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5 hours later…
07:09
@JerryCoffin Of course I knew you were joking ... just like you should have remembered that I was one the 31i7357 tr0115 ever existed on the internet!
08:01
I wonder if there is any harm in including spurious captures in lambdas, like auto add_two = [&](auto a) {return a+2}; compared to auto add_two = [](auto a) {return a+2};
nwp
nwp
You lose the ability to turn it into a function pointer. +[&]{}; does not compile.
I also value making captures explicit and would avoid having [&] and [=] in general.
 
3 hours later…
10:50
@fredoverflow i guess that would be the reason for many of failed solutions over codechef and codeforces
 
2 hours later…
12:58
@Agent_A there is actually an entire specialization in computer science around numerics that gets paid quite a lot of money
their job to literally to know how to do the math so that things come out with the least error and fast
practical function analysis
those folks can tell you if the FMA unit on a particular chip is worth using, or if you need to do all sorts of bit hacks to get a valid result
nwp
nwp
13:33
It amuses me how long it takes for VS to save files. It switches to the tab before saving so you can see its progress.
I suspect that's a legacy architecture issue that's become a 'feature'
my guess is the save code only operates on the active tab
and rather than fix it to allow for a save all... they just change active tab and eat the perf impact
nwp
nwp
> $ git diff --shortstat
117 files changed, 1571 insertions(+), 1531 deletions(-)
This will be a fun one to review.
It almost makes more sense to review the regex.
13:50
Decline PR, request smaller PRs, fixed there you go xD
I'd be severely tempted to do that
nwp
nwp
Well, I guess I can PR one file at a time. 117 PRs. I don't think that makes it better.
Maybe I can combine files from the same subfolders.
But seriously, I think reviewing the code conversion process would make sense here.
In theory I should be using libclang for this.
Were those file partially auto-generated? If so, most of those files only differ in a line or two, such as time stamp or new lib link.
Maybe do a diff to see the extend of the changes.
nwp
nwp
No, they were all hand written. I had to change LOG << "This bad thing happened: " << error << " which is bad because " << errorcode; to LOG << QObject::tr("This bad thing happened: %1 which is bad because %2").arg(error).arg(errorcode);.
And sometimes error is an std::string and you have to do error.c_str() instead.
14:07
Nah PRs should be atomic
just that's a massive amount of change
oh that's easier to review
nwp
nwp
LOG_((?:DEBUG)|(?:INFO)|(?:WARNING)|(?:ERROR)|(?:CRITICAL)|(?:ALWAYS)) << "([^"]*)" << ([^<]+) << "(.[^"]*)" << ([^<]+);
->
LOG_$1 << QObject::tr("$2%1$4%2").arg($3).arg($4);
Looks good?
Thanks Qt Creator. That's exactly what I needed.
There is an extra . in capture group 4, but I don't think it matters.
Ah. $5 at the end, not $4. Rip.
Should have git stashed.
14:30
@user12439167 why is this guy having diff names over here and his original stckoverflow acc?
Is it time to worry when you find a /usr/bin/exit and running it does indeed exit the current shell with the specified return value to the parent process.
no why?
that was a common pattern in old unix
that file exists for backwards compat as the exit command is actually implemented by the shell itself now
But how does /usr/bin/exit cause the shell to exit? Think about it.
it should just be a shell script
go look
14:57
Huh arrays are hard. I was writing to random memory causing random parts of my code to segfault. C++ is so much fun
you're probably doing it wrong?
Yes I didn't boundary check :D
I took sensor data and used it as array indices without boundary checks, ofc my program segfaults randomly :D
C++ trusts the programmer, and you betrayed that trust. How could you?
15:18
time for valgrind, I thought I got it, but it's still segfaulting
15:48
@TelKitty I'm well aware you like to claim that, anyway (but I've never seen any evidence of it).
16:12
@nwp any reason why? I've increasingly found myself just writing [&] and not caring.
 
3 hours later…
19:10
Fatal Python error: Cannot recover from stack overflow.
they did it, title drop
everyone clap
 
1 hour later…
nwp
nwp
20:36
@Mikhail Lots of very difficult to debug bugs being caused by capturing something by reference that then goes out of scope.
 
2 hours later…
22:29

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