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00:42
 
6 hours later…
06:28
Pet chicken enjoys a hot bath. She seems to enjoy it very much. I have put some epsom salt in the water.
06:41
@traducerad I have a rPi that has some sensors on it - GPS, lidar & camera. I have programs that read from those sensors. When I stop the program (say, by press Ctrl + C), I want to properly turn the sensors off so they are not hoarding any resources.
user7659542
07:03
@TelKitty easy use a signal handler tu either put the sensor in low power mode or have a piece of hardware turn off/interrupt the power supply to it
07:38
@traducerad I mean to properly close the USB port or GPIO so there is no problem when they are repoened.
user7659542
07:56
@TelKitty again, there is no such thing as opening or closing a gpio
user7659542
You may “deallocate the pins fonction of that’s really what you want. But that looks a bit useless at first sight
18:20
Is there some shorthand to aggregate initialize an array of std::bytes? Somehow std::byte is ending up being too cumbersome for practical use :-/
18:56
Brace initialization doesn't work?
it works for std::vector<uint8_t>, but not for byte
19:17
@Mikhail Anybody up for a user defined literal?
#include <cstddef>
#include <vector>

constexpr std::byte operator"" _b (unsigned long long in) { return std::byte(in); }

std::vector<std::byte> bytes { 1_b, 2_b, 3_b, 4_b };
Protection against narrowing conversions left as an exercise for the reader.
 
2 hours later…
21:25
honestly this would be better then the crap we got
also you forgot 0_b
constexpr std::byte operator"" _b (const auto in) { return std::byte(in); }
 
1 hour later…
22:26
std::byte is a textbook example of "actually this isn't super practical to use"
23:01
It is also poorly differentiated from uint8_t
But, because C++ was formed out of chaos, cout<<(uint8_t)90; still prints a character.
So, the one damn thing, they could have damn fixed, was not damn fixed.

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