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00:00 - 21:0021:00 - 00:00

00:23
Okay, 28 in. 4k monitor with 100% DPI is totally unusable.
shocking
why?
too high resolution?
It's just 1080p on a 14in.
Everything is really really small.
My laptop has a 13" 1080p
That is a normal laptop
00:25
@milleniumbug But what DPI are you running at?
100%
yes, it's small
no, I normally wouldn't work with such DPI
Now multiply it 4x. Your sidebar is basically a very thin line.
The text in visual studio requires a magnifying glass to see.
but it's a laptop which means I'm not able to use my regular hardware otherwise I would use it
@Mysticial Not surprising. I had a 15" laptop screen that was 1080p and that was already small.
Costco this thing for really cheap (> $100 lower than online.) Been wanting one for a while to try it out.
First of all my laptop seems to lag a bit on it. With a GTX 970M.
00:27
aren't all these interpolation tricks fun
The HDMI feels like it might be a limiter.
Even 125% is unusable. 150% (the default) is much better.
Oh ic. While the monitor supports 60Hz. It needs to be over DP. It's 30 Hz atm.
My laptop only has HDMI and mini-DP which I don't have a cable for. I'll see what happens when my hook my Skylake X build to it with DP.
Other than that, 28in. 4k looks pretty nice. I'm tempted to turn it vertically and screenie the Lounge at 100% DPI.
00:46
I think when I upgrade to 4k I'll get 32" monitors
but that'll be in a few years cuz 3 of them costs a fortune now
@iksemyonov Well, hello.
@Borgleader This 28in. 4k one was $300.
I paid $450 each for the 4 x 27in. 1440p's 2 years ago when I first moved to Chicago.
And these have wall mounts. So I could technically do a bunch of them.
But my laptop seems to object to the idea of running both the 4k and its own screen at the same time.
Not sure if it's the DPI scaling or it takes the entire 970M to handle a single 4k output.
@Mysticial Oh thats not so bad, but still. I want to at last wait for HDMI 2.1 or whichever one has adaptive vsync or wtv its called.
I have a writing disability that prevents me from doing others' homework for them... — Coldspeed 6 mins ago
5
@Borgleader lol
Sorry its: "Game Mode VRR which allows for variable refresh rates (VRR) for more fluid motion in games"
01:00
AMD FreeSync?
so basically if the game is running at 28FPS, youre getting 28 FPS not a shitty stutter
01:12
@Borgleader Oh wow, it got red-flagged.
@fredoverflow Because he can?
@Borgleader VRR seems like it would have conflicts when not running in full screen.
Since different parts of the screen will have different refresh rates.
That would make sense.
Actually all consumer monitors are constant refreshing at ~60hz independent of input. (Source: I took high-speed measurements).
@Mikhail What about the 144Hz monitors?
01:22
@Mysticial :-)
So they're a scam?
idk, didn't measure them
BUT there is a real scam
Amazing irony
> "Good luck getting help now:" I hope you realize one-day making others feel worse isn't the best way to go along with things.@Coldspeed – Daniel Solorio 23 mins ago
Consumer monitors can't actually fully toggle from all-black to all-white, so every manufacture says something we refresh at from pixel value 140-160 in the supposed response time. But the cycle that they use isn't consistent between manufactures so the actual response time is completely arbitrary and typically an order of magnitude higher than the reported rates. This becomes a problem when you're opening them and trying to use them for wave-steering (like what I did).
It gets even weirder because the supposed response times are the instantaneous response which is only applicable when modulating a sinusoidal.
And most people that sell monitors, even specialized vendors of scientific equipment don't know what the heck they are selling.
here is a recent email about a liquid crystal device similar to a monitor
fucking company sold me a device with a 1 ms response time but then ended up being like 80 ms
Checking with a friend at Samsung, apparently 1 ms is physically impossible for non DMD devices
@Mikhail ....and, of course, we can substitute almost any other word we like for "monitor", and this remains equally true.
01:34
Not really, especially when you hit the $100k range
I'm of the opinion that Thorlab's is either willfully lying about the performance of their device or more likely they completely outsourced their business to china - along with the technical expertise to explain how monitors actually work. Yet they still sell at an absurd markup. The markup comes from them not being a Chinese company and supposedly being able to provide technical support. Both of which didn't happen.
</rant>
01:55
@Mikhail That....depends. Some dealers seem to know their stuff really well--but others are utterly clueless. For work, I've helped deal with obtaining some pretty high-end equipment. Some dealers are pretty knowledgeable. Some others...not so much. Just a few weeks ago, happened to be at the lab and overheard a conversation where the sales guy didn't know the difference between a SEM and an STEM...
It definitely happens more than 50% of the time. I'm wondering if one of the systematic reasons comes from the idea that sales people pay for themselves - so, if there is indeed a market for your product, typically hiring one doesn't affect your bottom line. So, its easier to hire them.
also they should have bought an AFM
02:17
@Mikhail If the sales guy had suggested that, I'd have at least considered it a reasonable possibility. In this case, it was just a conversation I overheard, so I'm not sure what they needed it for--but at least as I recall, AFM isn't nearly as capable of dealing with "rough" surfaces as STEM, so it's not universally superior, or anything like that.
Its actually worse in terms of resolution/image quality, but significantly more usable. Also 5x cheaper. For example biological samples need to be literally covered in gold before SEM. Few applications require SEM.
I also seem to recall that STEM can also be used a little like TEM to determine the composition of the material, which AFM doesn't indicate at all.
And if you're doing STEM, you're basically a research lab.
@Mikhail Pretty much every semiconductor failure analysis lab uses them nowadays. That's been my exposure to such stuff.
Hmm, still sounds like overkill mostly because the STEM we have at work is rarely used - most people prefer SEM for ease of use (even for semiconductor applications).
SEMs are like $200k, STEMs are like like $1 million
AFM is like $60k but you can stick anything in it without much trouble
02:39
@Mikhail Unlike the sales people, I recognize the limits of my expertise--I know people do use STEM fairly regularly, but I don't know enough to say with certainty exactly why (though I've overheard enough conversation to have some notion of some of the reasons).
02:51
I have been wondering, in space, does the lack of gravity affect bowel movement?
03:35
@Telkitty probably
 
2 hours later…
05:25
'C++' is the same as 'C plus one' (C +1) right? :p
so instead of C, now we got a couple :p
05:58
@Telkitty Remember that C++ evaluates to the value of C (and more or less independently increments C.
So we get exactly what we started with.
06:11
so ... energy conserves, if there is a global warming (thus, increase of energy on earth) where is this outflow of energy?
@Telkitty IR light being reflected outward.
OK, I might just be momentarily dumb, but how do energy other than photon exist in vacuum?
@Telkitty There is no absolute vacuum.
Ell
Ell
@Telkitty dark matter :D
The earth loses (for example) a substantial amount hydrogen and helium from our atmosphere every year. The warmer that is, the more energy we lose that way.
06:25
don't be stingy, look at how much mass sun loses every year :p
@Telkitty Not being stingy at all. In fact, the earth loses very little mass. We lose hydrogen and helium, but we gain a fair amount from dust and meteorites as well. We're probably losing a bit more than we gain, but only a little.
This leads me to another 'discovery' - as sun burning through its mass, it gets smaller, so the surface of the sun get smaller. Given it's burning at same rate, there will be less energy receive by earth as years go by ...
Ell
Ell
Until internal radiai pressure overtakes gravity
Actually, the sun is currently expanding, and will be for some time to come. Eventually, it will become a red giant. Then (eventually) it will shrink. But that's a long ways out--5 billion years or so to the red-giant stage. Relatively soon after that it will shrink to a white dwarf.
06:52
if universe is indeed expanding, everything should be colder not warmer
@Telkitty The average temperature is dropping, and has been for billions of years. That doesn't mean everything is or should be cold though.
doesn't seem to be getting cooler
@Telkitty There have been ice ages periodically throughout earth's history.
@Telkitty Like I said, the average temperature is dropping. That doesn't mean everything is getting colder everywhere.
As I said, the sun is expanding. Yes, it's losing mass, but it's getting larger anyway. Eventually (a few billion years) it'll get hot enough that earth will no longer be inhabitable, at least by anything similar to humans.
After it hits the red giant stage, however, it will shrink to a white dwarf--and then earth will cool off a lot.
07:34
that's the theory
but evidence close to earth does not support it
@Telkitty Evidence here on earth seems to fit pretty well with the theories.
of course, there are plenty of other variables
@JerryCoffin earth is not getting colder, it's getting warmer
@Telkitty Yes. We're taking potential energy that's been stored up over millions of years, and releasing it in an incredibly short period of time. Do you think that shouldn't affect our temperature?
Are you sure it's not because we have 7+ billion people on earth? If you have 7 chickens in a small chicken coop, it would be really warm in winter too </trollololo>
08:11
@Telkitty If most of us were are full of hot air as politicians, that probably would be the main problem.
08:24
are you suggesting that we use politicians as heater unit in winter?
09:07
@JerryCoffin Prettty sure that during the red giant stage, it will grow so big, it will consume the Earth, and the Earth will be uninhabitably hot after only 1billion years or so
@Puppy This is what I remember about this red giant stone cold fact
"possibility"? it's a stone-cold fact.
it's not necessarily a fact what I just said about the details as I am barely an armchair physicist, but it's undeniable by anybody with the slightest lick of sense that it will become a red giant and then white dwarf
nwp
nwp
telkitty does not believe in slight licking of senses
09:36
@BartekBanachewicz ping
@BartekBanachewicz Nevermind
10:32
@jaggedSpire That band is great. I often listen to them in my car :D
 
3 hours later…
13:08
@Telkitty if the universe is expanding, planets can still fall into stars, no contradiction at all
I wonder on how many instances have you witnessed a planet falling into a star
And the hints guides. Lovely things. Reminds me a bit of some Haskell static rewrite shit. (whatever it's called, again)
user1804599
Rewrite rules.
user1804599
fmap f . fmap g = fmap (f . g)
user1804599
13:23
@sehe Do you know how to install Boost on Debian?
user1804599
Debian has only Boost 1.55 lol I want the latest Boost.
13:43
@rightfold Everybody knows
@rightfold why not compile it from source?
I like this shortcut:
4
A: Boost compilation failed on ubuntu server 14.04

seheAs always, I heartily recommend cheating to get the dependencies for any library: sudo apt-get build-dep libboost-all-dev Note for clarity: this just makes sure that all dependencies that would be necessary to build the distro's packaged version of Boost are present. As such, it's just a short...

@Zindarod That's what he wants. Apparently he's wearing his lazy hat today. And perhaps rightfully because there's probably a lot of expertise here
@sehe right. lol
user1804599
Compiling from source takes ages.
user1804599
Apparently there is a boost-latest repository, but it only works on Ubuntu.
user1804599
13:51
For some reason Google is still awful and searching for Debian questions yields Ubuntu answers.
@rightfold 10 minutes, thank you. 20s to extract.
user1804599
Also, when compiling from source, you need to set up all the new library paths etc.
user1804599
Unless you want to install it in between the Debian packages, which you don't.
Nope. Just install it properly. Not rocket science.
user1804599
I'd much prefer to install this stuff in /opt or /home/r
13:53
But if you are just looking for a repo, google is your servant.
Cmake takes care of setting all the flags and paths, but it does take more than 10 mins to compile.
@rightfold So, do that. Building from source is the route for it, use checkinstall with ./b2 install --prefix=PREFIX
user1804599
root@r:/home/r# add-apt-repository ppa:boost-latest/ppa
You are about to add the following PPA to your system:
 Providing the most up-to-date version of the Boost C++ Libraries.
 More info: launchpad.net/~boost-latest/+archive/ubuntu/ppa
Press [ENTER] to continue or ctrl-c to cancel adding it

gpg: keyring `/tmp/tmp52thv604/secring.gpg' created
gpg: keyring `/tmp/tmp52thv604/pubring.gpg' created
gpg: requesting key 029DB5C7 from hkp server keyserver.ubuntu.com
gpg: /tmp/tmp52thv604/trustdb.gpg: trustdb created
@Zindarod That makes no sense. If it takes longer, that's because the pc is slower.
@rightfold Yup you already mentioned that.
user1804599
@sehe So then I install it in /opt/boost, and my code won't build.
user1804599
13:55
Because I have to set the header and library search paths.
@rightfold Of course you will, because changing the include/lib paths is peanuts
@sehe corei7, 8gb ram with ssd. I use make -j4
user1804599
I still don't know how to do it without hardcoding them in the build system.
Me neither, except CMake does come with some magic
user1804599
> CPLUS_INCLUDE_PATH
user1804599
13:57
OK I'm going to try it.
@Zindarod Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-3770K CPU @ 3.50GHz, 32GiB, ssd, I use b2 and it takes ~10 minutes
user1804599
Step 1: uninstalling Boost.
@rightfold What is that? That looks project specific
user1804599
100% impossible.
@rightfold You shouldn't have to.
user1804599
13:57
@sehe According to a SO answer, GCC uses it. It's probably wrong, because why would things work in this nice world.
@rightfold sudo apt-get purge libboost-all-dev; sudo apt-get autoremove
user1804599
@sehe I don't want two Boost versions installed. I want an error when I don't use the correct one.
@rightfold Uninstalling anything in Debian based OS' is a nightmare.
user1804599
@sehe How do you know to use purge? I don't know this stuf.f
user1804599
I use remove.
13:58
@sehe I must be doing something wrong then.
@rightfold It's remove + purge config. There may not be a difference here
user1804599
OK, it's removed now.
@Zindarod Have you ever used Windows :)
user1804599
OK now downloading Boost.
Do bzip2. Save bandwidth but don't require 7zip. (Also, it doesn't use windows line-ends like th zip)
user1804599
14:00
Does b2 automatically parallelize?
It does with pbzip2
But it's only ~20s, so worthless
It's not windows! (Where unzipping the archive takes ~5 minutes, no joke)
user1804599
b2, not bzip2
Oh sorry. My bad. I don't know for sure. I think so
@sehe Sure have, but in windows uninstalling one program does not mess up others. In Debian based OS' purging one library sometimes deletes dependencies of other libraries.
@Zindarod lol. You must be kidding me
It sounds mostly completely in reverse.
It is possible for the repo to have mismanaged dependencies, but that's a maintainer error and I haven't have it happen for me in ~18 years of Ubuntu/Debian. Lots of times on Gentoo (what with arch masking etc.)
user1804599
14:03
./bootstrap.sh --prefix=/opt/boost
@sehe You won't believe how many times I have had to deal with broken OS because of purging one thing and messing up something else. Especially with nvidia and cuda.
On windows, the recipe is usually that 1 installation installs a dozen components, which simply remain as bloat on the system when you remove the application
user1804599
I wonder how many gigabytes this will be.
user1804599
My guess is 5.
@Zindarod Oh well. I've installed that stuff more than once for tinkering, alternating between cuda and opencl and not had a problem.
14:04
@sehe Exactly, bloat on the system is a drawback, but broken system is seldom the case.
user1804599
I really need to uninstall crap I don't use anymore, but it's so difficult.
@rightfold On windows, 10Gb, on linux ~2Gb max - but be sure to use --build-dir=/tmp/boost-build and drop it afterwards
@Zindarod I say that inevitable bloat is the sickness, not the cure. Windows SxS is the "head-in-the-sand" solution to DLL hell. It's what technically allows bloat to sit there harmless, except that only the SxS cache is usually 30Gb+
@Puppy I don't think anybody's really certain, but I've read at least some theories claiming that the earth probably won't be consumed, because by then it'll have moved out to somewhere around the same orbit as Jupiter occupies now.
@sehe You're right, it's not a solution at all. Anyway I'd take Ubuntu with all it's problems over windows anyday.
Cheers :)
I'll make a mental note of potential dependency woes with cuda/opencl
14:07
I use Ubuntu, Mac OS and Windows, all of them
@sehe That'd be great. Especially in the case of dual graphics card systems, such as laptops.
I use whatever is the best for the job
Everyone does.
I think few things beat the linux ecosystem for development. VS+R# go a long way for "enterprise dev" (at least rocks the socks off any Java-based ecosystem)
@sehe Care to give some points for comparison?
user1804599
OK install is done.
user1804599
14:12
Now the horror of search paths.
user1804599
OK, CPLUS_INCLUDE_PATH works.
user1804599
Now linking.
user1804599
oh god are you fucking kidding me
user1804599
Ok it works.
user1804599
Thanks @sehe
user1804599
14:18
$ tail -n3 ~/.zshrc
export CPLUS_INCLUDE_PATH="$CPLUS_INCLUDE_PATH:/opt/boost/include"
export LIBRARY_PATH="$LIBRARY_PATH:/opt/boost/lib"
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH="$LD_LIBRARY_PATH:/opt/boost/lib"
user1804599
Net disk usage change: -2GB.
user1804599
Purged most of my home directory of old JS projects which are typically about 200MB because of node_modules and bower_components :F
user1804599
Woo now I can use boost::container::small_vector<float, 16>. :3
user1804599
14:36
@sehe Wanna see my nice floating point parser in C++? :D
user784668
@rightfold How wrong is it?
user1804599
It silently doesn't work on big-endian systems.
user1804599
It fails to build on systems which don't implement IEEE 754.
user1804599
Everything else is OK.
user1804599
It's just an std::memcpy with a static assertion.
15:28
@rightfold maybe
@rightfold You must have forgotten the --build-dir hint :)
@rightfold I prefer rpath using -Wl,rpath etc.. But it only works if you know the deployed location (for dev envs, always)
Otherwise, just make sure the libs are tagged with the boost version, and link to the specific versions. Never a conflict on our systems/deployments
user1804599
15:53
@sehe I mean net disk usage -2GB. The amount of disk usage has decreased. There is now more disk available.
user1804599
@sehe What is the default build dir?
user1804599
I deleted the sources.
user1804599
@sehe Not sure how best to integrate this with GNU Make.
user1804599
@sehe Do you still do the C++ Azure SDK stuff?
16:09
I was talking to someone in a private chat, pressed something, and now i can only see my messages and not his? what happened T_T
you probably ignored them
go to your profile -> prefs -> and see if that person is in the ignored list
I cant find that ignored list
i can only see " Ignored Tags"
never mind went to his profile and unignored him
would be nice to know where that ignore list is tho xD
@Phantom it's in your chat profile
@fredoverflow nice
@milleniumbug thanks very much!
16:20
@StackedCrooked did you catch my nudge earlier? Still wonky coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/09922711bcbfe2fe
@rightfold Nope.
@rightfold In stage I *think*
@milleniumbug If you're an owner, you shouldn't ignore the well known trolls, otherwise you won't see if they start wreaking havoc again.
@rightfold I might have some things lying about, but it's probably aged now
@EtiennedeMartel That's a good point, OTOH it's actually quite difficult to actually ignore someone (their activity is visible in the user list, others are responding to them, and so on), so I'm rather using these as a reminder to myself why I ignore them in the first place, also to make it more difficult for me to accidentally respond to them
since I visit the transcript periodically anyway if I see ignored users in the sidebar
user1804599
16:36
@sehe OK :)
I'm still getting used to the room owner role, mostly I'm just moving messages
Your messages are very moving to me
 
1 hour later…
user1804599
17:48
return ok ? socket.recv(message), true : false;
user1804599
what could go wrong
user1804599
@Rahul2001 Tell him that having the best in tech work with shitty tools is extremely rude.
user1804599
And that he should kindly fuck off and retire ASAP.
@rightfold Does that even parse with comma having the lowest precedence?
Hmm, apparently it does. Weird.
user1804599
@fredoverflow Yes, because this is between ? and :, where precedence doesn't matter.
user1804599
17:54
If you put it in the else branch, then it'll be (... ? ... : ...), ....
conditional-expression:
    logical-OR-expression
    logical-OR-expression ? expression : conditional-expression
@rightfold return ok && (socket.recv(message), true);
user1804599
Nice.
@milleniumbug Moving messages that are themselves the result of bowel movements is a large part of the job.
@sehe Why not simply ok && socket.recv(message)?
user1804599
17:58
socket.recv(message) is of type void.
what about stopping abusing ?: and instead using your regular if/else
@rightfold Since when do you enjoy writing C++?
if(ok) { socket.recv(message); } return ok;
user1804599
18:00
I'm trying out some new C++14 stuff.
user1804599
I wish I had a GCC version that supported C++17.
What do you use instead, clang or VS?
user1804599
GCC 4.9.2.
user1804599
18:05
XD
gcc 4.9.2 is like 3 years old by this point
Maybe rightfold likes GCC 4.9.2 because America was discovered in 1492?
Is it that hard to install a new gcc?
user1804599
18:09
@fredoverflow I use it because that's what Debian has.
user1804599
I'd like to use some of the new C++17 features.
user1804599
Like namespace sb::net { ... }.
@rightfold I tried using Debian multiple times, but I could never get my graphics and/or network drivers set up correctly :(
user1804599
You should not run Linux on bare metal.
user1804599
You should run it in a VM.
user1804599
18:12
It is the only way not to spend too much time on everything every time.
user1804599
For example, you will not have to install new drivers when you change your hardware.
user1804599
And you won't have to run the web browser, which needs all sorts of horrible crap, like OpenGL, and audio, and proprietary codecs, in Linux, because you have a host operating system in which this non-programming stuff works out of the box.
So which host OS do you use?
user1804599
Windows 10.
user784668
18:53
@rightfold lol
user784668
@rightfold Wait, so you run fucking Jessie in VM?
nwp
nwp
For the record, drivers for my at the time pretty new nvidia card and wlan card work out of the box on Debian. It also has gcc 6.3 (default) and gcc 7.1 if you are willing to install experimental packages. I wouldn't know how to get gcc 4.9, I suppose one would have to manually download .deb packages to get something that old.
user1804599
@Fanael Why not?
user1804599
It's the easiest to set up.
user784668
@nwp GCC 7.1 is in regular sid, not in experimental.
user1804599
18:56
Also I can't use the C++14 library features because they aren't in my libstdc++.
user784668
@rightfold lol no wonder stuff doesn't work when you install an OS from 1975.
user1804599
Strawman much
user1804599
Also that also happens with Gentoo
user1804599
I really don't care
user1804599
My setup works very well, and I need Windows anyway
user784668
18:57
@rightfold Good thing you at least recognize your argument is a strawman :)
user1804599
If I need to spend more than five minutes installing drivers and other crap I don't want to use it
user1804599
I will repeat this exact setup at my first day at my new job, except with latest Debian, instead of Jessie
nwp
nwp
Not saying that Debian is super great, but at least complain about something like not having clang4/5 and not some BS that is not true.
user784668
@nwp clang version 4.0.1-1 (tags/RELEASE_401/final)
nwp
nwp
@Fanael My apt doesn't seem to find it on testing or experimental.
user784668
19:00
@nwp And Clang 5 snapshots are available if you want them
nwp
nwp
I remember someone saying that they had a clang4 package for months, but it breaks something so it is being held back.
user784668
@nwp Testing? Well, testing is still unfreezing.
Hey!
user1804599
hi @wilx
19:22
"You should've warned me lesbians are afoot." https://t.co/LnNTa2vlyC
@EtiennedeMartel Not sure I wanna click that link.
user784668
@EtiennedeMartel Bigots need trigger warnings, don't you know?
19:52
@rightfold And run the VMs on linux, obviously
@rightfold You never do. Do you live in 2002?
@rightfold You have a funny way of not-caring
@rightfold So, that would make it so you prefer Linux over Windows, clearly :)
(Honestly, there is likely not a lot of difference either way, except for the fact that windows still uses a boatload of precious SSD space and is unexplicably atrociously slow with filesystem operations)
user784668
@sehe Yeah, Linux is a great hypervisor.
user1804599
20:15
@sehe Ok did the ok && thing.
Lol. Twitter being helpful
user1804599
XD
I've also had this happen many times.
user1804599
@sehe What kind of C++ code do you write now?
The bad kind. Nah seriously. Just backend stuff supporting rpcs on protobuf (python & c++ clients)
user1804599
20:26
:(
It's a foggy launch. T-40s
@sehe weeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee
And ignition
Luckily the fog is ground level only (by definition), but the sky is clear
Uhoh what's that
That's a strange trail suddenly in MDP
Ah. Engine chill, perhaps
user1804599
What do you use for networking in C++?
user1804599
Do you use Boost.Asio?
20:30
Yes
user1804599
OK.
Coroutines for some "complex" statemachines (connections, mainly). Intention is to upgrade the RPC path to coroutines onces we get async database going
user1804599
OK.
However, the project is going in the fridge because of cash flow limitations.
I'm available next month.
user1804599
I am familiar with such a situation.
20:32
I hope not /again/
user1804599
No, I'm starting in a week. :)
user1804599
July 3rd.
Certainly, no risk of being paid late here. The company is being very responsible about things
user1804599
Nice.
user1804599
Do you still do programming as a hobby?
20:33
@LucDanton That re-entry is looking weird, approaching a dense layer of fog
@rightfold Sure
user1804599
That yours or mine? I don't OSS a lot
user1804599
Yours.
user1804599
Mine is this:
user1804599
20:35
Did I miss the frigging landing
@rightfold My activity is still mostly on SO, obviously (?)
user1804599
OK.
user1804599
Nice.
Livecoding got to the point where I can't even see my own inbox. Unless I disable ad blockers. Which I won't.
Stupid mofos
user1804599
You can try Twitch.
user1804599
They have a special game called "Creative" for things that aren't games.
20:56
Speaking of github, this is my latest commit diff:
  int index = Collections.binarySearch(list, key);
- if (index < 0) index = ~index;
- return index;
+ return index ^ (index >> 31);
premature optimization :)
10
A: Most elegant way to convert a byte to an int in Java

irreputableIgnore checkstyle. 0xFF is not a magic number. If you define a constant for it, the constant is a magic constant, which is much less understandable than 0xFF itself. Every programmer educated in the recent centuries should be more familiar with 0xFF than with his girlfriend, if any. should we wr...

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