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00:00 - 19:0019:00 - 00:00

19:00
@R.MartinhoFernandes FML:
Ok - no need for xsputn() or sync(), but your use of &m_str.front() and &m_str.back() in init() is broken; this has UB when the string is empty. On GCC 4.8.4 &m_str.front() is one after &m_str.back() in this case!! Then streamsize in xsputn() is -1 (rather than 0) and all hell breaks loose. &m_str[0] and &m_str[m_str.size()] should work (even when the latter is one-past-the-end; an impl kinda has to work that way in C++11. — BoundaryImposition 1 min ago
@R.MartinhoFernandes Power play, IMHO. The official reason he mentioned is that he wants to know first who will be his replacement and also that it is against the government's coalition treaty. Neither reason flies because the constitution obviously takes precedence in this.
I sooo want our Senate to impeach him and drag him in front of our Constitutional court.
actually maybe COW isn't a problem
pastebin.com/jLZ3TF3b is what I ended up with
in fact I think I shall make take_str() safer too
@wilx so he doesn't like the PM but likes the finance minister? This is really weird
19:16
lol benchmarked it and it has about the same performance as stringstream::str() wtf
suppose memory copies aren't all that expensive at the end of the day
ooh the .reserve is good though if I use it :D
pastebin.com/hCWfvt02 bit of a weak benchmark but good enough to show that there may be some value here at scale
(never mind root login; it's a VM with no other users)
@Mysticial That's amazing!
19:33
Hmmm, windows updated a driver and tried to load it while I was using my cd drive. I had to restart because windows left the old driver in memory and couldn't tell the drive to dismount to load the new driver.
hello folks
i have a new 130+ question on meta
130 in a few days!
nwp
nwp
20:10
I went to the smalltalk talk, it was good in the sense that I now know to never do anything with smalltalk.
Why not?
A comma splice is the use of a comma to join two independent clauses. For example: It is nearly half past five, we cannot reach town before dark. Although acceptable in some languages and compulsory in others (e.g. Bulgarian or French), comma splices are usually considered style errors in English. Some English style guides consider comma splices appropriate in certain situations, such as when being poetic or with short similar phrases. == Prescriptive view == The original 1918 edition of The Elements of Style by William Strunk Jr. advises using a semicolon, not a comma, to join two grammatically...
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@BoundaryImposition sorry, I'll try to avoid that in the future
@nwp gah! lol
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@Aaron3468 It is interesting in the sense that you don't write a program that runs in the classic sense, instead you have a pool of objects that you manipulate by adding functions and values or by creating new objects. You then can inspect any object and do changes. However, that creates massive problems in terms of deployment, scalability and collaboration.
you can do cool things like rotate the text in the debugger (so it is shown upside down for example), because it is just an object with methods and property like anything else, but none of it felt useful
20:23
+1 for the Karma approach of course. However, when Boost is in the picture, why not simply use Boost Iostreams and have ostream write to a container or array transparently :) — sehe 1 min ago
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then again, I may be too quick to dismiss it, because I'm also having difficulty understanding how anyone can get anything done in a functional language even though I know it is possible
@BoundaryImposition Just my $0.50p. Thanks for the buffer code though, I'll check my older buffer implementations against it
@sehe okay, that makes sense
annoyingly I'm past that point now and am currently trying to come up with a decent guess for reserve :D
@nwp Oh, sounds like the lisp interpreter. It's weird in the sense that you build the program and then distribute the interpreter's state. The issue with that is that you are in a very literal sense distributing the prototype itself. Not a cleaned up blueprint.
20:37
@nwp Smalltalk apps are either packaged or deployed as whole VM (as in software VM, not the VMWare kind of VM) images.
Smalltalk VMs have some kind of VCS though different from what you know from Git or similar.
I really like functional languages for their expressiveness, but the idea of not using a source file needs to die (or at least not be the primary pipeline). Source is easier to debug because you can assume your debug tools will work as expected.
wat?
Scalability for what it does is not a problem either. Apparently, there were banking and world wide distributed air plane ticket reservations systems done in it, so it cannot be that bad.
that's an inherently faulty assumption
it certainly can be that bad
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they also showed seaside which exposes a canvas to smalltalk which then gets displayed on a website, although having state in a website is not what people usually go for
20:40
@Puppy Imagine that you have to go fix a car, but the tools you get to inspect and repair the car are all created by the person who made the car. There's no guarantee there will be everything you need, nor that the builder has not modified the mutable objects (which includes all the interfaces you have available for output and input.)
pretty standard for people who implement compilers to also ship debuggers
@nwp So a live feed of whatever's on the canvas?
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@Aaron3468 I just worded that badly. You type in a URL which is handled by seaside which gives a canvas to smalltalk that represents the website. Smalltalk then puts some objects on the canvas. The objects know how to convert themselves to HTML and seaside shows the HTML that smalltalk generated via the objects to the browser.
The example was a tic tac toe game and the buttons just worked out of the box on HTML.
Interestingly it was fully server side, so clicking on a field would open a new site with a new URL which also meant that you can use the browser's back button to go back in state.
Totally cool, but nothing you would ever want to use in production.
@nwp You can do that with client-side apps now
@nwp Oh, that's not too bad. It's more or less what PHP and other scripting languages can do if you use the right framework. But I do agree that I would prefer dynamic pages with interactive content instead of url-controlled sites
One thing I notice is that I can't find much documentation on smalltalk. So I can't really tell if the mutability of standard interfaces like stdin and stdout is too much. Personally I don't like to debug code in an interpreter because you can only see one part at a time.
It's like probing an electrical circuit, you have to hypothesize what's wrong and test for it, rather than seeing it immediately.
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20:56
The spirit was that you don't need any documentation. If you wonder about something you just inspect it and see what it does. I don't know how well that works in practice.
I actually edited out a comma splice, I'm learning!
I'm a huge comma-splice offender too :s
It's interesting because it's a tradeoff. You can make much better tests when you debug in an interpreter, especially with reflection in a language. Personally I prefer to debug and modify source because it feels less like a black box to me.
@nwp Star.
@Aaron3468 :(
21:11
Style makes a difference. Those who comma splice tend to write as if they are having a conversation, rather than as if punctuation affects grammatical meaning. Commas have a dual meaning of denoting clauses or denoting short pauses in speech, for example.
@Aaron3468 semicolon
Semicolons imply a strong causal relation to the first clause. They are my preferred solution, but they are not usually applicable to run-on sentences.
</rant>
@Aaron3468 Style does make a difference, as does not having an earthly clue what you're doing :)
21:30
Language is the art and practice of conveying a message and there are many conflicting opinions on the extent to which the content to be delivered, or its delivery, is the object being conveyed. Academia has a strong case for clarity of the message while art has a strong case for creative license on the delivery.
This is on-target thenib.com/mixed-messages
You know what's worth than comma splicing? ...
Eternal ellipes... They drain the will to live... More even than ubiquitous smileys :) Right :)...
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I'm almost tempted to play along and do everything wrong, but I have not yet been converted into a total troll and will put some effort into fixing my mistake.
@sehe Unfortunately, if you replace "objectively false statement" with "objectively true statement" (or "statement that's open to question"), the rest of the conversation often remains essentially similar (and if you switch the two roles, that doesn't make a whole lot of difference either).
Touché
It's a safe social construct that prevents people from actually having to think or even changing their opinions
Yep. Often a mob will apparate with pitchforks and torches if the conversation occurs in a public forum.
21:49
can you please help me with this? I got very confused on why this error happened when I was trying to import the Intel RealSense project property sheets stackoverflow.com/questions/43857751/…
yes, I can help downvote your question
22:04
@sehe "what's worth than" -.-
dang ellipes
Oh man. Too late for edits.
hah, and I thought those were quotes
didn't even realise twas you
And how on earth did I get two glaring errors in one message. I'm falling apart. :(
At least ellipses and smiley abuses are still more annoying.
22:08
I thought the typos were intentional
If I were a less principled person, I would probably have thought to use that defense.
user1804599
awesome
Either people in dentistry and medicine are using haskell, or that's a game developer who is obsessed with hyper-realism.
user406009
@MonaJalal For future reference, you should ask your questions in chat.stackoverflow.com/rooms/116940/c-questions-and-answers
23:05
@Mysticial Urbana, IL
Monday 6:00 PM
Sunny 66F
@Mysticial Chicago, IL
Monday 6:00 PM
Mostly Cloudy 46F
23:54
@Borgleader I worry that I'll be disappointed, but there's no question I have to see it anyway.
The good news so far, for me anyway, is there's nothing in the trailer that bothered me. Maybe once the hyper goes down a bit I'll spot something, but as of now I wasn't disappointed by anything I saw in there.
@Borgleader Yeah--the trailer definitely looks nice.
user1804599
Cool, they made HHe molecules.
@Borgleader I just worry that almost any sequel is likely to fall short of the original.
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