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01:00
I continue to be shocked by Niantic's inability to deliver and the shocking amount of money they are laving on the table.
but think of the savings from using cheap labour
rules are unpinned
well I suppose chaos it is then
I think Niantic is also an outlier because while mot products fail because there is no market, in this case the product is failing because they can't deliver on the technology side.
omg who starred this
01:09
:-)
better write a witty rules message so I can pin it
you do it
and you go to bed
I could, but I suck at coming up with a witty text
One to rulez0r them all
01:15
@LucDanton lol les erreurs en rançais
ow ronic!
Did they fix begin() and end() in std::initializer_list or do we still need to do things at runtime time like fucking savages?
hrm? Including a header, you mean?
do you mean "at runtime"?
01:19
yeah (fixed)
prolly. Maybe he meant fucking savages.
> runtime time
Like `constexpr std::map<PhaseRetrieval, std::set<PhaseProcessing>> PhaseRetrieval_PhaseProcessing = {
{ PhaseRetrieval::Camera, { PhaseProcessing::RawFrames } },...` apparently doesn't work because of `begin()` and `end()`
that probably won't work, ever
as long as dynamic allocations are not constexpr
@Mikhail depending on what you want to do it’s been fixed for years
01:22
Actually I forgot its dynamic memory...
@Mikhail std::intializer_list was a mistake
Lack of flat containers was a mistake
@BaguetteGarlique I agree
(and NVCC chokes on Boost's)
@milleniumbug Great minds think alike
01:28
What don't you guys like about std::intializer_list?
unusable with move-only types, breaking "uniform" initialization syntax, and being generally unusable with heterogeneous containers
Why the last one?
that is, all the stuff must be the same type
oh, and the fact that {} have no type so it breaks perfect forwarding too
that’s a separate issue from std::initializer_list
given a f(x) which will perfect-forward to g(x), f({ a, b, c }) won't work where g({ a, b, c }) will
01:35
@Mikhail All of it
Also fucking lib solution once again jfc
language construct that you need to <include>
lmao
@Mikhail std::initializer_list
mornin'
design_by_committee.txt
also the vomit assembly produced by initializer list godbolt.org/g/H4mzNJ
clang usually has good codegen for initializer lists
@BaguetteGarlique technically the precedent was <cstdarg>
01:38
@BaguetteGarlique please stick to the matter at hand :^)
never not derail a topic
@sehe I get it - it's like Stackoverflow, except you get paid :p
@jaggedSpire not sure if sweeping the floor or threatening you with a weapon ...
@milleniumbug if only you'd linked them in that comment
Rules are unpinned
12
what does that mean
01:53
this statement is false
@Telkitty trash fighting panda
@milleniumbug My ZFC senses are tingling
I’ll make sure to direct confused newbies to you when we have to explain that they have to read the rules
@BaguetteGarlique Zohn F. Cennedy?
@LucDanton they never read them anyway
01:54
@jaggedSpire talk to milleniumbug about that
@littlepootis zeitgeist for comrades?
@LucDanton but the rules are unpinned
> il est investisseur dans une boite qui "diminue le taux de chômage grâce à des algorithmes"
2
while (taux_de_chomage --> 0);
penses-tu qu’il faille plutôt diminuer le taux de chômage grâce à des algorithmes, ou grâce à des logarithmes ?
absolument
02:08
désolé, j’accepte seulement la réponse « plutôt absolument »
bien au contraire !
the rules are unhinged
@BaguetteGarlique ’fin bref un peu d’inspiration pour tes idées business affaires
blocked at work :'(
02:25
@BaguetteGarlique Do you work for ISIS?
@Mikhail Practically, yes, since I work in a hedge fund.
I'd make fun of you more but I assume you get paid either way :-)
is that why they use drugs
0 sum game - the more hedge fund manager/employees make, the less clients make
common mistake, should have used khan summation
02:31
@Mikhail Funnily enough my last day is tomorrow.
the money I manages always have higher return than superannuation managers make on my behave
congrats
Whats next?
just in time for the new LW episode… coincidence? I don’t think so!
02:32
@Mikhail Either vidyagaem or make my own stuff
I was going to recommend shilling
since superannuation is compulsory, it's almost robbery endorsed by the government ...
I am making 10+% on average, super fund making 3%-5% on average
Decent hedge funds make 20-30% annually
in good years
average is much less, I am talking about 10-20 years trend, not just one year
The percentages are meaningless as their quoted in australian dollarydoos, you might as well claim you're investment in doge coin is growing by 100% per annum
2
02:36
> their
> you're
mikhail pls
You might be surprised I got a perfect score on the GRE written essay
speaking of which, I am coming to the US in slightly more than a month time
I need to book my ticket these a few days
@Mikhail that 'G' must stand for 'Greek' then
02:52
@BaguetteGarlique Also remake this game, tigsource.com/2007/08/13/sexy-hiking
03:12
also, the safe haven currency is not the US dollar, it's Japanese Yen
and gold, which is not currency
Better luck with the Japanese Yuan
How you gonna make Gundams without rare earth metals?
go to Mars
then the metals aren’t rare any more
but then you'd have a rare mars metals problem
or rather then you'd have rare mars metals, which I'm told are no good
@Mikhail It's actually ill luck to be a safe haven currency - in financial crisis, countries will try to devalue their currencies to give export more advantage. A safe haven currency means investors will park money in your currency, thus makes your currency bigger and your export less attractive.
03:23
In today's late stage capitalist societies the service sector dominates over industry. It makes a lot more sense to go a la Leopold III and plunder natural resources while artificially increasing the value of your currency and thus your lazy, good for nothing, degenerate, people's buying power.
03:49
maybe you should apply for Yellen's job
only if you know what she's thinking
"I'm not yellen', I'm Italian"
04:02
I don't believe in cheap money, I think official interest rate around the global should raise over the next 3-5 years. But then again, with a lot of people so indebted, I don't think the world will return to the 5% official interest rate anytime soon.
world economy might look healthy, but it is on the drug of incredulously low interest rate
04:29
So I'm thinking about this math problem. I can generate a symbolic expression in MATLAB that works very well but is extreme long - further it contains crap like cos(x)^2, or sin(x)^5. The initial strategy was to have MATLAB convert everything into polynomials but somehow it doesn't want to. I'm thinking of evaluating the function and doing a polynomial fit, but I'm not sure thats a good idea as my function has 4 inputs - something like I(A,B,C,D).
man, maybe just force MATLAB to stringify the symbolic expression, perform a taylor series substitution on the string, and then convert back to symbolic, followed by factoring...
04:53
My PC is incredulously slow today
popups would disappear like they should
I didn't know computers could be incredulous
s/would/would not/
I am slow today too
like most other days ...
05:11
@jaggedSpire my robot couldn’t believe either
3
How to compete with @sehe (sort of) in the ridiculously over-done answers category.
0
A: C++ using ceil and length outputs incorrect value

Jerry CoffinAs far as I can see, the result should be 2 in both cases. In the second case, the values in the array will be a 1, a -1, and a lot of 0's. The maximum is 1. 1-0.00000001/1 +0.2 = 1.199999999 (give or take a 9 or two). That's clearly more than 1, and less than 2, so ceil will round it up to 2. A...

Man, the poem is pretty hard to read out loud.
@wilx Not at all--for somebody whose first language is English (though some, of course, would argue over accents and such).
@JerryCoffin I don't even know some of the words :)
> With such words as plaque and ague.
sward, n.

(swɔːd)

Forms: 1, 7–8 sweard, 4 suerd, 5 swerde, swarde, 5–6 sworde, 5–9 (now dial.) swerd, 6 suard, swart, 6–7 swarde, 6–8 Sc. swaird, 7 swort, 7–9 sword, 5– sward. See also swad n.1 β. 6 soord, 6–7 soard, 7 sourd, 7–9 (now dial.) sord.

[OE. sweard ? m., corresp. to OFris. swarde f., skin of the head (NFris. swârd, sûrd, EFris. swôed, swode, WFris. swaerd rind of pork, surface of fenland), MLG. swarde f., thick hairy skin, esp. scalp of man, skin of pig, (LG. swaarde, also grönswaarde greensward), MDu. swarde f. (Du. †swaerd, †zwaard, mod. zwoord n., infl. by Fris. forms), MHG
also that poem is too fucking long, I want my time back
06:24
already booked and paid for the flight, going to be in the US between 29 Aug - 26 Sept 2017
@wilx Mostly obsolete--was used to refer to almost any disease that caused a high enough fever that it gave people chills and made them shiver. Malaria was one common possibility, but (if I recall correctly) also staph infections, scarlet fever, and so on.
@Mikhail TBH, I did not read the whole of it.
@Telkitty A month there? What about you chicken?
that's a good question ...
my chicken was really sick a few days ago
but old hen has somewhat recovered
@wilx Aged to perfection--ready for soup.
06:40
chicken was sick and wouldn't eat anything, force fed the hen with cake, yogurt amoxicillin and multiple vitamins ... now she has regained appetite, I think she has also picked up a bit weight from over feeding ...
07:00
@BaguetteGarlique wanna revisit that one briefly for shits and giggles? I had a thought in the shower
@Telkitty when are you going to eat it?
never!
I would never eat my pet! ... or any old sick chicken
what about the eggs?
old sick chicken gives no egg
07:21
what if it gets healthy?
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix I refuse to see it: this chicken is definetely «she» for Telkitty, not «it»!
funnily "it" in Tatar means meat
> Because the encoding menu is only used by a subset of power users, it's the perfect use case for an extension.
okay then
@LucDanton does that mean they remove a feature and put it in an extension that power users have to activate themselves?
@Mikhail The clipping is brilliant
Any algorithm lover here? This time not to solve unemployment @BaguetteGarlique
07:48
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix oh yea, I remember that you're living in a Kazan! are you trying to delve into Tatar culture? :)
> DK Studio
Never heard of it before. I figured it was just a name.
@LucDanton shower me with your thoughts
@Rerito shoot
We are in the n-dimension unity hypercube
Let be N = 2^p for a given p
@BaguetteGarlique as you recall I’m quite fond of Niebler-style function objects. one perk is that I can provide easy partial application for chaining, e.g. compose(map.partial(&my_data::id), group_by.partial(&my_data::age)) to build a pipeline
We proceed to "maze" the unity hypercube with smaller hypercubes of a 1/(2^p) square
07:53
@LucDanton Yes I remember you are a true follower of the Prophet
@BaguetteGarlique well, suppose we 'tighten' the regular API to e.g. group({ .by = &my_data::age }, lotsa_data) as we discussed. can the partial application utilities match that?
Now for any natural integers p_1, ..., p_n such that sum(p_i, i = 1..n) = p
j'adore les discussions autistes en parallèle
@BaguetteGarlique right now I can direct you to the official, actually a language-feature proposal where the answer is 'nope, by design'. fun, but predictable
Well I think I'ld better stop here I CBA to write it all out
Plus without latex support it's unreadable
07:56
Well @Rerito glad I could help
whereas the hack where we (ab)use designated inits could work!
except, well, I realised that foo({ .member = init }) thing is really optimistic to begin with: when and how does deduction happen?
@login_not_failed my wife is Tatar, I know a bit the language
it's a lot like turkish honestly
Tatar de saumon ?
@BaguetteGarlique Je valide ce jeu de mot bovin
interesting :)
08:00
@LucDanton Sorry, the deduction of what, .member?
iow nothing works and APIs will still probably have to use a myriad of group, group_by suffixes and users will have to remember the parameter order cc @sehe
@BaguetteGarlique yes, alongside the whole thing
In theory if you learn a slavic, latin, germanic, turkish language you open yourself almost all european countries
And then there is Greek
but if you remember the greek alphabet from Math, you can almost read cyrrilic easily
@BaguetteGarlique poc code to help follow along
Hi
@LucDanton There's almost no deduction: if an overload accepts an aggregate at some position, such a call considers that it is a viable overload, but it will be ill-formed if it calls an overload that actually picks the wrong aggregate.
The designated initializers aren't used for the deduction.
08:15
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix yea, they're pretty close
I guess they didn't want to make the deduction algorithm even more complex.
People still do strange things.
@BaguetteGarlique also a Python demo
08:35
@Morwenn Just read that.
I wouldn't recommend this type of code when working in a team. Because if you leave the team nobody will understand how the heck it works.
But maybe I'm just narrow minded.
what the hell is this
08:55
If someone speaks Cyrillic they can also mostly understand Russian right?
@BaguetteGarlique no, it’s all Greek to them
I love your code comments btw
@BaguetteGarlique May I be delighted by some examples please?
see links above
Ven
Ven
@LucDanton writing Haskell in Python, I see
08:58
@Ven if only Haskell could do that
inb4 stupid records
Ven
Ven
where we're going, we don't need 'cords
@BaguetteGarlique Indeed the eyebrow waggling was a good one
@Rerito c’est mes tendances Marxistes comme dirait l’autre
@LucDanton std::marx
09:58
std::lenmin
 
2 hours later…
@LucDanton I say we need fluent API for it :)
Ven
Ven
linq.c++
I can't believe you keep posting the same work again after it has been answered fully and more than once. Stop using regex to do the job. Make a simple handwritten parser if you insist. You could ask about that in relation to my Spirit example (I get that it might be too complicated, but clearly, regex is too and it's just not the tool for the job). — sehe 2 mins ago
@Ven linq.c().plus().plus()
Ven
Ven
can't he just, like, replace '' with '?
Well, it appears he can't
11:58
@BaguetteGarlique Cyrrilic is just an alphabet. It's like saying if you can read latin letters you can speak turkish...
12:28
Believe me, I did! I objectively spent more time on this than anyone else. — sehe 10 mins ago
12:53
@sehe the duplicate question has more upvotes than the original one
13:15
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix A stupid amount of them, actually. It's a bad question. But apparently regexen draw in a crowd of neck-benders
so
I have a shitton of java code to make more generic
what are my options
besides botany
Ven
Ven
skaala
ghcvm
nwp
nwp
@BartekBanachewicz clearly this
you could also just use Java, but that would just not be acceptable
13:31
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix I don't think so. Lots of people are able to speak Cyrillic without needing to know any kind of alphabet. Imagine not being able to speak English because you cannot read the English alphabet? It would make no sense.
@sehe lol-WTF that message got flagged & deleted. WTF
0
A: Replace double single quote (' ') with a single quote (')

seheOkay. You've been asking about this parsing jobs for 6 questions straight¹. Many people have been telling you regex is not the tool for the job. Including me: I've shown you An example of a Spirit X3 grammar that parses this config string into a key-value map, correctly intepreting escaped...

Again, with the smothering-in-helpfulness approach
Ven
Ven
I mean. You can do it via a regex. You just don't want to.
Recreated the removed comment, now with extra spite links
@hydra123 Believe me I know. I've objectively put more effort into this than anyone else. — sehe 34 secs ago
nwp
nwp
@sehe That must be the correct way to deal with the situation.
Maybe not. Again.
Jul 20 at 14:24, by sehe
Leading by example is oft mistaken for dominance
I objectively put too much time in it. But I want people to see how to do things right. And why.
7
nwp
nwp
13:37
Not everyone wants to be saved. Some people just want an easy life.
Ven
Ven
s/\(([^')]*?)(?:'('[^)]+))?\)/\1\2/
I should go get my sweep upvotes! :P
(it's incorrect, btw, a real version needs to lookahead for '')
@Ven cue "yeah, but can you use boost::replace_all?"
Ven
Ven
it'd be easier if more regex engines supported variable-length lookbehinds
If you have one, then s/(?<=\([^)]*)''/'/ is a correct regex.
Not gonna pollute the answer with it tho ;-)
nwp
nwp
14:02
OMFG. Copying some data to %APPDATA%/path using robocopy literally creates a folder %APPDATA%.
Ven
Ven
it's all a buncha hacks
nwp
nwp
Whenever anything shell-related comes up in the future on windows I'll just refuse.
@Ven Please go ahead, comfort the OP in his dementia!
ASR
ASR
Does any one know about what is the design pattern is using for String class?
Ven
Ven
It's regex, of course it's dementia.
But then, I've been known to code golf, so...
@ASR what.
ASR
ASR
14:10
@Ven What is the design pattern is used for String class?
Ven
Ven
@ASR Did your teacher just ask you that?
Get a better school, for god's sake.
ASR
ASR
@Ven In interview they asked me
Ven
Ven
get a better job
you seriously don't want a job that ask you this kind of question
ASR
ASR
@Ven Please let me know if you know answer.
Ven
Ven
I don't even want to know the answer they expected. Immutability? Rope? What language is it you're talking about anyway?
ASR
ASR
14:12
java
Ven
Ven
so why are you here in the C++ room?
They probably expected the Flyweight design pattern
which is retarded because it's an implementation detail.
ASR
ASR
@Ven thanks
Ven
Ven
But then, people who believe in design patterns like gospel are most definitely retarded as well.
4
A: Is Java's String Intern a flyweight?

dash1eYes the String.intern() implementation follows the flyweight pattern. As the javadoc says Returns a canonical representation for the string object. A pool of strings, initially empty, is maintained privately by the class String. When the intern method is invoked, if the pool already c...

PUTTARNS
Ven
Ven
this is why the world is in trouble
14:15
@nwp what else would make sense
possibly expanding %APPDATA%
@ASR LOLWAT.
@Ven In java it can be relevant to be aware of this detail because it has repercussions when comparing strings the wrong way
@milleniumbug That would be more surprising to me. UNIX spirit
Ven
Ven
Except the GC is free to unintern the strings whenever it wants, so you're still not really guaranteed anything
string internship
14:36
I find it fascinating that there are journals for almost everything you can imagine. Case in point: Third World Quarterly.
Interesting site: journalmetrics.scopus.com
Are there other journal metrics sites?
@wilx Sounds like me and my salary. :D
@MarkGarcia lol, so true for me as well. :D
15:13
On ressort les classiques les enfants
@Ven I don't think that's true. I can't find a source that corroborates it
15:35
@BaguetteGarlique Without knowing english there is literally know way to spell those words correctly "half", "swap", "metre"... and so on depending on your mother tongue
You just have to listen to French trying to speak English, it's terrible
15:53
So how does the average Cyrillic speaker sound like
16:44
@BaguetteGarlique Nice troll
@odinthenerd @foonathan I debugged a colleague a few weeks ago, who had assumptions about bitwise ops's priority th… https://twitter.com/i/web/status/889505152566272001
17:42
Ah finally somebody worth voting for in the mod election.
@Borgleader Yeah, boring shit. And no AVX512.
@Mysticial Who?
@wilx Cody Gray
@BaguetteGarlique Ce mec xD
That's not to say the other nominations suck. I'm just not familiar with most of them to make a proper judgement.
@BaguetteGarlique That depends. Cyrillic in a feminine voice sounds musical. Cyrillic in a male voice frequently sounds like he's been drinking heavily.
17:51
I should run for the moderator office. My shitck would be that I am extremely unlikely to actually moderate-ban your comments-questions-chat.
@Mysticial Without doing any looking to confirm, my recollection of Baum mit Augen seems mostly positive as well.
:38292773 Speak for yourself!
@JerryCoffin Always!
nwp
nwp
18:09
Yay, my package arrived in the package station on 01.01.1970. It will be delivered soon!
@nwp I'm almost surprised this has managed to go for even a few seconds without somebody coming back with a "Got your package hanging, right here" type of comment.
@nwp That's a significant breakthrough. Because I don't think anyone has figured out how to deliver packages to the past yet.
Even in Steins;Gate it was mostly restricted to text messages.
nwp
nwp
18:26
They managed to give the order, get the package, put it in the station, fail to deliver it and put it back into the station all at 1:00 am. Which explains why the delivery failed, I didn't exist at that time.
18:36
@Mysticial Personally don't quite care about the latter, I'm just hoping for no major bugs at this point.
I figure anything in that range should be a good upgrade from i7-3770
If you want a 6-core now, get the 7800X or go AMD. Otherwise wait to see what Coffee Lake has.
Though even the cheapest of the X299 motherboards are on the order of $220.
 
2 hours later…
20:13
@sehe your transcript's been put to good use, but I'm having terrible problems with the left hand :D
oooh i got it!
@BartekBanachewicz I scribbled on a bit after that point: stackoverflow-sehe.s3.amazonaws.com/… but only the RH
(also transcription*, it took me while to figure out what transcript)
@sehe oh that looks way beyond my skill
I wish you good luck. I'm not going to go back to found out exactly which people "supported the regex". All I note is that you can't seem make the code work using regex. Instead of railing after the fact, you could simply say why you reject the answer. Instead, you don't respond at all to the answers (this has been the first time you say anything remotely relevant like "there is a reason I do not want to" - although it's not clear /what/ you don't want to: you're "writing the parser" anyway, but with crutches named regex). — sehe 1 min ago
/cc @Ven I think
you're overdoing this soooo much
20:28
Overdong is my middle name
@sehe I think someday I'd like to have a word with your parents...
@sehe why not seovhe then?
@sehe Oh, and in this case, the missing "i" could be read as...invoking rule 34, so to speak.
You don't suggest that is an accident, right
@BartekBanachewicz You mean like this:
And no I don't have a problem with many questions. But in this case the sequence of questions show you don't know what you're doing. And I care about that: I want to show you parsing into datastructures, explain what character escapes are and that escapes are a presentation-only thing. I just want people to learn how to do things right and know why. It's why we are here. — sehe 39 secs ago
I'll rather risk making a bit of an impression then to assume the cause is lost.
Some of the wisest lessons I've received from teachers landed over 10 years after the fact. And I realized it when the pennies dropped.
7 hours ago, by nwp
Not everyone wants to be saved. Some people just want an easy life.
This may be true, for now. This person (or any other reader in the future) might change, and his/her perspective too.
@JohanLarsson Because vhe kinda kills the SEO
20:51
2017: your vacuum cleaner is quietly mapping your home........ and selling that to the highest bidder http://gizmodo.com/roombas-next-big-step-is-selling-maps-of-your-home-to-t-1797187829
In an hour a sex worker in Medellín, Colombia can make the equivalent of a month’s minimum wage in Venezuela http://econ.st/2vsSEdq
nwp
nwp
> This is all part of the larger quest for a few major companies to hoover up every bit of data about you that they can.
They sound even more paranoid than me.
@nwp lol
@wilx Pretty sure I can too.
nwp
nwp
@Morwenn Whoa, I thought you worked with python or something.
20:58
@nwp Could do both x)
I ain't though.
@Morwenn Here it would be like 2.5 to 12 hours of hooker's time to make minimum wage.
@wilx I think a hooker friend of mine earns twice as much as I do with my programming job.
It's probably higher than the wage in Venezuela.
@Morwenn Either you are selling your self cheap or she is the best hooker in France. :)
Not really, it's just that finding clients is rather easy when you're a shemale.
@Morwenn Oh.
21:10
There are many customers and not that many shemale hookers, so...
Whiwh is exactly why I'm saying I could probably earn more than I currently do x)
Anyway, I'm going to sleep now ^^
See you later!
@wilx I wilx, thanks ^_^
@wilx that's ... very old hat, right
Also, I don't think dictionary entries ought to be terminated with periods
why not?
I just didn't think I saw it before, and also don't think it makes sense (it adds no value and it could cause confusion with orthography of the entry itself)
21:20
the description probably should but the entry itself should not
@sehe At least here in the Lounge, not all that old:
Aug 6 '12 at 16:01, by ecatmur
also keming
Only (about) five years ago when it was first posted here. :-)
@sehe Obviously they should be terminated with...extreme prejudice.
21:47
Anyone I should vote for in the moderator thing?
this is a dog
the expression on her face always makes me laugh
@milleniumbug she's got my vote
the hidden truth behind this story is that she's actually about to yawn, as opposed to being told something incredibly shocking
21:56
shocking twist
22:08
@Puppy "See the look on this dog's face? You won't believe what happened next!"
@JerryCoffin click
nwp
nwp
no selfies
@nwp This is the c++ room; here we call that a thisie! Selfies can go to the smalltalk room for all I care.
nwp
nwp
room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: We exchange the puniest jokes on the stack! [c++] [c++11] [c++14] [c++17] [c++-faq]
(yes, one n)
23:05
if only they were punny at all

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