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05:24
Hi @EtiennedeMartel. Long time no see...
Ha, I saw your comment on that
I'm mostly active on the Discord Lounge now. Only hanging around here in case an owner is needed (which is pretty rare honestly).
@EtiennedeMartel Yeah, not enough traffic to need owners around much, I'm afraid. I'm kind of torn. This Lounge is too slow to be interesting, but the Discord Lounge is so busy it's overwhelming for my little brain...
Oh, I have over half the channels on there muted
@EtiennedeMartel I suppose that would help. But I'd probably have to spend a while being overwhelmed to figure out what parts to mute. Maybe I'll feel ambitious enough sometime soon...
Fair enough
Well, fell free to drop by whenever you want
05:28
@EtiennedeMartel Yeah, I have Discord installed, and drop in now and again, but at least so far it hasn't ever lasted very long.
Hows Mysticial doing these days?
Haven't seem him in a while
@Mikhail I haven't seen him recently--either here or on Discord. Not sure what he's up to.
He either found Pokemon or a girlfriend :-(
Yeah--his profile says he was last seen 20 November.
That could, however, mean a major new release of y-Cruncher...
 
2 hours later…
07:53
@JerryCoffin The collection would be the collection of phosphorescent pixels, but I don't really want to collect them, just apply <algorithm>s on them.
08:26
Are there any good sources to learn ARM assembly language? I can't find an appropriate room for assembly language, so sorry for asking here.
 
2 hours later…
nwp
nwp
10:13
Fira Code failure case.
I think I will need an ad blocker for the Qt maintenance tool soon.
@JerryCoffin Yeah in C++17, I thought it was deleted and added to zombie names in C++20, but apparently they haven't done that yet
Despite a tendency to remove library features from the standard quickly enough, thanks to the zombie names mechanism which allows implementers to keep providing them
11:19
Good Morning
hey :)
Waz up?
Did you have a fun holiday?
Lazy holiday, still saw a bunch of selected people, it was good times
nwp
nwp
I spent my productive time screwing with JavaScript mainly.
I almost didn't use my computer at all
11:24
JavaScript gets too much hate for a language
interesting start to 2021, apparently Assanges extradition request by the US was denied.
nwp
nwp
Eh, a lot of it is deserved.
I'd say it gets just enough hate
nwp
nwp
Also a lot of it goes away if you use TypeScript instead.
yeah, that
C++ gets lots of hate too, but it is often deserved too
11:30
Maybe people were forced to use Javascript as a punishment.
Me: JavaScript gets alot of hate
Chat: Fck that language
Wise people use pure html </Trollololo>
nwp
nwp
Good chat.
running on HTML5 super computers
12:09
@Mikhail Pokemond or Animal crossing
@PeterT provisionally
IIRC, Mys mentioned about looting in his area. Soon after, he has disappeared. So let's make a fairy tale out of it instead, let's say ... maybe he met a mermaid, and they lived happily ever after on a tropical island with porcelain clean sand and crystal clear water?
Also my does my bluetooth headphone keep on making random calls on my phone??
I must repent - I kept on having this image in my head: a pale slim Asian dude being carried away by some dark hunky dudes from the looting crowd. Please, Goddess, forgiving me for having such an evil thought!
Shameless kitteh is shameless ..
13:14
.....
13:28
My GitHub CI builds are taking shape
That's good
nwp
nwp
I'm imagining some electric monstrosity coming out of your computer taking on physical form and marauding through cities.
haha
Our GitHub CIs at work are monstrosities full of customized docker images and weird ass cache invalidation rules
Fortunately I only maintain a small library without a lot of dependencies ^^
So far there's been rough edges with GitHub Actions though: no anchor support in the workflow YAML, no Valgrind on MacOS for some reason (brew install tells me it's a Linux tool, but I could run Valgrind on MacOS just fine with Travis CI), no built-in [ci skip] support
Just finding a way to list my configuration in the build matrix was more painful that I want to admit
13:44
and testing it locally is a nightmare, the reference runner images are so huge
yeah, but I already couldn't test shit locally with Travis CI x)
at least when you edit the YAML online, the editor has a bit of knowledge about the format, so you can find some errors
14:07
@Morwenn isn't travis basically dead for non-paying customers?
@Mgetz That's why I'm moving
ah ok, I need to get off my arse and do it... but I can't be bothered
They changed their free plan to "a limited amount of total hours then you have to upgrade for more"
I think that CircleCI made an equivalent move some time ago?
I mean I understand it... but it sucks
I already planned to move to GitHub Actions, but knowing that Travis wouldn't be usable for free at some point was the tipping point
I'm not sure how Microsoft handles or plan to handle the reasons why other CI services stopped their free plans
nwp
nwp
14:10
Keep it free for a bit longer, have everyone move over, cash in :D
maybe
In which case I'll only be able to rely on local tests x)
There's still another option: provide free plans on-demand, which means checking that projects look legit
That's what some code quality services already do
@nwp dunno, I'm surprised MS hasn't already restricted it more
I know they see the value because they do contribute to quite a few major OSS projects fiscally and code wise
but I'm kinda surprised they didn't set license requirements etc
They're probably waiting for enough people to move to their service first
nwp
nwp
Someone should make a local-CI, a project where you can do the same as in other CIs, just that it runs locally.
I'll add it to my list of projects and do it after writing my OS, compiler and CYOA engine.
Conan is pretty good at that with conan-docker-tools
It downloads a bunch of Docker images for several configurations and tests your package in all those environments
I can't delete some of my old experimental Actions runs from a workflow that doesn't exist anymore because they're attributed to a "ghost" user for some reason
Which is a bit upsetting and unsightly
 
1 hour later…
15:41
Guess whos full of coffee and just signed a new contract, this cup. \ (•◡•) / ʕ•ᴥ•ʔ
neato, gratulations
thanks, I'm spending all my earnings on sugar packets.
is that a euphemism for some kind of fancy new drug? :D
nwp
nwp
Signing contracts while high on caffeine is definitely a good idea.
Was it a contract about buying more coffee and/or sugar packs?
@PeterT No, its a euphemism for some kind of fancy old drug
15:49
Glucose? I see
It's the oldest
@nwp I am a cup, I don't have many needs
I'd use you to make cakes
cupcakes
i brute forced that and got tle, does anyone know a more efficient way?
nwp
nwp
16:08
It seems like a classic dynamic programming problem. You calculate the score for a[i] by i + score(a[i+1]). The trick here is to put the result of your score functions into a lookup table so you don't need to compute the same scores multiple times.
Though in this instance you can do it even easier. Since you can only move to the right you can go from right to left and fill the scores without having to do more than 1 step for any fill.
i thought about iterating backwards through the original array, not stopping going forward if the value has already been seen
nwp
nwp
Unless the values can be negative I guess.
@nwp my current method iterates backwards through the array, but moves the calculation ofrwards, stopping if it has already got to that index
nwp
nwp
If you go backwards you only ever do 1 addition maximum.
@Morwenn you just reminded me of the mug cakes I used to eat all the time in college
those were sooo good
16:15
I have a book of mug cake recipes, but I don't remember where it is :/
I don't know whether I could eat something that big and sugary nowadays xD
You own a book? Nerd! Who reads anymore?
I don't even know how to read. Mainly because I'm a cup but that's not important.
Anyone who suffered cooking websites on smartphone learns to love books again
16:36
I'll never love cooking books though
1
A: Two pointers alternative to C++ std::vector

seheHere's the absolute minimum to encapsulate a unique_otr<T[]> in a first-class value-type that models a RandomAccessRange: #include <memory> template <typename T> struct dyn_array { explicit dyn_array(size_t n) : _n(n), _data(std::make_unique<T[]>(n)) { } auto begin() const { return...

Did I miss something obvious existing?
Replaced my answer with the simpler and more complete takes. Thanks for making me go a step fruther. It's actually simpler (reinforcing the mantra: choosing the right abstractions leads to simplicity) — sehe 1 min ago
@sehe why though
What did I say..... No one knows how to read anymore
@sehe In C++20 I think that you could use destroying operator delete to make the thing cleaner
I never used it though, so I'm unsure how exactly it's used, but I know that it intervenes in the same kind of one-allocation patterns
Barring that you could take advantage of new[] implementations that return ptr, but store the size of the allocated memory in position ptr - 1 haha
16:56
slack is down (status.slack.com) its all over
nwp
nwp
Time to slack off.
I thought that's why we're all here
@sehe I'm not sure about "existing", but if I'm not mistaken, this is at least really close to what Puppy tried to propose to the committee.
17:11
I thought it was ThePhD who tried to propose a C++ way to have the array trick to the committee?
@Morwenn He may have also proposed something similar, but I'm pretty sure Puppy did propose something on this general order--a halfway point between array and vector with fixed size chosen at run-time.
Oh, so Puppy proposed a container proper?
I think so, yeah. Was a few years ago though, so I'm not sure I recall the details precisely.
17:31
I kinda doubt that it was a 'proper' proposal though.
17:56
That's an interesting claim :) I suppose it being "C++" disqualifies from the "proper" subset?
@JerryCoffin Cool. Yeah that sounds close
@Morwenn I ran across it during my implementation errands and made a mental note o check it later (which I didn't yet)
@Morwenn slightly more evil than my shortcut of using C99 felximble array members
@sehe If you do, then you probably want to read the original proposal (not the one with just the wording) since it contains an example of such a array class
@sehe Both are non-standard in different ways haha
:big-eyes-engaged: Now I'll have to find it so I can add th link
@Morwenn One is surely unspecified behaviour to rely on IB. The C99 is specified, so I prefer it
But yeah, better would be to be pure c++
18:33
BEST WISHES TO Y'ALL btw
6
19:06
Would be cool if there was a easy way to merge std::vectors like with python lists (aka weird overload of the + operator?)
19:24
Is lounge discord still a thing? :O
🍞
@A.H. Yes.
cool
@sehe Rechecking, I was pretty clearly mistaken. Puppy submitted four proposals, but none of them was what I was thinking of. For anybody who cares to look at them, they were N3572 through N3575.
I am asking a question on physics.so and the only tag that comes to mind and best describes it is stupid xD
I dont think this bodes well
19:35
@A.H. Physicists have built entire careers on string theory, so "stupid" isn't necessarily a handicap in itself.
+1 fuck string theory
3
Well I can't create the stupid tag so I guess I will settle for everydaylife tag ¯_(ツ)_/¯
life without a left hand
@Mikhail Looks more like a missing forearm. And since it's facing us, that would be the right, I think.
It's a sensitive matter, signed some papers and can no longer talk of the 'incident'
:P
19:41
@JerryCoffin or detached
@Mikhail Kind of like a lot of limbs on the Wii...
 
3 hours later…
22:33
Performing arithmetic on enums results in a stuff being converted to ints? When can we finally get strong types?
@Mikhail enum class Foo ... prevents that. You can overload operators on the enum.
enum class Foo { A, B, C };

Foo operator+(Foo a, Foo b) {
    return Foo::C; // PoC--not useful implemention
}
I don't strictly mind non class enums being converted to ints
Yeah, although one reason I don't like the enum class stuff is that you gotta prefix everything with the enum name? So enum class direction {north,south};. In this case, north & south become direction::north, direction::south. This will rapidly exceed my typewriter's ink.
@Mikhail I found that switching from an ASR-33 to a DecWriter LA36 fixed a lot of those problems.
Strong words from a man still using a CDC when I got a Cray
22:49
@Mikhail 18 bit addresses should be enough for anybody!
using enum might save you some ink?
@A.H. Don't have to prefix each name with the enum name.
Oh that looks like some cool C++20 magic. I'll need to check it out.
gonna need g++ 11 though
Oh fudge, I'm on like 9.2
22:59
@A.H. There's always something...
Confusing how gcc versions will start to alias with C++ standard names. We should write a PEP about it.
I mean one would think using could have worked that way from the start anyway
It seems reasonable
@A.H. For a while that's how things were (except it was versions of CFront, not gcc).
I meant the using keyword not the version numbers
Unless CFront somehow had using enum :o
time travel?
@A.H. Perhaps not...
@A.H. Oh, I think that's reasonable too, yeah. Pretty soon, using will become almost as useful as it was in Pascal... :-)
23:05
@JerryCoffin I don't know pascal :(
@A.H. No biggie. Point at hand is that its using would let you bring all the names in a Record (its equivalent of a struct into scope, so you could do using foo; a = 1; b = 2; c = 3; d = 4; to get the equivalent of foo.a = 1; foo.b = 2; foo.c = 3; foo.d = 4;
23:27
so like With from VB? can we switch on strings yet?
Its pretty easy to switch on strings by hashing them? (wonder what happens if you have a hash collision?)
Talking about strings, is there a way to make a constexpr structure that stores characters?
struct meta_data {constexpr char* label; int something} ?
This kinda feels impossible because it requires meta_data items to exist, but somehow I still don't like it :-)
23:49
@Mikhail you mean like constexpr char foo[] = "foo"
Yeah but I can't actually do what I want because it would be a constexpr non-static member
So for example,
void const meta& get_meta_data()
{
constexpr const static meta_data = {"Foo",42};
return meta;
};

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