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13:01
it's a SI unit
oh wait... I see what you did there
Video.js video y u no IE9
It even works in IE7.
how do i do a printscr on my second monitor?
@LuchianGrigore In windows it captures both automatically.
oh, right :|
I didn't scroll right
13:04
Use ShareX.
This kaggle thing is pretty cool
@LuchianGrigore I bet you didn't scroll, right?
right, I didn't scroll right
13:19
@StackedCrooked it's the muscle buildup you get from crapping too much
@sehe oh god, serious lols
@StackedCrooked maybe he scrolled left?
There was no left to scroll to
Or, there was no scroll left to the left, but I did right by scrolling right
@JohannesSchaub-litb any chance you will absolve us by showing an example of what you mean?
In other news, why is this guy cpptruths.blogspot.nl not in this room more often
13:26
his examples seem nice
@sehe Maybe he wants to actually get something done once in a while instead... :-)
unlikely - but you may be right
@thecoshman You mean he's a southpaw?
Or he uses the mouse with his right hand, except for scrolling, which he does with the first finger on his left hand.
@BartekBanachewicz yeah. I found him via his very well done roundup about noexcept swap and move construction: cpptruths.blogspot.nl/2011/09/…
@StackedCrooked lame pun-coon strikes again
13:29
@StackedCrooked shift-alt-numlock, num keypad :)
Hello.
@Rapptz reportz
@sehe I don't get it.
I must be missing out on some secret awesome key combo.
@sehe Why are those line numbers random?
I don't see any line numbers on the site
13:33
I see them, but they aren't random.
Is it on the code?
On the code?
The line numbers.
It'd be on it ergo 1 int main()
not in it.
The line numbers are in the left margin of the code samples.
  void swap(Modern & p)
    noexcept(noexcept(swap(std::declval<int &>(),
                           std::declval<int &>())) &&
             noexcept(swap(std::declval<std::string &>(),
                           std::declval<std::string &>())) &&
             noexcept(swap(std::declval<std::array<L::legacy, 5> &>(),
                           std::declval<std::array<L::legacy, 5> &>())));
My head..
@StackedCrooked it's not secret, I just said it out loud in chat
13:36
I tried that but didn't do anything.
@StackedCrooked Yeah I learned a lot about function-style noexcept reading that. I had no idea
On Ubuntu.
Weird how on my screen it doesn't have line numbers. Maybe it's because I disabled javascript.
@StackedCrooked Ah. It's mouse-keys. I remember the key combo used to work (and do the same) on ubuntu in the past, but I admit having tried it recently, it didn't work any more. I assumed it was because I switched to Mint in the mean time
Looks much better now with it enabled.
13:37
@Rapptz It sure is
@Rapptz JavaScript could be used to generate them.
@StackedCrooked It is the famous SyntaxHighlighter plugin (alexgorbatchev.com/SyntaxHighlighter)
@sehe Can it be considered top-pro level C++, or are things even harder? (in terms of learning)
@StackedCrooked They aren't random (unless the random generator coincidentally generated sequential numbers from 1 upwards...)
@BartekBanachewicz Can't judge it from reading one article (which drew heavily on the input by Dave Abrahams and Howard Hinnant, of considerable C++ ISO Standards Committee fame) - but at first glance I'd say it looks like a good sampling of library-quality modern C++ discussion
@BartekBanachewicz And yet no-one on the entire fucking planet except a few geeks thought that "hey, this thing is pretty cool, I'm going to buy one and install a bunch on games on it, use it as my primary phone, use it to get directions to places, use it to look things up on the internet and so on"
I wonder why... Could it, perhaps, be because of the point you fear so much, the one you refuse to entertain: that Apple made an innovative product which just beat the pants off everything else that was available at the time?
13:49
What about those without any pants on?
@R.MartinhoFernandes obviously they had the pants beat off them
@R.MartinhoFernandes they took a serious spanking to to butt
If computers are deterministic machines, then how can UB exist?
:P
Xeo
Xeo
@StackedCrooked Humans are undeterministic, and so is the input they give :)
Yeah, I'm often not very determined on things.
13:59
Heh
"@bigl have you debugged?"
blablabla
@bigl that doesn't answer my question...
Well then I don't understand your question
Ell
Ell
ub is just too much effort to determinine
UB means "i don't know if I don't know your exact PC specs, date, and your cc number"
@MohamedAhmedNabil Hello.
What category do stuff like (goto and if and while) fall under?
Ell
Ell
14:05
actually what if you get data from /dev/random ?
Conditional Statements and Loops?
Ell
Ell
control structures
oh yeah statements
/dev/random is realy entropy is.t it?
Btw, is kyrostat totally closed now, or can I take a peek?
yea control structues yea. Thanks. I needed that name to look it up in the C++ refrence
@BartekBanachewicz There's nothing to peek at, I think.
14:07
Anyone have this book?
@R.MartinhoFernandes sad_face.jpg
I'm still working on ogonek, which sprouted from it, but I don't think there's much else.
Ell
Ell
there's a cool website
@R.MartinhoFernandes "ogonek"? where did that name come from?
14:11
@R.MartinhoFernandes Haha, i was wondering if it really was the polish word ^^
@jalf When the original iPhone came out, Nokia had been selling Symbian smart phones for quite a while, and no it was just a few geeks who bought them either -- more Symbian phones were being sold than iPhones right up until Nokia announced that Symbian was dead and they were switching to Windows.
See table 1 for 2010 sales figures:
is using goto bad programming practice
@MohamedAhmedNabil just a sec
@MohamedAhmedNabil here : stackoverflow.com/questions/12034241/… .By the way, is using search so hard?
@MohamedAhmedNabil IMO, it's not bad practice in itself, but it often indicates that you haven't thought about the problem enough, and there's probably a better way to do it.
14:13
@R.MartinhoFernandes oh, come on, we've all already seen that one
what about the break good or bad?
@MohamedAhmedNabil Neutral. Perfectly acceptable, but no reason to look for excuses to use it.
@MohamedAhmedNabil what about the random questions out of the blue?
goto depends entirely on the situation.
@Rapptz I think the gorilla answered it the best way.
14:17
Well I've only used it like.. once.
@Rapptz Yeah, there are two situations. #1 Do you want to use goto? Use it. #2 Do you want to write good code? Do not use it. :P
And that was out of sheer laziness
@Rapptz do not use goto.
If two functions, in the same process, load the same DLL and each of those functions saves its own handle to the DLL, does each function get its own DLL "stack"?
AFAIK (i.e., I don't know), loaded modules are ref-counted.
14:25
yep, they are
@BartekBanachewicz :)
So basically, the two functions can access/read/write the same "variables"?
sbi
sbi
@R.Martinho, can you take a look at this question over at SF?
@R.MartinhoFernandes in windows
@sbi ServerFault?
Oh, PS.
@sehe Well, DLLs...
14:29
@R.MartinhoFernandes You said loaded modules, which is also valid terminology on other platforms :)
@sbi Hmm, I think it's a limitation of svn, then. I've used it in hg commit -m $multilinemessage and it works ok.
sbi
sbi
@R.MartinhoFernandes Ah, Ok. So I should ask at a SVN forum, really. Sigh.
(Just in case. "foo\nbar" is not a multiline string in PS. The escape character is backtick)
sbi
sbi
@R.MartinhoFernandes That $newExternals variable is the outcome of a line akin to $newExternals = $($oldExternals | foreach-object -process {ProcessEachLine $_}), so it's really multi-line. Also, when I write its content to a file, manually change that to be ASCII, and then type the svn command at the command line myself, using the file as input, everything works as expected.
Ok, I just mentioned in case you were being bitten by that.
14:53
why does outlook mark deleted drafts as unread by default?
where is the sense in that?
Well, VS crashed agaiiiin.
Or, rather, it just froze.
meh, VS
sbi
sbi
@thecoshman "Why does Outlook..." "Stop right there. There is no Why? in Outlook. It just is."
man, these last few minutes on a Friday always drag
@sbi not sure if you are saying Outlook is good or bad...
sbi
sbi
@thecoshman Due to some plugin connecting it to an inhouse tool, I have to use Outlook for certain tasks, and I dread it. I use TB for everything else.
15:07
What's TB?
Oh, Thunderbird.
@sbi ah. I dabbled with TB for a while, was indeed very nice. But I prefer to stick to web mail
sbi
sbi
@thecoshman I hate webmail. Can't write a mail when you're offline.
user image
2
@sbi yeah, I can see how that could be a bit of a deal breaker, but for personal use, I don't really send that much email. And to be fair, at work when I want to send email, I want it sent NOW so there is not much use in caching it to send later
Is that Excel for Mac?
@R.MartinhoFernandes you mean crap for crap?
ah, bit harsh maybe
sbi
sbi
15:10
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah, looks like it.
I don't get why the change of logo. I guess it looks more like a Window now.
is it not the font they changed?
oh wait, I have been so stpid :P
@R.MartinhoFernandes I think it's part of the joke.
@thecoshman I don't think Excel is crap. I don't have much use for it, though.
@R.MartinhoFernandes what annoys me about it is that way people treat it like some sort DB
sbi
sbi
15:13
@thecoshman The problem isn't caching and sending later, the problem is when I need to be online to be able to create a mail that's a reply to a lengthy email lots of which I am citing etc. — in short: when typing it in some other editor isn't easy. Works beautifully in an emailer (except for Outlook, of course). But if I'd use webmail, I'd have to be online, which means dozens of programs running on my machine might access the Internet to download their updates — which is a deal breaker via UMTS.
lol, the update rush hour.
@sbi you... you don't update?
sbi
sbi
@thecoshman I do, but not via UMTS!
@thecoshman Not over UMTS.
sbi
sbi
@R.MartinhoFernandes :b
15:15
oh :P
I had to look it up
not used to hearing people call it that, I normally just here people say 3G (yes I know it's not always 3G, but it's easy enough and people know what it means in a practical sense)
sbi
sbi
@thecoshman I never know all the different connection types.
3G is just 3rd Generation.
sbi
sbi
What's UMTS vs. 3g vs. HDSPA(sp?) vs. WhateverElseThereIs?
> Is there a transcript and/or write-up of the lectures for reference purposes? Failing that how about time tags on the video?
EDGE < WCDMA < HDSPA < 3G < LTE
15:18
> Every episode is an undiluted stream of consciousness (mine is filled with cats meowing), but maybe Charles has some resources here.
I think...
That's what I like about standards. There are always plenty of them to choose from.
well, it's not like you can just pick and choose which one to use
sbi
sbi
This is steampunk!
15:19
your phone has to support it and you have to have coverage for it
sbi
sbi
@thecoshman Ah, thanks.
@thecoshman I don't think LTE is even available here in Germany.
@sbi not sure about the order of the first three... but they are all slower then 3G
@sbi it's VERY new
@thecoshman Erm, 3G is not a standard, it's just what people call stuff. Perhaps you mean HSPA+?
@R.MartinhoFernandes meh, I care little. My view on this is mostly fuck... more work
any way, time to rock and roll
I thought 3G was standard by now
15:21
@sbi en.wikipedia.org/wiki/… According to this, it is.
@Rapptz 3G is an umbrella term encompassing several technologies.
No key.
sbi
sbi
@R.MartinhoFernandes I believe I have read that tablets advertised as supporting LTE make little sense here in Germany so far, because LTE isn't yet available. ICBWT.
There seems to be a strong correlation between countries with LTE trial systems and third world countries
sbi
sbi
Well, my Android phone, under the connection symbol, usually shows either "3G" of "H".
15:26
@sbi They couldn't just tell you what the G or H stands for, why that would take all the fun right out of it, wouldn't it?
sbi
sbi
@Neil I dunno. Is there an Android manual somewhere? Or is that something my phone vendor hacked into Android? Where would I even start to look.
The H stands for HDSPA I think
@Rapptz WHAT?! They use an acronym to represent an acronym?!
that's just downright lazy
They don't have enough room to fit it :P
@TonyTheLion Yes. It's a little dry, but good.
15:30
@BartekBanachewicz It was the best of what was there, but I (obviously enough) prefer the one I just added.
@sbi Probably 3G means WCDMA (aka not very usable for data), and H means HSPA.
@FredOverflow Nothing a bit of water can't help.
You're talking about a book, right?
I'm pretty sure that if I were that lazy in a program that I made, my boss would give me an ear full
@StackedCrooked If new bool() fails, *i is leaked.
Hey guys I have a little question, simple
sbi
sbi
Introduction A wide variety of different wireless data technologies exist, some in direct competition with one another, others designed for specific applications. Wireless technologies can be evaluated by a variety of different metrics of which some are described in this entry. Standards can be grouped as follows in increasing range order: Personal Area Network (PAN) systems are intended for short range communication between devices typically controlled by a single person. Some examples include wireless headsets for mobile phones or wireless heart rate sensors communicating with a wrist...
15:33
Just ask.
@Neil It's not an acronym unless you can use it as a word. I don't see much way to pronounce HSPA (or HSDPA), so I'd vote for just "abbreviation". My time in the military innured me to 2 (and 3 and even 4) level abbreviations.
@Rapptz Someone told me I shouldnt ask questions out of the blue like thatt but ok :)
Why when i create an object then close it.

When I open it again, I have to write the associated file again. Why?

`fout.open("file.txt");`
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yes, see the message I'm referring to.
@MohamedAhmedNabil I can't parse that
why do you close an object? is it a first question?
@MohamedAhmedNabil Though I'm only guessing, my guess would be that you want something like std::ios::ate. When you don't specify otherwise, opening a file for writing destroys any current content. ios::ate says to keep it, and do new writes at the end of the file.
15:37
@FredOverflow Then forget about the water.
@Abyx The question is when i reopen the object why do i have to write the associated file again like this fout.open(file.txt);
Because you're invoking the method?
Because you can open a different file.
@R.MartinhoFernandes You could drink read wine while reading the book.
You could drink read wine while reding the book.
15:38
@R.MartinhoFernandes If i can open different files with one object. Isnt it redundant to have more than one ofstream object.
@MohamedAhmedNabil "why do you need to specify file name twice"? bcoz object doesn't keep it
@MohamedAhmedNabil No, because using fout everywhere doesn't tell anything, but using chapter1_file somewhere and index_file somewhere else makes stuff clear.
sbi
sbi
@MohamedAhmedNabil Terminology is something really important. When you use the wrong one, nobody understands you. You cannot open or close objects, objects can only be created or destroyed. You can, however, open and close files, and files are, in C++, best represented as objects of types derived from std::basic_fstream. So what is your problem — are you closing and reopening the file, or are you destroying and re-creating the file stream object?
what do you call this

ofstream fout("file.txt");
//......
fout.close();
fout.open("file.txt");
sbi
sbi
@MohamedAhmedNabil I'd call this nonsense. Why do you close the file just to re-open it? Can't you keep it open?
15:45
doing it wrong
} catch (IOException e) {
    try {
        channel.close(); // close the channel and drop it
    } catch (IOException e1) {
        // I said, drop the motherfucker!
    }
}
I just wrote this.
Im just testing it out.
@sbi Of course i wont use it like this when writing a serious program. Im just learning about fstream so im seeing what i can do
sbi
sbi
@MohamedAhmedNabil Yeah, I wasn't completely serious, and gave you the right terminology in my answer anyway.
@MohamedAhmedNabil Of course you can do it. Why you would is another question. You'd probably want to put a .clear() in there somewhere too.
@MohamedAhmedNabil why C++? if you'd write in Java, you'd go ask in another room
15:47
@Drise I'm not sure a fstream has a clear() member
Clears the errors.
@MooingDuck to clear the flags? It should inherit from basic_ios or whatever.
@Drise so it does
@Drise Did you ever figure out what was going on with that map problem the other day?
15:50
@Abyx I'm not sure where you're going with this.
@sbi I almost understand. Im not opening and closing the object. Im opening and closing the file using the file-stream object. Correct?
@Prætorian Compilation bug in VS. Needed to use get<> on the iterator and just reconstruct the tuple.
@Abyx What are you going on about?
sbi
sbi
@MohamedAhmedNabil Yep. This only changes the object's state, the object itself is never destroyed/re-created.
@Drise No other way around it, huh? That sucks
@sbi I will take the Yep and ignore the rest :D
15:52
@Prætorian Not one that wasn't going to require that I spend a number of hours finding it.
@MohamedAhmedNabil Don't. When @sbi speaks, listen to all of it.
@Drise Fair enough, it was only ints so cheap to copy around
@Drise It got me confused :/
@MohamedAhmedNabil Then ask more questions.
@sbi What do you mean that the object's state changes
If there was a simple Paint program in linux, I would show with pictures.
15:54
http://bash.org/?464385:
<@insomnia> it only takes three commands to install Gentoo
<@insomnia> cfdisk /dev/hda && mkfs.xfs /dev/hda1 && mount /dev/hda1 /mnt/gentoo/ && chroot /mnt/gentoo/ && env-update && . /etc/profile && emerge sync && cd /usr/portage && scripts/bootsrap.sh && emerge system && emerge vim && vi /etc/fstab && emerge gentoo-dev-sources && cd /usr/src/linux && make menuconfig && make install modules_install && emerge gnome mozilla-firefox openoffice && emerge grub && cp /boot/grub/grub.conf.sample /boot/grub/grub.conf && vi /boot/grub/grub.conf && grub && init 6
@MohamedAhmedNabil fstream is an object. It's like an apple. If you take a bite out of an apple, you've changed it's state.
@Drise nevermind... I just noted that it would be better if noobs learned other languages, not C++
sbi
sbi
@MohamedAhmedNabil In OOP, objects combine state (think: data) and behavior to change that state (think: member functions). (In strongly typed languages like C++, similar objects are grouped in classes.)
@Abyx Very not true.
@Drise I'm not sure that's the best analogy, since you can't unbite an apple
15:56
@MooingDuck Car transmission, going from drive to reverse, to drive?
@Drise better
@MooingDuck LMFAO
@Drise And then crashing!
sbi
sbi
@Drise False analogy. Let your apple sit on the window sill for a few weeks — then you'll see it changing its state.
@MooingDuck Q: What's the difference between a pregnant woman and a light bulb? A: You can unscrew a light bulb. (Thanks Vinny!)
5
15:57
@sbi I didn't specify that was it's only state change or the only way to change it.
Last thing, Is it the objects that gets closed or the associated file ? (this is bugging me)
I really think our previous discussion with Mohamed and Objects really confused him.
I finally got the courage to dance with some chick last night at the club, and she tells to me take my dancing somewhere else.
@Rapptz I just need a simple answer
@MohamedAhmedNabil The stream get's closed. The object holding the stream is....
15:59
@Drise So you took her with you, right?
@Drise Maybe she was suggesting you take it back to her place with her

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