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00:05
Windows update takes forever.
@CaptainGiraffe 1 million strings of 6 chars each isn't nearly enough to make you run out of ram
std::sort will do fine
@CaptainGiraffe count on us ... lenient ... in what sort of ways
 
2 hours later…
02:13
energy is all around us, all we need to do is collecting them effectively ... for example, using some sort of directional mini black hole :x
@CaptainGiraffe I had this one question that worked really well for finding students who thought outside the box. "How do you calculate the average of more numbers than you can possibly read into ram or otherwise access".
02:29
earth is pretty good at collecting energy
by trapping any energy or mass that getting too close
earth, you piece of attractive rock in the space!
02:56
why people are supposed to be happy because royal wedding when tax payers are actually paying for someone else wedding
 
2 hours later…
04:47
@TelKitty for the love of god, somebody feed that girl
 
1 hour later…
nwp
nwp
06:07
> What does it say about our society when more people would rather help those with superficial needs?
That's for you to find out! You made the experiment!
(Actually they didn't, they just made a mislabeled clickbaity youtube video)
Don't feed the animals
06:25
I've been trying to derive some equations for two weeks but its not clear how to demonstrate progress to my research advisor.
06:36
lol compile time arm "emulator"
07:34
@CaptainGiraffe Radix sort
@Borgleader I only answer interesting sorting questions (apparently I don't answer questions anymore) :p
@Mikhail there is no guarantee that you could derive the equation after another two weeks
actually most of the questions with the tag get downvoted to death, so it's hard to find interesting unaswered questions that I can actually answer ^^'
better think of a medium to long term solution if desire to spend time on deriving said solution
@CaptainGiraffe In doubt use ska_sort
07:59
If I create a stack array of objects with implicit lifetime, is it legal to use placement new to replace an object of the array with a new value?
08:19
wasn't this one of the use cases for std::launder?
@TelKitty phft, go back and do it again where the only things she changes is the sign
@nwp not so, it's ok to do an experiment and just say "Hey, look at this data we found, looks interesting"
but it's barely more than a single data point
08:39
I am Edward Lametek Adamu, the Deputy Governor, Corporate Services, Central bank Federal Republic of Nigeria.
I wonder why I found your email in spam </sarcasm>
@ratchetfreak that too, but the 'data' point at the moment is trying to handle so many variables
@StackedCrooked wasn't std::launder mostly designed to be able to replace const and reference parameters?
I found it funny when more 6 million pounds have been used in prince william's wedding when tax payer could have used it for, say better cladding for the burned down apartments in which 79 people were killed. Apparently royal wedding is a bigger news in the US than the unrest in Jerusalem.
Implicit lifetime objects would be "created" with std::bless in that other proposal
08:53
I suspect the unrest has been already translated into high fuel price, at least here.
nwp
nwp
09:04
@Morwenn Someone in a cppcon video said surprisingly clobbering objects is not UB. I don't think I can find it anymore though.
Clobbering?
nwp
nwp
I'm fairly sure the question is equivalent to whether new std::string; is UB.
My question would be about whether this is legal: int arr[10]; new(arr+5) int(42);
nwp
nwp
Clobbering means overwriting an existing object with a new one. As long as you don't try to access the overwritten object it's fine not UB.
@Morwenn That should not be UB, not even if you replace int with std::mutex or something.
Hum, replacing it without accessing it later would be pretty much useless in my case ^^'
nwp
nwp
09:08
Well, you can access the new int, just not the old int.
oh, ok
I was toying with the idea of having an std::inplace_merge-like function where you can explicitly pass a buffer
Passing a stack-allocated array as a buffer would be interesting, but you need object that you can trivially replace to make it legal I guess
nwp
nwp
@Morwenn I'm fairly sure that the const is only relevant to make compilers create bad code due to optimizations. It should be equally UB without the const.
Reusing memory is far too subtle :/
nwp
nwp
@Morwenn I'm not sure. Taking the buffer and putting your objects in there is no problem, but eventually the function will return and destruct the array which is UB because it accesses dead objects. I don't know if there is some exception for char arrays or something where it is fine.
Propose std::leak(object); that prevents the compiler from destructing a stack object :P
@nwp isn't it ok with trivially destructible objects in light of the implicit lifetime proposal?
nwp
nwp
09:17
No clue, I have not read it.
@sehe Have you seen youtube.com/watch?v=FapaI1bxH2s? Next Kissin?
nwp
nwp
So it looks like it is not ok.
damn >.>
that's what I feared when reading the same sentence 10 minutes ago
nwp
nwp
09:33
I guess you could make the array, trivially destruct each element, pass the array of dead objects to be used by the algorithm and then placement new a bunch of new objects before going out of scope. But that is super silly.
Actually I'm not sure you that would even be valid. Not sure if it is a problem that the objects that were automatically created and will be automatically destroyed are not the same, they just happen to be at the same place.
Implicit lifetimes would still allow to replaced std::uninitialized_move by std::memcpy for types that are trivially movable and trivially destructible
@nwp that does sound too silly to implement anyway :p
nwp
nwp
Wait, you don't need to trivially destruct the elements, you can just clobber them. But I guess you do need to make the objects valid again for destruction.
yeah, that's the problem
nwp
nwp
Maybe tell the regular void people that we want void array[42]; to compile and guarantee that no constructor or destructor is called here.
actually meant trivially move constructible instead of trivially movable in message about std::uninitialized_move
Actually in this case I can pretty much guarantee that the regions won't overlap (initialized vs. uninitialized memory) so std::memcpy can do the job
Yay, can't wait for formal implicit lifetimes to be accepted
 
1 hour later…
10:58
I need to stop looking at winter camping in the wild videos
watched too much yuru camp?
11:18
real life camping
I have bought like 8-9 tents in the past 5 years
I do camping quite frequently, like once per 2-3 months on average.
Mostly for weekend trips, but sometimes I fly over to some where for a scenic multi-day hike.
why are you changing tents so often?
Me too, I'm homeless.
a few broke, some are ultralight for multi-day hikes, some are big and bulky for car camping, some for easy setup at night because late arrival and only stay for 1-2 nights
I have homeless fantasies, nobody has called it a psychological illness yet ~_~
also places with best sceneries usually either does not have any permanent accommodations or in rare cases, do, but cost at least $250-$1000+ a night
tents can be more hygienic in certain ways - because I am the only one using my sleeping bags and only people who are already close to me and I use those tents
while as even 5 star hotels are shared by many many people, so ...
11:35
@TelKitty but the sheets are replaced between guests and the room is cleaned
they can't clean every single inch, and blanket inside is not cleaned after each guest
I wash my sleep bag and hose my tents and dry them before or after each use ... I shouldn't but I do. I am a hygiene freak.
most diseases on humans are transmitted by humans
I am not saying hotels are unclean, because most good hotels are, just that if you share stuff, by going to restaurants or bar for example, you are more likely to catch a flu I find.
11:51
go to any kind of convention and you'll likely get sick with con-flu
if you overzealously strive to keep away from "uncleanness", your immune system will be weaker
not telling to dive into dumpsters, but overzealousness is not good
12:19
I kind of like the proposed std::elastic_integer
Also I want std::contiguous_iterator_tag
12:38
The wealth of bad advice people give... wow
13:12
Dropped in to say hi! :)
Hi! :)
Is there any info about the unconference?
Everything should be on the Discord
Ah, thanks - I'll look at it at home - seems my company's IT is blocking it O_o
14:12
15:07
@Morwenn the dream was to use std::memcmp to check for equality
@Mikhail but padding bits
std::has_unique_object_representations to the rescue x)
granted it doesn't offer much and lacks an std::is_trivially_equality_comparable somewhere x)
Hey All, someone here who could help me with a simple c++ question?
sorry wrong room :p
 
5 hours later…
20:32
> The way a human moves the mouse before checking the checkbox can be distinct from how a program (a bot) checks a checkbox.
Cool stuff.
@StackedCrooked Unless you're me. I failed the Turing test!
"That one's clearly working too hard at seeming human. Must be a machine!"
Did the captcha fail on you?
Or are you one of those guys that use a trackball?
@StackedCrooked The only good use I've seen for a trackball was Centipede.
It's also good for playing trackball emulator.
20:51
@StackedCrooked Umm...seems like kind of a cheat to use the real thing and claim it's an emulation.
21:11
@StackedCrooked I often tab over to it and hit space on it...
though sometimes I do get some "go train some image recognition from our streetview for us" challenges
21:38
@ratchetfreak I'll beat std::sort on this of course. That is trivial.
@Morwenn Is there a boost implementation? =)
21:53
@StackedCrooked Now theyre going to use ML to learn how a human moves the mouse before clicking the checkbox
22:48
I doubt they do, they put pictures of streets, highway and obscure places and ask people to click on all the pictures with cars ... twice. Then not remembering your IP and do it all over again next time you trying to start a session even though you have not restarted your browser. Is this what you can intelligent detection?
server provider does it with their login page and I reckon it's one of the dumbest robot detectors I have ever seen
@fredoverflow Thanks for this video. It's exactly what I needed!
@TelKitty or street signs or store fronts, etc.
yeah ... but luckily they were doing it with 9 pictures
so twice is 18 pictures
if they change it to 4 by 4 ... twice
23:18
@StackedCrooked sehe had an even better video with this content using proper c++. not sure I can find it anymore though.
Using boost spirit I presume?
C↫↫
where the hell is sehe?
6
23:40
probably at a piano concerto

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