« first day (739 days earlier)      last day (4436 days later) » 

13:00
@kbok It would be me claiming that I'm always with my arse (well, my rectum to be precise).
@R.MartinhoFernandes o_0
Xeo
Xeo
MSVC is just strange.
For 1 argument, the recursive trailing-return-type works just fine, but for anything above it, nooope
@thecoshman Are you suggesting some sort of experiment involving copies of the C++ standard and Brainiac arses?
@DeadMG I'll listen... but I doubt I will enjoy
@MartinJames I am now
didn't enjoy
13:09
@Xeo it also differentiate between floating point and integer wrt. tail optimization. it is understandable. but still laughable.
upshot: there is something about recursion and msvc, whether compile time or run time, so to speak.
Xeo
Xeo
Well, the trailing-return-type seems to have been fixed in VC++11, atleast according to the bug report.
why aren't terrorists broadcasting bogus GPS info?
Seems feasible to drown out the real information with junk data. Would be a rather big deal if they did it
1
A: fatal error: iostream.h no such file or directory

Kerrek SBThat header doesn't exist in standard C++. It was part of some pre-1970s compilers, but it is certainly not part of C++. Use #include <iostream> instead. And all the library classes are in the std:: namespace, for example std::cout. Also, throw away any book or notes that mention the thin...

I have a feeling Kerrek exaggerated a bit on the age of <iostream.h>.
@R.MartinhoFernandes It was commonly used by the ancient Romans...
Big bang was caused by UB in iostreams.h
13:23
@thecoshman It's narrow-band, the frequency used is unfavourable for terrestrial transmission and many military antenna arrays are directional and point to where the signals are expected to come from re. the last almanac info received. Still, should be able to cause a good few traffic jams/accidents in a city.
Don't like.
Phrases you don't want to overhear from your coworkers: "it's a bit like an asynchronous goto". #Idontwanttoknow
Oh. Poor jalf.
Could be async comefrom.
I'm pretty sure it was a joke, but I didn't really hear the context
@MartinJames Indeed, but through enough power at the signal, and it can be broadcast just fine. You should also consider the when using GPS, you need to listen to many sattelites, so unless your directional antenna us 'above the horizon' it's not really much use
13:27
@R.MartinhoFernandes Maybe a tiny bit. While @jalf is right, and it was used by the Romans, it seems to have been invented sometime after the pyramids were built.
@jalf For the sake of everyone, I hope so.
it sounds a bit like that esoteric language where the order the instructions are executed is somewhat random
'Whenever' I think is that rather apt name of it
@thecoshman and you need to drown out enough satellites to fool any error correction on the receiver, and in the end, you need a lot of patience and/or luck. Simply faking someone's gps signal isn't guaranteed to immediately result in a plane crash. ;)
seems like a lot of effort for a very uncertain and unpredictable outcome. Easier to just sneak a bomb into a subway or something, isn't it?
@thecoshman Top of a high-rise should be fine to stuff up a city. Drivers would have to resort to using maps and road signs again. Foreign drivers in their trucks/hire-cars would presumably the hardest-hit:)
If you want to kill people, shooting them is a tried and true method.
@MartinJames Ha, resort to using maps and road signs? Me? Never! I'll get lost anyway, so I'd rather not waste my time with maps and road signs.
13:32
@R.MartinhoFernandes Please link to a research paper proving that shooting people kills them
If I'm getting lost, I'm getting lost fast.
7
Q: What is/was the ->> operator?

Seth CarnegieIn the course of my reading I came accross WG14 Defect Report #51 written in 1993 (or perhaps 1893, they left off the century and millennium). In the code sample there, apparently an operator spelled ->> is used on a pointer to a struct. I can't find it in any operator precedence tables I'v...

@jalf you do not need to drown out the signals, just have your's heard as valid and conflicting ones.
@R.MartinhoFernandes "I have no idea where I'm going, but I'm getting there fast."
There's no shortage of question marks in comments on that page.
@jalf Faking it in such a way that the gound-segment devices display an incorrect position would be very difficult indeed, (except on ios6:). Jamming it, however, should be relatively easy.
13:35
^ "E.U.’s ‘Science, it’s a girl thing’ campaign sparks a backlash"
@MartinJames Getting them to find a wrong position would be hard, but stopping them from getting any position would not be that hard
blumming eurocrats
Oh, should I mention that I once managed to get lost using a GPS navigator?
I am immune to your GPS jamming efforts.
@thecoshman Yes, that's my take on it too. The tomtoms/iPhones etc. would just fail to get a fix.
@R.MartinhoFernandes lol
13:38
@Cheersandhth.-Alf That campaign was utterly stupid
@MartinJames indeed, but it should be possible to extend such an attack to effect ships. Though, this will also require the use of some sort vessel to get your signal out there
@Cicada Utterly? Only utterly?
"We want to overturn clichés and show women and girls, and boys too, that science is not about old men in white coats" lol
I lack the appropriate vocabulary.
@R.MartinhoFernandes she means otterly
13:40
I've been amused.
@Cicada Ok, you're excused.
stupid private video (╯°□°)╯︵ ┻━┻
I have the feeling that many campaigns about getting more women into science and IT in general is attacking the wrong issues
Wow, this question is a negative rep farm. — honk 1 min ago
@thecoshman Ships have plenty backups. Assuming that the master is not drunk, (and, yes, that's a bit of a stretch:), I would be amazed if any ship actually got actually lost, (lost as in 'cannot find a port').
13:41
????? what is the reason for downvote??? — Manik Sidana 7 mins ago
??????downvote??? — Rahul Tripathi 8 mins ago
@MartinJames yeah, ships managed to go from A to B before they had GPS too
????? why do indians express surprise this way???
@MartinJames I don't know, how good are sailors are old fashioned navigation?
even with drunk captains
@jalf but they did it that wall all the time
13:42
@thecoshman I am pretty certain that they're "good enough".
@jalf I am sure military ships are
I'm willing to bet civilian ones are too
@Cicada They don't have ¿ like the Spanish.
maybe you might inflict minor delays, but they certainly won't get lost
also, even if you jam their GPS, they'll still be in radio contact with the rest of the world... Which has their last known position, and could come looking for them (and send over a qualified navigator, if necessary)
@jalf Picks up satphone "Bloody GPS is down, last recorded position [blah], proceeding to nearest port of [blah]".
13:45
@jalf bah
and finally, isn't it kind of an obscure target for a terrorist action? Trying to delay civilian ships by mucking up their GPS fix, which requires you to sail out there yourself (and hope they don't just follow you back to port, or the exercise gets even more pointless)
I still think a subway bombing is easier, more effective, and has less risk of failing ;)
@jalf Illegally broadcasting high-power signals from a ship, (which cannot get away anywhere fast), is asking for trouble - trivially easy to track.
@jalf yeah
@jalf ..but a waste of perfectly good sandwiches.
but where is the imagination in that?
13:48
@jalf You know, there must be a reason most nerds are not terrorists.
@MartinJames and you can't easily hide either
@R.MartinhoFernandes smart enough to know it's not worth it
unless you do it from a submarine!
@jalf Jam their visible EM spectrum signals!
I wonder why terrorists don't use submarines to sneak up on civilian ships and jam their GPS!
13:49
Hi, is it C++ room?
cpplinq - an introduction http://mariusbancila.ro/blog/2012/10/24/cpplinq-an-introduction/
@pima.developer Well, the room title is Lounge<C++>, and that's fairly descriptive
std::vector<string> primes_as_strings(int n)
{
    auto primes = range(0, INT_MAX)
               >> where(is_prime)
               >> take(n)
               >> select([](int i) {std::stringstream s; s << i; return s.str();})
               >> to_vector();

   return primes;
}
This looks interesting
@pima.developer you ask the room, "is it C++"? the room answers, "define it"
… except for the ugly range(0, INT_MAX)
13:50
Hmm, not a fan of the >> overload.
@KonradRudolph the horror
@KonradRudolph Does it have anything for mapping one-to-many? (like System.Linq.Enumerable.SelectMany?)
it is better with << i think
I would just use .
@R.MartinhoFernandes Well if it doesn’t it’s bloody useless, wouldn’t you say?
13:51
And for mapping many-to-one?
@Cicada Hmm? I find the syntax rather nice. Although I have to say that once you get down to it you could just as well use member access, i.e. replace all >> by .
IME those are hardest iterators.
@KonradRudolph Not extensible, though.
@R.MartinhoFernandes grr, right of course
omg why >>? why not foo(..).bar(...)
Not extensible.
That's why C# extension methods are sweet, even if their discovery mechanisms are a tad sub-par.
13:53
that is one crazy ass syntax
@R.MartinhoFernandes oh right
I hate working through NoMachine :(
@KonradRudolph I'd rather see member access, yes. Overloading >> is just a waste of space (besides looking ugly)
as if I didn't have to deal with enough shit
But EXTENSIBLE.
13:54
@Cicada Well the Portuguese robot explained why member access doesn’t work – and I think >> is a very reasonable choice here
@Cicada Boost.Ranges (?) uses | in reminiscence of the shell pipe operator but since C++ already uses >> for streams it makes sense to use it here
how about | then? You're basically describing a pipe anyway
Yeah, that's what Boost.Range does.
Using << for streams was a bad idea too
@Cicada it's like a loud speaker, makes sense
@Cicada iostreams was a bad idea in general
13:56
To be honest, I don't even like << for bitshifts.
@R.MartinhoFernandes yeah, same
The precendences are fucked up.
Why overload operators that carry no semantic when you can have a named method?
I think @Cicada should play with perl
@thecoshman Thanks, I don't need new passwords atm
13:57
@Cicada Syntax is different. (I'm not claiming it's justifiable; I'm just explaining why)
@Cicada that doesn't chain well. Then it'd be to_vector(select(..., take(n, where(range(0, INT_MAX), is_prime)))))))
if that's what you meant
ostream o;
o.write(stuff);
Not extensible.
As in?
Now make that work for my struct foo.
13:58
@Cicada Can’t overload it easily for own types
like always, C++ sucks.
It can be made to work with templates and some other protocol. POC coming soon.

« first day (739 days earlier)      last day (4436 days later) »