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00:40
err, I need to better classify items on my PC
@Telkitty Given the amount of effort people spend on searching, the same appears to apply to most of us.
I have nearly 200 items on my desktop, lol
@JerryCoffin also because humans are probably the only species capable of accumulating heaps of unrecyclable rubbish, such as spams, plastic etc
@Telkitty I guess we're at opposite extremes on that one. I have (pause for quick count) 7.
@Telkitty I believe some birds are quite known for accumulating bits and pieces of shiny rubbish.
and you are not talking about twitter right? :p
@JerryCoffin given same amount of items, either you have to go broad or go deep
@Telkitty Not likely. I generally avoid Twitter.
01:06
I am generally anti-social media :p
 
2 hours later…
03:10
@Telkitty I would suggest starting "curmudgeon central", the first antisocial network--but from what I hear, an awful lot of Twitter content is actually pretty antisocial already.
 
5 hours later…
08:33
one set of teeth is never enough (for this shark)
09:13
@sehe hmm... how come? Maybe I've just lost touch with what SO considers an acceptable question
Ven
Ven
Hi
@BartekBanachewicz oh yeah, you mentioned you were doing "wood bending"... did you mean that in the Avatar sense like "air bending" or literally bending wood, presumably by steaming it
@thecoshman I've got another possibility in mind :smug:
09:28
Hiiiii <3
Sup @Morwenn and @Ven
@Rerito Working, as most Mondays :p
You mean slacking?
Because I'm working obviously
eeerh
09:37
@Rerito hehehe
Ven
Ven
@BartekBanachewicz have you tried some compile-to-lua?
10:32
@thecoshman the latter
@Ven yes
Ven
Ven
@BartekBanachewicz and so?
Dunno it worked I guess
It was moonscript iirc
Or similar, all Lua names are moon related
Ven
Ven
was it Worth It™?
Even Solarus ended up using Lua and has a sun/moon related name, but it wasn't planned x)
I don't think so no
I mean Lua is fine as a language
Much better than say JS
Ven
Ven
10:36
okay
i'm a bit tired of very minor things, like +=/++
So it's not like TS which fixed a lot
Well ++ is useless but I agree that += missing is a bummer
You can always fork turnip and implement it :P
Ven
Ven
that'd be totally useless
unless I get WoW to use turnip
Are you developping wow plugins @Ven?
Are you making wow addons
Yesterday someone got to me on codementor with vanilla wow add-ons
Yeah addons is the name, I didn't remember it :D
Ven
Ven
10:42
@BartekBanachewicz yes
I am
What for?
Ven
Ven
pvp
More precisely?
Track opponent skill cds and stuff?
Oh you already have it
Brings back old memories from my wow days
Was playing enh shaman at the time
Ven
Ven
10:53
well that one existed earlier but wasn't updated
so I did it
 
1 hour later…
11:58
> Stop recounting constant string's length on each passed assertion
When you wonder why some things are slow x)
"recounting"? what is that, C?
Apparently Catch was using strlen on the same constant string literal in every assertion
@Morwenn I think at least GCC and Clang can optimize that away.
I'd assume it would be optimized out
I'd hope it is optimized away
12:03
@Rerito I can assure you that in the boost tag you don't have to be in a hurry to be the first to answer. Especially with boost-graph you can easily spare a few days. Also, don't get the impression I "ace" these answers in no time: I've documented for a while how I frequently spend hours trying to answer particular questions. — sehe 57 secs ago
@sehe I'm just paying a kind tribute to your boost sagacity :D
Boost wouldn't be what it is now without sehe answers on SO, think about it :o
nwp
nwp
Is that a real word or auto-correct being bad?
it's a real word
Apparently it's directly borrowed from its french counterpart "sagacité", at least according to etymonline.com/word/sagacity
2
nwp
nwp
It looked like a miscorrected "legacy" to me.
(And to be frank, I thought of the french word first, then checked if "sagacity" was an actual english word with the same meaning before sending that message :P)
12:11
@Rerito Usual French people: write anglicized French word first, check whether it actually exists and/or whether it has the same meaning later
Huehuehue
I have a shitty pronunciation tho
honhonhon
Especially with "scientific" words since I never actually heard them, just read them
Also how to pronounce "i", "y" and "ea" in words you don't know
Last occurrences: tuple pronounced "teupeul" instead of "tioupeul" and integer pronounced "integueur" instead of "intedjeur"
Apparently I also misplace tonic accentuation
12:14
bite
@Rerito Doesn't everybody else who's not from Oxford too?
IOW I talk like shit
but I know my slang :smug:
I hardly ever speak, so I'm terrible at it
I'm less terrible than many frenchies tho
I also prefer having a French accent rather than trying to have an English one, failing horribly and having no excuse for the terrible accent I used x)
12:16
plus french accent is supposed to be so sexy so why bother anyway right? :D
yeah right xD
let's be sexy :D
uhhh
have you been in meetings in english with french speakers
oh yeah it's terrible
pro tip: don't
I don't think I've ever been to a tech meeting
12:17
maille dire comrèdes
sank you faure attennedingue
ahahah
zisse tauque iz gauna bi aboute
FUCKSHEUNE POINTEURES
yesse
LC_ALL=ENGLISH_WITH_FRENCH_ACCENT
LC_ALL=LATIN-1.SEXY
3
I actually have less trouble understanding actual brits than some frenchies speaking english
brits can fuck right off
for many, many reasons, but first and foremost for being brit
12:20
I speak to some regularly for werk
condescendingly, I hope
I'm french
Being condescending is a natural trait
condolences
@Rerito Thank you :)
I just don't want to raise any false impressions. Imposter Syndrome is bad enough as it is, and we don't need to feed other programmers heavy inferioriy complexes.
Nov 6 at 0:33, by sehe
> "War schlruhe ... Gudel ne swach nuz Leisaht" - You know this is some peculiar brand of Yiddish or something.
That was kinda epic /cc @DiegoPereira
@DiegoPereira lol
@sehe Sorry I don't speak spanish :D
Yeah great french accent btw
12:24
In retrospect, should've been LC_ALL=en_FR
@Rerito integuerre!
@sehe Yeah I did that one for my whole presentation where I talked about integer_sequence and the like...
As long as you don't pronounce std:: stud...
looking at you herb?
or who was it
std::get
coz std stands for other things as well ...
aw man. That's a framable offense
(as in, can I frame that one?)
@DiegoPereira STL, I think (stood putter)
12:27
At this point we may just go to meta and ask be aliased to
15
@Telkitty other things ... like ...
@Morwenn for some reason when I try to use this it tells me I'm not in brazil
@Mgetz woah
@Mysticial gotta love people making assumptions about the efficiency of assembly
@sehe QFrame it for greater offense
12:30
@DiegoPereira well at least any spirit questions
@Morwenn I have principles
I don't :D
It is known
Ok, that's not true
12:34
Oh man. Sometimes I'd love that feature too. To make sure that the receiver appreciates it enough
nwp
nwp
You only get it for your side. Otherwise too much cheating.
13:10
@BartekBanachewicz oh wow, that's kinda cool
13:30
Yeah, it is
I'll post some pics later
14:04
The power went down in the middle of a Git command, now I've got a unusable branch -____-
Ven
Ven
they're always usable
just run svn cleanup
When I try to git branch -D it says the branch does not exist x)
Even though it is able to list it with git branch
@Ven Can it have unwanted side effects?
Ven
Ven
@Morwenn It can segfault.
segfloat /o/
Ven
Ven
@Morwenn legit had one of my students get a segfault on a svn cleanup
I just told him to delete the repo and checkout again.
14:10
nice
14:31
@Ven Obligatory:
 
2 hours later…
16:03
@Morwenn Does autocomplete work? Can you type git branch -D x and then hit tab, provided the name starts with x?
@JerryCoffin y u no inline xkcd?
@fredoverflow Yup, autocomplete works perfectly well
That's weird. Is there something like git chkdsk? ;)
no idea :p
Can you see the branch via git log --oneline --graph --decorate --all
Ven
Ven
@fredoverflow there is
git fsck --full && git gc --auto
/cc @Morwenn ^
16:13
@Morwenn It can be a remote branch in that case.
16:28
@fredoverflow Because it was early morning, and I was still feeling lazy.
(Not to be confused with the fact that I'm lazy in the late morning, early afternoon, late afternoon, evening and especially at night).
Why can
Hello~
Why can't we use virtual to a constexpr function? I definitely know there's a rule prohibiting this in the standard, but I'm not sure why it's supposed to be that way.
Ven
Ven
16:44
@Il-seobBae there's no constexpr vtable :P
Do you suggest that it's not possible to maintain vtable for constexpr in theory?
Ven
Ven
I maintain nothin'
I'm just saying there's currently no runtime polymorphism at compile-time
Thank you for the comment.
> Those not comfortable with toxic language should pretend this is a religious text.
lol
17:05
@Il-seobBae I suggest that there's no point. virtual supports late binding--i.e., the actual type of a referenced object isn't known until run time. constexpr is all about execution at compile time; if we're executing the function at compile time, we obviously know the type of data upon which it's acting at compile time as well, so late binding clearly isn't relevant.
nwp
nwp
@JerryCoffin I sort of wanted to say that too, but then I thought the same can be said for int because it supports runtime values, so there is no point in having a constexpr int.
If the actual function is known at compile time it should just work in a constexpr context, regardless of whether it is intended for runtime or not.
@nwp It supports values. There's nothing specific to run-time about those values.
nwp
nwp
I've been wanting constexpr new and delete for a while. There is no reason we can't allocate some memory from the compiler if we give it back at compile time. It would neatly solve the problem of for example not being allowed to use std::string in a constexpr function.
@nwp Yeah, it's open to a fair amount of argument that the constexpr reserved word is basically pointless (it doesn't guarantee compile-time execution).
nwp
nwp
And arguably even if we don't give it back the compiler could just insert a call to new to make the constexpr new object available at runtime.
17:13
0
A: Return a member variable if it exist

sehe At some point during decoding, I need a get_header() function which would return the header member(incoming_header or outgoing_header). You didn't require a uniform signature, so, that's easy: Live On Coliru IncomingHeader const& get_header(X_1 const& msg) { return msg.incoming_header; } O...

Is it me, or do C++ programmers have a fetish for overengineering with Sfinae, type-traits etc.?
@sehe Programmers in general tend toward over-engineering. In C++ it happens to be channeled in the direction of doing everything possible at run-time. With other languages, the direction changes, but not the underlying trend (at least that I've ever seen).
I think there is some kind of misplaced pride in creating overly clever solution
but that reminds of that quote about needing to be twice as clever to debug something than to write it
> Everyone knows that debugging is twice as hard as writing a program in the first place. So if you're as clever as you can be when you write it, how will you ever debug it? (Brian Kernighan)
nwp
nwp
Just write bug-free code. Easy.
Wow, I got a badge out of the blue :D
I sure wasn't expecting that
@Puppy It wasn't a remote branch, just a local branch corrupted by the sudden power out :p
17:49
@nwp Clearly the simplest approach.
@ratchetfreak Fits well with a point of David Storer: "Don't debug standing up. It cuts your patience in half, and you need all you can muster."
The pair I like better starts with Ronald Reagan's line: "If it ain't broke, don't fix it."
The reply: "If we can't fix it, it ain't broke" (aka, "that's not a bug, it's a feature").
18:10
did you mean "compile-time"?
Agreed
@sehe Oops, yeah, of course.
18:34
:)
 
2 hours later…
20:05
@JerryCoffin Sometimes I wonder after reading joke like these... Do people really find it hard to work with git?
I remember like 10 years ago, the daily merge conflict with SVN. To me this joke seems to apply more to svn than git... I remember those times when merge conflict were so bit it was easier to just copy the folder somewhere else checkout and fix the conflict manually from the copied folder
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix wanting to just git, it's really hard. Nothing makes sense, there's all this funky concepts and strange commands. But, actually take the time to sit back and think about what you are working with, the commands start to make more sense. I also think that compared to other source control tools, git is one of the harder ones to use, but that's only because it makes actually working with others easier. As you say, SVN etc. are easy to use on their own, but hard to use with others
> Return member variable if it's sexist
MFW IRTA
yes I guess that's the big issue with others as you get to work with people things get messy
One of the tool I think might be also interesting is Darcs, never had the time to try it
20:24
@thecoshman well. SVN is simple to use for setting up, checking in. But hard to use for version control. Their fatal flaw was lack of merge-base tracking until version X (and heinous off-line capability). Then, bazaar, mercurial, monotone, darcs took over and showed how it's done.
Git just happens to be more portable than most (bazaar, darcs) and better implemented (monotone). The reason git vs. mercurial was won was that the feature set of git is strictly larger, AFAICT
I suppose Mercurial would actually be the best DVCS for 80% of purposes, but Git won the race because of large providers (bitbucket, github, gitorious etc) and defaults.
JVM is out.
@sehe as a nitpick bitbucket started as Mercurial only and it looks like it still suggests Mercurial as a default (although Git is the first option, for whatever that's worth)
user1804599
@sehe Java is nice
Nice is an object-oriented programming language released under the GNU General Public License. It features a powerful type system which can help eliminate many common bugs, such as null pointer dereferences and invalid casts, by detecting potential runtime errors at compile-time; the goal of the designers was to provide safety features comparable to those found in languages such as ML and Haskell, but using a more conventional syntax. Nice aims to be feature-rich, and as such, in addition to the common features of modern object-oriented programming languages, it implements contracts in the style...
user1804599
20:34
XD
user1804599
I’m going to generate Java bytecode.
@sehe from what I recall of using Mecuririal, it's nice, and the only main reason I had to not use it was that you don't have as muhc support for it
user1804599
@fredoverflow yes
user1804599
@thecoshman clearcase
20:42
@thecoshman "Mecuririal"? :)
@fredoverflow sssshht Muriel!
@fredoverflow meh
@rightfold erm... yes, I'd rather you not remind me of that pain
Not sure about mercurial but after working almost 10 years with git. It's really hard to get on with other VCS because of the toolset of git
I think I didn't merge anything for around 3 or 4 years. I pretty much rebase my work instead of merging
That's the thing, git just has so much more support for it
another system would be hard to push it off, it'd need some serious features
it's not just support but the way of working too
I think Darcs might be on par with git as it claim "patches" are pretty much independent so as long as patch can be applied it works
20:49
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix Has anything happened in the last 10 years that made git substantially simpler to use?
In the beginning there was almost no documentation
@sehe I think it's more the call of what passes as a celebrity (Linus) than anything else.
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix And now we have git-man-page-generator.lokaltog.net ;)
Anyone using git. If you don't know about "git add -i" you've been missing one of the coolest feature of git
3
@fredoverflow one could argue that git submodule work bad, but it's just they don't know how to use it
If that counts, new git default make it less likely to shoot yourself in the foot
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix I think (especially at first), yes, quite a few people do. The mapping from command names to what they actually do, in particular, is really pretty awful. If you did a survey of programmers who haven't used Git asked "what does rebase mean with respect to version control?" I'm betting that no more than 1 in a 100 would give an answer that even vaguely resembled what git rebase actually does (and other commands similarly, though rebase may be the worst in this respect).
20:56
I think it's fine... It base your change set on a new base... Sounds natural to me
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix Your mind has obviously been warped by excessive exposure to git! :-) Seriously, yes, once you know what it does, going backward to the name isn't all that hard. I doubt most people who didn't already know what it does would guess correctly from the name though.
You're probably right. I'm pretty sure I correctly understood what it does from the name, but couldn't understand how to use it at first
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix I'm pretty sure at first I thoroughly misunderstood what it does, and for a while after I did at least sort of understand, I couldn't see any reason I'd really want to do that (and most documentation just said something like: "to keep a clean looking change history.")
@JerryCoffin I don't really believe that really. If that were true, more of the kernel development processes/culture would have been cargo-culted
@sehe I'm talking specifically about why it beat Mercurial. I don't think the celebrity status is a huge draw, but when you have two that are essentially tied, and one has a celebrity (and with it, a large user base from day one) that can easily be enough to give it the win--especially in something that benefits heavily from network effect, so even a small initial advantage quickly balloons into domination.
21:13
You seem to have written this code using a random number generator - just about every line is wrong. Please read a book on C++ rather than guessing. — Neil Butterworth 1 min ago
o.u.c.h.
@JerryCoffin mercurial didn't have any rebase-related options initially (you needed plugins for that). That's been huge for git. It drives many merge workflows. Moreover, the fact it was present in git from the very start means that the core functionality supports related features (e.g. matching rebased commits in revision trees).
Also the author/commit distinction and sign-off, they all seem to point into the direction of simply much more robust workflow support.
@JerryCoffin it may have given git a slight edge to start with, but it's enough to draw more people in
it's a feedback loop, the more people use git, the more people teach git, the more people use git, the more tools work to help git, the more people use git, the less noise there is about other systems, repeat :P
If anything about that gave Git a popularity/sympathy boost, I suppose it was the Perforce gaffe that preceeded it.
@sehe Perhaps--but most people I knew who initially selected Git over Mercurial 10 years ago (or so) didn't understand what they were getting into well enough to even understand those differences, not to mention realizing how much difference they'd make in the long term.
It might have given people confidence that Git would never be un-FOSS-ed
21:26
@thecoshman That's what I meant by "network effect".
@JerryCoffin ah
@JerryCoffin In my mind, this is the reason why Mercurial continued to be quite strong during those years :)
@sehe s/Perforce/Bitkeeper/ ?
I started with Hg simply because it was offered by a tool I can't recall right now... it was a step up from svn clearly, even for such a small group project
swapping from hg to git was kinda simple
very similar concepts
21:41
@thecoshman got more details on the video tuts thing
50 mins ago, by Loïc Faure-Lacroix
Anyone using git. If you don't know about "git add -i" you've been missing one of the coolest feature of git
also git add -p
@JerryCoffin Erm. Yeah. :embarrassed.jpg:
I'm using git add -p regularly and it's awesome
but I don't get git add -i
@milleniumbug I started using Github Desktop recently and for a lot of things it's actually better
@BartekBanachewicz that's for adding parts of a file, right?
@thecoshman it's interactive patch-based
21:43
ah
I tend to stick to cli git just because I don't want to get tied to certain tools
I don't feel I am tied to GH Desktop
I'll forget what I'm installing and used to using, then on a new machine I don't have them any more :\
I just use it when I feel like it
for small projects especially when it still works reasonably fast it's a nice tool
I stopped using SourceTree because it was way too slow on my work repo
Anyway GH Desktop is cleaner and yet more useful, staging parts of files is better supported (altough you can't break chunks manually which is a bummer)
and you always clearly and immediately see the repo status
I still wouldn't use it for anything complex, but for dumb single-branch hobby things it's good enough to be actually useful and time-saving
I need to sort out a nice PS1 line that does git status in a way I'm happy with
I used to have that but eh
21:49
meh, I use git cli exclusively on a large multi-man project
I don't see the need for any extra tools except the PR stuff (we use GitHub for that)
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix That's actually not really true (see rebase -i)
it would be more appropriate to say that rebase copies a set of commits, fucks with them arbitrarily, and then puts them somewhere
@Puppy yeah it's not like I need it
it's not far off to say that rebase treats the commits as a list of raw patches that happen to closely mirror existing commits, rather than actual commits
I just found the newest version nice when I tried it a couple days ago
truth be told
I completely don't get why anybody has a problem with the git cli
maybe I just happened to walk into a place where there was a guy who was a gitfu expert
@Puppy they're noobs
21:56
tbf, git cmdline has a shitton of tiny things which you have to learn or they'll bite you
> To make things worse, the whole ours/theirs stuff switches roles (becomes backwards) when you are doing a rebase.
like what?
^^ like that, for example
I have no idea what that is referring to
merge conflicts?
115
Q: What is the precise meaning of "ours" and "theirs" in git?

CommaToastThis might sound like too basic of a question, but I have searched for answers and I am more confused now than before. What does "ours" and "theirs" mean in git when merging my branch into my other branch? Both branches are "ours". In a merge conflict is "ours" always the upper of the two vers...

ah
I never had any use for "ours", "theirs" or anything like that
what would you use it for?
22:01
Yesterday I used it for checking out a file on my merged-to branch, git checkout --ours and I had to look up what does ours and theirs mean
why would you use --ours instead of just naming the desired branch/commit/etc?
because ours/theirs is what came to mind when I did that.
Doesn't invalidate my point though
well I admit that the stated behaviour sounds confusing
but it seems to me like you asked for some confusing behaviour by not being explicit about what you wanted
@milleniumbug the trick is to first learn how git handles things, some of the concepts behind things
22:21
well, fortunately the times where there wasn't a day without a git accident are past me
23:20
@Puppy merging from unrelated repos/branches. Since subtree merge and attributes there should not be much reason to use these directly.
@milleniumbug yeah, rebases are weird. I only use them in fixed workflows, really
@Puppy oh I was mistakenly assuming that the context was merge-strategy. In which case they're really quite obsolete.
In practice for merging/rebasing I never deal with these terms because of vim-fugitive
23:36
Should I use visual studio remote debugging or deploy a build environment on one of our demo computers?

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