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00:18
what if ... there is no big bang and other galaxies are not moving away from earth
what is the red shift was caused by a special field surrounding earth or our galaxy that causing the waves to get longer
01:15
@Telkitty This is in the order of questions - "Why should'nt I install emacs as my main operating system?"
@Telkitty Wouldn't explain that things that are in blue shift, nor the variation in red-shift depending on how are away from us they are.
@JerryCoffin Should we tell telkitty about the Hubble constant wiki page? Edit: Hubbles law.
@CaptainGiraffe I'm too lazy, but if you want to, feel free.
@JerryCoffin I feel like it is more effort that it is worth.
01:31
Hubble's law is the name for the observation in physical cosmology that: Objects observed in deep space (extragalactic space, 10 megaparsecs (Mpc) or more) are found to have a red shift, interpreted as a relative velocity away from Earth; This Doppler shift-measured velocity, of various galaxies receding from the Earth, is approximately proportional to their distance from the Earth for galaxies up to a few hundred megaparsecs away. Hubble's law is considered the first observational basis for the expansion of the universe and today serves as one of the pieces of evidence most often cited in support...
big bang was inferred by the red shift
@Telkitty The abundance of H and He is also a big clue. (Li too)
@Telkitty There are a half dozen (or so) different factors that all point toward big bang.
@CaptainGiraffe how so?
@JerryCoffin please educate me
@Telkitty Sorry, have work to do.
01:46
@Telkitty I think you might be able to google "Four pillars of Big bang theory".
I have read it, but other than the red shift, nothing else is sound and solid proof
for example, the abundance of hydrogen and helium means very little
the universe could have started with hydrogen only through some process other than the big bang
or maybe by statistics, fission happens more often than fusion
thus more 'smaller' elements
02:15
Well. Here's a "first". I'm unable to post my answer because the code is too long
02:30
Only 352 more chars to shave off
0
A: Parse into a complex struct with boost::spirit

seheIronically, heading over to Appendix B.2 of RFC 3525, and implementing the bulk of it superficially¹ it turns out your sample snippet is invalid. It was missing ammParameter, that's not optional as soon as you have the opening {: So, fixing the snippet, here's something to get you started. It...

TFW when you have to use tabs instead of spaces (and not indenting an outer struct scope was critical).
I had to do some ugly compression using that TOK macro to fit the code in to the 30000 char limit. Please refer to the Coliru link for the code as it was intended. — sehe 1 min ago
Bwahahahahahahaha xD You're really pushing the limits here
Seriously though, I can only admire your dedication.
Obviously it uses a LOT more fuel per mile if it's just hovering, duh! :) — pipe yesterday
Dad joke for the win
lol @StackedCrooked aaaaaand I broke coliru's limits too coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/297cadcc4f8a3f44 /cc @Borgleader
(it is true though, the utf8 is probably invalid because it isn't utf8)
02:49
go to sleep :P
I will. And you too :)
(Stop watching anime and CppCon vids)
I just woke up briefly. But I'll go to sleep again.
Managed to extract the SPIRIT_DEBUG output from Coliru: coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/297cadcc4f8a3f44/outputsehe 6 secs ago
@StackedCrooked :o I'm so sorry
No, I was already awake.
Phew
02:51
I'll stay up for an hour or so.
I have these weird sleeping habits.
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix Isn't that the whole purpose of staging areas? And, please don't use git add -i. Use :Gstatus interactively in vim-fugitive. It doesn't get better than this.
If you're lucky enough to find one of many livecoding streams viewable, you can see me using it all the time
 
4 hours later…
06:45
Sup loungers
07:16
Nov 14 15:04:44 dimsum gnome-shell[6562]: ../../../../glib/gmem.c:130: failed to allocate 18446744072098939136 bytes
unsigned_integers.txt
Good work
 
2 hours later…
08:52
Apparently there's a new SG for tooling
But I don't know more
Ven
Ven
09:37
Hi
wtf is git add -i
who doesn't just use git add -p
git add -i is the worst piece of shit feature in the history of git
I've no idea what either does v0v
Ven
Ven
-p is for patch, you get the ability to add chunks.
git add -i is just broken.
oh
I tend to cargo-cult the few git commands I know how to use
maybe he meant git rebase -i
because that one is awesome :D
Ven
Ven
git add -i is so broken it doesn't even make sense:
*** Commands ***
  1: status	  2: update	  3: revert	  4: add untracked
  5: patch	  6: diff	  7: quit	  8: help
What now> s

*** Commands ***
  1: status	  2: update	  3: revert	  4: add untracked
  5: patch	  6: diff	  7: quit	  8: help
What now> 1

*** Commands ***
  1: status	  2: update	  3: revert	  4: add untracked
  5: patch	  6: diff	  7: quit	  8: help
10:26
@Columbo seen this already?
@Ven hah. I'm so versed in fugitive that I didn't even notice that anymore.
Me forgetting about CLI flags is a rather rare femonenon
(except whether it's ln -sfvn or ln -sfvd -- I think it's the latter but I frequently get that one wrong)
Ven
Ven
@sehe tar xzf :)
10:47
@Ven rsync -hxDPavilWH --stats [--delete-after]!
Ven
Ven
11:12
I do
pushes the ban button
wow is this how you treat newbies here
literally harassed on my first message
Ven
Ven
no only you
nwp
nwp
11:33
@ArkadiuszKoćma This room is a refuge from Q&A. That room on the other hand is not.
11:57
@ArkadiuszKoćma only those who don't read the rules
nwp
nwp
Looks like I have to write code to turn a regex into a DFA or generalized KMP. I don't want to. Also it feels like that is a problem that has been solved a million times already, but I'm not finding code that I can just steal.
And doing proper research while probably effective is even less fun than writing code.
because it seems everyone compiles to NFA
@nwp it has been solved a million times indeed
Googling "regular dfa c++" gives me non-terrible results
12:12
swtch.com/~rsc/regexp/regexp1.html has some snippets that you can adapt
nwp
nwp
What I'm actually trying to do is syntax highlighting which means I have a bunch of regexes like \bint\b with a color.
Iterating over the regexes is too slow, even for my toy examples.
going to merge the DFAs into a single one with custom endstates then?
also prefix tree sounds more like what you want, no?
nwp
nwp
Combining the regexes like (\bint\b)|(\bdouble\b) does the match just fine with std::regex, but I don't get the index of which submatch matched (because it's always the first one) so I don't know which color to give it.
but you can then bin search the matched string in a set
nwp
nwp
Also I need to extract and reset the state because I have to match line by line and int main() may or may not be a comment enclosed by /**/, and none of the code I've seen allows to get and set the state.
@ratchetfreak Only for trivial cases, not for comments
12:16
custom state machine does seem best in this case
you are essentially tokenizing the text and applying colors as needed
nwp
nwp
@ratchetfreak I think so. Prefix tree + failure tree + index for every end state
of course after token " the regex you need changes, after token /* it also changes, etc.
nwp
nwp
The plan was to have a regex for strings, but I see how that would conflict with "int" when not explicitly handled.
Flex essentially does this, I think.
nwp
nwp
12:42
It would become simpler if I give up generality. Instead of allowing any list of regex-color pairs that need to be matched and colored I could just use the std::regex{"(\\bint\\b)|(\\bdouble\\b)"}; approach and require a match-prefix to determine which regex matched. The keywords just have the keyword itself as the prefix and comments and strings have like "\"", "//", "/*", "R\"" as their prefixes. There shouldn't be any overlap for C++.
For the prefix a simple trie without the need for supporting .* or back references would be sufficient.
Thanks for rubber-ducking, sorry for spamming.
numeric literals overlap -.-
but all numerics start with a digit
if it starts with one then go over the entire token
nwp
nwp
.1 doesn't
It would work if all numerics are in a single regex and the regex has an empty prefix to match everything that wasn't matched by anything else.
Not being able to give ints and doubles different colors kinda sucks.
I guess I could just parse the result with the regexes themselves. Then I'm back to parsing a single string with every regex.
12:59
but the more you can partition the search space the better
13:30
@sehe Yeah, I've seen it. Superb. Thanks for reminding me :-)
nwp
nwp
13:49
I can use states for multi-line comments.
Raw string literals will be super difficult. I can't use back references because I have to parse every line separately and states don't help.
you need to remember the delimiter somehow...
nwp
nwp
I should check how scintilla does it.
special case it and give the raw string lit the delimiter
nwp
nwp
It's always the special cases that get you. 99% are just simple words. 99% of the rest is just a simple regex. And that 1% of the rest over-complicates everything.
Ven
Ven
@nwp RIP
use a regex optimizer at least ;)
like retrie
nwp
nwp
13:54
@Ven The regexes are user provided and I think std::regex will be decent enough at making it efficient.
Ven
Ven
studecent
14:25
@Ven Huehuehue
"More stars" extension is broken :,(
> man compile-error-driven topological sort of a large tree of interdependent types is tedious
Also made that my commit message
nwp
nwp
Use type deduction \o/
14:41
? How does that change anything
struct X { vector<Y> ys; };
struct Y { Z z; };
struct Z {};
@nwp No amount of type-deduction will make that compile. And if the type tree is more like tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3525#appendix-A.2...
nwp
nwp
Write a clang-tool and call it type_sort? The time investment will probably pay off in a couple of centuries.
Unless it becomes widely known and used so that many people benefit from it.
I think in C++14 you can forward-declare Y to make X compile.
@nwp ? That's a first. Do you have a link/time to test it on Coliru?
I've got a run for now
@nwp Believe me, I googled first
@nwp It has potential. Especially if you make it detect and solve cycles (by using forward declares and potentially blessed wrappers like boost::recursive_wrapper or the thing in spirit x3)
nwp
nwp
15:03
@sehe Well it compiles although apparently by accident. I distinctly remember that std::vector and std::unique_ptr and some others are required to be declarable with an incomplete type since some standard. Now I can't find any trace of it.
I'm not entirely sure what that means.
@nwp I think it means that the allocator needs to be complete but the type doesn't have to be as long as alloc.construct(xptr....) and alloc.destroy(xptr) compile
15:59
@nwp yeah, vector<T> get shallow instantiated. It was a bad example
Ven
Ven
16:32
did you mean studvector
studvex0r
nwp
nwp
Array is such a stud. Nobody else get's this big when properly treated.
Ven
Ven
I do get this big when properly treated.
nwp
nwp
What's your sizeof?
Ven
Ven
MAX_SIZE_T
* CHAR_BIT
ha ha je suis drôle moi
16:45
std::girth_of is where it's at
@Ven où est-ce que tu vis ?
Ven
Ven
@LucDanton ACK
nwp
nwp
17:06
The error is here. — nwp 19 secs ago
5
Needs to be ++x :) Also, the real error is on the next line...
Damn. Forgot to upvote the comment before vtd
 
1 hour later…
18:13
sup guys :^)
trying to remotely debug a hardware malfunction 1000 miles away while attending a conference on neuroscience
@Mysticial I'm coming to your firm to interview next week xD
@Mikhail welp; good luck with that :P
Also two chicks gave me their number (unsolicited), but I can't follow through. \
Subtlest humble brag of 2017
You should see my h-index!
actually its pretty small :-(
18:16
what's your index?
Also, I'm not familiar with what is quantified as "good"; I just know that exceptionals are 40+ or something similar
If you're a PI and have people working for you, also 40 is still really high
not bad yo!
40 means you have 40 papers with 40 citations
18:18
@sehe Type deduction won't, but at one time IBM's Visual Age for C++ compiler ignored ordering enough that it probably would have (long since fixed though--we'd be talking about a mid-to-late '90s version here).
@nwp Subtle!
@Mikhail I know what h-index's definition is
then you'd see why its fucking impossible to have an h-index around 40 unless you're stealing work :-)
I want a grad student revolution
Although I'd settle for LARP-ing scenes from Fritz the Cat
Well, a good PI puts work into making sure his students get +40 citations ;)
40 + papers with 40+ citations
most PIs don't have that
so I don't think it's considered "stealing". iirc h-index doesnt care which author you are, last or first
I know; he could've had, say, 10 students who published 4 papers
which is very normal
18:25
most PIs don't do anything, they steal your work and put their name at the end
well then sounds like you got engaged into an abusive relationship :P
everybody
furthermore, I need to plan on finding people abuse, soon
@Mysticial do you suggest any specific ways of preparing for the interview btw? I know you guys have a quirk of being very heavy on C++.
nwp
nwp
18:46
I remember reading about gcc only optimizing out loops if the loop body got optimized out. If the body was empty in the source it leaves it alone. It doesn't seem to be true though and I can't find a reference to it anymore. Did I just imagine that?
Well gcc used to be known for not performing loop invariant removal if the loop body had asm in it... That was the one quirk I remember.
19:10
I'm also sad there is no way to ReadFile until a certain character or phrase, right now I need to mirror what I assume is an internal buffer to achieve the same functionality.
nwp
nwp
@Mikhail Can't use std::getline? It has a delimiter argument.
19:26
@nwp getline works fine as long as there's a single, fixed delimiter. Doesn't work at all if you need to read until you get to (say) a capital letter.
Pretty sad, considering that scanf supported things like scanf("%[^A-Z]) decades ago.
Technically, that gives implementation defined behavior (an implementation is free to treat "A-Z" as meaning only the three characters "A", "-" and "Z"), but everybody I know of interprets it the "obvious" way.
I'm tokenizing off a COM port, and the only way I know how to read it is with ReadFile
I mean, writing the code is trivial (and it works) but I'm always wondering why I can grab the underlying buffer rather than using some kind of copy.
In the future, instead of reading files we'll just mmap them
19:43
@Mikhail "The Days of Future Past" (MULTICS basically just memory mapped all the storage, so a "file" was basically just a name attached to a virtual address.
hey, you lost this: )
Conspiracy theory: json was invented by ISPs to sell bandwidth
 
2 hours later…
21:51
@milleniumbug Nope. Definitely a winning day for me--just finished a live demo in front of the CEO of our largest customer, and everything worked beautifully!
-2
A: Program don't complete returns value 3221225477 no compiler errors

abelenkyDo not put semi-colons at the end of functions. ~Samurai() { cout<<"Samurai " << name <<" deleted "<<endl; }; // <== Why is this here? void printSamuraiDescription() { cout<<"Samurai name: "<< name <<" Duels: "<<numberOfDuels<<" Wins: "<<numberOfWins<<" In...

42K rep and apparently still hasn't figured out that if you post something as an answer, it should attempt to answer the question they asked, or at the very least, something vaguely similar.
22:39
https://blog.cloudflare.com/on-the-dangers-of-intels-frequency-scaling/?utm_content=buffer39099&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_campaign=buffer
@Mysticial seen that?
@Mikhail To bad they were foiled by HTTP/2
*o
 
1 hour later…
23:48
@sehe how ya been? :)
unbearable of course ...
we have quite polarizing expectations ;)
err ... why do some companies upgrade websites for the worse

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