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00:03
@LucDanton :D
@ScY Did any celebrity who vowed to move to Canada actually move to Canada after 8 Nov?
ScY
ScY
@EuriPinhollow I have no idea... But if I had to guess, I would say very few did, if any.
@ScY Actually you would make those who worship LePen happier if you do that. It's not a wise move unless it's a bluff and even then it's not.
ScY
ScY
I guess so
hm
I have absolutely no idea where my tzatziki recipe went.
 
1 hour later…
@Michael.P Hey, I learnt physics from C.S. Lewis too :D
^ Python World problems
01:50
0
Q: C++ equivalent for asm jmp

JasonI have a lot of old code in the form: FARPROC p[1024]; ... __asm { jmp p[128]; } This worked well for 32-bit applications, but upgrading to 64-bit where inline asm is no longer supported. Is there an equivalent jmp function in C++?

oh my... i wouldnt want to be in their place
Claims of inline ASM not being supported are dubious. Is the guy trying to deploy this as a Windows Market Place app :-)
I thought it wasnt supported by VS in 64 bit applications?
> Visual C++ does not support inline assembly for x64 mode, because generally using inline assembly is a bad idea.
Source (author appears to be a MS employee)
I see, so he should craft and ASM function with MASM or similar. Actually they probably should just use functions like normal people...
The code rot in python is real. I swear I'm rewriting my code every time I update the interpreter. This is so sad because I have 6 year old C++ code that still compiles but my python code won't run after 4 months.
02:05
Python is the fucking devil, at first its easy but then it owns your soul
You sell your soul for pretty code and fast prototypes Q.Q
@Mikhail that’s exactly what the garden of Eden story warned us about
I am at present debugging a memory allocation issue due to Python's fork(). All I wanted was to call OpenCV's JPEG routine in parallel and now I'm trying to figure out how to deal with memory over-commit.
Oh shit... it might actually be easier for you to write a python interpreter to fix the problem
Why do you think it's over-commiting?
There is a well known problem with task parallelism in python. Because it can't do actual threading, instead it does fork() to spawn new process. This has the downside that large variables need to be copied.
So I call fork() sixty four times and my system runs out of memory
and I got like 200+ GB of RAM...
With C++ I could just use pthreads/std::threads and no need to create separate process and mirror the memory.
02:12
I wanna fart so badly
Oh wow... Is there a way to create a c library you can use in python? You might be able to bind some proper threading.
@Aaron3468 yes
that's potentially a lot of work though
I would replace that part of my code with C++, but a lot of what I write looks like these kinds of producer-consumer queues. I need to re-write everything in C++, but I don't got no time.
Oh there we go. Quite a bit nicer than starting the binding from scratch.
Don't use Boost.Python, use pybind11, it's much better.
02:15
I'm the only "software guy" where I work, and my professor routinely refused to talk to me. I doubt I can justify the work, when I'm supposed to be doing optics instead of coding...
Anyways, the real moral is don't write in Python
@SpongyFruitcake I havent used either of them, but I'm curious anyhow as I might need one of those in the future, whats nicer about pybind11?
Another thing that seems weird is that the memory over-commit problem only happen on Linux... Conceptually I'm sharing a small number of pages between processes so there, should, be enough memory to go around. Other issues include ZFS eating all of my RAM.
maybe you should do some memory monitoring
@Borgleader Much lighter and more modern, also more maintained
@Mikhail Sounds like it's a side effect of how the linux interpreter is implemented. Naive efforts to port usually result in quirks like that
02:35
Although he issue is motivated by Python sucking, the immediate issue is differences in behavior of fork() on Linux vs Windows.
Although I suspect that the Python interpreter would benefit from replacing calls to fork() with vfork(), or whatever kids are calling it now days.
you have no forking idea
@Borgleader :O
03:05
I also figured out why file deletions were running insanely slow ( ~100 files per second), compared to the move operation. It seems to be a zfs specific quirk.
There even seems to be a specific procedure to remove large directories...: unix.stackexchange.com/questions/219786/…
03:23
@LucDanton Alors heureux / soulagé / déçu ?
03:55
@SpongyFruitcake sans commentaire
 
2 hours later…
nwp
nwp
05:55
but hey, I got an achievement for my first review, that's what matters, right?
> The film explores cult film director Alejandro Jodorowsky's unsuccessful attempt to adapt
what
Money.
Also, Jodorowsky wanted to make a 10-hour film.
14 according to wikipedia
That's what the screenplay Herbert saw had. But he intended it to be 10 hours long.
heh ok
the whole thing sounds very meta
06:21
Yeah. It seems to have raving reviews, so I got curious.
(Anyway, I would totally watch a 10-hour screening of a Dune adaptation in theaters.)
@BartekBanachewicz Apparently his unfinished work inspired a lot of the stuff that came out in the late 70s, 80s.
07:01
@R.MartinhoFernandes I have watched it. It is really good!
I love the fact that he wanted Dali to play to the main villain. Dali agreed only if he'd be the most highest paying actor of that time. Jodorowsky was fine with that but had only enough money for two minutes of Dali's screen time :D
07:24
@Horttanainen for some reason I keep thinking that Dali lived ages ago
@BartekBanachewicz I was surprised also when first saw that documentary.
07:38
The project I am developing contains a .cpp file that is 16934 lines long. Is this a world record?
Include list is 180 lines
Interface for this class is 585 public methods
how many people worked on it?
class is pimpl and singleton
1
for 20 years
are there any unused functions?
07:54
@Horttanainen So, this guy wrote the GUI in C# but needed C++ to communicate with hardware devices. So he writes this massive function with 37 arguments that performs all the hardware interaction (with tons of bugs). The single file takes over 15 minutes to compile (in 2013).
5
@Horttanainen ...At that point, I would avoid poking that code until you have a suitable replacement. Back it up 5 times and make a git repo before you try to replace any of that xD
@Mikhail :D
37 arguments made me laugh
A Guide to Doggos /cc @jaggedSpire @Borgleader
The sad part of the story is that in its broken, dysfunctional form, they published a paper claiming that their instrument did 100 frames per second. In reality it did about 7 frames per second. They made stuff and got away with it.
@Mikhail but was the argument list in the form of: int function(int num_args, ...)
07:58
@Telkitty I don't know. There are probably dozens of them.
@Mikhail next thing he'll do will be posting a job offer to "translate" this code to java
@Mikhail Our company once hired a guy who was so strange at the interview that they thought "Wow! This guys is either a genius or a lunatic!". Turned out he was of the latter sort. He's job was to develop some server. All went well for a couple of years until somebody looked at his code. It was a single batch file. Some say it was 30000 lines. There were no functions. Every time he wanted to reuse some of his code he just copy-pasted it.
@Horttanainen if this can happen then the company has serious problems
I swear I keep reading all those TDWTFs and thinking how come noone checked up on him
Every time he replicated the server he copied the batch file and hardcoded the changes accordingly to the servers needs.
@BartekBanachewicz It is a true story. He was fired 5-10 years before I started here.
@BartekBanachewicz A lot of times the problem is money and having enough people. If there are five people and only two "software guys", ain't nobody going to look at code quality.
@Horttanainen I knew of a smart guy coming from biology who wrote an MPI parallel code. Somebody told him that if\goto statements would run faster than loops. Code was insane to look at, but compiled normally under GCC. When we ran it into the Cray Compiler, the compiler promptly "fun" rolled the loops, leading to a 600 megabyte executable.
08:11
loop funrolling
welp
@Mikhail Did you benchmark it against some other MPI project? :D
nwp
nwp
@Mikhail In my experience they just can't look at code quality because they don't have the qualification. It's like they show me the results a doctor produces, I couldn't figure out if they actually knew anything about medicine or prescribed random drugs. Not all companies are software companies, but most companies benefit from a bit of custom software.
> We want to hire someone with more than ten years of experience in the latest technologies.
8
yeah that's tdwtf
but I think that quote alone is enough
08:15
I still can't get over that people are using the words "javascript" and "engineer" in the same sentence.
Ven
Ven
Hi
08:59
@Aaron3468 D'awww :D
hmm
funny enough, my new closurePush is used in function calls and in for loops
but it only fails in one peculiar case of a function call
09:15
for some reason the closure doesn't seem to be stored properly
[]
[]
[TableRef 29]
fromList [(Str "g",Nil),(Str "x",Number 2.0)]
    should properly scope locals FAILED [1]
hmmmm
09:44
aaah I see it now
I store the closure inside the function data
but I need to explicitely push it as well
oh crap I need to call it recursively
([a,b,c], x) -> f a (f b (f c x)) is just a fold?
"Why I can haz no new features"?! :shrug:
feathers*
because bear has furs
I am feeling weak
So, you're well-grounded today.
09:54
lawn mower repair - failed attempt #2
I opened it from inside
but I couldn't get the spring to work properly for the starter
Islamic State recruiters are sad - hiring ignorant underage minors to carry out terrorist attacks are shameful
Weak islamic feather mower recruitment from the inside. All in less than 10 minutes.
Are you calling islamic recruiter chickens?? Because this sure sounds like it!
worse come to worse, I will just have to buy a new mower
but I would really love to learn how it works
It's basically the same concept as a ladyshave.
it's like pulling your iphone apart and see what's inside
So, 6 to 8 weeks, then? — TripeHound 2 days ago
Zing
@Telkitty Hold it to your ear and let us know?
10:09
I have a set of tiny tools
to open iphone up
then I bought a set of tools to open lawn mower up
we actually have boxes and boxes of tools from house building
weapon - the tool of rage
beware the rage of a tool
user1804599
@BartekBanachewicz flip . uncurry $ foldr f
0
Q: when iam updating live server through git lab code changes updated in git lab but perivous changes in web live server

Muraliwhen I updated code in git lab code changes updated in git lab but previous changes in web live server and also refreshed the browser URL three to four times, not works and also done some changes in code no change same update in live server

typical git lab problems
10:54
peruvian change
@Mikhail typical monday mikhail :) Hi
(I can relate, see upwards)
@Horttanainen Server in batch file? WTF?1
@wilx I started to wonder about that too. i will ask my colleague when he comes. Maybe it was "bash file" and I heard it wrong.
Also, nobody did take a look at the server code for four years? That's management failure the size of...yomammasass.
Yes it is
11:12
Hi all >D
11:30
Congratulations
why life is full of those impossible choices - after told the new tenant off & said things would be fixed in a couple of weeks time instead of one week because the house is pretty much one of the cheapest on the market and we have already done 12 other fixes/improvements for them, I kind of feeling bad
it's a run down house full of problems, that's why it's so cheap
but then I feel bad for not fixing problems ASAP
@Telkitty assert(invoke_punctuation(msg)) == false); // it compiles for your message!
I've got a question about an SO answer of mine:
-1
A: What should main() return in C and C++?

EdwardOmit return 0 When a C or C++ program reaches the end of main the compiler will automatically generate code to return 0, so there is no need to put return 0; explicitly at the end of main. Note: when I make this suggestion, it's almost invariably followed by one of two kinds of comments: "I ...

The motivation was to put that text somewhere so I and others on CodeReview could point to rather than repeating it often.
So I'm looking for opinions here -- appropriate or not?
Ven
Ven
11:47
there are already answers pointing it out.
I looked for an appropriate answer before posting that, but the other answers seem mostly to address the signature of main rather than omitting or including return 0.
for a discussion that led up to posting that answer.
welp my fold didn't work
Couldn't match type `LuaMT m0 a0'
               with `forall (m2 :: * -> *). Monad m2 => LuaMT m2 [Value]'
Expected type: LuaM a0 -> LuaM [Value]
  Actual type: LuaM a0 -> LuaMT m0 a0
nwp
nwp
you must do it rightfold
Ven
Ven
makes sense
serves me right for using existential aliases
--closurePush :: TableRef -> LuaM a -> LuaM a
closurePush :: forall m a. Monad m => TableRef -> LuaMT m a -> LuaMT m a
let's try with that
Finished in 0.1431 seconds
29 examples, 0 failures
f yeah
12:53
ffs, now I ran into an assembly section in our codebase... I see «__asm» everywhere now
thank god it's only a windows-specific hardware exception handling
hardware exception handling, did you mean SEH?
yea
just getting into this stuff, reading Matt Pietrek's article about it
user1804599
@sehe SEHE
SUH
I see now, so «sehe» obviously is «SEH Extended» — some next level stuff
13:05
Feb 28 '13 at 23:32, by user142019
SEHE *
Some jokes are old
user1804599
Meh, exceptions.
Nothing out of the ordinary.
user1804599
user1804599
@Ven neat
user1804599
Coyoneda is awesome.
13:10
It oneboxes as stationary here torday
@Telkitty Maybe fixing the problems would help to raise the price? :)
that's issue, I would like to be more up front
if it's a good tenant, I would rather not raise the rent
but I will do fixing/improvement at my pace cause I can save some renovation cost
if a tenant keep on asking things to be fixed/improved, then 99% of the times, rent will be higher when contract expires with agent/other landlord/lady
Oh dear, OpenGL vs. DirectX vs. Vulkan holy war on hackernews
Personally I think we have been very good, because we tend to always fix the known problem even though we are not obligated to. But there is no guarantee it will be done straight away
Ven
Ven
The fact that tryhaskell can't run a b c = b + c is bad
13:22
@Telkitty Sometimes a frank discussion with the tenant about the cost of meeting various levels of expectation can be helpful.
13:46
@Mgetz so nothing unusual
user1804599
@sehe It's a JPEG.
@BartekBanachewicz pretty much, the usual situation of vulkan zealots, OpenGL fanatics, and people that use DX because it works
I don't know I stopped caring past 4.5 a bit
@BartekBanachewicz with the open sourcing of the hlsl compiler it should be trivial to cross compile vulkan and dx12
because they can basically be implemented in terms of the other
I'd certainly hope that MS drops DX at this point
13:49
one can only hope :)
@BartekBanachewicz they won't because vulkan still has pain points and will inevitably have the same over specialization issues that OpenGL got into because the driver vendors wanted hardware specific extensions
14:03
@Borgleader cc ^
(disclaimer - I have nothing against autism. It's just this particular brand of ingeniousness)
Ell
Ell
@Mgetz lemme see
@Michael.P how do you construct i that way? Or transfinite numbers?
@rightfold oh hey, curl 'http://i.imgur.com/BbgL7x3h.jpg' | file - confirms that. Interesting :)
@BartekBanachewicz QuickBasic! We Meet Again
@sehe the video is A+ though
if you can stand the format
Oh it wasn't judgement. I like it
14:08
the fact that he does it in BASIC just shows that you don't need Unity to do all that, you just need knowledge
Anyhoops, I did use GWBASIC myself, professionally. It was the quickest way I knew how to emulate a hardware device over a null-modem cable
and I love how he displays the scene three times from the same data
So, I bought a null-modem cable and grabbed myself a copy of GWBASIC.EXE and was in business.
just this little fact gives you a lot of insight about a person's thinking
I got paid for those two months. Makes me smile now
14:09
if you can render three different views from the same model, you're definitely above beginner level
Ell
Ell
@BartekBanachewicz and time
(coming from experience on Codementor)
Ell
Ell
And dedication
@sehe nice :)
It was on a SAP R/3 implementation, so in retrospect I figure a few managers will have raised a few eyebrows (though not as bad as when I requested a Borland IDE, instead MSVC which was already overtaking it on windows, back then)
nwp
nwp
14:12
@BartekBanachewicz the opposite would be so much better, if Unity could replace required knowledge
@nwp well it does that
my fear is that people will assume CG is super hard and you can't do it w/o unity soon
nwp
nwp
maybe that's just like fearing that people will assume assembler is super hard and you need a programming language to make programs
@BartekBanachewicz Are you gonna tweet it? I might (re)
@sehe actually
You don't need game engines when you know math, BASIC and have a piece of paper. Great watch! #graphics #3d https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HQYsFshbkYw
14:32
@BartekBanachewicz this happened with the web and jQuery sadly
That cycle has happened many times.
@BartekBanachewicz why he uses ancient code editor.. :/
@ProblemSlover he said that in the video. Also can you top his code in your modern editor? ;)
@BartekBanachewicz no.. I wrote probably far less than 10K lines of code in my life
@Edward the silver bullet cycle
14:43
@ProblemSlover well then, try using an ancient code editor and see if you like it :D
@BartekBanachewicz such a tedious voice to listen to
@BartekBanachewicz I think using vim is almost same expirience as using that editor.
@ProblemSlover almost
I spent a few years in Turbo Pascal's editor
it's funny how all those modern things don't really matter
@R.MartinhoFernandes well, obviously using unary number system you can construct any natural number N, then, using additive inverse, you expand that to set of integers Z. And from that you can construct any rational number a/b where a,b belong to Z. Maybe you can even obtain irrational numbers using algebraic manipulations, because, in my mind, although Z is restricted to a/b, there is nothing preventing us from, say, adding some magic number with another and getting sqrt(2)
There are really only two numbers in existance that have any significance: 0 and 1.
And I ABSOLUTELY LOVE 0
@BartekBanachewicz
https://jobs.geoexpat.com/job/4952?searchId=1493045376.5236&page=1
C++ Ad. Look at salary offered. 1HKD = 0.13 USD.. Oh God
14:54
@ProblemSlover doesn't sound that amazing
22k HKD is about 11k PLN
or one top spec Macbook / month
or the salary of mid level php dev :/
who codes jquery also
time to go home anyway
my tests pass I can merge my branch after I clean this mess up
tyt.. sounds like you had great adventures today
15:13
@BartekBanachewicz Is that before or after taxes.
It is comparable to CZ salaries.
IOW, not much, IMHO.
Also, is Apple laptops per month a new scale for salaries in IT? :)
15:32
It was Big Macs before, now it's just Macs.
soon it;ll be Small Macs
16:04
@BartekBanachewicz Great find.
@Edward Wait a minute. Who let you in here? I'm not supposed to have competent competition for title of "resident old fart." :-)
@wilx I think it fits p well
@JerryCoffin I've been waiting for someone to crush those records in a few days using a supercomputer. It's been more than 5 years and still nothing. Something like 10^15 digits using a machine with 10 petabytes of memory would do it pretty easily. You just need someone to write the program and someone to give you the computing time to do it.
@Xeo I'll put that on my to-watch list.
@Mysticial they prefer to spend compute power to predict the stock market
@Mysticial so what's the point in wasting power in such a way again?
as far as I'm aware, it buys you nothing more than bragging rights
16:13
@BartekBanachewicz bragging rights? It's not like I'm the one running them. :)
I never understood the idea of bragging "I have money" vOv
but then again people buy things and then post photos of them with the assumed "I had money to buy it and you probably don't"
If anything, it's more of a sport.
One with a very small audience.
16:29
@JerryCoffin It's OK. I just pretend to be competent. Now git off my lawn!
@Edward You forget: I've looked at a fair amount of your code over the (many) years. I already have some idea of how much is pretense and how much is real...
Yeah, they say that the memory is the second thing to go...
I came in here pimping this answer so I wouldn't have to keep repeating it on CodeReview:
0
A: What should main() return in C and C++?

EdwardOmit return 0 When a C or C++ program reaches the end of main the compiler will automatically generate code to return 0, so there is no need to put return 0; explicitly at the end of main. Note: when I make this suggestion, it's almost invariably followed by one of two kinds of comments: "I ...

@Edward In a computer, memory is the second thing to get upgraded... :-)
@Edward Only a couple of us here (mostly @Morwenn and me) post much on CodeReview.
@JerryCoffin Here's a question that maybe you can answer.
I sometimes use things like lint for static analysis of code.
@Edward That seems to be a statement, not a question. :-)
16:41
But what I need now is code analyzer to look for concurrency errors in C
Any suggestions?
Luck works for me, but some of my other team members are... less lucky.
tell them to not touch concurrent code then
The problem is that they don't seem to realize when they are.
This is embedded system stuff and I'd really rather not do it all myself.
Issues occur such as "you can't just write to the timer port because it's a shared resource."
Or "you can't call the OS from within an interrupt handler."
they need to be taught how to write kernels then?
16:45
@Edward It's mostly dynamic rather than static, but Helgrind can be pretty useful. Clang also has a thread sanitizer that can be quite helpful.
I've used helgrind, but didn't know about the thread sanitizer. Looks great!
Thanks!
Not sure how much help either is likely to be for embedded work though.
I've been working on creating an abstract machine on which to run the code, so this might work.
the worst part about Mondays is listening to you imbeciles complain about Mondays
@R.MartinhoFernandes
ohh it's monday already..
16:57
so, what is it - La Pen or Makron ?
I usually don't like it when fascists are in power anywhere, so I'd prefer if Macron won, even though he's not exactly the best candidate.
@EtiennedeMartel John Oliver said Macron, "isn't particularly attractive to anyone".
He's vanilla ice cream. Nobody really likes it, but it's still better than shit.
Hey, I like vanilla ice cream!
It's one of only like 3 flavors I actually like.
No you don't. You don't dislike it, which is not the same as liking it.
Also you probably associate it with apple pie.
17:04
I hate apple pie.
Wait, all my stereotypes are breaking down.
Calling modern nazi "fascists" might be an insult to both victims of real fascists of WWII and those fascists themselves.
@Abyx I recommend you read Umberto Eco's essay on fascism.
@EtiennedeMartel ok, I'll read it. I doesn't look very long
17:07
I think just about everything from Eco is worth reading.
However I take that Umberto Eco was a part of capitalist word, so his definition of fascism might differ from what was called "fascism" in other parts of the world.
@BartekBanachewicz Interesting, Ill watch it at home.
I'd also recommend "Inventing the Enemy", which is a recent Eco collection of essays.
17:41
@thecoshman What exactly counts as an "evolution simulator"?
user1804599
@rightfold What is this, another Monad tutorial?
user1804599
It's a question.
user1804599
There are no further clues.
user1804599
Choose the correct answer.
17:44
@rightfold 2)
1) on top and 3) below
@fredoverflow ha ha ha, perfect question. Well, at the time I was watching a video series about a basic genetic algorithm for little creatures that are trying to move as fast as they can. The fitness is simple, how far did they move to the right, the creatures were basic, graphics simple enough etc. Just a nice project you could slowly build up to show a lot maybe...
@EtiennedeMartel I've finished reading it. It's shit. A bunch of pretty but obscure words describing traits you can find in any healthy state. Apparently the author got paid for the amount of words, not for the quality of the text.
user1804599
@BartekBanachewicz Why?
@Abyx Java programmer?
17:46
@fredoverflow what
> Apparently the author got paid for the amount of words, not for the quality of the text.
meh
Nov 1 '11 at 20:30, by FredOverflow
> You can eat a one pound steak, or you can eat 100 pounds of shoe leather, and you feel a greater sense of accomplishment after the shoe leather, but you know, maybe there are some downsides.
so I'd rather stick to the Soviet definition:
> a political trend that arose in the capitalist countries at the time of the general crisis of capitalism, reflecting the interests of the most reactionary and aggressive sections of the imperalist bourgeoisie. Fascist rule consists of a terrorist dictatorship, headed by the most reactionary forces of monopoly capital and implemented for the purpose of preserving the capitalist system.
(from Great Soviet Encyclopedia)
not that bullshit about tradition, modernism, irrationalism, etc, newspeak
@Abyx I have never been into politics, and I cannot make any sense of the above quote. This is what Monad tutorials must sound like to people who don't already understand Monads.
17:57
Modans
How do you like "danom" as the name for a programming language?
nwp
nwp
has more than 3 letters 👎
also too close to demon
-1
Q: Why stackoverflow c++ labeled questions get so frequently downvoted?

nikferrariWhy do c++ related topics get downvoted so badly? Other topics get equally silly, non well stated, non-clear, not formatted questions, but honestly I have not seen this hostility elsewhere. It is obvious that these practices only harm the community and they actively discourage people (specially b...

@fredoverflow sounds like a Danone yogurt
@Abyx yummi
18:08
@Mysticial inb4 lounged
And the moral to the story: never iron your marshmallows in the bag.
@Mysticial I blame students (and unis)
Unis teach C++ badly, and as a result, students ask bad C++ questions
@JerryCoffin And I haven't even answered a question in ages.
@milleniumbug I spoke to a student today. His university teaches C first and then C++ on top of that.
It's not like we haven't been knowing better since... 2000 something?
18:20
Now I've seen the sunlight, I've got freckles everywhere.
I like my refactored code
I lile my code refactored
I need a code review on the new closure stuff though
nwp
nwp
I refactored like my code
I think my closure pushing is bad
nwp
nwp
18:27
(not at all)
closurePush t a = do
    LuaMT . lift $ _2 %= (:) t
    r <- a
    LuaMT . lift $ _2 %= tail
    return r
this looks basically like lack of RAII
if a fails I think the ExcepT will basically the pop
previously the closure stack was passed as a parameter, which is closer to reader
18:52
@fredoverflow Universities update their curriculum once every 20 years.
Ven
Ven
@BartekBanachewicz looks like bracket
anyone here uses mac ??
Ven
Ven
no !!
kind of stupid question to ask still !!
Ven
Ven
yup..
18:56
alright will anyone be knowing whats the equivalent to strace for osx
@Smple_V Try truss.
that sob doesnt wrk either
get out without any result
Is your bandwidth so limited you can't afford a few extra characters per sentence?
00:00 - 19:0019:00 - 00:00

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