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00:01
@PeterT Depends on what you include as other languages. For example, are you including things like Makefiles and CMake scripts? I write other stuff by choice, but if I wanted to just write C++, I'm pretty sure I could go for years withing having to write anything in other normal programming languages, but you almost always have to deal with building and such.
user7659542
@PeterT some companies that switched to model based design: airbus, multiple firms in the automotive and defence
Model based design makes sense if you have like 30 people and unlimited time?
user7659542
user7659542
@Mikhail dont know what makes you belive that
There is a somewhat amusing case of convergent evolution with modern VLSI based designs in semiconductors. For example, you need to write a simulator before doing much fo anything.
user7659542
00:07
id rather sell sperm
That way I at least have fun while making money
@Mikhail I'm not sure it's actually limited to such things, but current use certainly seems to be primarily on large projects with large teams.
Like I was saying about management, if they don't understand the need for specs, the engineering process isn't going to improve. In VLSI, it's understood that a solution will absolutely not work profitably without a thorough testing in a good simulator
@traducerad It's kinda crazy to think if you donated sperm once a month that you could have 12 offspring running around by the end of the next year
Some regulations limit this
user7659542
00:12
@Potatoswatter Studying history allows us to learn a few things. One is that most people don't study history enough to learn anything from it. Another is that most who do learn something from history still manage to draw the wrong conclusions.
one to three times a week
3*52= 156 children
user7659542
@CupOfJava he said "some" regulations limit this. I presume he was speaking about the regulation from Ikirghistan, not the American regulations. Can't blame him.
that's fair
What if I ask our candidates to submit a typing test where we higher the candidate with the most words per minute?
I don't think that's a good measure of skill
if you type too fast you'll type "higher" instead of "hire"
00:16
@JerryCoffin I've come around to understand that the best engineering practices aren't suitable everywhere. But there are hardly any history teachers in circulation, compared to snake oil gurus.
@Potatoswatter No argument from me on either of those points. I'm not sure how much we can learn about software engineering from history. Even 20 years ago, the vast majority of software development barely qualified as engineering at all--lots was done without even so much as version control.
Dec 24 '20 at 18:23, by CupOfJava
it's one of the only professions that's able to guarantees 100% results, the other is snake oil salesmen.
user7659542
christ it s past midnight
user7659542
and I have to look up what a "Hessian matrix" is
what a life...
@CupOfJava The problem is that most of them aren't selling exactly snake oil. Most of the software engineering methodology people are pushing things that will work, at least for some definition of the word. The problem is more often with impracticality than simply not working at all.
@traducerad Matrix with really good horsemanship, available for hire to the highest bidder.
user7659542
00:23
@JerryCoffin bold of you to assume most of the software engineers are able to push smth that will work. May I remind you that most people fail your tests?
@traducerad It's a bit late to start fighting German calculus matrices
user7659542
@Potatoswatter Nein.
@traducerad Most so-called software engineers aren't trying to push development methodologies.
user7659542
They should. This is for their own sake
Assuming what they push makes sense
I'm trying to push development methodologies for only 399$
00:24
If you're trying to push a development methodology, you'd better appropriate the term "software engineer" for yourself
It's a great deal
user7659542
@Mikhail has a PhD and does computer vision, so he should know very well what a Hessian Mtrix is and why it is usefull
user7659542
last time I saw this was when reading publications about computer vision, when I was still at uni
@traducerad Most of them don't, of course. One problem is that you need somebody who understands both software development, and how to manage others doing software development. In the entire history of mankind, I doubt there have been a dozen people who met that initial qualification.
00:47
I mean I know what Hessian are when rolling my own optimization algorithms, sometimes as homework...
I'm not sure what this comment is about...
user7659542
@Mikhail maths
So my coworkers didn't like my question about the difficulty with passing -march=native to gcc. Its kinda weird because I think they are reasonable at their jobs but don't know these flags.
I have problem with Arduino doing serial.read - it always read twice. The first time, the real input, the other garbage.
So if I input 02010 into Arduino, it will read 02010, then ???? the second time.
 
4 hours later…
04:47
@traducerad Also, sadly no longer in computer vision or even embryology. Now I'm something like a compiler engineer.
 
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13 hours later…
20:11
what would an std::iterator for a CRT electron beam look like? Asking for no reason at all... .. .
Also is it an std::iterator (due to it being an iterator) or a std::iterator, due to it being in studd.
std::iterator is an almost useless class that was removed from the standard library in C++20
21:08
But guys all my friends have iterators in the languages they use.
21:36
Yes but in C++ we have the concepts of indirectly_regular_unary_invocable and indirect_strict_weak_order. Bonus points for identifying what "regular" and "strict" mean in this context.
So for some screwed up reason (porting python, doubly linked nodes) I need to do shared_ptr_obj->add(shared_ptr_obj, something). What's a good way to DRY it up without loosing the shared_ptr? One criminal approach is to use a macro shared_ptr_obj->link(something) where link is #defined...
 
1 hour later…
23:05
@Morwenn Unless my memory fails even worse than usual today, it wasn't actually removed yet, just moved to appendix D.
@CaptainGiraffe An electron beam isn't a collection (nor at all collection-like) so having an iterator for one makes little sense. To an extent, CRT electron beam is an output-only iterator for bits.

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