« first day (763 days earlier)      last day (4412 days later) » 

user1804599
05:01
Problem with nebulae is that it's virtually impossible to make them in 3D unless you have models.
For what it's worth, getting a pretty strange looking effect on part of the moon.
Or did you mean to include a simulation of the moon forming into a black hole and eating itself?
ok i have the strangest problem in VS 2010
it says my app is running when its not i can't stop the exe or exit the program -_-
user1804599
@JerryCoffin The poles look weird due to the shape of the faces of the sphere. Maybe if I triangulate them…
@Dave Have you checked in Task Manager (or something similar) to see if it's executing in the background with no window showing, or something on that order?
yeh it was in the task manager thank god
user1804599
05:05
@JerryCoffin Looks much better now.
@Aardvark Have you uploaded the new version?
user1804599
@JerryCoffin yes. Maybe you need to clear the cache for the new CoffeeScript to load.
@Aardvark Yup -- does look much better now. Didn't need to do any extra work to clear the cache, just had to open it again. Just FWIW, one minor addition to part of your text: the moon does rotate a little with respect to the earth, so if you look at (the right) different times, you can see a total of something like 200 degree, not just 180. Patrick Moore spent years working on catching as much of this as he could.
whats the symbol used to display floats with fprintf?
%f
05:15
ah ok thanks
@Dave There is none. %f is used to display doubles; if you try to pass a float to printf, it'll first be promoted to a double.
user406009
%f. I think floats are automatically promoted to doubles while being passed to printf.
thats sufficient
IdrA vs RorO now.
interesting ... exit(variablename); gives 47 if i print it i get 18million something or other
05:27
@Dave At least in Linux, what you pass to exit will first be converted to int, then anded with 0xff to produce an 8-bit return value.
strange suddnely it wont print to my file now
sfml doesn't like me today :P
> parse error in template argument list
How useful.
Xeo
Xeo
Tells you everything that's wrong. :D
I'm guessing that inheriting from std::enable_if is too much for GCC and it can't handle SFINAE.
In case you're interested, write a select<N, T, U> metafunction that computes either tuple_element<N, T> or tuple_element<-N - 1, U> depending on the sign of N except that it should SFINAE out if tuple_element<-N - 1, U> is not default constructible.
Parse error again if I change to using a partial spec for SFINAE. I think I'm writing my condition wrong.
05:46
wtf this is not making sense at all
@LucDanton: do you have a > in the condition unhidden by ()?
@rici No.
exit(temp[i].height); = 47   on the v.next line if i comment out the exit:

fprintf (pFile, "%f",temp[i].height ); = -107374176.000000
Some local testing suggests that I've written the metafunction correctly.
And in fact the original implementation (i.e. alias to std::enable_if invocation) also appear to be fine.
@Dave What's its type? float, double or int?
05:57
its a float
scratch that its an int
but shouldn't hurt outputting a float if it was an int surely
Xeo
Xeo
Er... sure should?
it would give a compile error
no it won't.
it doesn't even give me a conversion warning as theres no loss of data
variadic functions have untyped parameters
Xeo
Xeo
05:59
You're invoking UB by passing a type other than what's expected from the formatting specifier
fprintf will reinterpret the int's memory as that of a float
hasn't been an issue before :s i printed an int as float before it just added the .0 automatically
@Dave When you use printf, you need to match the conversion you specify with the actual type of the argument you supply. If it's an int, you need to give it %d (or %x) not %f. This mismatch will not normally give a compiler error. Most compilers can/will give a warning, but you may have to do extra work to get it from some (e.g., VC++ requires /analyze on the command line, and only enables that for the Express version of the compiler, not the Pro version).
Xeo
Xeo
You do know what undefined behaviour is, right?
well i just did :

int i = 1;
fprintf (pFile, " %f", i );
output : 1.0
no issues there from what i see
Xeo
Xeo
2 mins ago, by Xeo
You do know what undefined behaviour is, right?
06:03
any int i put it just adds a .0 to the end of it for me.
or to be exact it outputs 1.00000
Xeo
Xeo
Oh please don't. This is the same fucking discussion with every programmer who believes UB is harmless...
i'm not saying its harmless
im saying why one int var returned negative 180 million
Xeo
Xeo
"It works on my end, so it is totally correct!"
But you're not answering 'no' to the question either.
but that example returns as it normally has been
Xeo
Xeo
06:05
Try it with 47 on your machine.
ok hold
that link doesn't explain why mine is coming out with 47.0000
Xeo
Xeo
undefined behaviour, anything can happen
i could loop it see if it changes
Xeo
Xeo
06:09
And in the worst case, the correct thing happens
@Dave No, but it shows that the results aren't useful. You're wasting far too much time on something that's just not worth trying to do.
heh well i dunno why its happening
unless VS some how converts it =/
now i must work out why my font wont output so brb
Oh gawd, now GCC SFINAEs on 'parse error in template argument list'.
hmm doesnt happen here =/
must be IDE related
Xeo
Xeo
06:12
Runs fine if I give it a floating point value.
            typename std::conditional<
                ( Indices >= 0 )
                , identity<int> // Dummy
                , tuple_element<-1 -Indices, std::tuple<T...>>
            >::type::type
Anything wrong with that that I missed?
try assign it to a var first.. see if it run time errors
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton What is Indices?
Just N from the prior example?
@Xeo int... Indices, there is a pack expansion in the larger context.
Xeo
Xeo
Hmm
Mind showing the larger context?
The snippet is fine AFAICS
06:16
Not a good sign, I forgot the final ellipsis of an EnableIf<>... clause in the declaration, but not in the definition, yet GCC didn't warn. I think I'll switch to the typename = EnableIf<> style.
Xeo
Xeo
heh
It declares a different function, doesn't it?
    , typename = EnableIf<
        std::is_default_constructible<
            typename std::conditional<
                Bool<( Indices >= 0 )>::value
                , identity<int> // Dummy
                , tuple_element<-1 -Indices, std::tuple<T...>>
            >::type::type
        >...
    >
Xeo
Xeo
Wait, no, that should error out.
@Xeo Definition is out of line and needs a matching declaration.
(Member template.)
Still results in 'parse error in template argument list'.
Mmh, changing to typename = void also results in the error.
Xeo
Xeo
What happens if you replace the tuple_element with another dummy?
06:18
I smell an SO question brewing
Xeo
Xeo
Oh, wow.
@LucDanton You did remember to only have this at the declaration or definition, though, right?
@Xeo Ye. Definition is just , typename.
Xeo
Xeo
Hm
Btw, why the Bool?
I'm thinking something else has broken.
@Xeo I normally have a LazyConditional trait for that typename std::conditional<>::type::type thing.
Xeo
Xeo
Ah
I always have an If alias. :D I hate that long name.
user1357851
06:22
just received a message, this is so flattery
Do you have a convention when it comes to eager vs lazy metacomputation?
user1357851
iHungry has invited you to join recycle bin. See your invitations.
user1357851
har!
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton In what sense?
Most of my Foo<T, U, V> aliases will eagerly compute e.g. Invoke<U> or Invoke<V>.
The only spot where I take special care is LazyConditional.
Xeo
Xeo
06:26
Well, I have the normal traits (aliases) and the lazy ones, I guess.
Boolean operators?
Xeo
Xeo
Erm...?
Which traits are lazy?
Okay, as expected the actual error was completely unrelated and the original design works.
Xeo
Xeo
Depends on which I need to be lazy for my snippet. :s I don't have 'em all nice and sorted in a header.
Now I can do shuffle<int, std::nullptr_t>(make_tuple(0)) and shuffle<int, double&&>(make_tuple(0)) will correctly fail!
Xeo
Xeo
06:29
What does the first exactly do?
Moves the 0 to the 0-th position, value-initializes an std::nullptr_t.
Xeo
Xeo
So it initializes the best-matching?
The description for shuffle is as follows: the target tuple is filled from left to right with the first (left to right again) source element that has the target element as best match, and the 'holes' are value initialized. Hence a missing target element that is not default constructible results in an error. (I've just spent time making sure that something like int&& ref = {}; doesn't happen.)
That description makes it pretty clear that the complexity guarantees are kinda iffy...
Has anyone here found a legitimate use for the comma operator in C++?
Xeo
Xeo
shuffle<int, int>(make_tuple(0)) -- error or (0, 0)?
@GeorgeEdison So many, I can't name count em. :) Mostly in meta-programming.
06:32
@Xeo Error, and I'm not sure how to amend the description to explain that.
@Xeo Really?
Xeo
Xeo
@GeorgeEdison All the time, especially with variadics.
Very interesting.
@Xeo Oh right, BestMatch<int, list<int, int>> is an error.
@Xeo Generic programming, I would think.
Xeo
Xeo
06:35
@LucDanton Right.
@GeorgeEdison At least in C, I see it (ab)used at lot in while() conditions.
Xeo
Xeo
Oh right, we also use it all the time in for-loops.
@Xeo Well, it doesn't error anymore.
shuffle<int, int>(make_tuple(42)) is <42, 0>. So it's still safe.
Xeo
Xeo
I see
I'm still puzzled how that happens.
<0, 0> would make more sense, I would think.
> error: conversion from 'annex::BestMatch<int, annex::meta::list<int, int> > {aka annex::overload_found<0, int>}' to non-scalar type 'main()::<anonymous struct>' requested
wut
Xeo
Xeo
06:39
lol
I'd like that feature, but it shouldn't be here. I'm so confused.
@Xeo Have you kept your BestMatch implementation around? Can you check?
Xeo
Xeo
Uuuh...
checks log
Don't you have a toolbox and wouldn't you want BestMatch in it?
Xeo
Xeo
2 days ago, by Xeo
http://ideone.com/AnrXF9 - 35 lines (excluding the obvious int_ implementation)
What do you know, foo{}(0) compiles for struct foo: bar<0>, bar<1> { using bar<0>::operator(); using bar<1>::operator(); }; and appropriate bar.
Xeo
Xeo
06:44
@LucDanton I planned to make a toolbox for my meta stuff since long ago, but I never get to it. :s
@LucDanton Wat?
The overload that is picked is that of the base which using declaration appears first. Not the order of the bases.
Xeo
Xeo
What the.
[07:48:38] <Xeo> clang-bot -c { foo{}(0); } template<int I> struct bar{ bar<I> operator()(int){ return {}; } }; struct foo : bar<0>, bar<1>{ using bar<0>::operator(); using bar<1>::operator(); };
[07:48:40] <clang-bot> error: call to object of type 'foo' is ambiguous
Thanks. I'm browsing the Standard.
Xeo
Xeo
With Clang 3.2
> The name is looked up in the context of the function call following the normal rules for name lookup in function calls (3.4). The function declarations found by that lookup constitute the set of candidate functions.
> Overload resolution (13.3) takes place after name lookup has succeeded.
Xeo
Xeo
06:50
Aye
Time to file a bug I suppose.
It's kinda daft but I think it's possible to emulate the behaviour.
Xeo
Xeo
Sucks if the language feature the whole thing is relying on is broken in the compiler.
Come to think of it, no that probably doesn't work in the general case.
@Xeo It's fine, in those cases I usually write a test with the comment // expecting wrong behaviour here.
Xeo
Xeo
Sure, but coding up against theory isn't the nicest thing to do :/
As soon as the compiler is fixed the particular test breaks.
@Xeo Well, no, the test documents that it's currently coded against the implementation even if it does the wrong thing.
It's no consolation for the clients when their code breaks of course.
07:08
@Xeo Can you check that Clang accepts a snippet of the kind struct a { a baz(int); }; struct b { b baz(int); }; struct foo: a, b { using a::baz; b::baz; };, with no attempt to call foo {}(0) at all? Just in case that the class declaration might not even be valid.
0
Q: Why can't I hide the questions I've asked?

Fuck youIf I don't hide, you'll down vote all my previous questions!

Xeo
Xeo
[08:10:13] <Xeo> clang-bot -c {} struct a { a baz(int); }; struct b { b baz(int); }; struct foo: a, b { using a::baz; b::baz; };
[08:10:15] <clang-bot> Success
@Mysticial ...
Woah, wait.
There's a using missing there.
Okay, still compiles with added using
[08:12:11] <Xeo> clang-bot -c { foo{}.baz(42); } struct a { a baz(int); }; struct b { b baz(int); }; struct foo: a, b { using a::baz; b::baz; };
[08:12:13] <clang-bot> error: call to member function 'baz' is ambiguous
lol
um
Is that to be expected?
Xeo
Xeo
What exactly? That the first snippet compiles? No.
[08:16:09] <Xeo> clang-bot -c { foo{}.baz(42); } struct a { a baz(int); }; struct foo: a { a::baz; };
[08:16:11] <clang-bot> Success
I have a feeling something weird is going on with the fixups
@Mysticial Funny -- the really strange part is that as far as I can see, he's only received one downvote (at least on SO -- maybe more on Meta).
Xeo
Xeo
07:17
So, we learned that we also can't trust Clang for the time being!
Or atleast clang-bot
@JerryCoffin Still no close votes...
Probably wrong time of the day/night.
Now there's a close vote... aww...
@Mysticial Probably. I don't see any reason to vote to close though -- he's asked a fairly simple question, that can be answered (though probably only with: "Sorry, but you can't."). I suppose he could request hiding questions as a feature, but I'd foresee a "status-declined" in a hurry for that.
[ Example:
namespace A {
extern "C" void f(int = 5);
}
namespace B {
extern "C" void f(int = 5);
}
using A::f;
using B::f;
void use() {
f(3);
f();
}
— end example ]
The meta-police are very fond of deletions.
I've lost a lot of rep because they deleted a lot of things that I answered on meta.
The example mentions that f(3) is fine, but f() isn't.
I think that works because the rules for using declarations at namespace scope are different?
Xeo
Xeo
07:23
@LucDanton Why does the former work?
Oh wait a second, this is actually the same function declared twice.
@Mysticial I guess I shouldn't be surprised -- I mostly just stay away from meta. Too many wannabe politicians who've forgotten one of the basic precepts of SO: that it needs little management because coders are largely self-organizing.
@JerryCoffin I am trying to work towards 10k on meta.
But it's tough...
@Mysticial Why? College isn't quite painful enough?
I'm now imaging coups on meta where select rep nests are nuked to remove privileges from other people. If you can do it and maintain a majority that can alone decide on delete/undelete, you gain control until moderators step in, no?
07:26
@JerryCoffin I wanna see all the deleted stuff.
Disclaimer: I don't condone the cool crime of gaming the system.
@JerryCoffin Oh and if you didn't know already, I'm quitting my Ph.D. The qual committee gave me impossible pass conditions.
So I really have no choice but to leave.
@Mysticial Well, I guess I can't blame you there.
I need to take 3 hard classes and get A- or better in all of them.
My average grades are around B. (Not even B+.)
So fuck that.
And it's very likely that they did that intentionally.
@Mysticial No, I didn't know. That sucks. Are you going to go elsewhere, or what? (Or not sure yet?)
07:29
Because failing me outright in the qual would likely lead to a PR backlash.
@JerryCoffin Probably sometime in December, once I've finalized my decision, I'll be updating my SO profile to start looking for a job in the Bay Area starting Fall next year.
@Mysticial Yeah, that was pretty much what I gathered when we talked shortly after the qual.
So I'll be "graduating" with just a masters in May. I'll take the summer to recuperate and move on in September.
@Mysticial I suspect there are at least a few employers who'll have a bit more appreciation for what you've accomplished, and care more about ability than just rote memorization.
I'd certainly hope so.
Although the department did have a good reason to get rid of me. My research progress was slowing to a stand-still.
I haven't gotten anything done between February and now.
I was a lot of more productive my first year. But I'm starting to realize that I'm actually starting to fall apart.
So even if they passed me unconditionally, I'd need to take a year off to recover.
@Mysticial I think that's more an excuse than a reason (though I'm not sure what research you were doing, or what progress would be expected, so I suppose it could be real...)
07:34
So fuck that.
@JerryCoffin TBH, the stress from the quals took a very heavy toll on me.
@Mysticial Not worth doing yourself any real damage to keep them happy, that's for sure. A doctorate would be nice, but not worth hurting yourself over.
@Mysticial Yeah, just chatting made that pretty clear.
@JerryCoffin Exactly. My parents have actually been nudging me to get out a few months back.
Not worth my health or sanity...
@Mysticial Most definitely.
The fact that I lost my enthusiasm for building computers was a very big red-flag to them.
I dunno if anyone here has noticed any behavior changes in me over the past 10 or so months.
These kinda things are hard to notice in yourself. It usually takes and outside observer to point it out.
@Mysticial Not sure -- I do a poor job keeping track of time, so I'm not even sure how long you've been hanging out on chat. Certainly the last few months, you've seemed pretty stressed out. Given the machines you've built, and the fact that you don't seem to really care much about them now, there certainly seems to be a pretty serious change that's taken place somewhere along the line though.
I was frankly almost amazed when I dragged out the quote earlier today, and realized it was over a year old -- if you'd asked me beforehand, I'd have said that was more like a couple or three months ago.
07:41
@JerryCoffin Which quote?
Oh that one...
haha
That was before I joined chat.
@Mysticial Okay -- like I said, I don't track things like that very well.
I think I joined at around November last year.
I've noticed Mysticial becoming more and more mellow/at peace with the situation, but that's a recent development. Before that I don't think we've crossed paths too much.
@Mysticial Ah, so just shortly after that. Okay. I am, however, a step ahead of one of my college friends, who honestly never even knew what day of the week it was.
A moon and the sun kind of deal perhaps. Also I may just not be that perceptive.
07:44
@LucDanton Programmers are not known for being the most socially perceptive people...
Don't yell at me!
Xeo
Xeo
lol
I also don't work well at all under stress...
Do you distinguish between good stress and bad stress? The former using a more literal meaning of the word, a bit akin to 'stimulus'?
Xeo
Xeo
"incentive"?
user1357851
07:48
@JerryCoffin unless they are also entrepreneurs
user1357851
then they have to
@LucDanton I'm not sure. It's the kind of stress where I'm always tired, I can never get a good night's sleep. I keep forgetting things, missing deadlines, procrastinating. And like trying to hide myself from reality. That kind of stress, whatever it's called.
@Mysticial Hmmm...If you're going to look for a job in the Bay area, maybe I should talk to my brother -- he's on a hiring committee at Google. I don't think he can (or would) try to give you an easy ride through interviews or anything like that, I'm pretty sure you could at least get an interview, which is at least a start.
Mmh, the history of the word is more muddy than I would have thought.
@JerryCoffin Thx. I'll definitely keep that in mind.
07:50
@Mysticial Oh it's fine to call it stress.
And also losing all enthusiasm for the things I love, like computers, bowling, video games...
Now that I think about it, it's been more than half a year since I've even touched my bowling ball.
@Telkitty Did you troll them?
user1357851
remove all my work related other activities from the internet
You do realize that most of us can still see them right?
user1357851
members are okay
user1357851
as long as outsiders can't
07:55
> For the purpose of overload resolution, the functions which are introduced by a using-declaration into a derived class will be treated as though they were members of the derived class.
:6256786 Yes and no. It's true that Google interviews a lot of people, and don't hire anywhere close to all of them. OTOH, it also makes a big difference (at least with them) to ensure you're interviewed by the right people, asking about the right kinds of things. If they interviewed him just asking general CS questions, it wouldn't do a very good job of showing his capabilities (at least I don't think it would).
Though they should at least look at my resume before they interview me.
Speaking of which, I should probably get that updated, it's been a few years.
@Mysticial Yes, they should -- but I think like many places, initial screening is typically done by HR people, who probably wouldn't know what they were looking at (though "world record" does tend to be pretty easy for almost anybody to recognize).
@JerryCoffin Yeah, and I've had a history of having trouble getting past initial screening...
Not for interviews, but for everything else in school.
user1357851
@JerryCoffin with one of them, I think I answered all the question right (not necessary the best solution) but they told me there are so gaps without giving me details
08:01
@Mysticial Well, we'll see. I certainly can't guarantee anything, but may be able to at least help out a little.
user1357851
it is not about getting interviews right
user1357851
I think it is mainly because I don't have a computer science/engineering degree
@JerryCoffin Yep. And thanks again. I'm trying not to worry about in the meantime anyways. Headed home tomorrow - and finally get some real food for the first time since June.
user1357851
I have a E.E. engineering and business degree/postgrad degree
@Telkitty Yeah, at least when well-conducted (rare in itself) it should be more about learning how you think than about just giving the right answers.
user1357851
08:03
but even if you get those right, which I did, I did not get an offer
@Mysticial Cool -- happy Thanksgiving (in case we don't chat before then).
user1357851
and also I have mainly spent time in finance IT
I'll still be around - at least not when I'm asleep or on the plane. :)
@Telkitty Yeah -- I certainly can't even guess about that, since I've never interviewed either of the places you mentioned.
user1357851
in risk management and pricing of financial instruments
user1357851
08:05
so when they pay you 100K or above they want certain experiences
@Mysticial The question is whether I will be -- my kids have next week off from school too, and it's looking like my work week will be pretty busy as well, so I'm not sure how much time I'll have free to spend on chat.
user1357851
like multithreading searching engine or cloud computing
@Telkitty Hmm... ya think? They're not gonna throw away 100k for nothing - at least I don't think.
I'd be lucky to even get 60k as a first full-time job.
You probably trolled them without realizing it. :P
user1357851
@Mysticial true :p
Xeo
Xeo
@Mysticial I get 30k o_o
08:08
Despite the wish for experience, I think in some ways, it's easier getting a job nearly straight out of college. They don't feel obliged to offer nearly as much, so the risk for them is much lower.
@Xeo Euro right?
Xeo
Xeo
converted to USD already.
Xeo
Xeo
23k €
That does seem a bit on the low-side. At least in the US. Of course I don't know what the environment is like in Germany.
Xeo
Xeo
08:10
I was shooting for 30k €, but we'll see how much raise I can negotiate after the trial period.
I can't remember if it was here or elsewhere, but somebody'd pointed to a bug report:
http://connect.microsoft.com/VisualStudio/feedback/details/692248
I refuted what's there and pointed out how (I believe) gcc is right, and VC++ wrong. Tonight I get a reply from STL saying he's convinced, and has forwarded it as a bug report to P.J. Plauger.
In any case, I'm probably not gonna settle for a long-term steady job a big company - at least not for the next few years.
I might try my luck on some of the smaller ones.
Well, it's 1:16 AM here -- I think I need to get some sleep. Good night all.
Dammit, all the good shows come out on Saturday. I'll be gone by then and I'll have to DL them on my slow internet at home.
@JerryCoffin night
Neat, I'm benchmarking shuffling a tuple.
Xeo
Xeo
08:25
@JerryCoffin How did you convince him?
Oh well, looks like I just discovered that there's actually a new season of Hayate airing right now. Time to DL that...
Has anyone seen the close/reopen war on the goat question?
Briefly.
i haven't
link?
Xeo
Xeo
> viewed 116641 times
08:31
The timed lock is over and the war is resuming...
geez...
@Xeo Yeah, seriously... That's gotta be a new record.
100k views in one day.
Although I wasn't around when this one went viral. That one's at 150k. So presumably most of that was concentrated onto a day or two.
08:43
Anyone willing to help me automate some benchmarking? I can run e.g. time g++-snapshot -Wall -std=c++11 -DITERATIONS=16 main.cpp to do a measure, any suggestion to help collect the data in some useful form?
Also any hint to improve the compiler invocation so that the measure is more accurate is welcome. E.g. if I could avoid measuring the time of writing the executable.
Ell
Ell
It's my birthday today :3
09:02
Happy birthday :)
Ell
Ell
thank you :D
Happy Birthday :D
Ell
Ell
thank you too :D
09:25
hi people ready to see my Homework :D
(a) Differentiate between the big O notation and big Omega notation. Find time complexity of the following functions in theta-notation :
(i) f(n) : n^3 + 2^1000
(ii) f(n) :n^4+!n+100
(iii) f(n) :n^3+ n^2log n+log4^ n+ 20
(iv) f(n) : 2^n + !n log n + log(log(log(n))) + 100
Ell
Ell
no idea.
:(
any one out of this world ?
who can solve this :/
Ell
Ell
I think I'll work on my game today :3
:8) ok
^^^ smily with nostrils :8D
:=8 )
Uh oh..
Looks like an exponential curve.
Actually I'm making sure I have the benchmark-study data chain working. I'm now going back to fix the actual benchmark, because it kinda sucks. I expect that to get worse.
Okay it's actually kinda bad.
Ell
Ell
10:58
if IrrlichtDevice has member function closeDevice, how do I use that as a deleter for a unique_ptr?

« first day (763 days earlier)      last day (4412 days later) »