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

00:11
Just submitted an RMA request for my Ryzen.
Hopefully I can make the box useful again.
00:33
@Mysticial The box is now safe:
00:44
I wonder if this guys is hitting the same issue I did back in 2010 with all the disk caching: developercommunity.visualstudio.com/content/problem/72546/…
One of several problems I hit that was only solvable with FILE_FLAG_NO_BUFFERING.
00:56
@Mysticial With the sizes of reads he's talking about, that's clearly the right thing to do anyway.
 
1 hour later…
02:05
@sehe I updated various plugins and now I'm getting things like note or todo being highlighted in various places. most perplexing is that according to synstack it’s not the usual syntax highlighting (right? maybe I missed something). does that ring a bell to you?
it looks a lot like the special highlighting that set spell does, but it’s not that
 
3 hours later…
05:23
I have a friend who is really negative. My other friends are saying so too. Should I just blacklist her?
I have other friends & I couldn't be bothered to make an effort for our friendship to work. Because deep down I want to be with people who I can partner with to design and build things, hopefully useful things.
I am too old for meaningless friendships, especially when it's not for making each other a better & more happy person
05:41
user image
11
06:06
My life has taken me to many beautiful places, I am happy 😊
06:44
Soooo many questions:
Wait what. Do regex libaries unconditionally treat line ends special? Reason #42953 to stay away from regex (FWIW, I don't think that's true) — sehe 1 min ago
-1
A: regex to match numbers within carriage return and line feed

selbieIgnore the \r thing. Any good regex library will match \n in the regex to a DOS\Windows end of line sequence (\r\n). I think you want this: (\n\d+\n)|(^\d+\n)|(\n\d+$) As a C++ string: "(\\n\\d+\\n)|(^\\d+\\n)|(\\n\\d+$)" Where the expression above is the "or" of these three expressions: (\...

WTF?!?!
How does a 43k rep "Principal Engineering Manager at Microsoft Corporation" recommend using Regex to "fix" HTTP chunked encoding gone wrong? And get their essential answer completely wrong.
well obviously <regex> is no good regex library
@LucDanton Seriously. That guy must be nuts. I shiver at the idea of having a manager who posts that.
07:00
the only thing that really bothers me is escape hell instead of using a raw string literal; that’s exactly what they’re for
@LucDanton This is the only thing that comes up in my configs (and I am happy with those highlights):
YouCompleteMe/python/ycm/tests/testdata/cpp_syntax:cTodo          xxx contained XXX FIXME TODO
yeah but that’d come up with synstack() and the like anyway, right?
@LucDanton That too
cos I looked and the stock python.vim does the syntax keyword thing too, and it can’t be that because I get a clbuttic mistake when I have a literal 'autodoc' in my conf.py, not even in comments
which is really why this is annoying me, if actual todo notes are highlighted that’s fine
I guess I have nothing better than to do an actual plugin/rc-file hunt now
07:26
@sehe turns out it’s a match, not a syntax item. learning a lot right now
Ah! match, 2match or 3match :)
That's weird though because they're mighty transient - what uses them?
…I did
a very crude pattern that did not lit up before, I’m not sure what changed
lol
07:31
@sehe I have ^L remapped to :nohl<CR><C-L>:diffupdate<CR>, so I don’t know why it’s sticky
are you sure they’re that transient?
perhaps you have :match in your own remapping :)
Ok, @selbie, since this got accepted, I'm going to ask you to account for this. How does a 43k rep "Principal Engineering Manager at Microsoft Corporation" recommend using Regex to "fix" HTTP chunked encoding gone wrong? And get their essential answer completely wrong? — sehe 2 mins ago
I'm not accepting it. Even though OP apparently is (WTF? Does OP not notice the answer is broken, and despite at least 4 experts commenting this is not the right solution and going to lead to problems.
@LucDanton I know I don't. I keep :match free for one-off use
HHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHhey @AndyProwl
nwp
nwp
@sehe Guess how the "Principal Engineering Manager at Microsoft Corporation" got 43k rep in the first place.
I've checked 2 random answers. They're not that bad
@sehe oh I get what you mean now, worlds and workflows colliding
Yes
07:42
at least I have an excuse for what happened, looks like most syntax files look for TODO exactly whereas I had a crude but case-insensitive match
That's weird
Sep 24 '12 at 0:28, by Link
no boost no nothing
Nothing wrong with the message. Oh well.
Ven
Ven
07:59
Hey
Hey <3
Ven
Ven
<3
08:16
lolzing. My former product manager sent me this:
user image
5
Ven
Ven
whoops.
I think he's making fun of my education now :)
Ven
Ven
but were you in charge of security at equifax when everyone got f'd over? :)
nwp
nwp
> I need a standard or good-feeling-from-experience response
That is next level cargo-culting.
@JerryCoffin well, you already have code snippets in most ideas... so that would be a strange solution
I guess you could use it across project members a bit easier
08:28
@sehe comme j’aime le répéter, c’est du pipeau
Ven
Ven
|o
@LucDanton fake news
Ven
Ven
In Java you write the type of everything but can also inspect with IDE. In Haskell you write it nowhere and have no IDE. 🙈
it’s not fair, why must Haskell have it all
@nwp aside from that specific wording, guy wants some kind of miracle, that's odd
nwp
nwp
08:47
I still can't decide if replacing for loops with std::transform makes code better or worse. I think I'll go against that dude because it just makes things unnecessarily complicated.
Maybe I should give it a try for a while though.
Ell
Ell
09:04
@Ven isn't it tempting to try writing a Haskell IDE?
I was thinking about a Haskell RAD tool
With an FRP gtk library
Ven
Ven
there are some
Ell
Ell
That'd be rad
Ven
Ven
09:19
i mean
emacs works
Ok, landed in the Nether
nwp
nwp
eww
It's so nice to have data roaming
Ell
Ell
@Ven I want to be able to drag n drop though
Ven
Ven
works on my emacs.
Ell
Ell
09:40
I've never tried
Ven
Ven
that's on you then
Ell
Ell
It sounds like a ballache though
Ven
Ven
¿
09:58
I really like p-adic covariant monoids
Ven
Ven
I really like you
Ven
Ven
:3
You're a cat now.
Ven
Ven
I haz a catfaec.
10:01
faecmews
@Telkitty where was that pic taken?
catfeces
@Froglegs On the balcony
yesterday, by Telkitty
Utah
yesterday, by Telkitty
tomorrow I am going to be in the Bryce Canyon national park
well i figure utah, but where?
ah k
10:25
@sehe Is this a joke? :(
10:37
Welp, it wasn't a joke.
Not that she could not learn things but starting with a music related degree... :(
@wilx wth i did that. And didn't even complete it. Is just funny. Funny after the fact.
Btw from the looks of it she is pretty brilliant at what she does. Doesn't erase the fact that now she's responsible for a criminally negligent breach. But don't blame it on her interests. In fact, seeing the fruit of STEM education, I'm very much convinced they're capable of failing just as well and much worse
 
1 hour later…
11:58
> The current ISO arrangement, with its dark inner-circle of wise men, is frankly medieval. In that light, it's no surprise that c++ lags behind every other technology on the planet.
is this from reddit
Nope, from the C++ Future Proposals forum.
Some guy who's been ranting about the implicit conversion from std::string to std::string_view for a while now.
@slaphappy Anyway, how are you? It's been a long time :)
I'm great actually :)
I have like 3 weeks left
Three weeks left before?
I finish my contract at my current job
12:10
@Morwenn umm not really? the main lag was a misunderstanding of the ISO process
@slaphappy Ooooh :o
And thus finish with the other thing :D
Cool ^^
Yeah I'm a bit stressed out but happy
slaphappy :p
12:11
got a new job lined up?
@Morwenn lmao
no, but it's not hard to find job around here
I'm in contact with a few recruiters
Also might stay in the same company but in another city and in another team
13
Q: I sent an interesting link to a friend that he didn't ask for at all, and he replied with "thank you" - what should I reply?

Saleh FeekI found some topic in the internet that I thought would be interesting to some friend; I know him well but he is not a close friend, we didn't hang out at all, we just met each other a few days at some Institute. That friend didn't ask me for anything. I just loved to share that link with him thr...

tbh the thing that I've been most anxious about is the job. everything else is ez pz
@Morwenn facepalm, there's that SE?
12:21
@thecoshman Apparently
how to communicate
Well, fair enough some people do find it hard
/r/totallynotrobots
@Morwenn "asl?"
@DiegoPereira ASV stp
12:25
Let me find my Caramail contact
@Morwenn sometimes I send gratuitous floof/wholesome gifs to my whatsapp friends
@slaphappy I occasionally send things too, but I'm not wondering what to do after that to the point I feel the need to ask on SE xD
imagine typing after every pic "you're welcome, i saw this gif and thought it might be an interest to you, I hope this exchange was productive, have a very nice day"
thank you
@Morwenn I guess some people are excessively awkward even on the internet
imagine how much this guy must be uncomfortable having smalltalk with strangers
12:28
"please wait a moment while I consult my Protocolar Guide of Appropriate Responses to what you just said"
"thank you"
You answered faster than I could find a suitable duplicate. That's not praise, btw. — Cheers and hth. - Alf 10 mins ago
lol
@slaphappy I don't even
nwp
nwp
12:58
> I wanted to start a conversation but you killed it off. You destroyed something that could have been beautiful before it even came to be. Now I am sad. You should really learn about interpersonal skills because you are clearly lacking.
> thank you
13:17
@Morwenn omg it's spreading to the different threads
That said, removing implicit conversions like he wants will only solve like 10% of the problems he's ranting about
@milleniumbug What about removing the committee?
Apparently they're bringing C++ into disrepute.
I think committee is unnecessary to bring C++ into disrepute :)
The fundamental problem he seems to have with std::string_view is that auto and templates are duck typed, and both string and string_view have the same interface (as far as duck typing is concerned) but different lifetime guarantees (a.k.a. not substitutable)
IMO this is a problem not with string_view
Had I made a Stopwatch class where stopwatch.begin() would begin the timekeeping, it would also be problem with templates
I'd like to buy some concepts
2
13:32
lel
@milleniumbug I hear it’s for supermodels only
13:50
I'd love to help but sadly my crystal ball is at shop getting polished. — Borgleader 11 secs ago
nwp
nwp
Mine worked just fine.
wow, that code
so pretty when scrolling up and down
14:45
@Morwenn Hodges
@sehe indeed
@sehe hi :)
15:02
@BartekBanachewicz wstring_convert et al is already deprecated?
@wilx Yup, all of <codecvt>. It now belongs next to the mythical <strstream>.
@Morwenn Well, that kinda sucks.
Why?
It won't be removed until there's a drop-in replacement, so you should be fine for years.
15:13
@Morwenn But it will spew warnings once standard libraries annotate it as deprecated.
@wilx I don't know of any standard library marking deprecated library parts as [[deprecated]] tbh.
I guess they'll only do so if you have a drop-in replacement at hand.
@Morwenn I hope so. It happened with auto_ptr.
Like, they could mark not1 and not2 as deprecated in C++17 because they can be replaced by not_fn without an effort.
@wilx Really? I never used that one, so I wouldn't know :/
@Morwenn It was part of the library before I started maintaining it.
@wilx Oh
Didn't you just replace it automatically with unique_ptr?
15:17
@Morwenn I did in later versions. It is not 1:1 replacement. I had to adjust.
Oh, I thoughht it mostly was. My bad :\
@Morwenn It mostly is. But only mostly. :)
@wilx You don't seem to be. codecvt facets aren't deprecated. Only the <codecvt> header is deprecated. It contains some pre-written codecvt facets--but they specified them poorly, so some (most?) of what they specified can't actually do what you'd probably want.
15:37
> Closed - Not a Bug
WTF, on MS employee said it's a bug - albeit one that's known and they're fixing it. Another MS employee closes it as not a bug.
Oh, it's the same guy who had no idea what the bug was about in the first place.
The shown code appears to come from a feature article on thedailywtf.comSam Varshavchik 1 hour ago
/cc @Mysticial
So plagiarism? :P
No I think he means that it looks like code you'd find there.
I mean he links to the main page not a specific article, so that would be my guess.
15:54
ah
@Mysticial if you can't get out of the hole, clearly you need to dig deeper :)
should be read as "Charles Fuck You"
Note that in 64-bit mode EVEX-encoded instructions can use up to 32 vector registers instead of the 16 registers provided for AVX and SSE.
At the last testing phase, we realized there is bug to use all 32 registers with AVX512. We didn't have time to fix the bug so we limit the available registers to 16.
mmmm, press release a bit too early
Looks like I'm gonna have to migrate even my lower-arch builds to ICC.
I had to move the x86 build over to ICC because MSVC stopped aligning x87 FPU spills.
And that led to something like a 30% performance drop on Core 2.
16:28
-9
Q: I am student, i study C, help me with my code, thx

Lungu Iulian This is my code, help me pls, i need help guys................. i don't no what is the problem... #include<conio.h> #include<stdio.h> #include<math.h> int main() { float a,b,c,x,y; float G,H; printf("dati a,b,c,x,y\n"); scanf("%f%f%f",&a,&b,&c,&x,&y); G=sqrt(pow(x,3)+pow(y,2)-c)/(((pow(b,pow((...

/cc @Mysticial @Borgleader
best question title I've seen in a while
Oh god.... That's just: i.sstatic.net/RSxvH.jpg
16:43
@Mysticial Just the 1st line coworker. I think it makes sense that they say it's not a bug (it's a known non-feature)
That's bureaucratic, but at some volume you need to be. It would be nice to explain the status update, of course.
17:01
@milleniumbug Wow. That's..... bold.
@milleniumbug good lord...
@Mysticial Why do you even use MSVC? I've been doing mostly ICC for everything except the crap I need Qt for.
@Mikhail It builds a lot faster than ICC. And is better integrated with Visual Studio than ICC.
In some cases, it generates faster code than ICC. Though those are becoming increasingly rare.
It also supports AMD-specific instructions.
So it's the only option in Windows for FMA4/XOP. (which admittedly are dead now, but there are newer instructions)
17:16
@Mysticial doesn't it have better C++17 support?
Both MSVC and ICC lag significantly behind GCC in standards support. So I generally don't use new C++ features until all 3 compilers that I use support it: MSVC, ICC, and GCC.
irony for the longest time my barrier was libstdc++
The only things in C++17 that I'm interested atm are:
- constexpr if
- static_assert without message
- namespace Outer::Inner{
constexpr if being the most important one
constexpr if does not work as promised
at least not on MSVC
Last time I checked, none of my 3 compilers supported it yet. VS2015, ICC17, and GCC6.3. I should get GCC7 in October with Ubuntu 17.10.
17:21
not happy with VS2017?
Not usable yet. ICC won't integrate with it.
Switching to VS2017 is blocked waiting for ICC17.5 which should fix the integration (for 15.3 at least). And it also adds VTune support for Skylake X.
nice, I've never really bothered with ICC because it was a pain
But MS breaks the ICC integration on every single release and minor update. So once ICC17.5 comes out, I'll be locked on VS15.3 for a while.
Since 15.4 will almost certainly break ICC again.
MSFT and Intel don't talk.
@Mysticial odd
VS15.2 works with ICC17.4. But I missed the boat on grabbing the offline installer for VS15.2.
Learned my lesson though. I have the VS15.3 offline installer.
Microsoft's constant (often forced) updates are gonna make ICC harder and harder to use unless those two teams start talking to each other.
MS always breaks ICC on each release. ICC has an update cycle of 3 - 6 months. VS2017's updates are shorter than that. Which means that ICC will never work with the current version of VS.
Right now, I'm on VS2015 update 3 and ICC17.2. Looking to atomically update to VS2017 (15.3) and ICC17.5 in one go.
nwp
nwp
17:49
Maybe Intel should just bundle the VS installer with their compiler.
I am so done with debugging this evening.
Need to access 3,5 SATA drive, only have laptop with eSATA, no eSATA cable, SATA cable and working PSU.
Pinouts say that I may hack SATA into eSATA port.
After half'n'hour of fine-tuning the plug with knife I learn that pins do not reach the tnogue with host pins because of slightly deeper border.
Lol ok, I may try to rescue old PC which stopped working some time ago after downtime.
It signals eror code with LEDs, it is not found in manual.
Eventually found that dust clot was short circuiting something because of humidity. It works, booting dat joint.
It is HP prebuilt, it has cover on onboard VGA port saying "do not remove". Removed it, shit works as expected.
Boot to OS, Philipps LCD displays image rotated vertically (bottom part on top, top part on bottom) and shifted horizontally. Only does it at native resolution - what the eff.
After 10 minutes of scratching my head I find out that it has some ridiculous amounts of image shift set up in OSD - I never did it - and they are out of range 0-100 which is hard-coded, like 109 and 218.
Luckily it is not stuck at those values.
This same LCD switched theft protection on last time I used it before without me changing the host system, I never requested it.
The OS is left from previous owner, it is legit but desktop background is black and "Run" runs as administrator only. Decide to overwrite it from recovery partition.
Recovery utility suggests backing up "images", "text", "movies" and whatnot, I check all of it, it runs and displays "found files". Shit ends up with finding all extensions like .txt, .wav and whatnot in every directory on the volume, fuck it, manually copy Users instead and proceed.
18:13
@thecoshman You probably already have the 20 minutes filled, but extension methods are cool, and also the read-only views on collections are interesting.
OS displays HP-made welcome screen with some retarded text art. Set up XP-style anarchistic file sharing to access files from my laptop in both ways - error 80070005 while accesing laptop with Vista.
Explorer.exe hangs on subsequent attempts to access shared folder on my laptop.
Try to access shared folder on laptop from the laptop itself - shit hangs itself.
Reboot, repeat, get 80070035 instead.
Definitely goind to set up FTP server instead, shit is unbearable.
@fredoverflow I do rather like extension methods
@EuriPinhollow I'm not gonna read all that, but it sounds like you had a rough day, so have a there there from me: there there!
Think I'm going to try to keep it to features I've used and like, then try to end with a link to something that provides a more complete list
good morning
18:19
@thecoshman You can even have extension methods on nullable types like String?
fun String?.isNullOrEmpty() = this === null || this.length() == 0
nice example, consider it considered free to use :P
what is this monster
is that javascript? but it can't be
Kotlin <3
18:23
Interestingly, they use this == null instead of this === null
Well... I've been sampling CLion
it is amazing
hahaha
@fredoverflow I'm thinking I might do the presentation as just working through a few examples of how to solve problems and how Kotlin helps. like with that, I could start with a java function like Boolean isNullOrEmpty(String s){ ... } (and unavoidable wrapper calss to hold it)
rather than just being like "You have extensions methods, here how they work"
you know, lead by the problem and show how the features help, rather than lead with features and show problems they can solve
@VermillionAzure It's for a talk at work I'm going to do as a sort of casual thing
omg you can buy these?!?
sigh... where do I spend my money?
@thecoshman Starting with the problem instead of the solution is always a good idea.
indeed :D
18:35
So I got Netflix on Sunday. I have been binge watching shit ever since.
It is evil.
It's so worth the money isn't it
Also, Broadchurch, British crime TV series is soo depressing.
such proof that piracy isn't the inevitable, you just need a decent fucking service to pay
@fredoverflow From far away, that looks like a giant silicon wafer.
@thecoshman Totally, at least so far, the 12 EUR do not seem that much.
18:36
@wilx €12 for you? last I checked it was €10 for me...
@thecoshman It was the most expensive of the three plans.
ah
yeah, I think that higher teir doesn't offer much of any worth for me
the lower one isn't HD, so was a big fat bag of nope
@thecoshman Yup.
I forget what the top tier offers
@thecoshman UHD and 4 devices to watch on.
18:40
ah, right. well, not UHD devices and just myself, so nope :P
nwp
nwp
In case anyone is not sick enough of C++ yet: This is pretty neat, at least if you haven't seen it a million times already.
Unfortunately my solution is not as neat as the answers.
@nwp Didn't Java kill C++ in the late nineties or something?
nwp
nwp
C++ has been undead since 1979.
Maybe I should throw mine as an answer in there for being somewhat different.
18:57
@fredoverflow you think it worth a quick digression into the bytecode/jvm side of things?
considering it might not be all programmers
@thecoshman ...You only have 20 minutes...
@Telkitty me so jelly
@thecoshman Well, I haven't actually paid anything yet. I am at the start of the supposedly free month. :)
@fredoverflow true... I'lll have to see how time goes
nwp
nwp
19:51
I was staring at enable_if< 5>3 > wondering why it wouldn't compile -.-
nwp
nwp
Let's just change the syntax to template {class T}. It's not like anyone is relying on C++ code to work.
@Mysticial structured bindings
With concept introduction syntax, you could actually write Template{T, U, V} class whatever { /* ... */ };
nwp
nwp
I haven't found a use for structured bindings yet. I should look harder.
19:57
Byt the concept introduction syntax didn't make it into the standard yet.
At least we got modules
@nwp If you write auto [foo] = bar;, and sizeof foo != sizeof bar, then you can probably store information in some bits of bar even if the type isn't yours.
That's most certainly UB though.
Structured bindings are nice when your function return a tuple containing the correct result and an error code
also auto [quotient, remainder] = std::divmod(a, b);
I think its also easier to iterate maps, but I haven't had many opportunities to play with them, as I'm stuck in MSVC 2015 land
Will structured bindings fix division?
We need to outlaw the / division operator
20:02
@Mikhail You mean the path operator? :p
I'm on Windows
nwp
nwp
Has there been a proposal to add an overload to all STL algorithms that make std::algorithm(container, ...) behave like std::algorithm(std::begin(container), std::end(container), ...)?
I imagine not- everybody wants to actually solve the problem
@nwp Ranges TS
nwp
nwp
@Morwenn Right, I've heard of that. I thought that did a lot more with piping and folding or something.
20:08
fuck, its easier to write features in my code than to write these fucking grants
@nwp Let's say that ranges vs. iterators algorithms is one of the features
When the Ranges TS will be in the standard, I'll have a shitload of work to do in my library -___-
nwp
nwp
Just support MSVC to buy yourself a couple of years of time.
4
I sent my library to the development team, so they might make their compiler work with it ><
20:24
Is that the sorting network one?
The sorting one, yeah. Sorting networks are but a tiny part of it.
How'd you generate the networks? I've been mostly googling for somebody to have done it for me.
Stole some from eveywhere, and generated the one I couldn't find by reading results from the literature.
And found a better one by myself.
How far did you go?
I went to Germany once.
20:30
That's not very far
Nah, seriously, what do you mean by "how far"? xD
(actually went to China once)
its double the distance if you come home, fyi
Anyways, whats the highest network you were able to use? Got one that does 50 elements?
Nope, I only have 0-32 networks since the lliterature almost never mentions bigger networks.
And I didn't implement generic sorting networks either.
that's still pretty impressive
It did take me some time to manage to get all the best-known networks by number of comparators.
20:34
I've found them extremely useful for doing things like denoising scientific camera images, which is mostly done on a GPU. When you're on the GPU implementing variable instruction stuff sucks.
Mine run on a CPU and don't explicitly take advantage of SIMD, so they're pretty useless.
I can write my own god damn code. Getting the network is harder :-)
It's a bit tedious to reconstruct the networks, but you'll at least find the indices to compare here :p
How does sorting with SIMD even work? If the object is inlined with the key that's used to sort, then you have to do SIMD gather. If only a pointer is stored, then you ruin your access patterns after the sort. Or is the object something trivial like an integer?
its trivial, there is an AVX1024 intrinsic that sorts for you
20:42
@Mysticial IIRC there are implementations of bitonic sort using SIMD shuffle instructions.
Plus it's indeed for trivial objects such as integers or floating point numbers.
Here is a sorting algorithm using SIMD, plus links: github.com/khegeman/floki
I wonder if the _mm512_mask_compress_epi32() intrinsics would make things more interesting. You can separate elements over a pivot in just 4 instructions.
@StackedCrooked headsup paste.ubuntu.com/25529900
Short answer: Yes there is. No you shouldn't. My answer has a much lengthier explanation of what is going on here. — sehe 10 secs ago
My own TL;DR service
00:00 - 21:0021:00 - 00:00

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