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00:00
you know what does puzzle me?
@orlp hmm? I think it's quite natural. It took a while but here's the original r8 <fis? gis>\( \acciaccatura b <a fis> r16 <fis gis> <fis dis'>4\)
I'm using this sheet music
why on earth
javanese.imslp
lol
does it provide fingering info for the absolutely trivial first two measures
and then is completely silent for the complicated part?
@Columbo don't ask me
I'm a premium member at IMSLP
00:01
Contrast to an "annotated" version that affords the reading you hear: r8 << { \voiceOne gis16-2[\( b-4] a8.-3-^-. gis16-2 dis'4-5\) } \\ {\voiceTwo fis,?8~-1 fis2 } >>:
@BoundaryImposition ^ precisely
hah yeah there you go
@sehe is this last version a transcription of what I sent in that audio clip?
I put a little swing in my Unicode version but at this pace that's probably better
@BoundaryImposition (I don't suggest actually altering the score. I suggest /thinking/ about it that way)
or am I misunderstanding?
00:03
although you've effectively introduced two ties on the F#
@orlp It's how I'd mentally group (chunk) things to arrive at that interpretation without getting hampered/blocked/confused
ok sort of with you
@sehe I'm also confused, am I supposed to actuate the F# 4 times or not?
do it like templates. two-phase lookup! add the F# repetition on top of what you get
(actuate as in release and press so hammer strikes F# string again)
This is what I have difficulties with: bar 2
Phrasing and articulation are always governed top-down in music. And the "busyness" of the ornamentation tends to grab way too much attention.
@orlp Yes.
2 mins ago, by sehe
@BoundaryImposition (I don't suggest actually altering the score. I suggest /thinking/ about it that way)
@sehe busyness or business?
(I fear you've just confused matters but I think I see why you took this approach)
@Columbo I hope busyness more clearly expresses what I mean here
00:06
@sehe I hope you're not trying to suggest that good passagework is unimportant/subsidiary.
On the contrary. Of course.
I think I just lack the finesse that rubinstein has, and need more practice - I want some sort of 'skipping' feeling (as in the physical activity of skipping), very light and free
It is subsidiary, though. Like almost any musical detail. It's hard to actually nail down the "soul" of a piece.
@sehe Well, voicing is certainly not subsidiary.
@orlp And you may be attacking it the wrong way: I suggest NOT zooming in until you have it. I suggest zooming out and listening.
00:08
@orlp Rubinstein is widely regarded as one of the greatest pianists of the 20th century, so your lacking some of his finesse is probably to be expected
@sehe can you elaborate?
@Fanael Nothing with an memory address as the destination operand will fuse with a branch.
@orlp Don't focus on ornamentation. Focus on the big picture.
And in most cases, IIRC, source memory operands won't fuse either.
@orlp I'm not sure it will help, because it will repeat what I said.
@orlp There's a distinct possibility that you're trying too hard to make that happen, whereas the effect will present itself when you don't emphasize it at all. It's more a thing that happens when the grace note is fast and unobtrusive enough, keeping it legato in all respects (and ironically, the percussionistic effect of the sudden fast combination will be the effect you're looking for).
In other words, like Zen And The Art Of Everything: You will be able to observe when it happens once you stop trying to make it happen
00:13
@orlp The two things you can do here, as with any technical problem, are finding the correct solution and practicing it. Not a lot of magic necessary.
Though finding it can be by far the hardest part. Especially for a beta-mind.
@sehe Well. You do need practice, so not trying to make it happen sounds a bit... weird.
Art is weird.
don't prematurely optimise
basically
just get your algorithm written first
make it super smart and lean later
alright thanks for the advice guys
00:15
& by that point you'll understand your new code so well that it'll probably be very easy
good luck
@Columbo Actually, just know what to listen for. And observe very closely. This IS practicing. But without having decided how it must be done ahead of time.
@orlp Cheers
I'm off to bed
user1804599
Form (i1 *** i2) (\(r1 /\ r2) -> (/\) <$> o1 r1 <*> o2 r2) $ \(r1 /\ r2) ->
  map (map (_ /\ r2)) (h1 r1) <> map (map (r1 /\ _)) (h2 r2)
user1804599
Almost like Perl!
@BoundaryImposition The problem with that approach is that you won't find e.g. position technique related problems until it's too late. You have to roughly get it down at the start to see whether your idea does indeed work out at performance speed (polishing comes later).
Occurred to me several times, and I had to change fingerings in hindsight, which is a PITA.
@rightfold You rival me
00:18
So now I take a more pragmatic approach and just try to go through the whole thing roughly first. That works better for me.
@Columbo You're conflating everything. Studying a piece is not the same job as developing technique. They're hard to separate, but the advice for one thing can be different from the other.
@sehe is your ascii notation lilypond source or?
@sehe same job developing technique?
missing "as"?
Probably
00:20
@sehe one last question, I have a new synth for the piano, do you hate it as much as every other synth I had in an audio snippet so far? :D
@sehe I'm speaking solely of technical aspects.
What am I conflating?
@orlp Well. I don't actively remember the others. But yeah it was pretty clear the sound is artificial, and not very forgiving of your human variation (notably left-hand)
@Columbo The things I mentioned, mate.
I really must be going. Sorry for that.
@sehe I never talked about studying the piece.
Oh well. Getting details right w.r.t. the interpretation is studying the piece, for me.
@sehe I just pointed out that when you practice it, and develop fingerings etc., you need to always keep in mind how this will interact with all the parts surrounding the current one, or e.g. whether you can apply consistent fingering to repetitive structures (for simplification). I have no idea what you're talking about, still?
This is merely how I approach writing the "algorithm". It's got little to do with my interpretation. (Well, not zero, since you do need to consider how it sounds, and different fingerings facilitate different e.g. voicing, but you get the idea.)
@sehe For me, it's understanding the concept and building your interpretation, listening to other recordings and reading the score. Did you mean practice?
(Although that's probably because for me, "study" sounds theory related.)
user1804599
00:34
@sehe Due to the magic of equational reasoning I could reduce it to this superior version:
user1804599
Form (i1 *** i2) (bitraverse o1 o2) $ \(r1 /\ r2) ->
  map (map (_ /\ r2)) (h1 r1) <> map (map (r1 /\ _)) (h2 r2)
@Columbo I was responding to "not trying to make it happen sounds a bit... weird." and I probably misread the message to BI about "you won't find e.g. position technique related problems until it's too late" (position and technique is not something I'd attribute to a particular piece, normally ¹, so I missed the fact you meant things like fingering choices for the specific piece, not "hand posture" or so)
[ ¹ unless it's a specific etude, in which case I'd develop the technique separately from the score. ]
Anyhoops, all clear for me now. Cheers
@sehe I'm playing Etudes and Preludes only, so things are different for me :-)
00:49
@Borgleader scritches
 
1 hour later…
02:45
I still don't understand certificates thing in apps, I mean they are for security probably, but other than that, I have no idea ... (how to sound retarded)
also, as expected, it rains today, waited for a week for this semi prompt car wash :p
also now my email address associated with app account changed, should I get new certificates associated with those apps?
annoying because not many people had to go through this I imagine
03:05
 
1 hour later…
04:12
Congratulations!

You’ve been personally selected to take part in our 2017 Annual Visitor Survey! Tell us what you think of Firefox and to say “Thank You” you’ll receive a chance to get a Apple iPhone 7!
how much lies in the above message?
04:36
@Telkitty Do you mean Android apps?
yeah, both ios and android
If you already published an app on Google Play, you must use the same signing key for upgrades to that app.
So no, don't change the certificate. If you want to make a new one for new apps that is fine. But then you have to keep track of which key to use with which app when you publish upgrades.
cool thx.
 
2 hours later…
07:08
I find it distasteful that Cortana is trying to give me food suggestions.
because she doesn't have any?
:V
07:46
Cortana is a sales chick
always remember that
there is a pigeon trapped on an express train that I am traveling on
by the time it can get off, it will be some 10km away from where it used to be
08:40
Hey I want to look into the source code of a c project in xcode. I created a new terminal project and added the source code files to it. Unfortunately I can't use the go to decleration option...is there something I have to do to let xcode identify my files whatever?
08:59
@Telkitty I don't think it cares.
09:16
@Telkitty You have Internet no a train? Wow
1
Q: Adding .c files to xcode

SnowmanI'm trying to add the hypen library to my Xcode iOS project and it has 4 files: hyphen.c, hyphen.h, hnjalloc.c, hnjalloc.h. I dragged them to my project and hit build, but I'm getting undefined symbols for architecture i386 errors. Am I supposed to take any other steps besides dragging them to my...

(Wild guess, I simply typed "add c files to xcode project" into Google. I have never used xcode or owned a Mac.)
 
1 hour later…
10:30
@wilx I think pigeons might be territory, so if that is the case, it cares :p
lol www.pigeons.biz
@fredoverflow my phone has internet access
@BoundaryImposition excuse me , but what I wrote was all the information I knew ,unless you want to see the file I am working on.If you do not see it is enough I can do nothingfor you and you are free not to help — shery 5 hours ago
why do some people seem not to want others to spend their Sundays helping them for free?
that's racist
10:45
buses do not usually race with trains
sure they do
user784668
16 hours ago, by Fanael
Wait, that… doesn't make much sense, does it?
11:08
Morning
Meh, I drank too much last night. My stomach isn't very happy with it.
I drank nothing last night. I'm not very happy with it.
11:24
I was happy to go out and drink though. I was otherwise depressed all day long :p
exactly
in fact, speaking of which
What game is that
dafuq is that*
11:55
toodleoo suckers
hi sucker
how's pupper?
12:21
there he is
Lol
Fight, fight, fight
12:40
@StackedCrooked speaking of island names:
user image
7
user1804599
13:08
> Isle get it done
user1804599
XD
16:18
@Borgleader those ears :)
user1804599
16:30
user1804599
@sehe Is this common?
16:58
No
32th notes are not common, let alone much smaller
17:09
@jaggedSpire adorable
@TonyTheLion <3 <3 <3
hows jagged?
jagged's pretty good. :)
How's my favorite lion?
17:11
struggling with embedded code
the struggle is real :P
@jaggedSpire the most helpful of puppers
@TonyTheLion I hope you get better with it! :)
^_^
@TonyTheLion @Borgleader <3
yea I need this
17:16
this is how i want to die xD
throws all of the balls
const auto size = std::distance(list.cbegin(), list.cend());
for (std::size_t i = 0; i != size / 2 + (size % 2) - 1; ++i, ++middle);
17:18
for this, i'm getting a "signed unsigned comparision" warning, because std::distance returns ptrdiff_t for std::forward_list
@jaggedSpire wow this kitty climbing up that wall
is it safe to assign size to std::size_t? i'm sure the list will always have 1 element at least
@TonyTheLion it's pretty impressive!
so adorable
> We're looking for a brilliant developer to join our compiler front-end team as we take on a new charter for C++ compiler development. You will have the opportunity to work directly with customers and other Microsoft teams as we add new features to our language and libraries. You'll experience the indescribable joy of resolving compiler bug reports submitted by library developers, as they use your features in ways that no sane person could possibly have anticipated.
7
@rightfold That's my favourite as well :)
18:01
uhm.. Firefox on Linux is telling me that connection to chat.so.com is not secure? is that intended?
@iksemyonov Well, the links pasted here and oneboxed can lead to any URL, even non-HTTPS.
18:52
@wilx FF says the actual connection is not secure. i don't see an https marker, should there be one?
@jaggedSpire Ninja kitty :o
19:39
@jaggedSpire woooof
20:20
oy
what's wrong with you people
I said, "wooooof"
nwp
nwp
we are inferior beings and robot isn't around
where is robot?
@Puppy booof
@iksemyonov chrome reports it as "not fully secure", the https connection to chat is grand, but as wilx says, there is non http content that get's added
@thecoshman well the trick is that there is no https:// in my addr. bar
mean, yeah, noone really needs the stuff i'm writing here but i'd be happier with a better understanding of how this works
stallman?
I'm pretty sure everybody knows
20:50
how would you compare two std::forward_lists for a test written using boost::test? boost apparently refuses to compare using element-wise comparison
and std::equal() for two ranges only exists in c++14..
A moment of silence for all of the fictional mothers that had to die in the name of tragic back story and character development. #MothersDay
21:03
hehe
21:19
@iksemyonov this has been in c++ like forever en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/container/forward_list/operator_cmp
@sehe you won’t get the nice diagnostics on test failures though
Indeed you won't. He didn't specify what kind of diags are required, though.
Apparently, he's envious of std::equal so...
@iksemyonov Also, no problem here: coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/63f0faace74a22a6 /cc @LucDanton
Why is this not a question on SO anyways.
user1804599
@sehe whatsup
I'm alive, you?
user1804599
21:36
Writing good code
@sehe I have to admit that I find this situation almost ridiculously hilarious. For the past six or eight months, essentially every Democrat in the US has said that Comey is not only incompetent, but probably an evil conspirator. Now that Trump's fired him, he's suddenly a fallen hero, and the only possible reason Trump had to fire him was protecting himself from investigation.
Well. It clearly wasn't about the Hillary hooking.
@rightfold I lost my discord login.
Don't get me wrong: I wouldn't be particularly surprised if that really is at least part of why Trump fired him--but it's still pretty hilarious to see how people have changed their opinions overnight, without even a first (not to mention second) thought.
@JerryCoffin I would be surprised if it weren't part, in the sense that he knew it would make it so much easier to rationalize this. I'm not buying the timing at all though.
user1804599
@sehe cool
21:40
@JerryCoffin I feel to see any humor here. How do you not see that the way in which the WH changed its opinion on exactly the same thing at least as hilarious? That makes it a neutral to me, and therefore the only thing left is just bewildering "so why did he". I think all the smoke and mirrors around it is just very smart use of circumstances.
@JerryCoffin Well, it's also true that since then, he subsequently opened an anti-Trump investigation. The Democrats can say things as hypocritical as they want, but Trump actually did something.
I'm not saying that what the Democrats have been saying is not hypocritical, dumb, opportunistic, or just generally wrong in every way, but I think that actually firing the man whilst he's attempting to investigate your campaign is far, far more important.
and if his firing actually had anything to do with his actions over the Clinton email thing, that might be justifiable, but it clearly doesn't
@sehe I don't see them as particularly comparable. At least that I can recall, during the campaign Trump didn't say a whole lot about Comey at all--I seem to recall his one saying something about taking guts to investigate Hillary, but that was about it. To be comparable, he'd have had to hold Comey up as a true hero right up until he opened the investigation of Trump's campaign.
In short, Trump's done roughly a 90 degree turn--from mostly neutral about Comey, to firing him. The Democrats have (by and large) done an exact 180 degree turn.
21:56
Also there isn't much "street heat" on Trump compared to the 70s, so in short ain't nobody in power going to be giving a fuck
@JerryCoffin Having the anti-Trump investigation be opened in the meantime changes this equation pretty heavily.
Ahem
I would like to Cinch the rules
5
oh god
If you would like the suffering to stop, perhaps I suggest you read the rules?
oh, that kind of cinching
22:03
having Comey decide to open an investigation against Trump seems like rational motivation to change your opinion of the man
@Puppy Well, at very best it was certainly a stupid move on Trump's part. Even if we're charitable and attribute only the very best of intentions to him, it's still given anybody who doesn't like him (of whom there are obviously many) an easy reason for attacking him (and yes, they might well be right, even though I'm more inclined to assume he's innocent until actually proven guilty).
I don't really see any possible motivation for him to fire Comey other than because he wanted to stop/impede the investigation into Russian ties
muscle flexing
@JerryCoffin Oh hell yeah. They went on that FBI couldn't interfere with the elections. If they published dirt on Trump during the campaign that would be political move that could never be justified. Of course we all know that well timed 180 on that. If anything, that's the hilarious part.
@JerryCoffin I don't hear anyone claiming Comey should stay. Where do you hear this? I hear LOTS of people saying that firing Comey is a very bad sign, and not the first sign (by far) of power abuse by the new WH. Those are not contradictory
Hm
Who can I talk to about compilers... Hm...
22:13
@JerryCoffin The point is, I think, he's proven too many times he does not deserve charitable reading.
Ell
Ell
@VermillionAzure rightfold
or anybody else
what do you want to talk about... about them? :V
@Ell She's not here right now though... o_o
Well... specifically...
I need to build a sort of compiler for Scheme
Or, rather, that's the next step in my project
@Ell Here, shaka-scheme:
@JerryCoffin Proven guilty? What proof do you need. There's too many things. However, if you're referring to the whole Russia thing, yes then I concur this seems far-fetched, and it's probably just the new WH being naive.
Very naive.
22:15
@Ell My team and I built this project but there's a major glaring problem -- we have no support for first-class continuations
Ell
Ell
as in, call/cc?
@Ell Almost. The scope is slightly larger, for tail-call optimization, etc.
But yes, basically.
So the idea is we choose SSA or CPS or ANF to compile to and figure things out
I am thinking compile to CPS in order to simplify things
But the problem is convolved by the macro expansion and definition process
It's ridiculous
Ell
Ell
can callcc be transformed into CPS?
So the process goes: Lexer --> Parser --> Macro Expansion --> CPS conversion --> execution-ready IR.
Ell
Ell
I thought it was only delimited coroutines which can be
22:17
@Ell Everything can be converted into CPS.
I'm pretty sure every almost every single program can be converted into CPS, even SSA-based IR's. It just requires the right primitives and models.
call/cc's implementation is only made more simple by using CPS.
So is tail-call optimization. So are exceptions, supposedly.
Ell
Ell
@VermillionAzure and your trouble is in the CPS stage?
@Ell Well, the trouble hasn't even started yet.
We have to literally redo our entire evaluation system from the ground up
Ell
Ell
how come?
@Ell Because we don't have support for first-class continuations
There are three ways of implementing continuations
1. Keeping track of heap-allocated activation frames, whatever that means
Ell
Ell
but I mean
22:22
2. Keeping track of the stack and saving it
Ell
Ell
are you already just evaluating IR?
@Ell No, we are directly evaluating the S-expression-like list structure
It's literally a cons cells of Boost::Variant's
Where one of the variant type is a std::shared_ptr<DataNode>
Ell
Ell
ah
@Ell It's really just a mess right now
I have no idea how people implement macros except for Racket
and Racket's approach is really REALLY complex
Ell
Ell
I don't really know lisp
I started writing an interpreter recently
22:32
@Ell For what?
Ell
Ell
Just for fun
I'm screenrecording it
@Ell No, for what language
Ell
Ell
Oh, sorry, lisp
no specific lisp
I'm basically making it up as I go along vOv
@Ell Have you taken a look at McCarthy's original paper?
Or are you following Norvig's Lis.py?
Did you take a look at CL or Scheme yet?
Ell
Ell
@VermillionAzure No
I'm just writing what I think lisp is :P
22:37
@Ell I suggest you look at McCarthy's original paperp
Ell
Ell
I'm about to refactor lambdas & quotations though
Just gotta go onto Google Scholar
Ell
Ell
because they are special :(
so I'm going to turn quotation into a syntactic form
and same for lambda
@VermillionAzure where's the fun in that? :D
@Ell Because you probably don't know where you're going
Like me
So I suggest you do it before you mentally rewrite your evaluation system 5 times
Because it's going to be 5. It's at 4 already
Ell
Ell
@VermillionAzure I know the general direction :)
22:39
@Ell Have you considered macros or continuations yet?
Exceptions?
Scoping?
Ell
Ell
@VermillionAzure I won't support continuations
@Ell Exceptions?
Ell
Ell
scoping works fine atm
macros I haven't decided
I won't support exceptions either
Ell
Ell
haha
22:41
When people say "Lisp is easy" it's because they ignore a majority of what makes Lisp, Lisp
Ell
Ell
I'm making it easy for myself :)
user1804599
Lisp doesn't exist.
user1804599
Oh, you're Cinch, I'm out of here.
4
@rightfold Ugh.
Anyways
I am completely irked by the state of Lisp macros. I have no idea of its history, etc.
And newer things are confusing because the concrete implementation with data structures is slightly obfuscated
23:32
hello
Ell
Ell
Hi
Ell
Ell
I've had a terribly unproductive day
oh well
too late now
I'm reading about Tarski's axioms :D
Hilbert's are where its at
23:50
Okay, what do you think about this deployment strategy. I built a complicated circuit interfacing with an Arduino. When the program starts, as part of its handshake with the Arduino it flashes the firmware. I'm thinking of keeping the firmware flasher (an exe) and firmware binary in a Qt resource and copying them to a temporary file and invoking from there. Does this sound like a bad idea?
stackoverflow.com/posts/43968855/revisions people seem to think this is reddit. Or sumtin'
@sehe Unfortunately, this is how kids talk now days.

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