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10:00
there's need to unstar, we can't keep it at 21 forever :P
@Neil Scratches cheek and looks smart " I knew that"
@JamesDyson \* to add star :)
how do you guys get at 21?
@rubenvb Took 21 years, but I finally got there.
10:03
//Comment rejected
@rubenvb binary numbers man :P
@Neil fairly sure that is just an extension
@Neil I meant stars, you stupid fæcal matter!
^ see what I did there?
@rubenvb /*
All sense has been lost... Again.
^ see what i did there
Neither do I
10:04
@rubenvb I doubt that for some reason :P
Well Ladies, Ill be off now
Seya coshy and Neillybob and rubenvby and ... no.. nevermind....Bye xD
@JamesDyson Take it easy, James
@Neil And you too meh hearty. Arrrrggg fæcal matter!
Bye bye
pop me a message for updates :P
The inconsistencies between Xchat on Windows and on Linux are annoying, just little things
Also annoying, is the quality of Chrome's spell checker vs Google's search spell checker
@thecoshman use pidgin, it sucks equally much on both :)
10:12
@rubenvb ಠ_ಠ no
15 minutes to explain my master's thesis == not doable
I need to invent time travel so I can resuse the 15 minutes
this sucks
and the thesis is about timetravel :D
shocker :)
fairly sure it means you are over complicating faecal matters :P
10:16
physicist always overcomplicate :P
@thecoshman faecal
@ScarletAmaranth We oversimplify. The rest of the world just don't see the simplicity.
In my case, I just did a friggin' lot of stuff
@Neil good save :P
@rubenvb then work out what matters
@rubenvb Lets try this then. Pretend you're in an elevator with all of us. You have to tell us what you did on your thesis in a couple sentences or less
@thecoshman It alll matters!
10:17
@rubenvb Lounge is not the place where we wouldn't see your point :)
@Neil that would be too trivial :(
@rubenvb Good place to start
Always easier to add detail than to remove it
I can explain in a few lines, but then I can't get to 15 minutes :)
yeah, sum up your thesis to us here, reduce it down to a single post
@rubenvb 15 minutes will fly past :P
@rubenvb Wait, you have too much time to talk about your thesis or too little?
10:18
hh: "I did stuff to get my degree." is pretty much a good summation
Before I started on my thesis, I wondered how I was going to get a thesis as big as I needed it and by the end, I was panicking because I couldn't shorten it to where it needed to be
Electrons can be diffracted in such a way that they gain Orbital angular momentum. I worked out a way to describe the diffraction through the Dirac equation. I got preliminary results that give some insight into the relativistic spin structure of these electron vortices.
@Neil too little
The thing is, to explain the diffraction part, I need 15 min. If I don't explain that, I leave out the coolest result of my thesis.
@rubenvb Brilliant.
@rubenvb What is the formal title if you don't mind my askin' ?
@ScarletAmaranth oh, it's dutch, let me translate
"Relativistic theory of electron diffraction and electron vortex beams"
10:21
Neat. And why do you have only 15 mins ?
you have a something like a minute to say hi. about 4 minutes to talk about what you where aiming to find out, about 4 to talk about what you did and how, 4 to talk about what you learnt or found out. a couple of minutes to talk about how it went and a nice buffer
@rubenvb Let me guess, the coolest part of your thesis is a very technical point on diffraction?
I also solved the Dirac equation in several coordinate systems, and used those results to a) describe vortices and b) describe the parallel between my diffraction theory and the classic light diffraction thing.
@Neil no, it's the exact formal electron description completely parallel to the classic plain wave equation approach.
but with spin information.
And that's only one point. There's the application of this result on the electron vortices too.
And me bashing other publications for misleading comments
I assume there is a Q&A after your quick talk?
yeah, only like 5 minutes
10:24
@rubenvb And what is the official name of your "field of study" ? Just "physics" or something more specialized ?
you can fall back on that to let them ask you more intricate details
@ScarletAmaranth Thingy.
@thecoshman yeah I should. There'll only be four people who've read the thesis though.
@rubenvb Then why do you have to describe it in full detail?
@rubenvb You mean there will be you and 3 professors who were cooking for their kids while reading your thesis :) ?
10:25
@ScarletAmaranth I worked with a "Condensed Matter Theory" prof, and a researcher working with elektron microscopes
@rubenvb Do you plan on staying in the academia ?
In my experience, the professors inquire whatever they're interested in hearing more of
@ScarletAmaranth yes, I have a doctorate scholarship already :)
So you could take advantage of that fact and just point out the highlights and let them fill in the details of the things that are not so important
@rubenvb Ooh, congrats man.
10:26
@Neil true, there's an optics professor that's also reading it.
So... I thought to maybe focus on that.
hmm
maybe better to keep the theory simple
but it's so interesting
@rubenvb You have a problem with time, man.
I really discovered lots of interesting theory nitpicks
that are quite astounding really
"v = s / t" simple :D ?
@rubenvb your talk just needs to tell them that you know what you are on about, and give them so openings to ask you questions about. So, this Diriac equation (or what ever it was) is the details of solving that really relevant to your findings, or can you just tell them that you have solved it,a and let them ask more if they want?
@thecoshman I think I may have to do exactly that.
10:27
Can you just ask for extra 5 mins, shees ... ?
Sup niggas, gimmeh' 5 more minz, dat kay ?
@ScarletAmaranth nope, lecturers want to sit there a lot less then you want to stand there talking
There's about 10 people that need to give presentations that day
10:28
everyone in my year
FUUUUUUU
basterdz are stealing my time
@ScarletAmaranth and thanks, before I let that "congrats" be swallowed by the top SO chat bar :)
@rubenvb Sure, I'm fairly positive you worked hard for it so thank yourself in the first place :)
@rubenvb Considering that proportionally, the amount of people on this planet who probably understand these theorems as well as you do is something on the level of the number of people on this planet that die from meteor strikes
Take comfort in the fact that you and only you probably see these nitpicks as you call them
@rubenvb I'd imagine that this talk is more or less just to test your ability to talk about stuff. The most important thing is that you make sure you know what you are saying. Very much a case of quality over quantity
he he he, tity
You arrive at a point when you realize your professor isn't even on par with what you've learned, and that's the moment you know you're way beyond being a student
@thecoshman yeah, I've done this before, and I'm pretty good at just blurting everything out in a decent manner :) I just need the slides and time frame worked out :/
10:32
@Neil that implies you can stop being a student, which implies you can be out of things to learn. That's a sad prospect, there is always something new to learn
@rubenvb just do it fonzy style, walk in, give them the thumbs and "ayye!" then walk about
@thecoshman I think he meant student becoming fellow researcher more than "kung-fu master" :)
@thecoshman Student in the sense that you are a pupil learning from a master
At that point, you are the master.
@thecoshman I really thought about just flinging it. I could, and they'd think it was great anyways :P
You learn always, but never as teacher/student
but then i'd still need some pretty pictures
10:34
@rubenvb easy marks though, right :P
adblock plus y u no work no more in FF 16.0a!
@thecoshman I doubt this is even for marks.
@rubenvb it probably is, even if it's only a small amount
else people will find out it's not, and just say fuck it
@thecoshman well, some did in the past :P
but generally you have too much self-respect to bail out early
What exactly do the mblen etc. functions do? Does it use the current locale to determine what “wide character” actually means? (Never worked with locales on Unix)
10:40
@KonradRudolph ¬_¬ what you playing with
It's standard C...
@rubenvb Read that, didn’t help. It mentions locales but it doesn’t explicitly say that locales define what multibyte wide-character means – is it fixed for the system?
@KonradRudolph it uses LC_CTYPE info from the locale currently set by stuff like setlocale
@rubenvb OK, but what is “wide character”? Unter Windows this appears to have an entirely different meaning
@KonradRudolph wchar_t
10:44
@rubenvb That doesn’t square, the functions work on char, not wchar_t
@KonradRudolph I don't see any mention of wide character in the first link I posted... Except for that ununderstandable sentence about state shift bytes which I have no clue about.
@rubenvb Yes, exactly. Which makes it entirely unclear to me what the function actually does.
@KonradRudolph you pass it, say a UTF-8 string (for simplicity and a UTF8 locale like is common on Linux) and you get the number of bytes that builds up the next Unicode character.
I know C doesn't specify unicode, but I can't explain without an encoding.
so you know exactly which bytes to use to get the 32-bit value of the character.
I guess the value lies between 0 and 6 for UTF8 string/locale.
@rubenvb Ok, that makes sense (and so it is defined by the locale). Now the question remains: why do I pass in a length? I don’t know the length, right?
@rubenvb 0 and 4.
@rubenvb Shouldn’t it be between 1 and 4?
@KonradRudolph The null byte returns 0.
ah, ok
not entirely convinced by the usefulness of the second parameter, there must be some detail I’m missing
@KonradRudolph It's the length of the input string.
To avoid overflows.
@RMartinhoFernandes right-o
10:51
yeah
UTF8 was originally designed for 6 bytes, but they changed it (according to wiki)
so if I want to determine the length of a string in a given encoding, I need to call this function for every code point – i.e. I start at the begin of the string and consecutively add the result of the previous call to the location?
@rubenvb They simply decided there were no more than 0x10FFFF codepoints, which fits in 4 UTF-8 units.
yeah. that.
If you saw someone seriously defacing a question, is it in that case best to simply rollback or flag the question?
@KillianDS Both.
10:53
ewww. How do I read Unicode input from the standard input in C++ then? getline doesn’t work, nor can I read char-wise …
do I need to read four chars at a time preemptively?
@RMartinhoFernandes okay, thanks
@KonradRudolph You're boned?
@KonradRudolph getline works for UTF8 files?
@rubenvb Not if they use other line separators.
@RMartinhoFernandes like what?
10:54
@rubenvb How so? It’s not encoding-aware, it just checks byte values, and \n can be part of a UTF-8 (or whatever encoding is active) character
@KonradRudolph pretty sure it can't.
@rubenvb Like one of the other 6 line separators defined by Unicode.
Yes, madness.
@KonradRudolph It can't by definition.
what’s worse, std::istream actually replaces \r\n by \n, no?
@RMartinhoFernandes ridiculous and unpractical never to be met problem.
@KonradRudolph depends. In text mode it's implementation defined and should do the platform nativ thing.
damn, so I need to read the underlying buffer. Fun!
10:56
@KonradRudolph why???
@rubenvb Well, std::cin is always in text mode, no? Can I change that?
Just getline and handle the extra \r that might pop up
@KonradRudolph std::cin+Windows+Unicode is a bust
If you're reading from standard input, doesn't it make sense to read in the current locale?
@RMartinhoFernandes Yes – how?
I mean, that's how the user will be writing, no?
10:57
@KonradRudolph that's by default if you didn't mess with the global C locale.
@rubenvb Yes, but the point remains that getline for instance isn’t encoding aware, and if the user enters a UTF-8 character that contains, as part of its coding sequence, a \n, then getline will cut this character and read only the first part
@KonradRudolph THERE IS NO UTF8 MULTI-BYTE SEQUENCE CONTAINING A \n!!!
That's by definition. ASCII is safe from multibyte UTF-8 stuff.
@KonradRudolph No character other than \n has \n in its encoded form.
@rubenvb Except for \n, that is ;)
@rubenvb Had too much coffee or something?
10:59
@rubenvb That counts only for the first byte, not the consecutive bytes
wait, bs
@KonradRudolph No is no.
@KonradRudolph no, it counts for every byte :)
UTF-8 was designed so that each byte can only appear on a particular place.
yes, I remember
@jalf fixed.
11:00
@RMartinhoFernandes In UTF-8 "No" is "no"? :)
getline is perfectly fine.
you'll get your stream of un-endianned bytes. Then you need to interpret that manually (or just use the mbtowc conversion, which should work just fine on Linux).
@thecoshman one of these days, you are going to share with us your secret methods of staring messages
Use your eyes.
@thecoshman also... ternary numbers are not what you think they are
@StackedCrooked In Soviet Russia, "UTF-8" is "No"
Them Russians again.
11:05
grr, not working :/
They know stuff
@KonradRudolph whatchagot?
And whereustuck?
gist: Wide-character handling in C++, 2012-06-25 11:06:42Z
#include <iostream>
#include <cstdlib>

int main() {
    std::string line;
    std::size_t bytes = 0;
    std::size_t length = 0;

    while (getline(std::cin, line)) {
        bytes += line.length();
        for (
                std::size_t i = 0;
                i < line.length();
                i+= std::mblen(line.c_str() + i, line.length())
        )
            ++length;
    }

    std::cout << bytes << " bytes " << length << " characters\n";
}
$ ./len <<< "♠♣♥♦"
12 bytes 12 characters
Nooooo gist
11:07
I expected the output to be "12 bytes 4 characters"
♥ gist. Lobby for SO to fix the onebox
yeah, well, pastebin
ffs
@rubenvb calm down
sh*t, lunch, gotta go – I’ll be back with poignant questions so better prepare yourselves!
@KonradRudolph you're missing an if
11:09
> The Bacon Ipsum app is now available on the Android Market. I’m not sure how useful it will be, but hey, there it is. It doesn’t require an internet connection, so you can use it on a plane, on a train, in a box, with a fox, etc.
@KonradRudolph Btw, line.length() as the second parameter is wrong.
ohw ait
you multilines the for.
ugh
11:25
hai gais
ohai
this I came accross today when my Google switched language
@RMartinhoFernandes damn, true
@rubenvb What, where?
Is it considered bad practice to have multiple exit points in a function. With no exception usage?
11:39
@Nils nooooooo!
?
@CatPlusPlus looks like the boost::interprocess examples to me
@KonradRudolph ..
@Nils Hm? What?
clear answer, no?
so it is not considred bad practice
Well currently I can't use exceptions. But assuming I would use exceptions having multiple exit points might not be needed anymore, right?
entirely depends on the code. Multiple exception points are sometimes completely unrelated to exceptions
if (!file.open(..)) { m_lastErr = FailedToOpenFile; return false; }
11:48
@Nils I would consider it bad practice for the simple reason that it makes it difficult to understand the flow of the method
@sehe well, I know that with electronics tri-state is a magical thing that is not base 3
If the entrance and exits were always the same, you could add log messages for instance and it would always work (save for exceptions)
Though, it's not like it increases performance, it's simply a convenience thing
humm ok
Couldn't find any serious writing about it so far.
Can I do print *a@len (gdb, a is a pointer) with the Visual Studio debugger somehow?
@Nils er, what is it supposed to do?
GDBs "artificial arrays" feature. Prints values from where a points to to a + len
11:57
I think the syntax is just a,len to denote an array
thx :)
aaaargh!
std::string() + size_t() compiles!
grrrrr
What did you expect
thankfully I got a segfault so I knew something was wrong
@Cicada guess?!
he he he, reading through some stuff, saw it mentioned 'vala', I read it at first as 'vulva'
12:04
I'm always here at the wrong time it seems
well I know a duck isn't jet powered nor propelled
(a.k.a. WTF does tri-state have to do with ternary, and the earlier point: WTF does ternary have to with three-digit numbers?)
@Cicada Come back when I least expect you.
@sehe wait... what do you think ternary numbers are, they are base three numbers, no?
user784668
@KonradRudolph Empty string concatenated with a null pointer?
Anyone used QDataStream to serialize classes before?
12:10
@Nils *vomits* Sorry, what did you say? QDataStream? I.. *projectile vomits*
@Fanael No, the second cannot be implicitly converted to a pointer.
only 0 (as a literal) can
@Neil what?
ur free to use Mfc u know :P
@KonradRudolph Wrong.
user784668
@KonradRudolph I always thought that size_t() yields a 0 of type size_t and that size_t is a integral type.
12:11
Any zero as an ICE can.
@RMartinhoFernandes shit
@Nils Can't stand it, that's all
@RMartinhoFernandes hide it before the ape get's to it :P
– but what’s “ICE” here? normally it’s internal compiler error, doesn’t fit here
Integral constant expression.
12:12
ok
1-1 is a null pointer constant.
anyway, I still don’t know what’s wrong in my program. Well, time to hit teh Stack Overflowz
I have no fucking idea who wanted that to be one, but it is.
1
Q: Dynamic arrays vs STL vectors exact Difference?

RajeshWhat is the exact difference between dynamic arrays and vectors. It was an interview question to me.. I said both have sequential memory Vectors can be grown in size at any point in the code. He then said even dynamic arrays can be grown in size after creating I said vectors are error prone sinc...

> I said vectors are error prone since it was a standard library.
right...
Is it possible that I explicitly need to set a locale in C++ before I can use mblen?
normally the program should inherit the locale from the environment, no?
12:18
@FredOverflow lol
@KonradRudolph If it didn't, you'd run into a fecal matter amount of troubles
that sounds about normal for locales anyway
@KonradRudolph True, but in this case I don't think you have to explicitly set it
nice! segfault
std::cout << std::locale("").name() << "\n";
why would this segfault?
Ell
Ell
if std::locale("") returns null o.O I have no idea.
ugh why is every job a web developer job?
12:25
@Neil So std::locale().name() returns “C” for me but echo $LANG, $LC_ALL (on the command line) returns “en_GB.UTF-8, ” … is the “C” locale just inheriting the global locale or what?
@KonradRudolph I had assumed so
ok, thanks
@KonradRudolph by the looks of it, "" is not a name you can give for a locale
Though apparently my knowledge of locales isn't as good as I thought
@thecoshman I got that code snippet from the documentation – (cppreference.com) – but admittedly that whole code sample there is wrong & won’t compile
12:27
g'day y'all!
@thecoshman “The empty name says to select a locale based on environment variables. See section Categories of Activities that Locales Affect.”
@KonradRudolph hmm...
why not std::loacle::global.name, or have I misunderstood that
@thecoshman global sets the global locale
and std::locale() (i.e. the standard constructor) returns the global locale
12:32
@thecoshman yes you can, that is the C locale IIRC. Same as "C"
I got the standard to back me up:
explicit locale(const char* std_name);
Effects: Constructs a locale using standard C locale names, e.g., "POSIX". The resulting locale implements semantics defined to be associated with that name.
Throws: runtime_error if the argument is not valid, or is null.
Remarks: The set of valid string argument values is "C", "", and any implementation-defined values.`
And it defers to C, that says "C" and "" mean the "C" locale.
@rubenvb yes, the values "C" and "POSIX" both work, but everything else appears to cause segfault, including the empty string, and sensible values such as "en_us.UTF8" or "en_us.UTF-8"
@KonradRudolph note locale naming is OS dependent
Unix names no worky on Windows.
@rubenvb I copied the locale from my $LANG environment variable name, still segfaults
@KonradRudolph and your capitalization is not right
@rubenvb Doesn’t matter (tried both), and see above, I copied this capitalisation from the value of $LANG
12:35
@KonradRudolph try the locale command
your glibc needs that locale enabled
$ locale
LANG="en_GB.UTF-8"
LC_COLLATE="en_GB.UTF-8"
LC_CTYPE="en_GB.UTF-8"
LC_MESSAGES="en_GB.UTF-8"
LC_MONETARY="en_GB.UTF-8"
LC_NUMERIC="en_GB.UTF-8"
LC_TIME="en_GB.UTF-8"
LC_ALL=
and std::locale throws exceptions. Catch them and see what they say
@rubenvb LOL
I just realise that the “segfault” I’m getting is of course an uncaught exception, as the gdb stack backtrace clearly told me, I just ignored it …
well, that isn’t illuminating :(
> locale::facet::_S_create_c_locale name not valid
incidentally, the message is the same when passing "" and when passing "en_GB.UTF-8" (which I got from the environment, see above)
@KonradRudolph what's your glibc, gcc, OS?
@sehe Search for "stare" also returns results for "staring". Interesting.
12:42
Apple clang version 3.1 (tags/Apple/clang-318.0.58) (based on LLVM 3.1svn)
Target: x86_64-apple-darwin11.4.0
Thread model: posix
OS X 10.7
glibc – wait a sec
Oh OS X.
* @(#)stdlib.h 8.5 (Berkeley) 5/19/95
the empty string failing is definitely some bug. Try ideone to be sure.
@rubenvb Damn, just tried the same on a Linux server
Show ideone code.
12:47
$ ./len <<< "♠♣♥♦"
C
Using locale: en_US.UTF-8
♠♣♥♦
12 bytes 4 characters
=> works perfectly!
2 hours ago, by rubenvb
you'll get your stream of un-endianned bytes. Then you need to interpret that manually (or just use the mbtowc conversion, which should work just fine on Linux).
"should work just fine on Linux"
then again, I do need to set an explicit locale, otherwise the result is bollocks
that's true.
although you don't need a locale, you need UTF-8
but that’s OK, just set an empty string
the bytes' values don't care for locale stuff as long as it's all UTF-8
12:51
ok, now the question why this doesn’t work on OS X will be deferred to Stack Overflow
Ell
Ell
I need to learn php :'(
@Ell Why php?
@KonradRudolph it crashes or hangs on Windows+GCC too :/
Ell
Ell
because I need money :L and there are no c++ jobs available for students :P
@Ell ah yeah when I was doing freelance work a lot of it was in PHP.
@Ell What grade/year/school are you?
12:54
@rubenvb OK< but Windows doesn’t even pretend to know about Unix locales and while it’s a pity that cygwin (?) doesn’t handle them perfectly, it’s not too surprising. But OS X should handle them perfectly
@KonradRudolph You're not doing any unix locales there...
Ell
Ell
@mrazza I've just finished year 11, entering year 12 next academic year. Thats UK style, not sure where you are from or how it works where you are, but I'm 16 and will be 17 later this year
That's just Standard C++ built on Standard C.
@Ell yeah. What languages do you know now? Are you doing freelance work online or what?
@rubenv true, fair enough
12:57
maybe it's cmd.exe messing everything up
Ell
Ell
@mrazza well I "know" c++. Well, I'm learning it :P And I used to do some vb.net/c# but I have only ever done desktop stuff, which is the problem, because everyone needs web developers
let's try a file
Ell
Ell
the only non-web stuff is embedded c++ which I don't have any experience with either
so I may as well not be able to programme at all :L so I'm going to attempt to learn php in order to get some money :)
I don't know where to start though really, I know MVC is all the rage but it seems everyone interprets it differently
@Ell you could learn PHP really quickly; I don't see how you could get work doing embedded programming without directly knowing someone or having a degree. There are some C# and .NET jobs online you can get.
@Ell PHP?!
12:58
@Ell when I was your age I was doing a lot of C# and PHP work online
do .net or java
there are plenty of opportunities
File input "works".
@Nils less freelance work
libstdc++ on WIndows has no locale support :/
or C++, just have to search a little longer
Ell
Ell
12:58
I suppose I could do .net, but it's all web isn't it?
let's see about MSVC.
@Ell No it's not. They have projects for desktop applications.
It has sucky locale support.
so I need to get some work done
Ell
Ell
@mrazza oh cool - where have you found work online?
12:59
@Nils Then what are you doing here?
@Ell I've used rentacoder (now called something else) and odesk and vworker

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