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00:03
@Jeff not I
Ell
Ell
sorry I havent
@Chimera That's ok, I didn't want help from a fire breathing dragon anyway! :D (i'm just kidding). You'd probably fry my motherboard! :D
Never heard of it.
@Jeff lol
@Rapptz @Ell You're not alone. It's a specialized library for solving a special type of math problem.
@Chimera I'm glad I looked up "chimera" before making that joke. I had a completely wrong definition for it in my head.
00:07
@Jeff Yeah it means a few things.
@Chimera Well, the definition I chose worked better than the joke I was going to make using the definition that I thought it was, anyway. :D
Guys, what's something that changed the way you do things in life?
e.g 9/11? current global recession? cost of energy?
Good question. Probably the resulting emotions when one of my friends committed suicide years ago.
@Jeff I meant in a philosophical way.
00:12
I learned to not take anything or anybody for granted.
00:28
@Chimera THe most I've lost is a cat.
...But I still take my current cats for granted.
@Jeff Well, losing a cat is rough enough.
@chim um.... it hurts, but it's not quite - not nearly - the same thing.
I can't imagine putting down a pet you've had for years.
let's talk about something happier: anyone here done any MPI programming?
@Jeff nope not here...
@Jeff you talking about message passing interface?
00:34
@chim yes
Heard of it, but never worked with it.
for range loops are one of my favourite things so far
I want to post a question here, but I don't want to seem desperate: sundials.2283335.n4.nabble.com/… :|
im just gonna throw something out there
It's just, so beautiful.
@MohamedAhmedNabil ?
00:41
if any if you guys use chrome, you can get the plugin "Read it later Fast". Since people tend to post lots of links here and if you dont have the time to read them at that moment. You can just open up the link, right click anywhere and press Read it later. I will be stored in a list of links where you can come back to it and read it
@Jeff Go ahead and post it on SO
@Mohamed sounds like a good feature. better would be if they had it for my tablet (Kindle Fire).
@chimera If nobody answers it there in a couple of days then I will.
@Chimera I'd prefer a solution specific to the library I'm using because I'm afraid that on here, I'll get a solution more like "each thread has to send it's own output to a file, then you have to merge them, then... [more procedures here]".
Of course, the real issue is that I'm way too impatient to wait a few days! :D
@Jeff Well, you'd be surprised. Many people here have probably used the same library if it's in common use.
it's a very specialized library for use pretty much only by advanced mathematicians (I don't qualify!) and other scientists.
@Jeff check out math.stackoverflow.com
00:50
yup! :D
How's that color scheme?
for what? it looks good to me
@Jeff mandelbrot set
err very small portion of it
i mean, why is the color scheme important? is it for printing on shirts or something?
Just fooling around with some code I wrote several years ago.
@Jeff Oh just trying to find a pleasing scheme...
01:00
looks good to me
@Jeff thanks.
What kind of colours can you do?
@Rapptz Right now, I can do a palette of 256 colors. 24bit colors.
Should try navy blue/gold
@Rapptz yeah I will see what I can come up with.
I'm looking into something like this.
13
Q: Smooth spectrum for Mandelbrot Set rendering

Nick JohnsonI'm currently writing a program to generate really enormous (65536x65536 pixels and above) Mandelbrot images, and I'd like to devise a spectrum and coloring scheme that does them justice. The wikipedia featured mandelbrot image seems like an excellent example, especially how the palette remains v...

01:07
Michael Clarke Duncan (December 10, 1957September 3, 2012) was an American actor, best known for his breakout role as John Coffey in The Green Mile, for which he was nominated for an Academy Award and a Golden Globe. He is also recognized for his appearances in motion pictures such as Armageddon, The Whole Nine Yards, and Daredevil, as well as voice acting roles in works such as Brother Bear and Delgo. Early life Duncan was born in Chicago, Illinois, and grew up in a single-parent household with his sister, Judy, and mother, Jean Duncan (a house cleaner), after his father left. He ...
Damn!
@Chimera I just found an answer, anyway (whew!)
... I was looking in the wrong part of the documentation!
01:31
would anyone happen to know if there is an equivalent to shlex.split() (from python) for c++? I dont want to re-invent the wheel :P
@ITNinja split as in string splitting?
That Careers page on SO is pretty neat.
i figured it would be easier to show you :P
That really looks like a regular string splitting function to me.
essentially yes
but no, we don't have any native splitting.
01:39
kk
there is one on boost
277
A: Splitting a string in C++

Evan TeranI use this to split string by a delim. The first puts the results in an already constructed vector, the second returns a new vector. std::vector<std::string> &split(const std::string &s, char delim, std::vector<std::string> &elems) { std::stringstream ss(s); std::...

I personally use that though
tyvm! :D yeah, i dont really want to get boost :P
@Chimera I retract that statement. I did not find an answer to my question! :(
02:05
@Jeff Sorry to hear that. :-(
I'm very upset. I took down that post I linked you to :(
at least now i can post on SO, though.
@Jeff Why couldn't you post on SO?
@Rapptz I didn't want to post in two different forums (I'd already posted it in a forum specific to the library I was using, here: sundials.2283335.n4.nabble.com/Sundials-Users-f3239170.html)
Is there a [sundials] tag?
No
I deeply abhor those forums with the massive >> quotings.
02:44
@Rapptz ??
Massive compression due to size of webpage.
Oh. Well, it is a small, very specialized forum for a bunch of mathematicians and scientists. It's not terribly active, either. They were probably not going to put a lot of money and effort into creating a nice forum. So that does the job, and it also doubles as a mailing list (all subscribers receive an email of every approved post).
03:01
Is there a way to enable ADL for user-defined literals so they're useful from outside of a namespace scope?
As it is, if you define one in a namespace, but access the namespace through NS::member syntax, using them becomes a real hassle.
"Ontario, Ca. driver tweets "YOLO" minutes before crashing, killing himself & four others (brianphickey.com)"
I don't know @Chris. I never looked into UDLs as much as I should.
03:24
"Something missing"... what's missing is a good title — jogojapan 26 secs ago
lol that is the easiest compiler error to figure out
Oh it isn't even his first question about it.
0
Q: Could not find a match

DHFHow to solve an error of "Could not find a match for 'PEmployee::PEmployee(char *, double)' in function main()"? class PEmployee { public: PEmployee(); PEmployee(string employee_name, double initial_salary); void set_salary(double new_salary); double get_salary() const; string get_name() const; ...

03:57
Is "efficient" even relevant? "My program can pause for 5 seconds more efficiently than yours!" — Mysticial 57 secs ago
04:54
Anyone in here still?
Well, if anyone comes back, please tell me if the following two declarations are essentially equivalent (in C):
realtype *udata;
realtype z[N]={0}
Don't they both declare an array of realtypes? But the first one is variable length and the second one is fixed length, and all set to 0. But they are both arrays of realtypes, right?
@Jeff, The first is only a pointer. If you make it point to a newly created array via malloc, it will be on the heap and require free to prevent a memory leak, whereas the second is allocated on the stack and will clean itself up.
I'm not familiar with the difference between a heap and a stack (or even that they existed). I don't think that'll be a problem because the array will probably be assigned a value elsewhere, anyway.
@Jeff, The heap requires you to babysit it.
The thing is, docs say z is just a pointer to realtype, just like udata.
@chris i'll keep this in mind when i need it. the stack, though, is more adult.
@Jeff, Arrays are not pointers. They can decay into pointers given the correct circumstances.
05:03
I've read that an array name, by itself, is a pointer to the first element of the array.
Well, sizeof(realtype *) is 4 or 8 or whatever it happens to be, correct?
Try it with your second example where N is 100. It won't be the same, as sizeof doesn't cause it to decay.
I'll make up a quick stack vs. heap example for you.
ok. great!
more immediately, is there a command for adding two arrays (of same length and data type)? or do i just write a loop?
memcpy is the go-to function for copying arrays.
so, if i'm going to have an array in this thread, I should define it as realtype z[n]={0}, then populate it. If I'm going to receive an array from another thread (using MPI), I should declare it as realtype *z1. Is that correct (anyone who's still listening)?
No. realtype *z1; does not not not define an array.
It's a pointer.
05:11
@Jeff, As you can see, the compiler warns you. Here's the example.
@Luc but it's a pointer to an array. I'm going to receive the array from another thread and I need a pointer to it (if I understand this - which I don't think i do).
@Jeff It's a pointer to a realtype. It might be a pointer into an array -- that is to say, it would point to the first element of an array. (There's no way to tell from the type alone.) But in any case, that wouldn't make it an array anyway.
@Luc oh. how do I define a variable (z1) to receive an array?
The distinction is important. It is in fact possible to have pointer to arrays themselves. It is somewhat customary to still refer to pointers into arrays as 'pointer to arrays'. Make sure to not get confused.
@Jeff realtype (*z1)[N]. You can see that it doesn't look super great.
You can also notice that the size is part of the type of the pointer.
As such, it's not really usual to have pointers to arrays. It's more customary to make use of a pointer+size pair or a pair of pointers, where the first pointer is the first element of an array.
05:14
@LucDanton OK. I know the length of the array, so I can do that. For other uses, can i also say realtype *z1[];?
@LucDanton how do you do that? (C is confusing)
Pair in an informal sense -- I mean that the information gets around through two variables.
@Jeff, It might be worth finding a good chapter of a book on pointers vs arrays in C.
As an example the function I mentioned earlier is declared void *memcpy(void* dest, void const* source, size_t num);
The (void const* source, size_t num) pair is a slice or view into an array.
@chris agreed, but they always confuse me unless i can ask questions. plus, i get the idea of pointers and I always get the simple examples in the books. but then in real life it's harder.
As such, the function will copy the bytes from the range source[0] .. source[num - 1] (again, not actual code).
05:19
@chris interesting example. since allocateStack is off the frame. ret goes away, so the pointer to it's address is invalid. But allocateHeap's ret didn't go away because it was malloced.
@Luc i see. i'll use your definition then to receive the array.
Be careful that it's not possible for a function to have an array as a parameter.
@Jeff, Yes, but in the heap one, ret itself dies since the pointer itself was allocated on the stack, but the memory it's pointing to does not, since that memory is on the heap and you haven't free()d it.
E.g. void foo(int i[45]); is not a function that accepts an array of 45 ints.
All you do is pass on where it was pointing, the pointer itself is unimportant.
Special rules enforce that it is instead equivalent to the declaration void foo(int *i);, i.e. a function taking a pointer.
05:22
True, in C++ you can have a reference to an array of 45 ints to enforce it, but references are non-existent in C.
now i'm getting confused again. i'm gonna put something in there and see what the compiler says.
sbi
sbi
@R.MartinhoFernandes Who did?
in LOUNGE(C);, 12 hours ago, by Jeff
@sbi that room hasn't been too friendly to me. :(
What happened, @Jeff?
@sbi well, i tried again! :D. (Actually, I think it was a different room, maybe)
how did you find that? sheesh! :D
sbi
sbi
@Jeff I find that bad. Calling the C++ room bad names in the C room, and then coming back here to repeal leaves a bad aftertaste.
Well it depends on how people are when you come in. This room doesn't have too strong of a connection with SO, answering questions for most of the day. If you have a genuine question, it's usually better to ask on SO.
05:37
We're usually just a bunch of jerks with nothing better to do. Not all of us are actually active on SO.
@sbi well, i didn't really say anything that bad.
You practically called us child murderers.
For reference, rule number 1 here is We don't care.
I care
..NOT! :D
@StackedCrooked was that wrong?
i mean, if i had known that was wrong. i wouldn't have done it!
05:40
Whoa the C room has starred messages from May
@Rapptz it gets very little activity. not like you cool guys in the C++ lounge! :D
@Jeff I'm just joking. I don't care much actually.
@StackedCrooked I had a feeling! :D
@Jeff Yes we are cool.
@chris I notice that Rule 0 is even more important, huh? It comes even before rule 1!
@StackedCrooked plus, i figured you... probably... aren't an actual baby killer!
05:45
@Jeff That's because my avatar has a broad smile, isn't it?
yeah. everyone knows baby killers don't smile!
They only smile when killing babies.
i suspect that baby killers are generally miserable people who never smile - even when killing babies
sbi
sbi
in LOUNGE(C);, 12 hours ago, by sbi
Really, this room has messages from 4 months ago on its starboard. How cute!
lol
TIL Today I've learned
I think that's improper English
sbi
sbi
05:50
@Jeff So now we've gone from child murderers to baby killers.
@sbi they're the same thing
sbi
sbi
@Rapptz And you've learned that only today?
I didn't bother to read the acronym section.
On Reddit it's "Today I Learned"
Should have said "TIL 'TIL'" if you'd learned anything.
sbi
sbi
@Jeff Go and tell my teenage daughter she's a baby. I'd be interested to see whether you'd survive her wrath.
@Rapptz As a general rule, when they don't agree with us, Reddit is always wrong.
05:52
well, my 6yo niece and nephew don't think they're babies. however, a baby killer and a child killer are near enough to the same to be the same thing!
@sbi I've implies past though
sbi
sbi
@Rapptz You what? I can't parse that. Didn't you just speak about proper English?
I've going to killed your baby soon.
@sbi "Today I've Learned", "I've" implies past.
I'm just thinking out loud and procrastinating.
sbi
sbi
@Rapptz As in "learned", you mean?
05:54
@Jeff There's one in Belgium. Unpleasant read though.
@chris my cats! NO!
@StackedCrooked that is disturbing.... he killed kids in a nursery! :(
sbi
sbi
So I have flagged 18 answers by that Ira Baxter guy yesterday, because he's using SO for a free advertising tool.
17 of those have been deemed "helpful" (and from a cursory inspection it seems all postings got deleted), one is declined with "Do you really need to flag this multiple times? Its already meta drama, anyhow. Go over there and join in the dogpile." There seems to be nothing new on meta, though and nobody answered to the two comments I left at one of the existing discussions about that guy.
This?
-8
Q: Limits for self promotion, round II

Ira BaxterWe have a moderator, casperOne, that has decided to start deleting my responses. I thought this topic had been beaten to death, and that I was operating within the limits of established policy: Limits for self-promotion in answers Here's a list of answers casperOne just deleted: http://stacko...

-8 already, no wonder I couldn't find it on the front page anymore
sbi
sbi
@Rapptz Oh, I missed that!
How did you find it?
06:00
I remember seeing it earlier today
Name seemed familiar
@sbi It was pretty in-your-face for a good part of the day
It only just got down to -8 where it automatically gets knocked off the front page.
sbi
sbi
@Mysticial Um. My day only just started, remember?
Oh wow. It goes from all the way to last year?
@all anyone used floodfill in c++ ?
06:08
Funnily, no.
What kind of floodfill are we talking? There's a million and one different ways for graphics in C++.
@chris i am asking for Scanline floodfill
I always watch algorithm gifs for some reason
Does anyone happen to know how long America's got Talent acts have to perform in the finals?
Wouldn't common algorithms be built in?
I don't watch tv
@chris @luc the array declarations worked. i sent
@sbi see what a great room this is! :D
sbi
sbi
06:19
@Jeff Did you just just try to point out the superiority of this room to the only guy left from the days when nobody knew it?
i have no idea who is left from those days. i lost count :D
sbi
sbi
0
A: Limits for self promotion, round II

sbiThis came up in the chat yesterday (and no!, don't bother going there and discuss it — all you will do is annoy the regulars, because nobody spoke up in your favor) and I was appalled to learn that, after I escaped you spamming Usenet, I find you doing the same here. (I must have seen you doing t...

4
06:33
In a printf format string, how do you leave a space for the negative sign for positive numbers? (get that? IOW, I want the decimal places to line up, but the negative sign on negative numbers is throwing the alignment off).
sbi
sbi
@Jeff This is the C++ room you're in. It's IO streams here, not printf(), because the latter is inherently unsafe.
(Not that I could answer your question off the top of my head for IO streams.)
well, i'm living on the edge with this entire project, so... :D
Yeah, I haven't used printf a lot, so I'm not too good with it.
You could make a typesafe one in C++, but there are better formatting options imo.
I wish we had something better for string formatting. Even Boost's library is kind of meh.
i like QString's arg approach
06:40
but i'm in C, not C++
@Rapptz, Which is your favourite?
Out of everything you've used.
@chris I like Python's .format() Unless you meant C++ only.
actually, i think i'm gonna call it a night. it's 2:40 am by me. goodnight all (and thanks all)
sbi
sbi
@Mysticial No, they're not. This is solely about activity, I think. FWIW, it's now on the front page.
06:47
@sbi Not for me.
sbi
sbi
@Rapptz There's a good deal of randomness in what's one the first page. It changes every time you reload the page.
@sbi Anything that gets to -8 gets knocked off the front page on metas. For main sites, it's -4.
So it only shows up in the "active" tab.
sbi
sbi
@Mysticial Ah, it seems that I was looking at the "Questions" tab. Sorry.
And look, this user got suspended for a month, after annoying everybody with his low-quality questions.
What about that guy from yesterday who wanted us to write code for him in the [java] tag
sbi
sbi
@TonyTheLion It feels 404?
@Rapptz I don't know about that one. Dato, OTOH, has >500 questions, and many bad ones.
sbi
sbi
Oh, but he only has half a dozen question. How might still learn how to use SO.
1
Q: Can anyone guide me how to get Google Directions between two locations using JSON

fresherI have heard that KML file is no longer available since 27 July 2012 (because Google has changed the structure of retrieving Google Directions, now you can only get it by JSON or XML) So plz guide me how to make road route between 2 location. BELOW CODE IS WORKING FINE NW ENJOY GUYS This is my ...

@sbi Most likely question banned now. He's got at least two -6s with all but one deleted.
That's ugly.
sbi
sbi
Why do you post Java questions in the C++ room?
06:55
@sbi me?
sbi
sbi
@Mysticial Ah, I hadn't thought about deleted questions.
@Mysticial Did you just post a Java question?
@sbi Yeah - for entertainment value. :)
I don't like Java much but I just thought the above code snippet was really ugly.
sbi
sbi
@Mysticial Mhmm. Funny, because from here it looks like @Rapptz posted that. Is that your sock puppet account?
Oh, I was thought you were referring to this:
14 hours ago, by Mysticial
10 hours ago, by Mysticial
0
Q: Is tr any Possible of geting output in this way in java..if u knw plz help me

fresher Is tr any option to do above image output in java.. I want d Output in this way. can any one guide me.. above there is a code... In middle i need line that separate the Output data. thanks in advance..

sbi
sbi
06:58
@Mysticial You are thinking of a message from 14hrs ago when I ask "did you just..."?
Frankly, I'm at a loss as to what to reply to that.
@sbi I didn't see as one of the tags. So I thought you were referring to the one I posted yesterday.
sbi
sbi
@Mysticial I'd have though that , , and the code beginning with public class... would be a clue. :)
Now that I clicked through it, yeah it's obviously Java.
07:23
Yesterday a guy came for an interview at where I work.

The questions:

1) Hello, what is your name.
2) Where have you studied?
3) Here's a bitmap with some handwritten text we drew using MS Paint's brush. Can you make a program that would identify all the points of interest (the endpoints and the corners) in the text in 6 hours?
What is a corner in a text? Also, what is your question?
Corner is the point where 2 straight lines intersect
Hope you don't mind a non-regular interjecting, but I believe put simply a program that processes a bitmap and gets points(x,y) for each verticy in each character. Sounds something like trying to translate a CAPTCHA image to either a string or just an array of points.
@satuon has little to do with programming ability. More with graphics analysis. That's a subject. I think I might come up with something in 6 hours, but it would certainly not be top of the line. It's another expertise
@BrandonMiller an array of points? You mean, a bitmap. yay. Done!
@satuon The real WTF is, of course, MS Paint
@satuon, if you are not worried about inefficiency, it might be easier
07:34
Noted, but I mean to only store the points that an intersection of two lines fall on
Just analyze all the different types of endpoints and make a bruteforce program that searches for those patterns
@BrandonMiller Wokay. Big gap between that and 'either a string' :)
It's ugly, but you could do it in less than 30 minutes I'm guessing
@Neil The point is: match a pattern. That's the hard part
@sehe Pattern matching is a np-complete problem
07:36
So what. There are algorithms that do okay.
It's always going to be hard by definition
@sehe Yes, but the gap was for whether or not they just need the points or are they are trying to identify the verticies so that they can translate them to actual characters and not bitmap data
The point is: make it fuzzy enough to understand various line thickness, blotty corners etc.
@sehe Reminds me of the SO question where somebody tried to compile helloworld.png :) Anybody got the link?
@sehe On the contrary, if someone solves this he has to have programming ability.
07:36
@BrandonMiller Haha. Making it sound so easy :)
@sehe That's where most programmer's fail. They can spend days building a program that can do pattern matching 20% faster, but fail to realize that a brute force program would have found the answer in under 10 minutes
@satuon Oh, absolutely. But if he couldn't, he might still be a very accomplished programmer
@sehe Sounds like an incredibly painful process to me.
@satuon, for each point (if black) { for each direction {find distance to boundary}, if there is a single peak, it is an endpoint, if it has two peaks not 180 degrees apart, it is a corner }
Sometimes the best program for the job is brute force
07:37
@FredOverflow Now that would be some interview question!
Just that it's not often the case
@Neil It is unclear to see in which direction you are arguing now.
@sehe Not arguing with you, unless you disagree
Just making conversation
:)
@satuon And write the compiler yourself, too (easy: just compile as HelloWorld v.0.1)
There needs to be a developer environment which keeps track of run statistics
How long the program ran, how long it was idle, how long it was working and with how many threads, etc.
@Neil Wut?
@Neil You mean, like, a profiler? Perfmon, WMI, /proc, DTrace?
@sehe Is there a profiler that will tell you how much faster each run was with respect to the last?
@Neil Many do that.
@sehe Well hell, they need to add that to Java then
07:42
@Neil I'm sure netbeans/eclipse have that built in?
@ronalchn That was his solution actually.
@sehe I'm sure you could fish for start time and end time in a log, yeah
But no, it doesn't tell you how long it was idle, etc.
@Neil There is an OProfile plugin in incubation, it seems (obviously, linux only)
@sehe Ah, therein lies the problem. You see I use Windows.
07:44
@Bartek, ...morning? it's evening here
@Neil "it doesn't" - perhaps you're asking the wrong "it". Regardless, let me google abit
@Neil GNU gprof lists execution times in descending order, not exactly checking in respect to the last but close
@ronalchn In Europe it's morning (or close to, anyway)
I'm sure a plugin exists that'll do that, there usually is
@ronalchn "here" must be, what, East Asian timezone?
07:45
@BrandonMiller doez it works with le jawah, though :)
@Neil Well, isn't that what you are looking for then?
@sehe Yep
Erm. No joke: Is google down? It seems to be, here. Chat's working...
www.google.it is up anyway
@sehe Oh, didn't notice the talk about eclipse and netbeans
was still on c++
:) Anyways, chrome doesn't find google either
07:48
@DeadMG, here is NZ
googleception
@ronalchn Close.
@sehe They drew the bitmap before his eyes, actually. That's why they used MS Paint.
@Neil Woah, must be regional thing: google.it is not available from here too
@BartekBanachewicz Haha :)
07:49
well most of the Lounge regulars are European
and a dash of American
google.it is working fine from here
@sehe I can access www.google.com and www.google.it from here, (here being italy)
Oh, so there are other countries than Europe? awsum.
2
@DeadMG <crying/>
You say it like Europe is a country
@ronalchn was the point
07:50
@ronalchn Could be further from the truth, IME.
but especially where timezones are concerned, it's impossible to not notice that Europe is a distinct block
sehe@mint12:~$ fping www.google.com www.google.nl www.google.nl
www.google.com is unreachable
www.google.nl is unreachable
www.google.nl is unreachable
Unless they suddenly stopped allowing ICMP traffic....
@sehe ping 8.8.8.8 ?
ehe@mint12:~$ ping 8.8.8.8
PING 8.8.8.8 (8.8.8.8) 56(84) bytes of data.
64 bytes from 8.8.8.8: icmp_req=1 ttl=55 time=30.0 ms
64 bytes from 8.8.8.8: icmp_req=2 ttl=55 time=29.1 ms
64 bytes from 8.8.8.8: icmp_req=3 ttl=55 time=29.7 ms
64 bytes from 8.8.8.8: icmp_req=4 ttl=55 time=29.7 ms
64 bytes from 8.8.8.8: icmp_req=5 ttl=55 time=29.2 ms
64 bytes from 8.8.8.8: icmp_req=6 ttl=55 time=29.3 ms
@BartekBanachewicz Dunno what that is. Google dns?
right, google dns
a.root-servers.net? Dayum. Can't even google for "ip address 8.8.8.8" now :)
Ok guys, just in case, I'm going to reset router and network...
sbi
sbi
07:56
@FredOverflow It was by @JamesMcNellis, and it got deleted in a sweep-up. I don't think you can search for deleted postings. You might find it from his twitter timeline, from the transcript here in the chat, or you can narrow it down by answer ID on SO based on the fact that it was posted on April, 1st. Good luck.
sbi
sbi
@LuchianGrigore Oh.
It was deleted, though.
and google is back. Will never know whether the problem was local, but it seems unlikely, IMO.
Ah, didn't see that

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