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sam
sam
12:00
Is anyone know how to add include path to ubuntu linux? Thank you~
qox
qox
join removes one level of monad structure.
amagad
the earliest I could possibly get back home from Linz is 1am :(
join [[1, 2, 3]]
[1,2,3]
@qox got it
@DeadMG What are you doing in Linz?
@sam I get my additional include paths from running the system updater.
@FredOverflow Oracle.
12:03
dafuq? for flying out, the fare is £40 and the fees are £42.
@DeadMG Are you applying for something specific (C++ programmer, database expert, whatever...) or just "for a job"?
£13 air passenger duty tax, £13.70 passenger service tax, £6 for a web check in
@FredOverflow They want to offer me an internship.
@sehe :) Also, don't blog when hung over.
sam
sam
@StackedCrooked I installed libvtk-5.8. But other lib like pcl use include ".h" not "vtk-5.8/.h".
12:04
@DeadMG So.... basically you are complaining that the fares are too cheap. Makes sense
qox
qox
@sehe because that would certainly result in death.
sam
sam
@StackedCrooked so I want to add include path to the ubuntu system. How to do that? Thank you~
@DeadMG Oh.. Ryanair:(
@sam Do you mean include path like in C++ #include? Or just where binaries are searched for?
12:06
4
Q: Set LD_LIBRARY_PATH for applications started from the desktop

dwjI have Qt Creator installed on Ubuntu 10.04 LTS. When I launch Qt Creator from the desktop I can build the application I am working on but cannot run or debug it. After struggling quite a bit I found that LD_LIBRARY_PATH is not set for applications that are run from the desktop. If I start Qt ...

@sehe What? I'm saying, dafuq is with all the fees.
sam
sam
@StackedCrooked Yes,c++ include
@sam I vaguely remember it was right-clicking somewhere.
@DeadMG Sigh. That is cheap. People get cost transparancy, they complain more. Go figure
sam
sam
@StackedCrooked because when I compile, it shows some headers not found. But I can find the headers by locate.
12:07
@sehe Probably because it's not transparent at all. How does it cost the airline £6 for me to book online?
57
Q: How to add a default include path for gcc in linux?

Jesse BederI'd like gcc to include files from $HOME/include in addition to the usual include directories, but there doesn't seem to be an analogue to $LD_LIBRARY_PATH. I know I can just add the include directory at command line when compiling (or in the makefile), but I'd really like a universal approach he...

and what the fuck even is a passenger service or passenger duty tax?
@sam Oh, then CPPFLAGS="-I /usr/local/include/myincludepath"
in fact, the airlines are currently being sued by a bunch of consumer groups because they suck at this
@DeadMG Perhaps you'll have fun getting that explained by your customer service spokes person
@DeadMG The transparancy is about the bill. Don't get all confused. It's irrelevant what it cost them. It's relevant what they charge you for. That way you can select another airliner based on the info
12:09
@sehe 'passenger service' is a local tax rip-off, 'passenger duty' is an EU rip-off, web check-in fee is a Ryanair rip-off.
sam
sam
@sehe Why I echo $CPPFLAGS is nothing? Is that right?
And the various rip-offs add up to exactly £42? That cannot be a coincidence!
@MartinJames Precisely. Transparent. Fine. Ripoff? Fine. Still exceptionally cheap. Go by boat if you prefer. Oh wait. That's more expensive
@sam Of course. By default, you need no tricks. gcc -v will list the defaults, IIRC
well, this is gonna cost a bomb. I hope Oracle are happy to pick up the bill
@sam Also, usually you'll put this in your makefile: CPPFLAGS+=-I /usr/local/include/myincludepath
@DeadMG I think they are less twitchy with the petty cash. This is a flight, remember.
12:12
@sehe OH, I'm not complaining overall - I still fly Ryanair 'cos the bottom-line price. It's the stupid distortions that annoy. That web check-in charge is unavoidable and is effectively a part of the fare.
@sehe I don't feel that £40 is petty cash. Or maybe that's just me. What's it got to do with it being a flight?
@DeadMG (Also, don't mention the Bomb at checkin, or the cost will rise, as will the duration of the journey)
how long does it usually take to check out of an airport?
sam
sam
@sehe Thank you for hints. I found my situation is a little bit difference. I use rosmake to compile my program,but I'm not familar with rosmake. So I want to just add a include path simply to the system to let other lib can find it. Because the error is not generate by my source code but by the lib I used in my program.
@sehe Is CPPFLAGS can only used in makefile? Or it also can used in export CPPFLAGS=xxx?
@sam You can just try that. Chances are, it will work. Also, look at export INCLUDE=xxx or export INCLUDES=xxx (I think this is the archaic UNIX way)
12:15
@sehe ..or carry a zippo. What damage could you possibly do with a zippo above a butane lighter? Soddin' Swiss made me go through security check even though I was only connecting there. They spotted my zippo and made me dismantle it and bin the cotton stuff with a tiny bit of petrol soaked in it.
@DeadMG It has to do with airplanes being plenty expensive, airports being plenty expensive, fuel being rather high priced these days, security not being free (and also not being guaranteed, but I digress). It has to do with the same logic whereby a bottle of good wine will cost you more than a bottle of water
@MartinJames See ^
@sehe So Oracle are expecting for it to cost a bomb.
sam
sam
@sehe I'm a bit confuse. Which should I use CPPFLAGS or INCLUDE or INCLUDES or LD_LIBRARY_PATH? What's their difference?
@DeadMG No. They are expecting it to cost around about the cost of air travel. Durrr
IOW a bomb
12:18
@sam Boy. I don't know. You try it out! I'm just giving things from experience, but if I knew I would have just said so.
@DeadMG Nah. Around 100 EUR :)
@sehe That would be what it would cost before fees
@DeadMG 40+42 is ... 82, right?
@sehe Return flight too. But that one has no fees.
@sam And right now, I'm going to tell you to take your question to Stack Overflow or Super User giving more details to run the risk of finding someone who actually knows what rosmake is
then convert to euro and I reckon you can get up to 150
then there's the hotel, which I have six nights at about 50-60 euros a night
12:20
@DeadMG Wokay. Then, that. Of course, they know what it costs. I don't know whether they cover travel expenses, but I'm sure you asked
@sehe They cover my flights. But I don't want to find they tell me that I picked an overpriced flight and they won't cover it, because that would be a big difference in my bank account
@DeadMG Honestly, I find hotel prices more suprising every time I look at those. I cannot bring myself to stay in a hotel. Not at my own expense, at least
@DeadMG Well, you find a cheaper one, and I'll personally cover the flight :)
lol
(I won't cover your insurance though. You'd need it, I suppose)
@sehe What alternative is there? You could take your own cardboard box, but that would take up part of your 10kg cabin-bag allowance.
12:25
@MartinJames Youth hostels used to be my pick. I remember staying at 'Hotel-de-botel' (a boat) when I stayed in Maastricht for a client. I was 22, though. It wasn't very comfortable
@MartinJames I'd be fine with the 'cupboard style' stay-overs they apparently have in Japan.
@sehe Hehe - never stayed in a boatel. I would like to try it once.
@sehe TBH, me too, esp one-nighters.
between the costs of my passport, and the trains, I'm still splashing out a lot of money to go visit Oracle
hey, now I have to pay again if I want to bring luggage?
shouldn't that be included in the fare?
@DeadMG Hint - don't go near the minibar, except to check that it's fully stocked when you first get into your room. I've been done twice for minibar charges when I haven't used anything.
@DeadMG usually up to a certain weight
yeah
12:32
10kg isn't unusual, but for short continental flights, it might be less
@DeadMG L..L.. luggage? On Ryanair?
Ell
Ell
can't you ask oracle to pay?
well, strictly, Oracle are paying
it's the trains that are gonna cost me
I reckon getting my passport has cost me a couple hundred pounds so far, and the trains to get to Stansted and back are gonna be another £75, even after my railcard
@DeadMG OK, say your bags were full of DB manuals.
£75 !! Erk! From where?
I live near Devon, in the South West
so I'mma have to trip to London, which is five hours and £35 each way
and did I mention that if I fail to check out of Stansted and get to the train station on Sunday in 25 minutes or less, there are no more trains that night that can get me back home on time?
12:37
@DeadMG that's not too expensive. It costs me £50 to back and fro to London.
@TonyTheLion I have to get the Tube and a few interconnecting trains too.
besides, you're more on the Bristol line, whereas I'm on a different train line
well I have an Oyster card, but that's no use to you now, is it :P
12:38
lol
@DeadMG I've 'slept' nights in Gatwick 'cos that. Stansted shoud be quiet-ish on Sunday, depends if some 747 has just got in and passport control is jammed up. Those electronic passport-machines are often not working:(
@StackedCrooked It is spectacular. Depending on your usage patterns. If you end up doing linear traversal of contiguous memory anyways, the prefetch is going to 'forgive' your alignment issues
Where you off to again puppy?
Linz
oh yea Austria
have fun speaking German :P
12:40
@StackedCrooked But, consider thread safe, lockfree code with random access patterns. Now, suddenly aligmnent is going to kill L2 cache performance
@StackedCrooked Scott Meyers has a nice talk on that, somewhere (think cache lines)
@sehe why L2 cache?
oh fucking hell
I think I saw his talk on cpu caching.
their Total Price (for ryanair) has another thing under it saying "Excluding admin fee".
how can you have a Total Price that's not a total price?
that's Ryan Air.
they are known to suck majorly
Easy Jet is better
12:42
@StackedCrooked Well, I don't remember it being about CPU caches. But yeah, this is what I'm referring to. Think cache coherence and false sharing as well. SMP processors make this hurt a lot more
and they do fly to Austria, well at least from Gatwick
ryanair are the only ones who make the flight to Linz, afaik
the others only fly to Vienna
ah yea
when's your flight?
13:30
@DeadMG Presumably, the 'admin fee' is something that might be added when you don't self-book via the site? A traveling agent might add that? Or their ticket shops at big railway stations (if they even have them) and airports?
@DeadMG Today?!
12:43
@sehe Oh. Wednesday.
@DeadMG Hehe. Figured
ah right
you taking your laptop?
I'm assuming you are.
what laptop?
IME, when I finally get to the 'Total Price' on the Ryanair server, that's exactly what they take from my card.
12:45
@sehe Got rid of linear traversal. It's a little more noticable now..
@StackedCrooked Now, add threading and memory barriers. You will see the spectacular effects (if done right)
Is that was false sharing is about?
@StackedCrooked Cache coherency, mostly. False sharing occurs when a cache line reads adjacent memory that you weren't actually looking to modify/read. Now when another thread modifies the 'falsely shared' data, all cores have to drop that cache line to avoid having potentially stale data in there. This is bad, since it was only 'by-catch' in the same cache by accident
Thinking about this, you'd probably notice the dramatic effects only when there is concurrent write access. Mmm. Well, suffice it to say that alignment is important for performance, especially in SMP
12:51
@TonyTheLion Oracle said they'd issue me one if I didn't bring one
Perhaps linear traversal is now more likely to create problems.
@DeadMG ah right
@DeadMG Yes - so definitely don't take one, especially if it means you can get away with only a cabin bag. Waiting interminably by a baggage-conveyor while also on a tight timetable for the last train or coach is no fun at all.
@StackedCrooked Things are, obviously, the worst when several threads are reading/modifying around the same elements. The around gets noticable especially with unaligned data
@MartinJames Can I bring enough clothes for a week in a cabin bag? Not having to have checked luggage would be a big plus.
12:56
@TonyTheLion That's awesome illustration:
> As you can see as soon the two data "false shared" have 51 bytes separation the execution time collapses from ~8 secs to ~1.8 secs, so just wasting 51 bytes I'm able to obtain a x5 speed up, nice isn't it?
Lol, I already messed up my thread management. Getting crashes now.
@DeadMG Mmm. You tell us :) How big are you, exactly? Sweat a lot? Hehe
@StackedCrooked Could be just CPU time ulimit on LWS
It also crashes on my computer.
@sehe It shows the point nicely.
And the code is not very well thought through :D
12:59
@sehe I'm pretty big.
@DeadMG If you don't need three suits, sure. I'm sure Oracle will understand that you're travelling light. Besides, the aggro of maybe having a jacket/suit dry-cleaned mid-week pales into insignificance compared with sleeping in Stansted overnight~:((
don't need any suit
@DeadMG Oh - that's assuming you have a 'Ryanair-sized' cabin bag - as big as they will allow and no bigger.
how the fuck do I know how big that is
@StackedCrooked Oh, aha, I think the join loop (while) is starting before all benchmark workers have been created...
13:04
@DeadMG Ryanair site - terms and conditions.
@DeadMG 'Strictly one item of cabin baggage per passenger (excluding infants) weighing up to 10kg with maximum dimensions of 55cm x 40cm x 20cm is permitted. (handbag, briefcase, laptop, shop purchases, camera etc.) must be carried in your 1 permitted piece of cabin baggage'
I'mma need to get advice from my parents about which suitcases we have that would fit that description
and how much 10kg is in terms of clothes&whatnot since I actually have no idea
you have to include the weight of the bag itself in that too
so take a light bag
I have like, a rucksack
but don't know how much I can fit in it
that's normally pretty light
@DeadMG I have a cheap Argos wheelie-bag that fits nicely into the Ryanair baggage-sizer. Providing I don't take my lead underwear, it's not sensibly possible to get to 10kg with clothing and such.
13:09
besides a nice set of clothes for the interview itself, I don't suppose you need that much for the rest of the time
@TonyTheLion It's not an interview. It's three whole days of working with them.
I always travel as light as possible, wherever I go
@TonyTheLion Yeah - that's what I thought. Sod Ryanair checked-baggage charges - I won't pay 'em.
@DeadMG oh I didn't realize
now another thing I haven't thought of
their T&C speaks about seat belt extenders, and I realized that I have no idea what size their seats are, and I'm a pretty big guy
13:11
you need some Euro's
how can I find out if I'll fit into one of their tiny crammed seats?
They're generally pretty large
@TonyTheLion Haven't forgotten that.
@TonyTheLion Maybe we should find a sponsor for DeadMG.
@sehe Oh, yeah fixed it already but then my computer just froze and I had to reboot..
13:12
@FredOverflow is that a suggestion?
It is merely an observation.
I think Oracle sponsors him already
@DeadMG Err.. in which dimension? I'm 6'3", or 192cm, and I can fit, (just).
@MartinJames Hmm. All of them :P
I'm 6' but I weigh far too much and take up plenty of space
You can't possible be as large as some of the people I've seen sitting in those small airplane seats
13:14
@DeadMG The seats are not that small. It's a standard 192-seat configuration on a 727-800. Unless you are hiding your US citizenship, you should fit.
@MartinJames I think that depends on what proportion of you is leg.
@DeadMG Maybe you should take up sports?
@MartinJames How about compared to train seats?
I had the glory of a First Great Western train when I went to Newport and my legs were too long to fit in one of those and it was most uncomfortable
@DeadMG Quite a lot - I try to get an aisle seat to stretch occasionally, but I do then get run over by the service trolleys.
@DeadMG long legs
13:17
what the fuck
I DON'T WANT TO HIRE A CAR
christ, the number of "No" buttons you have to click to their endless not-at-all-special offers is insane, if you can even find them
@DeadMG Seat pitch: 76cm (30in)
what's the pitch?
I thought pitch was an angle.
hey
they didn't say that text message confirmation would cost me, and they didn't mention that I'd have to pay an extra £12 admin fee
I see the problem now. I was allocating 24 GB.
@DeadMG A semi-useless dimension - sorta like the wavelength of the seats, only useful for comparisons. Easyjet Airbus only 29"
13:21
right
well that's a hundred and twenty quid I'm due to claim back from Oracle
keep all the receipts of your train tickets too
you may get that refunded as well, seeing its part of your travel
@StackedCrooked only cicada has that kind of memory to play with here
@DeadMG Text message confirm, yes, they charge, and it's pretty redundant 'cos email confirmation and boarding pass. Once you have your boarding pass email, you're there. Dunno about the 'admin fee' must be a new rip-off.
@TonyTheLion Yup - absolutely! Bang in everything, if they don't want to pay, OK, but you should try. If you have a Costa coffee at Stansted, keep the receipt.
@StackedCrooked You what?! Windows, I presume :)
@StackedCrooked Windows, right?
No hes on Mac
13:27
@sehe No it was a bug in my code. I had increased the incrementation count to 1 billion, but forgot that I also constructed vectors with that size.
@StackedCrooked '1 billion, but forgot that I also constructed vectors with that size' - hehe!
The data type was a struct containing 3 uint64_t members.
@StackedCrooked Yeah. Lemme see:
t	offset: 1:	1.700 seconds
t	offset: 0:	1.706 seconds
j	offset: 2:	3.224 seconds
j	offset: 1:	3.919 seconds
j	offset: 0:	4.078 seconds
terminate called after throwing an instance of 'std::bad_alloc'
  what():  std::bad_alloc
Erm. Yeah.
13:28
That's with const unsigned long long iterations = 1 << 28;
So, that's my point about 'Windows'. Well, Mac, too apparently :)
That's the demangler picking verbose names I think.
@StackedCrooked Hmmm. Missing the point? I ditches the demangler because it adds non-essential cruft.
1 min ago, by sehe
That's with const unsigned long long iterations = 1 << 28;
Xeo
Xeo
1
Q: Where/how I can get a Looper?

axisWhere/how I can get a Looper according to the C++ standard or C++ standard libraries ? I need to design my own callback system and, of course, I need this one to manage my queue and my components. A looper is something that given a frequency does 1 simple thing, it just runs a queue at each clo...

I didn't know there was a point.
Xeo
Xeo
Wtf the OP here...
13:30
We got a looper situation.
@Xeo Sounds like a STD
Xeo
Xeo
A what?
Looper is a 2012 American science fiction action film written and directed by Rian Johnson. The film stars Bruce Willis, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, and Emily Blunt. In Looper, time travel is invented by the year 2074 and, though immediately outlawed, is used by criminal organizations to send those they want killed into the past where they are killed by "loopers", assassins paid with silver bars strapped to their targets. Joe, a looper, encounters his older self after his older self is sent back in time to 2044. Looper was selected as the opening film of the 2012 Toronto International Film ...
this ^
@sehe Where do you see that?
@StackedCrooked in my code, durrr. You know, when it doesn't freeze my system, and all ?
Xeo
Xeo
13:32
lol
lol
lol
@TonyTheLion let's say you kill your grandpa before he begets your pa. then your memories of that being your grandpa must be false.
@sehe that's the druiper.
13:34
@Cheersandhth.-Alf wut?
@StackedCrooked Gonorrhoe
Er .. something like that I guess.
@TonyTheLion assuming you can remember your grandpa?
okay instead kill your mother, before she produces you
then your identification of the one you kill, as your mother, must be false, yes?
@Cheersandhth.-Alf Yes I remember my grandpa
@StackedCrooked Anyways, here's a simplistic threading version using openmp instead. It runs on my system - allocation >5gb at it's peak. I made it modify the vector too:
liveworkspace.org/code/f01de30520a8c0b447f805bc4b13da3b uncomment line #50 to make it run thread teams per template argument type.
Compiled with
  /usr/lib/gcc-snapshot/bin/g++ -std=c++0x -fopenmp -Wall -O3 -march=native test.cpp -o test
13:45
I feel bad about the whole Linz thing
if I don't like Oracle, it'll be a nasty hit to my finances
@DeadMG Go forward. No point in looking back.
it's not about looking back, it's about looking forward to the imminent depletion of my savings and how I'm going to meet the resultant travelling fees to search for work if I don't get a position
@sehe Never saw openmp code before. It's weird.
13:48
ppl < openmp
tbb too
We are the people?
You mean tbb is also inferior to openmp?
fuck
( ppl | tbb ) > openmp
13:50
@DeadMG Hint #2 -, try to get to the gate reasonably early so you stand a better chance of boarding early-ish. If you are last on the plane, it's quite likely that all the overhead bins are full and you then have to put cabin bag under seat in front - further restricting your space.
@DeadMG apples < pears
@sehe They're far from incomparable. They're both C++ threading libraries.
@DeadMG They're not, really. openmp is not a library. And it's not about threading. It's about declarative concurrency parallelism, which is related. But far from the same
That's not a good description of openmp.
I don't generally like openmp, but I love it for quickly comparing threaded/unthreaded versions without having to adopt a library
Openmp quickly breaks down for lack of detail control for me. But welldesigned programs may not even require that. If a program has a simple task, and coarse-grained parallelism is the big win, openmp fits the bill nicely. It is portable, allows runtime tweaking (configuring scheduling and number of threads via environment variables if you want)
@LucDanton I assume you responded to the puppy (my post dates 2 seconds before yours :))
13:57
Indeedy.
:) and ohai
@StackedCrooked TBB?
No, I can't reproduce alignment* issues :)
Or only marginally.
qox
qox
Misaligned data should make your application crash. Any other result is idiotic and PHP-like.
14:07
@StackedCrooked I'm aware of that. You might want to play with access ordering patterns. I'm actually not aware how you order your accesses now :()
@qox Nope. Only if you use it in unsupported situations
In all other situations, it will just run slow.
@qox Oh - your stating your dream world. Go for it. Make a nice gcc extension that behaves this way :)
Isn't alignment a really simple matter? E.g. a large integer type mapped on a odd pointer address. The benchmark barely flinch at that.
qox
qox
@sehe s/gcc extension/CPU/
@qox Why?
since the CPU appears to cope with misalignment just fine, even without a performance penalty in many cases, being more tolerant of it seems like a fine idea to me.
qox
qox
Tolerance for program errors is always bad IMO.
I only tolerate my own errors.
j/k :)
@sehe const unsigned long long iterations = 1 << 27; => won't this evaluate to an overflowed integer that ends up being assigned to a larger integer? Will this not lead to byte loss?
Oh, wait, 27 bytes is still within 32-bit. Lol.
But my point holds, e.g decltype(1 << 50) evaluates to int.
Ell
Ell
14:22
man genetic algorithms and neural networks really interest me a lot
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GvEywP8t12I&feature=related
^this is fascinating
14:51
256 MB is 256 * 1000 * 1000 right? (Not 1024.)
Xeo
Xeo
according to new SI rules, yeah.
1024 is mebibyte
Xeo
Xeo
256 MiB would be 256 * 1024 * 1024
I can't type 1 today
@qox Misalignment is only an error if the CPU vendor defines it as such.
on x86 the alignment of all non-SSE types is 1 so that's fine.
fuckdiddlies
booked a train ticket for the wrong time but they want to charge me £35 for appending it, even though I booked it less than like, 1 hour ago
15:03
@DeadMG Welcome to trains :)
what about it?
... .and how is that news?
Things must be looking up. C/C++ (yes, I know), job advert on front page of Google technology news!
@DeadMG It's news 'cos job adverts not usually on front page
15:19
@DeadMG you didn't hear anything from the google guys anymore?
Dammit why is the type-punning cast faster than memcpy? It's not fair if the correct way is slower than the evil route.
qox
qox
Always use the correct route.
*(uint32_t*)ptr; is nearly twice as fast than uint32_t n; memcpy(&n, ptr, sizeof(n));
@StackedCrooked It's difficult to improve on the execution speed of no code at all:)
Code or no code, in the end it has to be translated to a series of assembly instructions. Why can't the compiler generate equivalent object code?
Xeo
Xeo
Because it does different things?
15:25
Kind of tautologous, but yeah, I guess.
@StackedCrooked They want me to be sysadmin.
Some dating site mailed me that I might like katie:
user image
2
No thanks.
@DeadMG Lol, that's not your thing.
no, really? :P
You curse enough as it is.
And they did not leave you any choice there?
@StackedCrooked I've seen worse.
15:30
@MartinJames On the Internet, I've seen worse as well :)
@StackedCrooked Not really.
Hellow everyone if anyone needs help in c++ may be i can help
@user1508671 It may be better today if you know any Oracle system adminstration.
I got contacted by a recruiter and he asked me what I wanted to do. That was only the first 5 minute interview. After that I got a list of things that I need study in order to prepare for a real interview. And the told me to let them know when I'm ready.
^ More katie images. :-)
qox
qox
15:33
@StackedCrooked *(uint32_t*)ptr; should be optimized out by the compiler. The statement has no side-effects.
@qox Yes - no code at all cannot really have side-effects.
That was brievity. In the benchmark the value is added to a counter .
(uint32_t)ptr; ??? what r u trying to do?
Hmm.. I must try more no code. No side-effects, no bugs. I don't know why I didn't think of it before!
qox
qox
@MartinJames Use Haskell.
15:36
@user1508671 lots of people here know c++. when you have anything to say, just say it.
@qox Not tried it. Does the GUI have Unicode strings?
qox
qox
What? Depends on the toolkit you use.
qox
qox
Haskell's Char type can hold any Unicode character.
@qox OK, OK all, I promise I'll look at the Haskell thingy.
15:38
@qox bah, probably limited to the bmp
@qox This is the code.. When compiling with higher optimization levels the punning code becomes up to twice as fast as the memcpy.
qox
qox
@Cheersandhth.-Alf bmp?
basic multilingual plane
qox
qox
> The character type Char is an enumeration and consists of 16 bit values, conforming to the Unicode standard.
'basic multilingual plane' - sounds like time for another Ryanair joke.
15:40
it's essentially the original 16-bit Unicode
qox
qox
String is a list of Chars. If you need UTF-8, use Data.ByteString.UTF8.
i couldn't find katie on mars but found katie mars
@user1508671 We used to have one but he wandered off a while ago.
like, the moon goes around the earth, and the earth goes around the sun, and the sun goes around the milky way, and the milky way goes around ... what?
qox
qox
15:43
@Cheersandhth.-Alf Yo momma is probably heavy enough for the Milky Way.
you just don't know!
Yo mama doesn't fit in the universe.
A supermassive black hole?
qox
qox
You mean yo momma's ass?
If it weren't for yo mama nobody would've known Steve Hawking is.
The Greek economy?
You mama had a snack in Greece and look now.
i tried to find the picture showing view of milky way from mars, no dice :-(
Last solar eclipse turned out to be your mom passing by.
Which parts of TBB do you find yourself using frequently? I've only seen use for the concurrent queue atm. What other things would you recommend me to have a look at?

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