« first day (2455 days earlier)      last day (2723 days later) » 

00:01
On the other hand, vim (for one obvious example) isn't really unique to software development either--but it's probably slanted heavily enough in that direction to qualify, where wget is probably used more for a wide variety of tasks.
@milleniumbug 0.0
 
1 hour later…
01:32
I am not a car person, but looking at Mercedes-Benz's new campervan, I could not but think: is the bottom of the car a bit ... low?
wildness here means: dirty road & dirt road means needing for high clearance ...
01:54
@Telkitty At first glance, it looks like it's built primarily for people who camp (mostly?) in campgrounds and such, so most of the traveling is on a highway.
there are many types of camping grounds
but the ones in national parks tend to have dirt roads leading to them
@Telkitty Here, ma'am is your promotion from captain obvious to major obvious. You've definitely earned it.
the bushwalking groups that I hang around with usually choose wildness camping grounds - because 1) they are cheaper 2) the whole point of going camping is to be in the wildness
surely if you can afford a mercede, you can afford a cabin in commercial caravan parks?
then again, I am not sure about US and Europe - you have a population density of 10X or more, maybe you have enough tax $ to build proper roads in the national parks ...
and in Asia, population is so dense, camping in campervan in national parks would be out of question because most people living in hotels and there are few campinggrounds
 
2 hours later…
03:51
Here in the US, there's everything from "RV Parks" that have carefully level concrete slabs, complete with running water and sewer service, all the way to (for one example) one of my favorites, which had about a two-mile long "road" that was barely a single lane wide in quite a few places, and only an insane person (e.g. me) would even attempt in anything without 4 wheel drive.
Here, we have worse - just a month or two ago, I drove on this '70km of doom' - a narrow dirt/gravel road zigzag up and down the mountains. There were a couple of signs "honk if you can't see the incoming traffic at bands". The people in our group were mad & were driving at 70km/hour. The aftermaths was that I had to replace all the tyres (they were getting old anyways).
Very likely you will be the dirtiest car on highway if you have driven on one of those beauties
One of the reasons to have a 4WD or at least a SUV is that you can drive on roads like this.
cars can only go 30km-50km per hour, 4WD can easily go past 60km/hour
04:07
@Telkitty I don't know if that's worse--I'm quite certain nobody could manage to hit 70 KPH on the road I'm talking about. If memory serves, the posted speed is 5 MPH (8 KPH). While there are places you could probably get up to around twice that (or so) there's a fair amount where people walking up the road are moving faster than anybody in a car.
I have a hard time imagining driving on some of the hiking trails I've seen that are shaped vaguely like a road
@jaggedSpire imagine you are doing it in a tank
I mean, they clearly do, or did at some point--the trail's usually split distinctly in two at the distance of a car's tires
but really
I've seen them diverge by more than a foot in height
@LucDanton now that seems exciting
yeah, that's a real nice road
I think Jerry's talking about ones that can justifiably be referred to as alleged roads
04:14
this is the road I was referring to (picture found on the internet), doesn't look too bad
@jaggedSpire here, they are open referred to as 'service trails'
used by national parks vehicles, wildfire services, fire brigade and such
or fire trails
@jaggedSpire like this?
yeah, though because of the rocks it's usually more curved
I remembered the name of a specific hiking area with one, but apparently people don't take pictures of the service road they hike in on--just the rocks they're there to see
who would have thought
It's worth noting, I suppose, that most of the trails are real trails, wide enough for a car and well-maintained. There was one, though, down by the streambed, that fit the description of "really shit road"
04:33
I have driven across a shallow stream before ...
nah, it wasn't the streambed. That was almost completely covered in bushes, to the point I couldn't tell if there was running water above ground
 
1 hour later…
05:55
I did a little looking to see if I had a picture of the road I was thinking of, but apparently I too mostly take pictures of the mountains (and such), not the road. I did, however, run across a picture I took the last time I visited the Philippines that caught my eye.
I think I've never been so happy to see that there will be rain everyday for the following weeks
I had a hard time getting him to put his foot even this close to it (not that I guess I can blame him much).
yeah those lil critters sure are shy
@LucDanton Yup--a tad shy of a foot long, to be more specific.
06:57
@JerryCoffin Almost cute.
07:43
Sick of wasting imperfect bananas
Ven
Ven
08:27
@Morwenn @jaggedSpire youtube.com/watch?v=lft4gIx8S28
@Ven I wish I could watch that instead of working xD
08:46
OS lib doesn't work properly ... it's not that I want to write sh!tty code, you made me!
@JerryCoffin ew, millipede
the ones here are much smaller
09:20
you know
seeing nixpkgs:trunk:haskellPackages.Hate.x86_64-linux is strangely uplifiting
at the same time it stopped building sometime last year and noone noticed
oh well
wait what
> Downloads 140 total (7 in the last 30 days)
who the hell downloaded it in the last 30 days
09:45
@JerryCoffin <3
I'll appropriate this meme.
Ven
Ven
nice
> Im Feld "Begünstigter (Name oder Firma)" haben Sie folgende unzulässige Zeichen eingegeben: ó
My bank doesn't let me use ó in the payee's name field for a transfer.
Fucking idiots.
Ven
Ven
&oacute;
that's a Polish ó!
I wonder why, really.
They can't be using ASCII internally because umlauts and eszetts are accepted.
But if they're using the obvious non-full-Unicode choice, Latin-1, it supports both umlauts and acutes.
Ven
Ven
09:48
german efficiency?
@R.MartinhoFernandes codepages?
I bet 🐷 is not accepted in payee's name either ...
@R.MartinhoFernandes Banks often have stupid limitations: do you know how hard it is for a married woman to use her own name for bank stuff and not her significant other's?
Last time I heard about it it was nightmarish.
@BartekBanachewicz Probably not the real limitation, since there aren't many such ones with umlauts but no acutes.
@Morwenn Maybe in France? In think in most places they just use your passport name.
10:05
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yes, in France. I don't know how it is in other countries.
Ven
Ven
my ID was wrong for as long as I've had it
well, before I lost it 2 weeks ago.
The didn't include the tréma on my name...
@BartekBanachewicz The only ISO encoding that has umlauts but not acutes is Latin-4, "designed to cover Estonian, Latvian, Lithuanian, Greenlandic, and Sami."
Maybe banks pushed to update their software after marriage for all. I don't know.
Sounds unlikely a German bank would pick that.
@Morwenn That wife thing doesn't really sound like a software limitation.
2
@R.MartinhoFernandes It was: if you were a woman and checked "married", most bank software would just use your husband's name. Employees couldn't really do much ^^"
@R.MartinhoFernandes I remember that one :p
#20 in this case.
> People have last names, family names, or anything else which is shared by folks recognized as their relatives.
My friend today got a letter addressing him as "Herrn <his given name>" instead of "Herrn <his family name>" as would be proper when trying to be formal.
It's not that the letter was informal, it's just that he is Chinese.
They typically write their surnames first, and I bet their software just splits by spaces and takes the last one.
Probably.
"Herrn" is a kerming nightmare.
My girlfriend's bank also constantly gets her name wrong, because her passport lists her old surname in parentheses (as aliases are usually listed).
I.e. the passport reads "Jane Smith (Jones)", her legal name is "Jane Smith", and the bank uses "Jane Smith Jones", which AFAIK is no one's legal name and never was.
They insist on doing that, for god knows what reason.
She never existed as "Jane Smith Jones" in any governmental registry, of any government.
Haha, it reminds me of when my cousin's school accidentally added an hyphen between his first and second given names. Combined to the fact that they were unable to correctly pronounce the first given name, my cousin often didn't realize that they were talking to him.
10:20
And her birth certificate reads "Jane Ivanova Jones", to make things worse.
Paz
Paz
Hi people, is has nothing to do with c++, but can ya'll give me your opinions about my web design?
That, and "Jane Smith" are the only legal names she ever had, but that won't stop the bank from making up a new one.
Ven
Ven
@Paz sorry sir, we're just a bakery
Ven
Ven
10:21
ew
@Paz Well, it has nothing to do with C++. That's most people's opinion here.
Paz
Paz
:(
still?
what do you think? its rtl btw
It not bad.
Not enough vaporwave gradients.
@Paz I still think it has nothing to do with C++! My mind hasn't changed since two minutes ago. Surprisingly.
Paz
Paz
10:24
@R.MartinhoFernandes haha
@Morwenn lol
@Morwenn I also have two given names, but they usually get fucked in a different way. Both my ID card and my driver's license have this stupid idea that there is value in separating "given names" and "family names", but on top of it they both disagree on where to do the separation.
Actually most of documents have the separation and disagree with each other.
Wow xD
I have two given and two family names, and I have official government documents that do the splits 1/3, 2/2, and 3/1.
Some of them are from the same government.
I have three given names, but it's never been a problem.
Like my ID card and my driver's license.
I always get strange looks :<
10:28
x)
Xeo
Xeo
that's just your face
I have two. It sucks.
do old chicken suffer from Alzheimer's?
Ven
Ven
@Xeo gottem
My pet hen has been acting dumb lately
10:39
@littlepootis yeah, a given name of "little" isn't all that rave-worthy. But, really, "pootis"? People will probably think you made up a cartoon name or something
Oh you meant two faces. Carry on.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yup. I read "Herm" the first few tries. And well played on the double spelling pun there on keming
Oh, I also forgot. Portuguese entities get my name wrong often, but in Germany it's even worse.
It's almost as if they have less context for dealing with Portuguese names :)
In my experience, companies fuck up all the names regardless. My wife has a surname with an umlaut. Good luck in the Netherlands. And then there's the apparent failed OCR jobs (how else to explain some ridiculous misspellings).
@sehe My name has no diacritics at all.
Also fun: try having the same initials and last name and living in the same house. And no, that wasn't easy to prevent as I can name the kids, but not the spouse.
@sehe you can stop the spouse taking your last name
or stop yourself taking the spouse's name
10:53
Sometimes I get "Martinho Fernandes" (first given name and last family name), which even though it is what I often go by, is not my legal name and never was. But I got all kinds of three-name subsets too, including those where the last name gets shortened to "F." which ends up with people calling me "Herr <one of the middle names>".
I should have added that companies frequently just default to "Mr." for any person.
I had that happen to me a few times
@sehe FWIW the UK government accepts and uses Mx. as a gender neutral title.
@ratchetfreak You could, but where's the fun in that? That's almost like saying "It's best to have a first name of max 8 ASCII characters, and an extension of three, for maximum portability"
2
when booking accomodation/flight
10:54
@R.MartinhoFernandes Wow. That looks pretty elegant
Anyway, whenever I get a call from e.g. the bank and they ask for "Herr Dias", I tell them that's not me.
It's nice because they often call me just to book an appointment to sell me credit.
You... get calls from the bank?
I've had one such call in ... 20 years and made their live miserable. Because at first they had to prove to me they were my bank, and later on I suggested they don't spill more privacy details from my account because I'd file a complaint :)
@sehe Once you get a regular income here, it normal for them to go "We have this nice credit and we were wondering if you have time to discuss it us? We can book you an appointment!"
That whole thing lasted ~5 minutes. It was pretty effective.
@sehe FWIW, they don't ask for any details really. "Is this you? When can you come to the bank?"
10:58
@R.MartinhoFernandes Wow. That's really something I remember from the 90s, and even then it was on the way out. Maybe the Netherlands doesn't have the crappiest laws regarding telemarketing after all
Now it's mostly "Is this Herr Dias?" "No" "Ok, sorry, bye"
@R.MartinhoFernandes That's a lot better
Xeo
Xeo
I only ever got... one call, I think?
11:17
@R.MartinhoFernandes so weird they would get that wrong in Germany
"the rural use of several regions where heavy dialect is spoken"
"usage of the definite article with the name outside of dialect is uncommon"
That last section's use of the word "dialect" is really upsetting.
@LucDanton I'd guess being used to a single Nachname is what messes things up.
fair enough, at which point I imagine they get the dartboard out to pick out which names to use
I get quite a lot of calls
but nowadays I can say that I use pretty much every single thing my bank has to offer so they can't really offer me anything new
11:33
@LucDanton Couple that with my Portuguese documents being all inconsistent as well, and you can see how it happens.
I checked my wallet and all six documents bearing my name disagree on either how many names I have or how they are split.
That's pretty impressive.
I’ve only ever had one admin get it wrong for my part. I tried to have it corrected but that didn’t stick. I guess they trusted my ID over me
11:56
> "Danton Cul"
No doubt
wow rood
12:44
hehehe
@sehe Did you figure it out without any "french help"?
Anonymous
mornin
Anonymous
Do you guys use a chat bot in here?
I'm a chat bot.
Use ? for help.
Ven
Ven
?
12:51
Sorry, I accidentally closed Firefox. What can I help with?
Use ? for help.
Ven
Ven
? for help.
Anonymous
s/closed/installed
@Ven You need help with help? Easy: use ? for help.
Ven
Ven
@R.MartinhoFernandes ? for rmf.
?drinking beer
@JayIsTooCommon You need help distinguishing between accidental and intended. Use ? for help.
@Ven Can't help with that if you're a wuss like Ell.
Ven
Ven
12:54
Shots fired!
@R.MartinhoFernandes he might be a wuss, but at least you got a freebie :)
Anonymous
@R.MartinhoFernandes I can post it, I just don't know how to use it
Anonymous
Anyway, if you're ever keen for one chat.stackoverflow.com/users/5764893/jeeves hit him up with an invite. It's broken and written in a bad language but needs exposure to improve OS contribs :>
Blatant self-promotion detected.
Anonymous
aha no, I didn't make it
Mention of systemdf*ck detected.
Anonymous
13:03
> needs exposure to improve OS contribs
I'm making a new rule: we can't mention the name of the common init system used in Linux distributions to bootstrap the user space and manage all processes subsequently, instead of the UNIX System V or Berkeley Software Distribution (BSD) init systems.
It must be censored.
And we all know the best way to censor things is to append "f*ck" to it.
nwp
nwp
system C++
Ven
Ven
@R.MartinhoFernandes you mean docker?
@Ven that was rude :(
13:36
save every byte in hex form in an array What do you mean by this? — Borgleader 2 mins ago
@R.MartinhoFernandes Might I suggest prepending instead? f*cksystemd has a nice ring to it.
one of @R.MartinhoFernandes's pet peeves I think?
@Telkitty I can't remember...
@JerryCoffin You're a genius, sir.
@Ven No? It's f*cksystemd.
Ven
Ven
:p
13:40
@fredoverflow omg, I didn't know :')
@R.MartinhoFernandes f*ck stands for fsck, right? As in git fsck?
@fredoverflow Didn't you ever learn regexes? It stands for ck, fck, ffck, fffck, and so on.
@R.MartinhoFernandes too vulgar; fucks***emd is probably better
Give *fuck = NULL; //don't give a fuck
13:44
@JerryCoffin Wouldn't regexes need escaping like /f*ck/ or something?
I am dumb today, can't think better
@Telkitty NULL is so C++98!
@fredoverflow That's not escaping, it's just delimiting. Needed when you might have a single string that mixes a regex and a non-regex, or perhaps to keep two regexes separate. We, however, are more open-minded, so if you have two regexes, feel free to put them together and allow them to breed. Support the council for freedom of regexes today!
I didn't give a fuck back in 1998, better now?
@JerryCoffin I hereby pronounce you regexrex ("king of regexes").
13:50
@fredoverflow How could you do such a thing to me? For regex-like duties, I (strongly) prefer SNOBOL4 pattern matching (and its approximate equivalent in unicon).
Jerry be like...
user image
2
@fredoverflow I may be an former bicycle racer, but honest, my arms aren't that puny compared to my legs!
14:09
Newsband on BFMTV a few seconds ago:
> Murielle Bolle fait greve de la faim [...]. Son avocate affirme que Murielle Bolle nourrit des pensées suicidaires
/cc @LucDanton @EdgyAlpaca
14:22
@fredoverflow lol so stupid
@sehe thanks
did you listen to my rendition of chopin op 64 no 2 btw?
Ven
Ven
14:38
in C++ Questions and Answers, 37 secs ago, by jeyejow
BYTE * x;
x = (BYTE *)malloc(user_input * sizeof(BYTE));
halp
@Ven Stop reading evil litterature.
15:44
@orlp oh yeah, kind of in between things though. With the kids in the car on bluetooth t hing. What I recall sounded steady, but I'll find it again for a proper listen
@Rerito Well. Some knowledge of french probably counts as "french help" right :)
I guess it's because of other cross language jokes ("Nee dank u!" with a french accent... see taalvoutjes.nl/taalvoutje/dans-cul). Also, ISTR Luc alluded to his name being a word play. I don't think he ever spelled it out though
BEWARE of security implications. This is literally RCE, be sure you know the implications and liability claims you may face if there is reckless neglect for security. — sehe 14 secs ago
0
A: Read binary into hex byte array

seheI think you will want to know about xxd -i file.bin For the above markdown it would emit: unsigned char file_bin[] = { 0x49, 0x20, 0x74, 0x68, 0x69, 0x6e, 0x6b, 0x20, 0x79, 0x6f, 0x75, 0x20, 0x77, 0x69, 0x6c, 0x6c, 0x20, 0x77, 0x61, 0x6e, 0x74, 0x20, 0x74, 0x6f, 0x20, 0x6b, 0x6e, 0x6f, ...

Of course we can give him enough rope
16:18
50
Q: Why can't your switch statement data type be long, Java?

FostahHere's an excerpt from Sun's Java tutorials: A switch works with the byte, short, char, and int primitive data types. It also works with enumerated types (discussed in Classes and Inheritance) and a few special classes that "wrap" certain primitive types: Character, Byte, Short, and Integer (...

I want to switch over a long, too :(
wait what
@fredoverflow Go right ahead. Just don't use Java (which you shouldn't anyway).
17:07
@sehe Why would you not ;)
@fredoverflow holy moly the level of arrogance in the comment of accepted answer is pretty high
17:42
@ScarletAmaranth Without excessive arrogance, Java wouldn't exist.
user784668
18:08
@fredoverflow wat
dafuq with that flag
user784668
@R.MartinhoFernandes fucks*stemd?
@JerryCoffin I reworked my solution, so now a switch over int is sufficient:
switch (identifier) {
    case ('e' & 31) << 15 | ('l' & 31) << 10 | ('s' & 31) << 5 | ('e' & 31):
    case ('i' & 31) << 5 | ('f' & 31):
    case ('r' & 31) << 25 | ('e' & 31) << 20 | ('p' & 31) << 15 | ('e' & 31) << 10 | ('a' & 31) << 5 | ('t' & 31):
    case ('v' & 31) << 15 | ('o' & 31) << 10 | ('i' & 31) << 5 | ('d' & 31):
    case ('w' & 31) << 20 | ('h' & 31) << 15 | ('i' & 31) << 10 | ('l' & 31) << 5 | ('e' & 31):
        return true;
    default:
        return false;
}
:-D
@Fanael wat because Java won't let you, or wat because why would somebody want to in the first place?
user784668
@fredoverflow wat because this restriction seems so fucking arbitrary
18:24
C++ can handle long longs
nwp
nwp
but no pointers which is just as arbitrary and stupid
@milleniumbug But can it also handle long dongs
ask cicada
I'm hungry.
I want köfte.
@nwp What pointer constants would you use as cases? :)
18:28
I want covfefe
@milleniumbug Do you want it to be constantly negative?
@milleniumbug Clean code has 100% test covfefe!
nwp
nwp
@fredoverflow Any function pointer for example. They are allowed as template parameters so they should also be allowed in cases.
static_assert(covfefe < 0);
@fredoverflow A beautiful result--intuitively obvious to the most casual observer.
2
18:29
@nwp Isn't the whole point of function pointers to avoid switches? :)
nwp
nwp
@fredoverflow Maybe, but occasionally it makes sense to switch on a pointer and see which function it points to. And there is no good reason not to allow it.
Then make a proposal.
@fredoverflow Nope, the whole point is to point to functions.
@fredoverflow Not the whole point. They're also useful to stress processor's branch prediction mechanisms slightly beyond the breaking point.
@nwp At one time they tried to support the notion of pointers that were incomparable (e.g., segmented addressing). Now that std::less requires a total order among pointers, there's not much reason to prohibit them from switches as well.
@Fanael From what I gather, it's because switch over long is not thread-safe or just bad design... yeah, right.
18:33
@JerryCoffin There is a DR because it's nearly impossible to guarantee it to work at compile time.
nwp
nwp
@JerryCoffin If they are incomparable they probably have different types and would not be allowed in the same switch anyways.
@JerryCoffin So at least we can binary search over an array of pointers :)
18:46
@nwp Not necessarily. In a segment architecture, two pointers to char (for example) could still be essentially impossible to compare.
nwp
nwp
@JerryCoffin Would be string literals only. If they split up string literals across different memory types I don't know anymore.
@nwp For that, consider using hashing instead: stackoverflow.com/a/19123540/179910
19:19
@nwp Actually, there is. I seem to recall there's some tricky problems caused by the requirement that a function has the same address in every TU.
20:07
> array
> pointars
@LucDanton Ruud is my middle name
 
1 hour later…
21:26
@fredoverflow What the fuck, how can switching on a long not be thread-safe?
it's an entirely synchronous operation involving the reading of data by just one thread
21:39
@Puppy You need to set aside normal logic and embrace Java logic!
nwp
nwp
Java doesn't have UB and must exhibit defined behavior in the presence of race conditions. That is not easy.
@nwp Simple start: make all variables atomic.
@nwp You're right- it's spectacularly moronic
but also does not answer the question as the spec could just allow the implementation to issue a pair of atomic reads for each 32bit part and then if it got changed in the middle, that's your fault
@JerryCoffin Imagine if Java requires sequential consistency as well.
@Mysticial Are you sure it doesn't?
21:51
yes

« first day (2455 days earlier)      last day (2723 days later) »