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00:19
@northerner roll your own, all you need is a std::unique_lock/lock_guard as a push method
void safe_push(const auto& item){std:unique_lock<std::mutex> lk(m); my_vector.push(item));
now you owe me a $200 consulting fee
 
2 hours later…
02:23
Let's discuss human's stupidity and our inability to visit any other planet (manned mission) despite 7+ billion people.
@northerner Either fine grained locking (like Mikhail suggests), or you pick a third party library (there's nothing in standard C++ for lockless containers).
02:48
A zero-sum game is (confusingly) defined as one where the total payoff to all players
is the same for every instance of the game. Chess is zero-sum because every game has payoff of either 0 + 1, 1 + 0 or 1/2 + 1/2
I don't think the author knows what zero sum game is ...
Winner take 1 (as reward, for example), loser lose 1, or take -1 (as punishment). Thus 1 + (-1) = 0. Thus zero sum game.
This A.I. book is very informative, just could be better written.
Gambling (without agents fees) or option trading (without brokers fees) are good example of zero sum game. Because the sum of everyone's net gain is zero.
03:36
Is 'tall poppy syndrome' only a human phenomenon? I mean, tallest trees in a forest usually get taken down by lightening.
There is a thing called protective coloring. If you are overly showy, there is a good chance you get taken out by predators/competitors.
 
2 hours later…
05:31
Trump is a great entertainer.
Trump: if you can't get up, try to pull someone down with you.
06:32
Must say Bill Gates is pretty good at being a tall poppy - never too showy with his wealth, always display how he tries to advance societies.
07:01
Hm, haven't used SQL since school.
Erm, if I have two tables ("Id" "X") and ("Id" "Y"), then how do I join them into ("Id" "X" "Y")?
07:22
Never mind I found it :)
 
2 hours later…
09:40
Also, in addition to whatever petty technical problems the C++ is having, it is good to see some people acknowledge the reality of academic knowledge. Specifically that most of my peers' work is fraud, nature.com/articles/d41586-019-00439-9
The next step in this self awarenese would be holding scientists accountable by people outside of the scientific community. I fear we may need to vote republican for that.
how can I use mmap with a FILE * instead of a file descriptor?
10:11
Jeff Bezos applauded for going public about Enquirer 'extortion' attempt
This sounds so heroic, but guess what the public agrees on?
"The perception among very affluent people is often 'I have this level of wealth, I'm untouchable"
So if you are very affluent, you are untouchable??
US and China have a lot in common - most unfair societies.
10:50
This general guide shows who is responsible when an infestation occurs. ... wait a minute, how could they list birds and possums as pest and vermins? I would totally love a bird infestation on the property!
11:06
@Aurelius I cannot even make sense of the question. Are you saying you want to get FILE* for a memory region?
11:26
the question is very simple
since mmap takes a descriptor
I was asking if there is a way to use that with a FILE *
maybe similar version of the function for example
seems that mmap can only be used with open() and not with fopen() for example
@wilx thanks
@fredoverflow But... this is my own project I'm working on :\
@thecoshman Do you know what you want? :)
@fredoverflow Kinda :P
Just not sure how to go about it exactly
But I think I'm going to go with Ktor
and apparently HTMl DSL is fast to process
11:41
One for @mysticial?
24
Q: Crash with icc: can the compiler invent writes where none existed in the abstract machine?

BeeOnRopeConsider the following simple program: #include <cstring> #include <cstdio> #include <cstdlib> void replace(char *str, size_t len) { for (size_t i = 0; i < len; i++) { if (str[i] == '/') { str[i] = '_'; } } } const char *global_str = "the quick brown fox jum...

@StackedCrooked love it. Sadly not all our computer versions support it well
12:42
@Aurelius Nobody uses FILE*. Neither should you
13:19
@Aurelius But if you already have FILE* you can use fileno(f) to get the int file handle.
 
3 hours later…
18:00
@sehe Definitely a bug. You can create a "legitimate" version of the same test using race conditions.
18:47
@Mysticial ever heard of: github.com/cmuratori/meow_hash ?
 
2 hours later…
21:08
what kinds of problems are solved by using the vertical ordering of binary trees?
21:31
@Borgleader wtf
cant tell if good wtf or bad wtf
21:51
Only wtf part is that they couldn't find a fast non-cryptographic hash floating around the aether. Its actually a pretty neat library.
22:01
> On modern Intel x64 CPUs, it hashes 16 bytes per cycle single-threaded.
That's faster than the built-in CRC instruction.
Of course, I could pull this of as well. However, it'd be a rather low quality hash :P

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