that msvc bs
@LucDanton If you can add more details so that I get how this works it would be great :)
In the meantime, I'm starving, heading off to lunch!
@Rerito I also have to go though, catch you later
Ven
Ven
can't catch brorito
static boost::optional< apr_uint64_t > getTSId(const char* stringId) { wow such codebase
it's so sad that the people who wrote that originally had to stick to C++03
o'reilly doesn't give you a free ebook for your print books :(
they give a discount
manning gives away free ebooks
Looks like I'll have to go to the doctor again -_____-
@Ven wut?
Ven
Ven
2 fast
11:40
2 furious
2 pac
baboulinet rpz
@Morwenn 2 bières
Ven
Ven
baboolinet
@Rerito Cool, I can't drink much more than 2 beers anyway.
MSVC: Helping you turning elegant code into ugly looking crap
4
11:41
x)
@Rerito add a "... since 1998"
@R.MartinhoFernandes I wanted to but then I remember I don't even know how long this crapiler has been around
VC6 was released in 1998, I think. That'd be the first major contributor to the crapification.
I was going to make a year 6 joke
because we all know non-VC C++ is oh so much better, amirite
11:48
@BartekBanachewicz You're severely underestimating the crappiness of MSVC.
They at least get variadic templates quite right
MSVC 10 implementation of result_of is broken
@R.MartinhoFernandes well okay broken time and random were pretty fucked up
11:49
it doesn't work with std::bind returned objects or lambdas
experienced it this morning
lolwut?
(What's MSVC 10? 2010?)
fuckers shipped libraries that they know they don't work
@BartekBanachewicz How was random broken? I might have forgotten.
Fortunately they hired STL :p
At least they have good tweets now.
@Morwenn Has he fixed deque yet?
11:50
@R.MartinhoFernandes The one shiped with visual studio 2010
@R.MartinhoFernandes No idea, I never use MSVC.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I've had more issues with GCC and libstdc++ tbh
1
Q: std::uniform_int_distribution<int> range in g++ and msvc

MarioWhile doing a minor school project, I just noticed a difference in the range of std::uniform_int_distribution : When using g++ the range is [a,b], however when using msvc (visual studio 2010) the range is (a, b], so the output of the next progam: #include <iostream> #include <random> using std...

MSVC deque is (used to be?) degenerate. Basically a vector of pointers to single elements.
@Mgetz That's hardly a good metric, I'd say.
Bartek, I've got the profiler output
11:52
@R.MartinhoFernandes Wow.
@Morwenn The size of each deque subvector is determined from sizeof(T) and if sizeof(T) is larger than some threshold, then it degenerates to that. The threshold is stupidly low (16 bytes? Maybe 64? Don't quite remember).
@R.MartinhoFernandes well in terms of pain it was significant, even if MSVC's implementation was shit at least it worked in general terms within the spec and the library was mostly complete
@YashasSamaga so, is that function actually being called?
@Rerito that being said, I don’t want to play the psychic: what are you doing?
@BartekBanachewicz it is being discussed in C++ Q&A chat room
11:54
@R.MartinhoFernandes IIRC in libc++ it uses the same kind of logic, but still stores at least a minimal number of objects per segment, no matter their size.
@LucDanton I have a graph representing all the classes present in our library
Given a class's fully qualified name, I want to offer the ability to filter the graph to only display that class's hierarchy
@Morwenn Right, that "but" makes a huge difference IYAM.
To that end I make a dfs starting from the target class and reference every node in the search into an std::unordered_set
@R.MartinhoFernandes I believe you.
Which allows me to implement a predicate for the graph filtering
11:56
I mean are you generically closing that set over a generic function or something
And of course the predicate needs to have access to the computed set anytime it is called
Wut?
I guess I don't hate MSVC as much as some because I don't tend to be at the bleeding edge of C++, but I do tend to rely on the stdlib quite a lot. So if bits of the stdlib are missing it gets really annoying.
Translate that into retarded english please
@Rerito what does the signature of that predicate look like?
bool(ClassVertexType const&)
11:58
what’s with the Args... then?
Oh that was just a shortcut
@Rerito yeah but the placeholders have to actually match
@Mgetz In all honesty, variadic templates are not the bleeding edge by any measure of reason.
this is why psychic debugging sucks: I can’t tell from the parts you omit whether you got them right or not
@R.MartinhoFernandes yes but I don't tend to write templates
11:59
@LucDanton they do, lemme show you what's borken in msvc though valid c++
@Mgetz You'd hate MSVC if you did .___.
@Morwenn probably, there are lots of subtle corners of the language that it fails to even get close to
MSVC oddly reminds me of chrome, it implements a lot badly
it's very un-microsoft in that way
Also, about the stdlib, I had to work around two different ways that <chrono> was broken.
First, using high_resolution_my_ass_clock = std::high_resolution_clock;, and second, broken duration arithmetic.
hey now, counting’s pretty hard
And at that, it was broken in a way that it was impossible to miss if tested because it simply wouldn't compile.
std::chrono::seconds(1) / std::chrono::milliseconds(1)
In my actual code, the set is computed through a call to another function and holds elements of the relevant type but in the end the semantic is the same
6MiB/s lol
@Rerito I don’t suppose changing the first predicate parameter to std::unordered_set<int>& s (i.e. ref to non-const) makes any difference
12:18
@LucDanton You mean that the const qualifier is what would break msvc?
@Rerito it’s unlikely and keep in mind I don’t use msvc, but the parameters that correspond to non placeholders can be tricky to get right. your code is sensible though, we’re just trying to fool the damn thing
similarly I hear mutable can help mollify the compiler
The workaround is alright. The set is moved and the functor is valid once returned from the function so it got it right
That's a weird way to make a screenshot, though
12:35
Oh nevermind
the workaround is not right
It does not move shit
Fookin kunt
might want to cut your losses and write an out-of-line functor
Wait, lol, GitLab deleted production data and have no backups?
And are livestreaming the team's work?
They have backups from 6 hours ago.
@R.MartinhoFernandes um
oh right I thought it was you who posted the link
They probably have backups, but not of the specific live data deleted. Has your company got continuous backup with 100% uptime etc.?
@littlepootis check
12:38
we thankfully don't need to keep up all of our data
@BartekBanachewicz This is a horrible idea, tbh.
It takes away the firing squad protection.
@BartekBanachewicz security, mebbe
In a firing squad, no one can be assigned blame for the killing.
That's the whole point.
12:40
@R.MartinhoFernandes how about all of them
Publicly the blame should be on the team as a whole, but by naming the people responsible in their reports and by livestreaming this, they're removing that possibility.
@BartekBanachewicz Right, the squad as a whole, sure. But no individuals.
@sehe They have backups, but they're all useless because they're just a few bytes large.
The backup scripts were broken, it seems.
@R.MartinhoFernandes wat
@R.MartinhoFernandes what?
@sehe DB dump scripts that failed due to incompatible versions between environments and produced empty dumps.
It's kinda hilarious when it's not your data.
> So in other words, out of 5 backup/replication techniques deployed none are working reliably or set up in the first place.
12:43
Oh gosh. I read something about the version upgrade in their Google Docs battle plan. No clue it included backup recover disastery
> Will someone be punished/fired because of that issue ?
Just saw this on YT chat.
But now the public (including the customers) knows who they will want to punish/fire.
The people involved can basically be lynched by the customers, or sacrificed for PR points by the company. (Not sure if there's a significant difference there)
12:48
@LucDanton Yeah, I guess so... The std::function(std::bind(...)) call ends up making 10 copies of the "captured" element...
It's crazy
I guess it's MSVC 10, you get 10 copies. I should get 13 with Visual Studio 2013
I guess there is such thing as too much transparency.

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