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just treat them all as numbers and cast as needed
you're talking about iterative generators correct?
rgr
my entire thesis surmounts to "This is a stack of numbers. isn't it amazing."
@Kurieita the deleted answer raises a valid point coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/208d4481e970fa2d
you can already print out a variant if all types are printable
@Borgleader
-22
Q: Disinformation on moderator elections

Michael HardyThe edit history of this page says the initial edit was "copied from meta.SO (with minor modifications)". I can't find anything that it could have been copied from. It is asserted there that moderator elections are held periodically. "Periodically" means the time from one election to the next is ...

18:07
@milleniumbug The code was almost correct
Had he actually compiled the shit
@Mysticial rofl
some ppl really have too much time on their hands
18:24
@Mysticial Rumor has it that once upon a time you did some programming with a Java compiler instead. May not have worked well, but still did work to at least some degree. I did quite a bit of what I thought was programming before C++ compilers were widely available at all.
So, one of the Trump decrees banning mainly Muslim countries citizens seems to have been reinstated by some or other court.
Thoughts?
Prayers.
@milleniumbug :D
@wilx Reinstated?
I thought just a couple of states fought against it
@Shoe My Google news feed links to some Czech article claiming that some higher order court has overruled the previous courts on this.
18:32
@JerryCoffin I think I left out the "programming in C++". But yeah, I messed with Java in the past.
I didn't hear anything about that. Well, on what basis was it reinstated?
I still maintain a small app written in Java.
folks, do you like my any implementation?
with conversion to std::any. even boost doesn't have that
that line 8 is obfuscated as fuck
what are newlines
18:39
anything goes
lol
@JohannesSchaub-litb Boost.TypeErasure can give you all the rope you could ever need
@LucDanton now with printing support coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/d167e92bf705bb7a lol
@LucDanton yeah i've seen it, it's nice
but it's very template heavy :( not for my fainted soul
19:00
@wilx I have yet to understand what this ban is supposed to achieve
Alright, a fully polynomial-polynomial space, exponential time np-complete iterative solution done
everything is done in nothing but terms of lists of numbers
a typetheorists absolute nightmare
my thesis: "This is a list of numbers, isn't it amazing"
solving all minimal hitting sets of a graph is np-complete right?
are you a discepole of rightfold?
19:39
Yesterday I had that genial idea of teaching my daughter binary maths
Once she'll go to school she'll be able to solve problems in binary and then teacher won't be able to tell if her method is right or good
Just to mess with them, I could teach her maths in base8
If "try everything" means "using different versions of the same thing"... I don't think you should expect big differences. I can assure you that it's perfectly normal for Eclipse CDT indexing to take forever. I use Vim + YouCompleteMe and it's quite — sehe 11 secs ago
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix They won't be able to tell whether she is just retarded or completely insane.
@sehe That's when she'll solve problems in base 12
That's for whimps. Base 13 FTW
Yeah was going to say that
And be sure to include modulo arithmetic
My son is good at calculations but he comes up with his own methods. Same thing.
19:44
What about YCM?
I like it
I have issues with VIM, when I have too much cpu load, vim starts having problem typing letters
YCM is nice but vim skipping letters and bad refresh rate made me disable it
not sure how to solve this
Then again, he did his presentation about hacking (complete with live "hacks" on the website they use for school exercises, a Furby and more). But yesterday he turned in his homework. Nicely on the answer sheet, using a typewriter. People tend to laugh.
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix That's weird. Never happens here. What even is a refresh rate in Vim? Is that an OpenGL version of it
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix I can blindly venture the guess that it's RAM, not CPU.
@sehe Basic Terminal one...
Disable swap, let OOM-killer sort them out.
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix It doesn't have refresh rate, AFAIK
19:47
I mean in the wide sense of it, I see how vim just lag and some letters aren'T updated
If you mean it becomes unresponsive/lagging, I'm pretty sure the whole machine is (like, also other terminals)
I have to rehighlight some lines to see the changes
Lag is a sign your system is overloaded (check the specs and biggest users).
Letters not updating is a terminal bug/misconfig
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix Yeah. That happens only if you have misconfigured termcaps etc.
@sehe people still have typewriters?
So, if you are on archaic systems, check the documented termcaps, and make Vim/screen/tmux (and whatever parties involved) aware of it
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix We do. Bought it for the kids, actually.
19:49
I'm using gnome-terminal..locally so not sure how to configure it otherwise
If not on archaic systems, look for a better/more modern terminal emulator. And/or check TERM etc. (in vim :verbose se term? etc)
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix Ok, the odds are in your favour.
I'll have to check, just like gnome-terminal it's simple and doesn't have much + tabs
I know. I use it.
but I can try disabling swap
How much RAM do you have, and how much RAM does clang require to compile your typical TU
19:52
8gb available. System using around 4gb right now
I'm never really close to 100% ram usage
for the latter point, hard to say, whenever I compile things it might use all resources but I still have problems when I have a bit of activity
20:29
Mmm. Sounds like you could do without swap. Are you on HDD or SSD? Can you see a bottleneck anywhere (sysstat, atop, vmstat, ...?)
21:05
@sehe I wonder why people use vim when they've gui available. I use vim only when I am on windows, running ubuntu server on virtualbox. In my case puTTY + vim works wonderfully, and does not consume much memory, as gui tends to do.
What does "gui" buy you
@sehe sublime!!
It looks as though all your arguments are in favour of vim though. I think you may have inverted some part of the question?
@sehe I am saying when you're running a desktop manager, then using vim doesn't make much sense. There are better options available in that case i.e Sublime.
Oh. I disagree. Sublime isn't better in most respects, and it's worse in key respects
@Zindarod I love just taking over my work session by attaching to tmux over ssh. Running on nice large monitors and good keyboard. I don't know why people would want anything else.
21:08
I've realized there are two things I really want for development from this transition: AutoCompletion/Intellisense. Debuggers worth a damn.
Peeps. Can we try to not drop so many words? Turns out, languages becomes close to incomprehensible that way.
@sehe Exactly what I said previously. Running ubuntu in virtualbox on windows host, then puTTY + tmux + vim is great. But if you're running ubuntu as host with desktop manager then vim doesn't make much sense, does it?
@roscoe_casita I always sacrificed intellisense in favour of speed and superior editing. I was pleasantly surprised with YCM. I had to get used to it's fuzzy-matching, but can vouch that it increased my productivity consirably, even though I was a big fan and ardent user of Vim's builting completion options.
@Zindarod Of course. Because desktop managers use more memory, don't support remote connections as readily, let alone headless sessions. I can literally restart X without losing an active session.
It's strictly more versatile and lightweight.
I'm a complete 'n3wb' when it comes to vim, barely competent I believe is the correct words. I have not yhet gotten completion options to work
thank you, I'll check that out
I love CPU bound processes
@sehe Have you gotten ycm to work for any language other than c++? I could only make it work with c++.
21:15
> Fast-typing colleagues, OTOH, tend to use the Backspace key a lot in order to edit whet they wrote.
Ven
Ven
s-bye
@roscoe_casita I used to have some videos up on livecoding.tv setting it up and demoing it's features. That is, until livecoding.tv started dropping vids and requiring me to un-ad-block to even use the site. livecoding.tv/sehe/videos
It might still be there
wow, awesome
@Zindarod Nah. I think the C# support "requires" SharpDevelop (?) project files and I can't be bothered. Let me tell you though that YCM's support for "compilation databases" makes CMake integration fantastic. No more handwriting any config (it's all from CMake)
alright, everything is running smoothly now
tomorrow time to start re-writing
21:20
@sehe Huh. I never even gave a thought about CMake integration. I will check that.
Me neither, it's just epic to have the entire configuration for build flags across the whole project for YCM automatically deduced.
I only slowly started to like CMake since then (what with rotten syntax warts it has)
@sehe What alternatives did you use for CMake?
Make.
(Sometimes a little SCons/Waf)
21:25
@sehe lol which one /s
GNU, what else.
@sehe BSD Make?
user1804599
BDSM.
Even AIX ran GNU make nicely and without too much trouble
BSD Make is supposedly different in the way that GCC and Clang are
something something recursive stuff works differently or something like that
21:26
Nah! Much worse.
@sehe You're saying Make has better syntax than CMake? I always thought it was the reverse.
@Zindarod At least Make is more transparent
"Better" - hrrrmpff. Both are akward.
More consistent, hell yeah.
@Zindarod Make literally is like a command runner that has very simple semantics unless you fiddle with it hard. CMake is a meta build system
@Zindarod Have you ever looked at CMake? It seems to be designed by PHP programmers with VB6 background who wanted to replicate Rex but ended up almost fore-shadowing Zimbu
21:28
@sehe what is zimbu o.o ?
@VermillionAzure That part is marketing fluff.
@VermillionAzure Oh, you will find it on Google. I'm not going to point you to a URL because I don't want to be liable for mental health issues
I've to be honest, I was always intimated by Make syntax and the sheer size of Make files. So I started fiddling with CMake from the get go.
@sehe what is this
omg
@Zindarod In college? Graduated? Hobbyist? What's your b
g
user1804599
lol zimbu
user1804599
}
21:30
@VermillionAzure MS.
@Zindarod MicroSoft?
Yeah, having worked with CMake for ~2.5years now, I'm over my biggest aversion.
However, the whole "It's meta" song is overrated. It's only "meta" if you put in a lot of effort and know exactly what unintuitive limitations (like, 80% of the interface) to avoid
@VermillionAzure Graduated, I mean.
or Masters of Science in X?
@VermillionAzure Doing MSCS.
21:31
@Zindarod oooh where?
@sehe Have you tried CLion yet?
I like it very very much I get Vim + Eclipse + CMake
@VermillionAzure Yes. No compelling features, too slow.
user1804599
Use GNU Make.
If I want to use Eclipse, I already can.
@VermillionAzure Vim + Eclipse? What's the point?
@Zindarod How did you first learn programming?
@Zindarod The inputs
21:33
@VermillionAzure When I started BSCS.
@Zindarod Eclipse + Vrapper and VS+VsVim are workable combis for say, C#, F# and Java
@sehe What do you recommend for development? Ever since I started using Eclipse I love autocomplete that's visual and easy to get at
@Zindarod No, I mean what tools did you use?
@sehe Oh, ok.
I find that CLion's autocomplete is very nice since all you have to do is to hook it up using CMake
@VermillionAzure How can autocomplete be "non-visual"? It needs to be keyboard operated, so there's the end of it. Vim+YCM for me
@VermillionAzure See YCM
21:34
@sehe Oh, as in I can't use the mouse with it easily or something like that
@sehe How does it work with importing libraries?
@VermillionAzure Almost everything. But professionally I use Ubuntu + Sublime + CMake
user1804599
You don't need more autocomplete than ctrl+P with setglobal complete-=i.
16 mins ago, by sehe
@Zindarod Nah. I think the C# support "requires" SharpDevelop (?) project files and I can't be bothered. Let me tell you though that YCM's support for "compilation databases" makes CMake integration fantastic. No more handwriting any config (it's all from CMake)
@VermillionAzure It's the same feature. It's not a CLion feature.
@Zindarod "almost everything" didn't include GNU Make?
@sehe Ahhhh
@rightfold The latter part being essential for C++. But yeah, I'd be happy to go back, although YCM does speed me up a little
user1804599
21:36
Yeah, C++ is why I added that.
user1804599
Also Perl.
I just wish there was more tooling for C++ for refactoring on the expressiveness level of AutoCAD
@VermillionAzure Unfortunately no. Wasn't much familiar with GNU based tools when in college doing BS. In professional life, started using CMake from the start.
@Zindarod Interesting. Even at my bohunk university we get Vi and GCC and command line from that start
...but we don't get IDEs or stuff or unit testing so idk
user1804599
Analysing syntactically incorrect code is a hoax.
user1804599
21:37
This is why editors like Eclipse suck donkey cock.
@rightfold ???
@VermillionAzure Yeah. But the route that CLion appears to take is to replicate features from Java/QtCreator that don't make sense in modern C++, or not a lot
user1804599
Get a file change triggered type checker and ctrl+S.
@sehe Would you be interested in an IDE that had a visualization component that would mirror UML but could be interfaced with like AutoCAD?
@rightfold YCM is noticeably more responsive and less intrusive
user1804599
21:38
ghcid and pscid are prime examples of excellent tooling that works this way.
@rightfold which are?
user1804599
You press ctrl+S and it shows you the first error that occurs.
@VermillionAzure Absolutely not. I don't believe in Enterprise religion.
@VermillionAzure That's has been my misfortune. Where I was doing my BS, everyone was into IDEs. No one gave a s*** about command line. Thank god I got a job in a company where I had to use GNU tools.
user1804599
@VermillionAzure luna-lang.org
21:39
@sehe I mean like visualizing AST with types and refactoring available with programmability/extensibility like Emacs
user1804599
lots of utter bullshit on that website but it's a fun concept
user1804599
probably vapourware but still good idea
@rightfold I heard about Luna. It seemed interesting but I feel like the niche is too small
It's data science workflow visualization, which probably means it's not going to handle non-linear or generic graphs with thick degrees well
@VermillionAzure Oh, yeah. But UNIX philosophy wins in the end. Make clang-based tooling. You can do all these without being pinned to IDE-isms
@sehe Clang loses a lot from what I understand, though? I dunno, I still need to look into clang
Especially if you choose LLVM IR as the direct front end
21:41
How could that be true.
Tools like clang-tidy exist.
@sehe shrugs I take what I said back -- I don't know what I'm talking about
@sehe Speaking about that, what code style do you use?
Also, do you do tests and how do you do them?
I run my tests locally. The CI server should be able to, but I haven't bothered to set it up.
I use Catch for small projects, Boost Test for larger (compile times) and freely use docker to test across distributions.
@sehe Does Boost Test support mocks?
21:46
@VermillionAzure Never remember
@VermillionAzure Orthogonal concept. It doesn't include them, though.
@sehe Ever since I've done unit tests for real, I've wondering why I haven't been taught them
If it's industry standard to do unit tests + integration tests why aren't we taught this hmmmm
I hardly ever mock. That means I have little tests between unit test and full-on integration tests, I guess
@VermillionAzure Google Mock supports mocks.
@JerryCoffin I know. That's why I'm glad I chose it
@JerryCoffin HippMocks looked cool
21:48
@sehe I never understood what a unit tests was ughhhhh
user1804599
The unit test is the bit of code you write before you write the code that is being tested by the unit test you just wrote before it.
@sehe I haven't looked much--I reserve most of my mocking for languages that Java that truly deserve to be mocked.
6
Well played
How often do you guys use unit tests professionally?
@Zindarod I am required to do it for all the code I write in my current jungle excersion
user1804599
21:50
@Zindarod I apply TDD, so the answer is: quite a fucking lot.
@JerryCoffin That Java that.
@Zindarod Each commit
And frequently much more often (because typically, tests fail)
Any tips for unit testing in C++?
Holy F*** thats alot
@Zindarod It's pretty ridiculous
user1804599
21:52
@VermillionAzure Apply TDD, use Catch.
@rightfold I thought Catch doesn't have mocking?
So do you write the mock classes manually?
user1804599
Mocking is not a feature of a testing library.
I mostly write in c++, so haven't written much unit tests to be honest.
@rightfold But unit tests require mocking, right?
@Zindarod I happily run selections. watch test_runner -t mylib/io/net/rpc -l all does a lot
user1804599
21:52
Reusability and pluggability is a feature of your code.
@VermillionAzure Not at all
user1804599
Tests are just one thing that make use of this feature.
@Borgleader Oops--too late to edit. "like Java that" (which looks terrible out of context--could be taken as implying that I like Java).
@sehe I've been told that (unit tests == black box testing) and (integration tests == white box testing)
@VermillionAzure Just inject dependencies and make design testable first
21:53
@sehe Right, but even if you have that you want to mock the dependency
@VermillionAzure Don't test. It makes users lives far too boring.
At least that's what i've been told
user1804599
@VermillionAzure No, you remove the dependency.
user1804599
It no longer exists.
@rightfold I mean, you don't utilize the real one but you still need to maintain the interface?
user1804599
21:54
Yes, that's this thing where multiple implementations share the same interface.
Isn't this why people use Mockito for unit testing by providing mocks of dependencies to inject?
@rightfold So you do manually write the mocks?
user1804599
No, they use that because their interfaces are so enormous that writing a simple implementation will be too much work
@rightfold But you still do write them, right?
user1804599
Your interfaces should be small anyway
user1804599
And then you can easily write many implementations, including ones that are used only for testing
user1804599
21:56
And also the decorator pattern, which is useful in the production code
@sehe is that the watch that runs periodically or more like an inotify-watch?
@rightfold Oh that's one I haven't used yet
@VermillionAzure I usually write my components so that they can be tested in isolation. Unit testing. And yeah, some of the time I write a mock. It rarely takes a lot of code. (12 LoC, on occasion)
It's like components right?
@LucDanton Periodically. I'm low-tech
user1804599
21:56
"Component" is a weasel word
I admit in our client-side code there are inotify-style watches. But that's not for "test". That's for running the dev env
@rightfold Until you define it. However, "Unit" is a weasel word in the same circumstances.
user1804599
If your language features parametricity you can omit a lot of tests, which is heaps of fun
@rightfold Component as in Unity components or entity-component systems
I prefer "components" because it seems not to imply "scale" that much. And I think the principles apply at different abstraction levels.
@VermillionAzure ew :) That's grossly gamedev centric
@sehe Well... Yes. But to me it seems like a very clear and practical use case for the Decorator pattern if I got it right
user1804599
21:59
Not to mention proofs. <3
@sehe oh yeah? what is there to run on your end? for my part I like to auto-refresh the docs when I'm specifically working on that. wouldn’t be much help for unit tests though, too heavy duty plus I output all compiler errors to the one file. too racey to really work out right
user1804599
A decorator is just any endomorphism.
user1804599
There are countless examples.
People how about naming a current project + programming language that you're working on currently?
@LucDanton We host APIs (python2, python3) in uWSGI
22:01
Just to put things into perspective.
We have npm run watch - which is supposedly node-flavoured hipness, and simple inotify-bin oneliners for the rest
@sehe all right, generating all of the glue code and the like then
@rightfold sorry what
user1804599
An endomorphism on A is a function A -> A.
@Zindarod I'm working on Shaka Scheme at school
user1804599
22:03
This is exactly the decorator pattern.
@LucDanton Yeah. Doing the pip install of common modules etc. uWSGI can actually do live-reload on source change
@rightfold ohhh sorry got brainfart-confused with isomorphism
@VermillionAzure alright
@Zindarod C++, TracksInspector (digital forensics)
@Zindarod I wanted to study prog lang theory and impl by creating a programming langauge interpreter. I bit off WAAAAY more than I thought I did because I chose a full Lisp-family language spec
22:04
@sehe F***ing cool!
:( And I'm not as cool as polar bear
I'm just a depressive red-blue squiggly
I am a Vision nerd so any project relating to that gets my juices running. :p
@VermillionAzure lol, you're still way more knowledgeable than me. So I wouldn't worry if I were you. :)
@sehe still, no shame in being low-tech. the last time I looked the off-the-shelves inotifywait was still kinda rough to use
@sehe Which libraries do you use in your current project?
22:20
@Zindarod Better ask which are unused. Think forensics: data extraction more or less implies support for every format/filesystem under the sun
user1804599
ØMQ
@sehe Alright, which ones that are vision related?
@rightfold yes, that's unused. Perhaps sadly
user1804599
RIP Pieter Hintjens.
@Zindarod OpenCV only. Imagemagick for simple image analysis/manip
@rightfold ~1 jr nu deink
user1804599
22:21
Oktober 4th.
user1804599
Never forget. Actually I remember because that's my grandfather's birthday and also dierendag.
@LucDanton Yeah, I'm quite fond of seeing the "permission denied" popup if the tests run during writing the binary
@rightfold Reminds me of Oct 11th
user1804599
Oh right we should still do that
@sehe You said that you use vim + tmux + ssh. How do you do visual test without desktop manager?
@Zindarod Oh I forget the boatload video processing libs (mostly through ffmpeg/formerly libavconv)
@Zindarod That's not unit testing. And I can test things fine without seeing the visuals (I can see that images get classified, and faces recognized just fine, without seeing the faces)
Of course we do a lot of adhoc testing using the browser, but that wasn't the topic before.
Testers only use browser-oriented tooling.
22:26
@sehe Ah, ok.
@foonathan We have another awesome tool in our arsenal: http://quick-bench.com!
1 hour ago, by sehe
user image
@sehe Since you're doing compute intensive tasks, what are you using for speeding up the processes? Intrinsics, gpus, apus etc?
user1804599
-O2
@rightfold That's just compiler optimization. In Vision projects, that's not enough.
Algorithms 101
22:35
@Mysticial sorry?
It's not a compiler optimization. It's a person optimization.
user1804599
"git gud"
user1804599
best advice ever
@Mysticial Algorithms and architecture. The pillars of optimization.
22:38
@Mysticial Yeah, but can you optimize your cpu code to match code running on Titan X? Especially Vision code, which are ideal for parallelization.
And people who have taking Algorithms 101 are more likely to be able to do that than people who haven't.
@Mysticial No argument there.
@Mysticial What about if you've only taught an algorithms class, not actually taken one?
user1804599
Pour la parallélisation, vous devez utiliser un functor applicatif !
@JerryCoffin Hmm...
good point
Fuck algorithms. Fuck optimizations. Fuck GPUs. Pencil and paper master race!
22:45
@Mysticial Let me advise against fucking vacuum tubes though. Most tubes are glass, so broken ones have really sharp edges...
I don't think they use vacuum tubes for GPUs anymore. But fucking a silicon wafer probably isn't much better.
@Mysticial Sure they do. Here's one that was just announced quite recently.
(Of course, whether this qualifies as "recent" may depend somewhat on your age).
Oh right, I forgot you were born in the 1800s.
@Mysticial Well, a long time ago, anyway. I use my birthday as the epoch for my time keeping, and the translation from my epoch to others is a carefully guarded secret.
23:09
Hi. o/
@BaummitAugen Hello.
23:49
-3
Q: Making a table of student first name, last name, scores

Tran Nguyen Use two parallel array(s) - one for student names and one for test scores. Your program should accept the student names in the form "FirstName LastName" only. The first thing your program should ask is if the user wishes to enter the scores via the keyboard or from a scores file. If the user cho...

/cc @Mysticial homework alert
@Borgleader Yeah, that question is definitely unclear. The last two sentences contradict each other:
> Can someone help me to make this program. Please make it easy so I can understand.
I find out it's not easy for me to work on this project and it take me a lot of time. — Tran Nguyen 1 min ago
maybe programming is not for you then...
00:00 - 18:0018:00 - 00:00

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