« first day (2468 days earlier)      last day (2707 days later) » 

00:04
@MartinJames I don't really think so.
the CEO of my company originally pitched this to me that the whole point of my participation is that the customers wanted to deal with somebody who was not a suit
but I received instructions from the sales guy to dress to impress
so I don't really know what I'm supposed to have done here
and furthermore, I only heard yesterday that I was supposed to do some kind of testing?
00:19
Guys! I've been promoted, I'm now officially a lead programmer.
congrats
gx
 
3 hours later…
03:15
Must say killing a chat by banning its regulars is a fairly effective way, at least for the lounge that is ...
who got banned?
πάνταῥεῖ, martinjames ... & cicada not long ago. I could have missed a few
04:04
04:38
my lone chicken is sick, so I put her next to me when I work on the code. Now I am pretty sure that she snores ...
4
 
1 hour later…
06:04
I just realised I'm cat sitting that weekend and can't go
seriously ...
06:56
Sup guise
08:05
@thecoshman It sounds like you want val v = map[key] ?: yourDefaultValueHere. Or simply compare with null and profit from flow-sensitive typing:
val v = map[key]
// The type of v is Value? in this scope
if (v == null) {
    // The type of v is Null in this scope
    // ...
} else {
    // The type of v is Value in this scope
    // ...
}
// The type of v is Value? in this scope
08:56
@fredoverflow yeah, I got there eventually :P Also nice that you can use the Elivs operator to early return val v = map[key] ?: return null; /* logic more logic that uses v and other stuff */
@thecoshman another alternative:
map[key]?.let { v ->
    // v is of type Value
    // ...
}
ah yes, because if map[key] returns null, the ? will stop the rest of the line executing
if (order.status?.validTransition(newState) ?: false) <-- man I like stuff like this. So much easier than with Java. Having to check if order.status is null and then if it isn't you can call the validTransition function on it
Ven
Ven
09:11
:|
why do you need ?: false? isn't null falsy?
In Kotlin, if requires a Boolean, not a Boolean?
it makes sense really
if true, do this, if false, do this... but what if I have neither true nor false?
Ven
Ven
sure does
@thecoshman finance? :p
@BaguetteGarlique no...
Ven
Ven
@BaguetteGarlique transition not transaction
Tu ne lis plus !
09:33
@Ven Il est dyxeslique
I pressed unsubscribe 3 times for 1 twitter account, really hope this time it would not send me more spams ...
@BaguetteGarlique Happy to leave your crazy flatmate?
10:28
account != finance
Meet Martin Shkreli: Internet star
"Your husband has stolen $US1.6 million from me," it read.

"Your pathetic excuse of a husband," the letter added, "needs to get a real job that does not depend on fraud to succeed."
I can't be the only one who wants to see Martin Shkreli's pretty face behind the bars, in a prison full of muscular homosexual gangsters ...
10:46
boost switches to CMake https://lists.boost.org/boost-interest/2017/07/0162.php #cplusplus #cpp
Finally , they ' ll get rid of bjam .
--------- beginning of crash
looks promising ...
11:00
@Telkitty he does have such a punchable face
Mercedes-Bens pick up truck - best concept ever ~_~
@Mgetz I am sure in a prison, there are things worse than getting his pale little face punched
@Telkitty probably
 
1 hour later…
12:14
in case you didn't notice, there is a little hare on the lawn
fuck people who write code taking an interface and casting to one concrete impl
ugh
@BartekBanachewicz that's a clear violation of the dependency inversion principle
@BartekBanachewicz I have better: an interface with an enum to know to what concrete impl you will cast!
nwp
nwp
13:21
I hate having to cast all the time from int to std::size_t because I'm comparing to some container's size.
Maybe I should just get rid of the warning and call it good.
Would even improve readability and reduce code size.
@nwp why are you comparing an int to a size?
nwp
nwp
because I use ints to count and as an index to containers
@nwp why do you use int as an index?
nwp
nwp
I could use size_t to count, but first that would be wrong and second I would have to cast to int in order to make Qt happy
why do you need to count manually?
nwp
nwp
13:24
Because I need the index. As an int.
I find code that thinks that often
in reality it's not very common
nwp
nwp
I'm like "Why doesn't C++ just automatically cast int to size_t. Oh wait, it does."
@nwp Yeah we have to add cast all the time for the no-warning policy as well
Though obviously we'll never reach an overflow unless some corruption happens somewhere
13:53
@CJDennis Done. By the way, your current rep (2469) is a beatiful number (being 3*823 and also visually paired as (24)(69) which is (2 2 2 3)(3 23)) — sehe 13 secs ago
Nerd hour
@sehe still not a taxicab number
@Rerito Eh? I left that one looong ago :)
@Ven Could be transition from Open to Cancelled or whatever.
@BaguetteGarlique So no top notch anecdote then?
I'm afraid not
she was insane tho
speaking of which how's your gf
she's fine
14:15
so in Raymond's most recent blog he makes the assertion that x ^= y ^= x ^= y; works. I'm pretty sure that's UB, but wanted the language lawyers opinions. Oddly does not produce an error even with -pedantic
I have never seen people writing this kind of code in production
I would hope not
but I have seen pretty bad copy and pasted code
14:30
@Mgetz I'm not really sure he does claim it works. Maybe I'm parsing it wrong, but I think he's actually claiming the opposite.
(i.e. that "works" doesn't mean shit)
@EtiennedeMartel he clearly says 'works in c++'
Somebody asked why x ^= y ^= x ^= y doesn't work in C#, even though it works in C++. More proof that people write code that rely upon multiple side effects, and they passionately believe that what they are doing is obvious and guaranteed.
IMHO works should be in scare quotes
Looks like he's actually quoting someone who he disagrees with.
@EtiennedeMartel second part of the first sentence
14:32
Again, the way I'm parsing it is that he's quoting someone.
I'm aware but the question posed to the legal team was: "Is this UB?"
I'm aware but that's not what my reply was about.
I guess writer should define what 'work' means. Does it mean the code compiles and doesn't crash when run?
also, why would anyone write code like that other than to cater their own curiosity or for academic research purposes?
15:20
Hello!
Pretty sure it's UB. The older standards made it quite clear that assigning to the same value twice without an intervening sequence point was UB. The current wording is: "In all cases, the assignment is sequenced after the value
computation of the right and left operands, and before the value computation of the assignment expression." This specifically does *not* specify sequencing of evaluating the left vs. right operands, without which it's UB.
@EtiennedeMartel I'm so very tempted to launch what looks like an all-out attack on this, claiming it's obviously wrong and horrible, then end with something about how it should technically be phrased as: "with whom he disagrees", but I guess (for once) I'll refrain... :-)
@Telkitty Your sentiments seem to align pretty well with the authors, given that the title of the post is: "Do people write insane code with multiple overlapping side effects with a straight face?" (emphasis added)
@StevenVascellaro Hello. How are you?
Ven
Ven
15:40
@Mgetz yes.
8) The side effect (modification of the left argument) of the built-in assignment operator and of all built-in compound assignment operators is sequenced after the value computation (but not the side effects) of both left and right arguments, and is sequenced before the value computation of the assignment expression (that is, before returning the reference to the modified object)
(emphasis mine) from cppreference
16:18
@Borgleader
-19
Q: Should downvote % determine the downvote penalty?

danday74Let's say I have 100 votes, 80 upvotes and 20 downvotes, such that my downvotes are 20% of my overall votes. Is it a good idea to adjust the penalty for downvoting based on downvote % ? For example: Penalty for downvoting Downvote % 0 .......................... 10% or lower ...

16:38
Here is the first teaser for big Hollywood movie THE DISASTER ARTIST!!!!!!! https://t.co/8PY2uHJFeA
This looks awesome.
16:58
Hi.
Hi
Back from Plymouth. The trip was cool.
@rightfold How bad is lack of Go generics in practice?
@wilx Seems like an interesting concept. But I still think I'd prefer something that was, like...good instead. Then again, any movie about making a movie, TV show, etc., strikes me as pretty much the movie-makers masturbating in public.
@JerryCoffin Hey, at least they've got first-hand exprience in what they're describing.
17:03
0
Q: What is the purpose of "import std;" C++?

rspI have seen following piece of code on cppdepend site. import std; // Module import directive. int main() { std::cout << “Hello World\n”; } So, What is the purpose of import std; C++? How to use import std; instead of using namespace std; in C++? I tried to compile program in G++ compile...

inb4 c++ import vs. include
@Morwenn I have first-hand experience writing code too, but if I tried to make a movie of myself at the keyboard, I'd probably die of boredom before I finished editing it.
@JerryCoffin ut you could write code about writing code.
@Morwenn LLVM 5: code generation, the next generation.
Code that generates itself.
Self-optimizing compilers.
17:11
@Morwenn Compiling itself is part of the regression suite for a typical compiler (unless it's for a language so handicapped that it can't, of course).
And compilers compile themselves, so they're somewhat self-optimizing too.
17:28
@Morwenn Unfortunately, to the degree it means anything, the optimization only means the compiler itself runs (a little) faster.
@Mysticial I like the way this guy thinks:
Why on earth would we want to do anything that discourages downvotes? — yannis 2 hours ago
Ok, so I just fell alseep once more on front of my computer.
I've got like 9 hours of sleep in the latest 3 days ^^'
@Borgleader I'm not sure why it occurred to me, but I'm horribly tempted to reply to the sub-thread about "agressive" downvoting with something about: "at least we can be fairly sure a woman can't get pregnant from a legitimate downvote." Not sure why but it strikes me a rather funny.
@Morwenn Sleep? You want sleep? Why? You slept just last month!
17:46
D:
@Morwenn What? You didn't sleep last month?
@JerryCoffin I need my beauty sleep more often than once a month.
@Borgleader We're whispering behind your back, obviously. Now please be so kind as to turn around so we can get on with it.
18:00
@JerryCoffin Nice comment about Rust advocates :D
@JerryCoffin What if concurrent downvotes invoke UB?
@fredoverflow down-votes are atomic. If I get my way, mine would be nuclear (but obviously nobody on meta has even the slightest hint of a sense of humor or proportion).
18:16
I might go to Japan in a few months. I'll probably be unable to go to onsens ^^'
going to Japan? Awesome
I'd want to go there at some point in my life
I want to go, but not alone. Fortunately my sister asked me whether I wanted to go with her :)
Ell
Ell
18:50
@Morwenn I'm planning to go in December
Tell me where to go once you've been :P
@Ell I don't have to ask people to do that. People always tell me where to go--and always to the same place, too...
 
1 hour later…
20:26
bad influence
20:59
@Ell I should go there in April, so I shouldn't be of any hlp ^^'
21:54
I rather like my work here. https://stackoverflow.com/a/45201583/85371
I almost forget to warn against using PopertyTree as-if JSON or XML library
 
2 hours later…
nwp
nwp
23:57
SUMMARY: AddressSanitizer: 29908 byte(s) leaked in 246 allocation(s).
Meh, it's a Qt application. That is to be expected.
passing random new'd objects relying on implicit convention on owning and non-owning? yeah, sounds not buggy at all

« first day (2468 days earlier)      last day (2707 days later) »