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01:11
I took many drone pictures while inspecting the land. I wonder whether one day I would get arrest for being suspected of potentially spying for the Chinese government, even though I have the least to do with any government.
In Win32, is the a way that you can force your window to always be on on top of other Windows? (Even from the same program)
The idea is that nothing should obscure this Window (which runs an OGL context, and controls a hardware device that appears as a second display)
idk, maybe run DeferWindowPos in a loop?
its on its own screen? check all windows and remove everything else?
seems kind of anti-windows tho..
In the ideal case the program would take complete control of the psuedo-monitor, so that no user interaction would be possible.
pseudo?
you want a section of your screen to act like own monitor?
SLMs (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spatial_light_modulator) are often controlled like computer monitors, its not a real monitor but you're supposed to control it like a monitor.
01:32
It's only okay if you are the user, but if you are developing a program that's forcefully staying on top of all other programs, be prepared for some red ears and itch nose (because a user somewhere is cursing you and your program).
 
1 hour later…
02:32
Spamming people with HD drone pictures ...
 
2 hours later…
04:32
@Mikhail SetWindowPos(your_window, HWND_TOPMOST, ...); ?
 
1 hour later…
05:34
 
2 hours later…
07:38
We all love hoarding to certain extend, hoarding is within human nature. I mean I do respect who can live a very simple, self sufficient life with very few possessions a lot. Unfortunately 99.9+% of us are not capable of living like that.
08:05
I hoard..but only things I think will potentially be useful - not paper for example (er..unless i decide to one day paper-machet , but i doubt it) . I grew up not living near even a small city, so if you couldnt make it yourself, you often did without.
some day im going to use that 0-gauge wire, im sure of it :p
I hoard for sentimental values.
So if the solar farm venture does get go ahead, I am going to build a large shed at some stage, all the stuff I could not find space could just go in ...
how long until it starts turning a profit?
Depends on the number of expansions. But should generate profit as soon as the panels start to properly output electricity on to the grid.
no cost to set up? you have land and panels already?
It's like turning large sum of capital into steady stream of cashflow with decent profit if everything turns out to be as calculated.
08:18
it was a simple question..
@ABuckau My dad and a multi-millionaire relative is pooling up a fund.
Land is the cheaper part, labour, foundation + panels would cost a lot more.
We are not selling any properties, my dad is selling shares to get this going.
Land in rural Australia is cheap.
Commute can be an issue.
But this is not definitely happening, currently maybe 50% chance of actually happening. My dad is very interested in solar farms. Couple of million is a small amount of said relative, who is interested in investing in Australia. So ...
 
2 hours later…
10:05
@TelKitty what about the 'get Andrew an m14/m16 from Vietnam' fund?
< 3
@ABuckau ?
rifles used by american military in vietnam. surely there were a lot of them "left behind". edit: Andrew is I.
kitty want a new servant? :D
New Servant? Sounds like I had an old one. No, I am the 'public servant' here - building houses for people to live, generate electricity for people to use. I am such a great contributor to society. </Shameless_self_promotion>
@ABuckau I could visit you when I swing by in the next 12 months if you have pet chickens ...
i would get 10000 chickens if you bring the m16
10:15
or not :'(
I was going to borrow one from you if I go camping in the wild (so I can sight a bear).
ill make a fresh batch of marshmallo bullets then :p
Hey @YvetteColomb, join us! We are speaking gibberish again!
ouch. a man can dream, cant he..
@ABuckau Do they generate explosive sound? I was told it's not the bullets that scare the bears but the sounds.
10:18
and also lower the charge to 1/10 of normal. *
good call.
I want fried chicken
I had chicken vindaloo yesterday though, and it was really good *-*
after you return from Vietnam ill cook you some.
Vietnam?
user3956566
@TelKitty tired. Just got in. I rejoin all my starred rooms when I come online.
user3956566
10:27
@TelKitty vdery cute
@YvetteColomb How come, just back from the paddock?
user3956566
@TelKitty stayed there late. Caught one of Vanessa's horses and put it in another paddock It's supposed to rain the next week, so I wanted to make the most of it
Yeah. Probably start raining from tomorrow, at least that's the forecast.
user3956566
I g2g. so tired. :)
Rest well :)
user3956566
10:33
thanks
12:24
You seem to be an avid hunter, so in which (computer) game do you usually practice your shooting skills?
@TelKitty daww, the kitten is holding it's lunch nearby
@Mgetz The kitty is bored because having to baby sit the chicks for mother hen. :p
Oh I was just teasing
nwp
nwp
12:48
I spent days to write an import function in Lua. Yay for reinventing a wheel that the Lua authors should have invented better.
C++ is still reinventing it x)
nwp
nwp
I mean seriously, how hard can "Run this script" be in a scripting language?
It turns out to be hard enough to get wrong.
Also the hope of sol3 solving all our problems died when I noticed that I would need C++17 which requires hacking qmake and I don't want to.
Not qmake actually, just the mkspec stuff, but still.
Which means our software only builds in our special snowflake environment a sane environment that doesn't simply override compiler flags.
What a beauty: return assert(loadfile(assert(find_script(name))))()
assert returning the thing it tested is kinda neat.
nwp
nwp
13:03
How does one implement if (string.endswith(".lua"))? Why is this so difficult?
strcmp it is -.-
std::string::ends_with
nwp
nwp
Cool. I'm gonna use that in about 8 years.
x)
I should be able to start using it this year
But I have no need for it in my libraries
bool ends_with(const std::string& str, const std::string& sub_str)
{
    return std::search(str.rbegin(), str.rend(), sub_str.rbegin(), sub_str.rend()) == str.rbegin();
}
nwp
nwp
13:18
That's kinda neat.
std::search seems a bit overkill, can't you just use std::equal?
nwp
nwp
They generally have different lengths.
In C++14 there's a version taking two pairs of iterators
that's what I was thinking, std::equal(str.rbegin(), str.rend()-sub_str.length(), sub_str.rbegin(), sub_str.rend()) == str.rbegin();
with a check that sub_str is smaller than str
@Morwenn we have too many algorithms :P
(tbh std::search is the first one i ran into while googling "search sequence in sequence")
honestly though i doubt itll make a big difference when searching a 4 character extension once in a while ;)
sure but search matches locations it shouldn't need to
@Borgleader beware though, std::search actually hides several algorithms
And not yet the one generally used in strstr
Even though it was also proposed for standardization :p
tbh the natural solution would be to use substr if it didn't create a whole new string -_-
nwp
nwp
I'd say "If compilers weren't so bad at optimizing out memory allocations".
I expect that to get much better in C++20 when they are required to do so in constexpr contexts, hoping that the other contexts benefit.
AFAIK only Clang actually takes advantage of new/delete elision to this day
Not sure whether any compiler actually fuses memory allocations
13:46
@Morwenn vOv
I guess that the default searcher uses Knuth-Morris-Pratt, and there are Boyer-Moore and Boyer-Moore-Horspool searchers in <functional>
And there's a proposal to add a Crochemore-Perrin searcher too
nwp
nwp
Clang is confusing me. That's a wrong warning because no RVO on parameters, right?
14:24
it gets optimized into a move anyway: coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/cd7a68561f49ce64
nwp
nwp
If the function is visible and can be inlined then yes. If it is in a dll it can't be.
> In a return statement or a throw-expression, if the compiler cannot perform copy elision but the conditions for copy elision are met or would be met, except that the source is a function parameter, the compiler will attempt to use the move constructor even if the object is designated by an lvalue; see return statement for details.
nwp
nwp
The example on the bottom of this still produces different results.
Although I guess the non-move result is better, so may as well remove it.
@nwp I read that wrong. A dll prevents RVO, not moving.
14:43
@ratchetfreak reading that I can't parse whether function parameters are implicitly moved or not when returned x)
the notes linked are a bit clearer:
How are they clearer? It's exactly what you quoted ^^"
> If expression is an lvalue expression that is the (possibly parenthesized) name of an automatic storage duration object [...], then overload resolution to select the constructor to use for initialization of the returned value is performed twice:

first as if expression were an rvalue expression [move ctor], and if no suitable conversion is available, or if the type of the first parameter of the selected constructor is not an rvalue reference to the object's type (possibly cv-qualified),

overload resolution is performed a second time, with expression considered as an lvalue [non-const cop
I meant linked in the section I quoted
oh, notes linking to notes
IOW if you return a local or a parameter you are guaranteed that move is at least attempted
14:49
ok
So the only fix we need is when the parameters are rvalue references
well, "only"
nwp
nwp
Otherwise C++ is perfect.
Just like I am perfect yeah
Exactly that
it'd be nice if the same thing happened for the last use of any scope-local object
True
I keep moving passed-by-copy parameters on last use
But I guess "last use" is hard to define in a way that doesn't break horribly once you try and decide that in the face of turing complete programs and goto
15:00
I often have return sorter(being, end, std::move(compare), std::move(projection));
nwp
nwp
Critical error detected c0000374 -> Heap corruption. Hmm, qmake probably screwed up, let's make a full rebuild. Critical error detected c0000374. Hmm, can't debug on Windows properly, let's start the Linux VM. Program runs just fine -_-
@nwp during runtime or build time?
nwp
nwp
runtime
I've been having segfaults for 3 weeks, and nobody seems to be able to actually identify the cause, which is amazing
nwp
nwp
Learn from Qt code: new everything, never delete, easy segfault prevention.
> The GRUB boot loader was previously installed to a disk that is no longer present, or whose unique identifier has changed for some reason.
Not the screen you want to see after apt dist-upgrade.
15:40
@nwp have you tried ASAN? and UBSAN?
 
1 hour later…
nwp
nwp
16:43
@Mgetz Yes. No issues.
 
2 hours later…
18:38
Is there any way to get the characters between 2 char *?
nevermind, done it
18:56
When it comes to steaks I always go for "a point" (medium) because it sounds the best. I once had saignant (rare) and didn't like that too much, but that was a long time ago. Maybe I should reconsider.
To be honest I'd go for "bien cuit" (well done), but everyone seems to hate me if I do that.
// get the characters from head to tail
return 0;
^ Nice comment.
danke
Yay or nay for the alloc_string function (onlinegdb.com/rkSFNYSwV)
it returns a new string between head and tail
too many reallocs?
19:15
nay
too many reallocs, also side effects in expressions
should I then allocate the initial string bigger so I reduce the number of reallocs?
take lessons from std::vector<T> and allocate x (like: 1.5 or 2) times bigger block instead of increasing the size by a constant
also
...wait a moment
you already have all the information there
since you pass the pointer to the first and last character of the input string, you know the size already
It's not the last character
it is
from the perspective of the alloc_string function
oh
oh so If I do sizeof
19:21
no
tail - head
yeah you are right
hold up, if I've got a struct that has a char * and then I malloc the struct, do I have to malloc It's char * as well?
struct whatever* p = malloc(sizeof(*p)); will only allocate memory for the struct itself, so yes
yeah makes sense, thanks
19:38
Yeah, you'll only get enough space for the pointer itself, not for whatever it points to.
In general, you need one malloc (and therefore one free) per pointer.
19:49
which one would be faster if I'd need a bigger array - realloc it or just malloc another 1 then copy the content from A to B
 
3 hours later…
22:28
Realloc has the potential to be faster and more cleanly expresses the intent of the code.

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