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17:00
Damn...
0
Q: Inappropriate username and/or gravatars.

rlemonI'm not sure if there is a post about this already. I searched my title text and the first two pages returned nothing useful, so here goes: I have just come a crossed a user with (imo) a questionably inappropriate username and gravatar match-up ( http://stackoverflow.com/users/23875/dropped-on...

@Drise Haskell is monadically awesome!
"Try our new Ubuntu One Music Store!" click "An error has occurred. Our engineers have been notified and we will work to fix this."
@Mysticial Wow
@Drise yeah... Someone clearly wants to get lynched...
17:01
@Mysticial Looks like little boy, the bomb that was dropped on Hiroshima.
What would be the best way to get the number of occurrences of a character in std::string?
if I wanted to find how many commas were in "a,b,cde,f,g,erf,h"
@Drise int commas = std::count(str.begin(), str.end(), ',');
@Mysticial I don't see how that's offensive.
@R.MartinhoFernandes It's not offensive per say, but it's just bad.
17:05
@R.MartinhoFernandes I don't find it offensive either. But I can definitely see others won't like it.
@JerryCoffin I was about to say..
I don't see how referencing Little Boy has to be bad.
user784668
@Drise auto result = std::count(str.begin(), str.end(), ',');
@JerryCoffin lol stupid brain of mine :)
user784668
@R.MartinhoFernandes Dereferencing it is bad.
17:06
If it was "Dropped on Japan, take that!" or something, maybe.
@Fanael Uhh...
@Fanael auto?
user784668
@bamboon auto
@FredOverflow Thanks Fred. You're the second most helpful person in the room to me after @MooingDuck.
In this instance std::count returns difference_type. I'm sort of surprised, I've always considered that the SL library leans towards unsigned types.
17:09
@LucDanton return last-first
@LucDanton is difference_type convertable to int?
@LucDanton "SL library"? Does the "L" in "SL" stand for something other than "library"?
@Drise usually
user784668
@JerryCoffin Super Light.
17:10
@MooingDuck Well, no. But now I've got to think about it.
@LucDanton I was thinking about when Stroussup mentioned that metric/imperial conversions should be a non-issue in C++, I realized that means all numbers with units ought to have the units be part of the type of the number. And then I realized that the STL doesn't do that anywhere, unless you define a custom allocator.
@MooingDuck I suppose the design predates std::make_unsigned.
@MooingDuck Wut.
All things in the STL are dimensionless.
hi gents, can i be allowed to bump this up a bit? stackoverflow.com/questions/12468104/…
17:11
@R.MartinhoFernandes std::count's return value shouldn't be, should it?
Dimensionless, or dimension-unaware?
@MooingDuck What dimension would it have?
no wait, I overthought this didn't I?
Yes, you did.
@MooingDuck boost.org/doc/libs/1_37_0/doc/html/boost_units.html. Also see VHDL, which does quite a nice job with units (IMO).
17:12
good, hate to find more msitakes in my favorite language.
int<metre> commas = std::count(str.begin(), str.end(), ',');
@R.MartinhoFernandes int<commas> :(
yeah, I definitely see my error now
@LordAro You are bad, and you should feel bad.
@LucDanton Well, unless you consider things like "number of iterators" or "number of elements" as dimensions...
But that may be pushing it.
@Drise can't tell if sarcasm or not... :L
17:15
Sep 10 at 21:08, by Mooing Duck
@oderebek so you thought you'd barge into a lounge, not look around, and pester us?
ok, read that, what's the problem? i'm just 'mostly' politely bumping up a question i asked yesterday, and have since revised somewhat
Chat is not a question dump.
Sep 9 at 11:45, by daknøk
If you are new here, please read the newbie hints right away, and only post here afterwards. Thank you.
Did you read it?
I doubt it.
Editing a question bumps it on the listing.
@Drise incorrect, good sir, hence the 'read that' ;)
@CatPlusPlus ah, i did not know that
17:19
The gist: we don't care.
@LordAro Not quite so. "That" is ambiguous in almost all cases.
@LordAro Not quite so. "That" is ambiguous in almost all cases.
Oh stop it chat.
@Drise quite true, i apologise for the ambiguity
@LordAro Are you using any toolkits such as QT which might have a helpful solution?
@LordAro If we seem to be coming off as a bit rude, we kinda are - especially at this time of the day. We get so many drive-by-linkers that some of us have lost our patience for them.
Also, remember, its not wise to update a running binary, so you probablly need to find a toolkit that actually integrates with the various OS's to run update tools.
17:22
@JonathanSeng nope, it's pretty much entirely self-contained (and no possibility to epxand)
@Mysticial i can understand that, i am not unfamiliar with chat/irc/chat-thingys
@Mysticial Wait, Mystical, when did you become Mysticial?
@LordAro Then you are pretty much toast. Doing this entirely yourself is such an undertaking that you will probably find it is mre work doing the auto update than the rest of the application.
@Drise Oh, mere mortal, you dare ask?
@Drise Which are you referring to? The extra "i" in my name, or when I became a room owner?
@Drise Erm, it's always been that way.
@Mysticial Lol, didn't think of the italics. But yes, the i.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Surely, no.
17:24
@Drise I've always had that "i" in my username.
@Mysticial I've been so blind for so long.... sob
It seems I'm the only one that noticed that since the beginning. I'm so awesome.
@Drise No worries, almost nobody notices it.
@Mysticial Its not like it was a 'Q' or something silly....
@R.MartinhoFernandes One or two others missing it doesn't mean you're the only one who saw it...
17:27
@Mysticial But... Have I really been calling you Mystical all this time, and have been wrong?
That's so...
@JerryCoffin Hey, stop taking away my awesomosity.
@Drise I dunno. Chat replies auto-insert the name. So I get those.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Awesome is useless for robots I would assume.
You know, the whole 'newbie hints' thing needs to be a special policy.... Its burried among other junk and its a bit rude to expect someone to read hours of posts and everything on the right column when people are intimidated enough by the amount of stuff on the screen.
@Drise Wrong. Robots run on awesome.
@JonathanSeng I don't think so.
17:29
@R.MartinhoFernandes Run on or exude?
@JonathanSeng heh, that may be the case, currently only exploring possibilities. i have explored around, an the general 'easy' way to do it is rename the currently running binary, download the file, restart program, delete old renamed program
@R.MartinhoFernandes If you run on human heads, then sure.
@JonathanSeng But then, I lurked for about a month before I first posted here.
I'm determined to make that a meme.
@LordAro Any supporting files? How to manage the multiple processes? Its a deep subject.
17:31
shouts Get a room! We don't want to see that!
Oh wait..
What are you talking about?
@R.MartinhoFernandes You can easily get a room on SO chat
IGNORE ME TOO MUCH DAYZ NO SLEEP
@Drise Yes, but you can't have sex in it.
@R.MartinhoFernandes That was the joke
@R.MartinhoFernandes The awesomeness of others does nothing to detract from yours.
17:34
by supporting files you mean .dll and the like? no :)
and multiple processes? perhaps you have misunderstood:
1. program.exe renames itself to old_program.exe
2. old_program.exe downloads new version of itself
3. old_program.exe stops
4. user starts program.exe again
5. program.exe deletes old_program.exe

any better?
OH dear.
@LordAro And it may require forking a new process to move a binary being used or any number of other problems.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Does that mean we're all neutered upon entering the chat room?
why are SO moderators removing all homework tags
why are SO moderators removing all voting explanations
why are SO moderators closing the most popular questions
@LordAro And, as your question received as an answer, there isn't a way to even get your starting information in C++ itself -- its going to vary from platform to platform. Find a tool and don't waste the time trying to support each platform yourself.
17:39
why is there no mediaplayer that works even roughly OK (like, VLC randomizing playlist order, WinAmp hogging resources, Media Player refusing to play files, so on)
What? There is no fork on Windows.
why do you have to submit to a ridiculous security check at the airport
@Cheersandhth.-Alf Because the moderators' idea of what the site should be differs from the users' idea of what the site should be.
Also renaming works fine.
@CatPlusPlus Right. Its windows. Use spork.
17:39
why is windows getting more and more unusable for professionals, more and more like "for children"
@JonathanSeng that may be the case, thanks for your help anyway
well i'm just wonderiong
Atmospheric scientists try for years to piece together what happened, but no explanation is forthcoming. Eventually, they give up, and the unexplained meteorological phenomenon is simply dubbed a “Skrillex Storm”—because, in the words of one researcher, “It had one hell of a drop.”
@Cheersandhth.-Alf Lowest common denominator.
@LordAro Sorry it isn't the answer you wanted.
17:40
IOW, people are idiots.
it's like there are people who want to conform, who want to teach us to conform too
@Cheersandhth.-Alf Hippie designers.
to just do as we're told
@Cheersandhth.-Alf I use foobar. I have no complaints. It doesn't play video, though.
yeah, freaking web designers
17:40
@CatPlusPlus Actually, there is -- it's just not part of the Win32 API (but is available in the native NT API, and was exposed in the POSIX subsystem, before they tore that out).
@JonathanSeng sometimes there isn't one :L </philosophical>
@JerryCoffin So, undocumented internals.
@Drise Jedi mind tricks don't work on me -- only money.
mplayer the best media player.
17:41
well ok, but is there knife in windows
I'm slow and I don't care.
@CatPlusPlus The POSIX subsystem was documented. At least some of the native NT API is documented (albeit, mostly in the DDK instead of the SDK) too, but I don't remember whether this is or not.
@CatPlusPlus huh. i tried it. it sucked?
but thanks i'll try foobar!
google...
Well, for films. foobar is for music thingies.
17:43
@Cheersandhth.-Alf iTunes currently takes 123 MB of RAM on my Computer and has been running for several days. (Not sure if 123 MB should be considered a resource hog for a media player.)
@StackedCrooked it may help to just minimize it. used to work with winamp
that
Foobar is taking 8 megs here, and it's been running... since last time I rebooted, probably months ago.
is pretty silly behavior for a memory manager, with hooks into gui land
@Cheersandhth.-Alf That's a lot easier to answer: Microsoft (nearly always) does a good enough job to compete, and no more. So, their media player sucks, but marginally less than Apple's, and (transitively) a lot less than anything on Linux.
@Cheersandhth.-Alf MPlayerX is the best video player on Mac also.
17:47
@JerryCoffin I liked Windows media player.. Until they forced it to update the ID3tags even when I told it not to.
And I also didn't like the lack of support for any reasonable codecs. Like DivX and such.
@Drise dvd
@MooingDuck what?
@Drise It may not ship with a DivX codec, but if somebody writes a DivX codec that conforms with their interface spec, I'm pretty sure WMP will happily use it.
SO is brutal on new programmers.
@JerryCoffin Or I can just use VLC
@JonathanSeng Linky so I can follow suit?
17:50
@JerryCoffin Someone did.
@Drise That, or Media Player Classic
Alright.
@JonathanSeng my advanced C++ book only has 8 chapters :-) — juanchopanza 3 mins ago
@JonathanSeng It would help if more people read the FAQ, about page, etc.
@MooingDuck It might. But they won't.
17:51
Quite honestly a site like EE would be better for newer programmers.
@JerryCoffin :)
@jornak What is EE?
@R.MartinhoFernandes It would have surprised me a bit of somebody hadn't, but I haven't looked for codecs in quite a while, so I wasn't sure.
@jornak EE?
@JonathanSeng Why are you assuming a bad book?
17:51
@JonathanSeng I do not know if I can speak its name here. (but it's Expert's Something-or-other :P )
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah, it could be the best 8 chapters ever written in human history.
A good book will definitely have std::vector before chapter 9.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I didn't. the whole point is that the question has a constraint and the answer garners up votes for ignoring the constraint and answer a different question.
Chapter 9: STL.
@JonathanSeng ExpertsExchange. AFAIK, SO is based on EE, except it's free to get answers.
17:53
@JonathanSeng What constraint?
Well, the entirety of SE's technical sites are based on EE
(The question garners votes because it's useful)
EE is much better if you need stuff like MS Exchange support and the like
"we are only supposed to use chapters 1-8 which does not include pointers.." this?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Stroustroup -- first example is chapter 13.
17:54
@JonathanSeng But you said it only has 8 chapters.
@jornak I can't really agree. At least the last (well, pretty much "only") time I looked at EE, people may have been more polite (I don't remember), but the quality of answers was extremely low overall.
FWIW, your answer is the one violating the constraint because it uses pointers.
@R.MartinhoFernandes That the author's unspecified book with unknown numbers of chapters can only be used for chapters 1-8 which do not include pointers.
@JonathanSeng Right, and there are no pointers in juan's answer.
@R.MartinhoFernandes But there are far more advanced templates and vectors.
17:55
@JonathanSeng It depends on the book.
In my view, pointers are more advanced than vectors.
@R.MartinhoFernandes And I fully acknowledge that [] and * are almost the same while trying to use something reasonably expected to ahve been taught [].
@MooingDuck Aah.
17:56
Ah, Mr. Norton just informed me, of its own volition, that "Foobar 2000 is... safe!". Hallelujah!
And without knowing the book, you're making the assumption that the book doesn't cover vectors early.
@JonathanSeng Having re-read the code in the question, I think the OP simply wanted to know how to call the addMovie function from main.
@JerryCoffin That's because you get these newcomers that don't have any idea and just guesses. Then there's the Microsoft MVPs (like Mestha) that come along and just blow shit out of the water.
@JonathanSeng Your answer has pointers even if it doesn't have stars.
I'm still surprised by things happening here, because I'm using new replacement laptop after spilling too much coffee in the old ASUS beast (it didn't like coffee, apparently)
17:57
-1 for not answering the question. There are constraints you know.. — Drise 2 mins ago
@Cheersandhth.-Alf Computers don't like coffee? News to me...
The only thing we know about the book is that it doesn't cover pointers early.
As I said, SO is brutal on newbies.
@R.MartinhoFernandes what book is this?
@Cheersandhth.-Alf We don't know.
@JonathanSeng I don't think it's SO in particular
@JonathanSeng Also, your answer is wrong and misleading.
@Cheersandhth.-Alf We don't know -- an OP simply said that he's restricted to what's in chapters 1-8 of his book, and that doesn't include pointers.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Please explain.
@JonathanSeng Not really. If you write a wrong answer, you get downvoted. That's the whole purpose of the site.
17:58
Answerers on SO have an expectation of some advanced skills.
@JonathanSeng Aww, poor newbies. Somebody think of the newbies!
@R.MartinhoFernandes have you read C++ Coding Standards (Herb Sutter and Andrei Alexandrescu) and/or Exceptional C++ Style (Herb Sutter)?
but it's not harsh on you
because you've also learned why you were wrong, which directly benefits you, as well as the questioner.
"The [] means pointer (...), but its not a Inventory* data"" is wrong.
@MooingDuck Sadly, that might be true.
17:59
@jornak we have an expectation of telling us what the question is
also bear in mind that I haven't seen the answer in question
Inventory data[] in that context really is Inventory* data.

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