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00:39
a sexual fetish for kicks. Does that also make it a foot fetish?
 
1 hour later…
01:44
also we need a way to bulk cast initializer lists
static_cast<float>({ nacs .nac_min,nacs.nac_max/2,nacs.nac_max})
fuck this can probably be done with metaprograming
02:07
just program it in assembly. I hear it's the fastest way to go.
const expr is by far faster
its one of those zero cost abstractions we've been hearing so much about
interesting, I did not know that
I never really understood metaprogramming. Even after having read the definition it still makes no sense to me.
templates
02:23
by templates you mean data structures or more like composable functions.
I feel the term overreaches. what isn't a template
One part of the def I found interesting was self-modifying.
Self modifying code is banned by MS
But it's done all the time with reflect proxies and callbacks
@Rick it’s regular programming, where the result is a program
that's odd. why call it something so specific, isn't it redundant to call it metaprogramming when it's just programming
to distinguish it from other programs which compute something else than a program
02:38
this is getting really confusing, what can a program compute other than a program
@Rick I'm using 'program' in a wide sense, I suppose I should be saying 'program fragment' instead
some programs generate text files that are the actual program of interest
if you write a function which computes the square root of its input that's a normal program
in C++ you could use template meta programming to generate different version of the same program for different data types
if you have ever used something like a generator which takes a wire protocol and spits out a header for use in your program, that’s a meta-program
02:43
so routines and coroutine are the mechanisms of interest.
not especially, no
what is an example of something which is not metaprogramming?
keeping in mind this is all very blurry of course, anything which computes numbers, text, talks to the network, displays shiny things on the screen, makes sounds, and so on
so some sort of imperative. This seems to abstract to talk about it in any meaningful way.
imperative or not is about how you write your program, but not what the result is
02:54
`std::cout << "This is something" << std::endl;` is not a meta program
`std::cout << " std::cout << something << std::endl" << std::endl;` is a terrible way to do meta programing
@Mikhail ah yes, delving straight into quoting! good thinking
I changed a precompiled header so I have nothing to do for 4 minutes
 
3 hours later…
05:50
@Borgleader Been a while since I've seen one of these. I guess they get nuked too quickly.
-4
Q: BITWISE BOOLEAN

JokerWhat if bitwise boolean is used in c++... What s its effect on value then?

 
1 hour later…
06:58
I've spent some time searching for the GNU+Linux equivalents of the following Windows functions: CreateConsoleScreenBuffer, WriteConsoleScreenBuffer, etc. I didn't find what I was looking for, and I'm wondering if someone here knows what these might be? The goal is to have similar access to the console buffer so that you can run "graphical" games directly on the terminal.
Or am I, basically, required to use ncurses lib for this? (Please tag me if you're replying to me. Thanks.)
I only know how to do it with ncurses
07:45
I've not used ncurses before, so what would you suggest here, then? @Mikhail
Learn to use ncurses
There are much harder things in life
Some bullshit ideas include rastering text using Qt
or just embrace the script and write your game in JS
really the correct thing to do is deploy your game as a vm running inside a emscripten port of qemu
or maybe convert to hypercard and use a similar strategy to bring up System 7 (archive.org/details/AppleMacintoshSystem753)
08:32
@Mikhail "Learn to use ncurses. There are much harder things in life." ... I think you misinterpreted what I said. I was asking if you about something specific in ncurses that I could look into as a starting point, not asking for an alternative to ncurses, so the tone of your reply seems rather unwarranted. I'm sure there're harder things in life, but I didn't come here to get a life lecture. But thanks anyway.
09:26
I should learn ncurses. It's been on my todo list for years.
Elsa in drivers seat @YvetteColomb :p
10:01
@Mysticial good lord.
OP: $(question)
U1: this doesnt make much sense can you add some code
OP: Sorry I just want to know if $(question)
:facepalm:
user3956566
@TelKitty aw thanks :) it was so good to see you
Good to see you and the horses again too :)
Hopefully Elsa's tummy is settled.
Morning
Meowing
lawn-morning
10:11
Mowing the lawn tomorrow morning. No kidding.
user3956566
@TelKitty I read the kids the riot act. Don't feed the dog anything that is not dog food lol. Yep the horses are special. I love you coming to visit us :)
user3956566
@TelKitty do you want to borrow a horse?
@YvetteColomb Not enough grass for a horse. I did think about getting a goat at one stage :p
user3956566
and take it around with you in the car
Talking about being lazy ...
@YvetteColomb What a good idea! A goat would be around the same size as Elsa :p
10:17
case N_AC_IDX: val = QVariant::fromValue<condenser_position>(static_cast<condenser_position>(item)); break;
I just unironically wrote this code
My friend used to have a goat, she tied the goat to her front gate. One night, the goat ran off and took the gate with it.
I think you can write it as QVariant::fromValue(static_cast<condenser_position>(item))
user3956566
@TelKitty but they eat all sorts of things...
user3956566
@TelKitty :/
or maybe QVariant::fromValue<condenser_position>(item)?
10:22
Depends on whether item is implicitly convertible. Also, STL will hate you if you do it like that.
 
1 hour later…
11:36
@TelKitty - Let it go...
Hopefully, the joke works, if you account for the dog's name. :P
12:24
I complained about Apple for sending me emails with no value 2 days ago. So today, they sent me an email about one of my apps made exactly $0.7 USD in Feb. Good work apple, no, I wouldn't burst into flames.
12:49
@Mikhail and every other major vendor
 
1 hour later…
13:59
@Mikhail isn't it what JIT compilation basically requires?
14:40
@EuriPinhollow there is a difference between modifying code and creating new code to run
15:12
Can somebody tell how to create sequence diagram for my vc++ project. All I see is codemap in visual studio
 
3 hours later…
17:57
When doing linear algebra or matrix math. What data structure is used to build a high-level representation of the data and order of operation?
@ScarletAmaranth why the facepalm
The answer is not a "matrix"
@Rick depends on the library
CBLAS uses raw arrays
Eigen uses data structures
No library, I mean at a more fundamental level. I recently read that they can be broken down into bipartite graphs @JerryCoffin have you heard of anything like this
 
1 hour later…
19:23
@Mysticial Gamer's nexus did a tour or highcookie's lab... he apparently got a thread ripper up to 5.5Ghz at 1700W
19:59
LN2 right?
@Mysticial yes... that would be nearly impossible to dissipate otherwise. He was able to get the overclockable xeon up to 4. something on a yet to be released noctua air cooler
@StackedCrooked yakusoku
not yet :)
honestly I'm surprised intel didn't rotate the die under the IHS to better help with heat dissipation on that chip
Hello everyone! Might be a stupid question, but it's about C++ anyway: what is Apple's opensource site for? Say, I would like to build ld64. It can be found here: opensource.apple.com/source/ld64 The version that's currently on my Mac is ld64-409.12, and this site has sources for it. I tried to build them, but found out I'm missing headers for libtapi, which can be found here: opensource.apple.com/source/tapi. To be continued...
The problem is, the version of TAPI my ld64 is using is 10.0.0, but the open source one is 1.30 (!) and is incompatible with the latest LLVM, because it uses LLVM's timing feature which has been removed long ago in favour of C++ Chrono
20:06
@ForceBru not getting sued
2
it has nothing to do with transparency or supporting FOSS
So, apparently, it's impossible to build libtapi? Thus, it's impossible to build ld64? Why have it open sourced, then? Or am I missing something?
@ForceBru insofar as the library licensing or original authors allow that, yes
open source doesn't mean build-able source
Well, that sucks... Does this also mean I won't be able to link binaries against libSystem without ld64, then?
Cuz I built the complete LLVM toolchain, with lld, clang and whatnot, but lld can't read Apple's .tbd files cuz it's not linked against TAPI
@ForceBru no idea? I would assume everything apple is just source dump without any of their proprietary patches
with the sole exception of CUPSD
generally speaking the apple open source site is just for the purpose of compliance, any actual open source you should go the project site
@ForceBru I'd guess it probably is actually possible. I've built some of Apple's open-source stuff in the past. It was a nightmare--much more difficult to find all the requisite pieces than with anything else, but eventually, with enough looking, it was all available somewhere or other. That said, in a couple of cases, I'm pretty sure I'd have given up if it was all up to me.
20:14
I also found this. Apparently, they tried to make libtapi part of LLVM, but it wasn't accepted, I guess... There's also zero info about what that whole TAPI project does
I mean, I was able to build the whole LLVM toolchain from GitHub for macOS, but lld can't use the .tbd files. Are there any alternatives? Maybe it's possible to somehow convert a .tbd file to a regular library? Doesn't make much sense tho
Looks like I'm stuck with the toolchain that's shipped with Xcode...
20:37
@ForceBru welcome to Apple
also remember that LLVM is licensed such that apple can do that
20:52
does anyone here use Code::Blocks?
@StackedCrooked ...yet?
I'm halfway through.
21:40
Is there really no way to properly concatenate a char and a string?
"a" + string(1, c)
humm
Qt of course has a nice string lib.
you could reallocate a new string with a bigger size, copy the old string and add the character at the end
silly question - If I have a struct A that contains an array of struct pointers of size 10. If I malloc the struct A, will it also allocate memory for the struct array as well?
@VioAriton Very elegant, almost like Python!
22:06
I wonder if any of you had a look at the Jai language..
But now I need some sleep, n8 and sweet dreams ;)
23:01
std::string hash256_to_hex(char * hash) {
  unsigned const char_mask = 0x000000ff;
  std::stringstream ss;
  ss << std::hex;
  for (size_t i = 0; i < 32; ++i) {
    ss << (static_cast<unsigned>(hash[i]) & char_mask);
  }
  return ss.str();
}
is this a good conversion function?
can I be sure that the mask will always be of the correct length?
doesn't unsigned change on different implementations?
std::string hash256_to_hex(char * hash) {
  uint_fast32_t const char_mask = 0x000000ff;
  std::stringstream ss;
  ss << std::hex;
  for (uint_fast8_t i = 0; i < 32; ++i) {
    ss << (static_cast<uint_fast32_t>(hash[i]) & char_mask);
  }
  return ss.str();
}
maybe this is better
how can read n bytes from stdin?
23:49
@Aurelius This is very similar to how Java does it. uint_fast32_t is not going to make a difference
@Aurelius Java has a better bit mask though.
Where is sehe?

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