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06:27
Hmm, so whats the best way to remove binary blobs from a gitrepo on gitlab to reduce file size?
the same way you do it for any git repo
bfg
06:53
What do you think about git filter-repo?
07:05
Morning
@ABuckau Numbers, number of centimetres to be more exact. Like 35 to indicate 35cm or 121 for 1.21 metres.
07:21
@Mikhail sure it works, but it's just slower. If the history isn't that long then it doesn't really make difference which method you use
Yeah, I found this script which is magical: stackoverflow.com/a/42544963/314290
07:56
$ git reflog expire --expire=now --all && git gc --prune=now --aggressive taking like 20 minutes
@TelKitty :|
Historically, interoperability with C was an important part of C++'s design. Is this still the case?
I mean, things like stdint.h are now deprecated, but what's the value in deprecating that? Doesn't that just hurt interoperability with C?
> I mean, things like stdint.h are now deprecated

whut, since when?
Since 1998
There are plans to undeprecate them though
@Morwenn Oh, that's interesting.
@Morwenn I see.
but cstdint works for interop doesn't it?
If you're using a C library in your C++ codebase, then that C library will use stdint.h.
Also some small libraries are still written in a way that they compile with both C and C++
Android seems to have some of those
The point is kinda moot because you can change the include to a supported header: <stdint.h> (C++11) (deprecated) Behaves as if each name from <cstdint> is placed in global namespace
08:37
Qt Creator seems to be getting worse with each release.
How so?
I use the "existing build system" project type. So the include paths are in the ".includes" file. But the most recent release seems to ignore that and puts squiggly lines under all my includes.
Also since 3.0 or so I can't use it on top of a sshfs mount anymore because the autocompletion engine is too agressive and blocks the GUI thread. Making the program freeze 95% of the time.
ouch
Time to move to vim
 
2 hours later…
10:27
So, my force push is failing because I'm probably pushing way too much in one go. Is there some way to split a force push?
you can push the branches individually
Well, I have this one big 6 GB branch that is failing to force push.
I trimmed it down from ~10 GB (the limit) to 6 GB but I can't force push it...
So, this person recommends splitting them github.com/git-lfs/git-lfs/issues/3758, but I'm not really sure what the proposal is. Looks like it simply pushes everything to a new repo. But I don't want to use a new repo. I just want to pushed a cleaned version to my old one.
well if you're brave you could just push --delete every branch first and then push the branches if pushing them individually is not enough
Yeah, but I suspect that one branch will blow the limit because they have a bunch of binary assets (mostly drivers).
Individual commits won't blow the limit...
11:02
you could probably filter-branch hack something together that pushes commits one-by one up the tree
hi, anyone knows where can i start learning about windows.h from beginning for cpp
@MarqDan What do you want to build?
@StackedCrooked because C is not always interoperable.. the C committee has occasionally done stupid crap
 
1 hour later…
Didn't know suggestions could be questions too, @Mgetz
@BartekBanachewicz i want to start building simple program but with a GUI, not cmd
13:38
@ABuckau Oops, was on rural property dealing with other things & away from the Pi. Now I am back home, checking the code & setup, Lidar is plugged in on a USB port on the Pi, "/dev/ttyAMA0" to be more exact. So I would say, digital.
ser = serial.Serial("/dev/ttyAMA0", 115200)
 
9 hours later…
user1804599
23:05
Lol yet another GUI toolkit
23:42
Yeah, a native C++ Windows only one, at a time where most UI is done using Web technologies.
Blast from the past.

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