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23:00
@Chimera is DEL whitespace? x)
@AlbertoBonsanto wokay. I have never heard of the book. That's a lone review. Aaaand the guy admits his recommendation was made on an impulse ("let me stick my neck out" after a lot of back and forth on the book's merits). I'd say, stay cleer unless you want to become an expert at arcane C. Might as well take up blind simultan checkers while you're at it?
@nixeagle it's a control character
@MooingDuck I know, I was asking chimera in response to his question addressed to jerry.
MS says this about white space characters:
@EtiennedeMartel hey, I found an article about how Nintendo changed their way for indie developers. joystiq.com/2012/11/18/…
23:02
@Chimera if you get into unicode, there is a whole category of glyphs that are meant to be interpreted as whitespace.
@sehe "Stick my neck out" doesn't mean it's an impulse -- it means he's taking a chance (at getting his head cut off). It might be worth noting that the author of the review is Francis Glassborrow, who is the "Principle UK Expert" (yes, the official "PUKE") on the C standard committee.
@JerryCoffin I was totally unaware of that name. I must admit I heard of him.
@nixeagle Lord help me if I ever get into Unicode!
@JerryCoffin Anyways, I wasn't taking "on impulse" as a simplistic translation of the phrase "let me stick my neck out". I was giving my weighed impression of the review. I genuinely felt that it was a very ambivalent review and that precise turn of phrase made me conclude that it's conclusion felt arbitrary. Just my $0.02
23:06
@sehe Fair enough.
:) thx
I'm curious now. I might reread the bit now just to see whether it 'feels different' now that I know who wrote it... People are strange critters
0
Q: Crazy string bug in g++

ZEROSUMAll I'm trying to do is append a period to a string. Simplest thing in the world. Why is g++ bugging out? This works for MSVC but then on Linux with g++ it bugs out. msvc ([]([][][()])[]). g++ .[]([][][()])[]) Here's what I've tried, with the same results str.append(1, '.'); str += '.'...

right.
turns out that I was accidentally deleting the font, since MSDN doesn't indicate whether the DC it gives you is shared ownership or what
Ell
Ell
arghh. need windows wget!
lol, this guy got all his rep from this kind of questions
23:12
@MooingDuck The guy is probably fishing for 'curiosity' upvotes. Once people will accidentally compile ` ([]([][][()])[])` instead, it might get reddited
@sehe Don't forget that I'll be asking that other question for Xeo to answer later on.
@Ell Cygwin
I am very sad the C book i am reading isn't even reviewed and the C++ book i wass going to read sucks
howzitgoing?
23:16
@Mysticial It's still my question :)
@DeadMG MS is pretty clear that unless you specify otherwise, all DCs are shared.
@sehe You can still ask it yourself. :)
@AlbertoBonsanto @AlbertoBonsanto you can obviously add your good C++ books to the list
@Mysticial I won't. Still for the same reasons
Haha, I expect the first downvote that I get will be from sehe... :D
@JerryCoffin Only if you actually use the DC-centric areas of the reference.
23:18
@Mysticial Just look at this shipwreck of a question. It could have easily ended up like that python question of him.
Sadly, he didn't make it abundantly clear that he was trolling on lambda syntax. And he forgot how C++ programmars tend to be anal-retentive when it comes to properly specifying a problem :)
Anyone know of any good C++ code for modular fibonacci function?
@DeadMG Probably -- I'm at a disadvantage in areas like that. Don't spend much time looking for things I already know.
@Mysticial Hint, just ask between 04:00 and 07:30 CEST and you'll be fine
i have code in python but i don't know enough about vectors to translate lists
@JohnSmith It's the code you write.
23:19
@sehe I can't write it
@JohnSmith Show it on SO, and show you're attempted translation. You'll get a dozen implementations < 1 minute
@sehe I'll be phrasing it in a much better format than that guy.
@JohnSmith modular?
@MooingDuck Bites.
modular means answer % some modulus
23:19
@Mysticial Meh
@JohnSmith no, but here's my fibonacci: ideone.com/8XKE7
@JerryCoffin Whereas all I've got on DCs is "Call X function to get DC, call Y function to retrieve this thing you need from DC."
"Solve"?
Still very nifty code, though
technically you can just do fib(n-1) + fib(n-2) and call it a day, but stack depth matters too and so I use a matrix
but i use lists in python, needs vectors in C++
@JohnSmith whats your biggest input?
23:21
magnitude 10^9
@sehe don't know what you mean by that
@JohnSmith well that's an awful big input
yeah but not a big deal if you're using a matrix with modulus
@MooingDuck Doesn't really matter for modulo arithmetic. It all depends on the modulo
uses technique called modular exponentiation by squaring
@DeadMG Yup -- pretty much need to read a decent book (e.g, Richter or older Petzold) to get some background before you can get very far. MSDN is a decent reference but lousy tutorial.
23:21
@sehe I was trying to figure out if he actually needed modulo or not
you need modulo because you can't calculate the full thing and THEN apply modulo, you'd need crazy huge memory and it'd take a long time
also overflow
@MooingDuck I mean that 'Solve' is a very strange name for that parameter. For one, Fibonacci isn't solved, it's computed. Second, Titlecase for a function parameter?
@sehe oh, the variable name. yeah. Couldn't think of a good name
is there a way to declare a double dim vector?
for instance my code uses in python [[1,1],[1,0]] as the matrix
@MooingDuck You can depend on our friend John Smith to have basic maths down better than most of the loungers, Duck. Remember, he's that John Smith.
@JohnSmith std::vector<std::vector<double>>, or maybe std::vector<std::array<double, 100>>
@sehe To be fair, my math's fine. My coding is what sucks
@JohnSmith boost multi-array, or just long[N*M] and index it wisely
user406009
@JohnSmith I seem to be having lots of trouble with my problem 401 solution(despite it matching the brute force exactly). Would you mind showing me yours?
23:27
@JerryCoffin Also, turns out that rich edit controls don't support WM_SETFONT, but instead have a completely different message... which you can then use to set the font.
gargh
@Lalaland I don't have 401 yet
it's easy though, just need to get around to it
you need to split it up into everything below sqrt(n) and then everything above it I think
@DeadMG Normally they use the font specified in the content RTF (though I suppose they also have a default font in case you haven't specified any).
user406009
I did it with a modified sieve of eratosthenes. But it seems to be off somehow.
@JerryCoffin I have no idea what a content RTF is.
I just want them to use the font I say :(
@lalaland also consider taking advantage of sum of squares f(n) = (1/6)n*(n+1)(2n+1)
user406009
23:31
Yeah, I did. It just seems to pop out the wrong number.
user406009
Probably off by one somewhere in the code.
might be a fiddly sqrt rounding issue
that gets me sometimes
sqrt(N)+1 or whatever
@DeadMG A rich edit control is normally used to display content that's in RTF format. If you want to specify a particular font, you normally do that in the content. You can change the format of a chunk of content with EM_SETCHARFORMAT.
user406009
I just wish project euler provided better example input/output
@JerryCoffin Is what I'm doing now. It's actually doing something, but apparently the height passed as the parameter is in completely different units to the normal height :P
23:36
Any C expert here? I am a bit confused in something....
@Mysticial Maybe?
@DeadMG Yes, it uses TWIPS (Twentieths of a point) because that's what RTF decided to use sometime back in antiquity. Other windows can support TWIPS too (MM_TWIPS mapping mode) if you want them to, but almost nobody does.
Uhoh, @Mysticial, you're getting a bad rap
@AlbertoBonsanto What is the question? Someone here is bound to have an answer.
haha awesome
@DeadMG RTF is formatting in the content, like HTML. Specifies its own font and colors and such
23:37
behold, my pixel art vector filter
@kbok nice. kind of refutes the idea of pixel art, of course
Sep 7 at 16:03, by Fanael
TIL Mysticial doesn't know C.
@kbok Looks cool
I worked my ass off for this.
Thanks!
why do i have to reserve memory for char types? char *str = malloc(128);
23:38
@kbok I'll bet. Looks pretty good though.
@kbok I know that's not trivial to do
@AlbertoBonsanto Why not?
@kbok Nice work. Did you create your own algorithm(s) or did you have some help from existing algorithms?
@sehe I am a bit confussed
@AlbertoBonsanto You don't have to: char buf[128];
@AlbertoBonsanto that's not an expert thing, that's C 101.
23:39
@AlbertoBonsanto Yes that is possible, but the var will have 'automatic storage class'
@Chimera I was inspired by a ..dodgy research paper from MS
@kbok Ah ok, cool.
@sehe I am thinking in C not C++ :)
The key concepts were explained but the algorithms I had to work out by myself.
@AlbertoBonsanto Meaning it's lifetime will be limited to the enclosing scope
23:39
@AlbertoBonsanto Yes, you can certainly do that. Just when you do, the size if fixed. Inside a function, you can pass in a parameter, and reserve space based on it: int f(int s) char buf[s]; ...}.
@AlbertoBonsanto Me too. Who said anything about c++?
@AlbertoBonsanto C has automatic storage as well
hmm
CHARFORMAT2 doesn't have anything for the width
@JerryCoffin Does that only work in C99?
@Chimera Yes (or newer, of course).
23:40
@Chimera Only if the size isn't fixed do you need C99
guys, is there a moderator in here?
@sehe when you say automatic storage, do you mean that C will try to recycle the memory?
@mmmshuddup no
@mmmshuddup Why? Because your nick is offensive?
@JerryCoffin That's what I thought. Just wanted to make sure.
23:41
@mmmshuddup No, just owners (when/if we need a moderator, we can flag for one though).
@Mysticial mmm bummer. well thanks. perhaps someone else could answer this...
@AlbertoBonsanto Basically. It means that the lifetime of the variable is limited to the enclosing scope.
@kbok very nice :)
@mmmshuddup Fire away. You look trustworthy from a distance
@AlbertoBonsanto Means the variable will be destroyed when it goes out of scope (but in this case, destroyed doesn't mean as much as in C++, because there are no destructors).
23:42
something weird just happened. I upvoted a question and got a little dialog message saying "You have 5 votes left today"
@sehe haha
@mmmshuddup Oh that's normal
@mmmshuddup You've probably upvoted 35 times today already.
@mmmshuddup you have only so many votes per day on questions/answers, and a seperate count on comments. You can upvote more questions than answers.
@mmmshuddup Yes, there' s a limit on how many votes you can cast each day.
There are daily vote allowances for all kinds of votes, up, down, question, answer, comment and flags just the same
23:42
@Mysticial wow that's a lot haha.. and weird I didn't even notice I was even on this site enough to have voted that many times
@mmmshuddup Bear in mind, that quota gets reset each day. So, it's worse
@sehe ahhh gotcha. I guess I never used enough votes before in one day to notice it.
how do i initialize the size of my double dim matrix?
The limit is 30 votes per day. But if you upvote at least 10 questions, you can go up to 40.
i want to make it 2x2
23:43
@mmmshuddup First time for everything :)
@JohnSmith it's 4. By the way: DON'T use vector for that. Use std::array or just T[2*2].
can i declare vector < vector<int>(2) >(2) or something
@JohnSmith or something, yes
@JohnSmith Preferably by passing the sizes to the ctor for the class you use.
did i do it correctly there?
23:44
@JohnSmith You can do that, but you almost never want to.
@JohnSmith std::vector<std::vector<int>>(2, std::vector(2));
@sehe :D indeed. good to know about the flags though. I had someone harassing me one day so I flagged like 5 times and it said I only had 10 flags left and I was like "oh crap, I better not use those in case I need them later on"
@JerryCoffin Why not?
About whether there is a moderator in this room, we have enough 10ks here where can nuke any question that isn't locked by a moderator.
@JerryCoffin I think I understand, so for example If I have an array declared with this syntax int a[20] inside a funciton, and i return a pointer to the start of the array, (to the main) It wont' reach the data? And to skip this problem i have to reserve memory using malloc?
23:45
@AlbertoBonsanto that is correct
@Mysticial Meh. Like it is great fun to nuke questions. It always takes me off guard when you mention things like that so cavalierly
throws an error mooing
"I am a C programmer" haha have you guys seen that video?
@JohnSmith Fairly wasteful, among other things. You usually just want to store data in a single vector, and index into that like T & operator()(int x, int y) { return data[y*columns+x];}
@AlbertoBonsanto Very good summary
@mmmshuddup Needs link
23:45
@JohnSmith what's the error?
@JerryCoffin more complicated
Yes.. it's one of those videos :P
giving me the whole "; expected" thing
when it usually doesn't like the syntax
@mmmshuddup Oh in good old 'is it webscale?' - style
@MooingDuck Not really. About a 15-line class, and after that easier to work with/use.
23:47
@sehe yeah like that NodeJs video and there's a funny one about the iPhone too
std::vector<std::vector<int>>(2, std::vector<int>(2));
                                             ^~~~  oops
@mmmshuddup I know them all :) They're fun
y'know
I love the C one though because he rips on PHP really bad (I am a PHP programmer)
23:47
maybe I'll just try a regular edit control
I don't even know the difference between rich and normal
same problem
guys being here makes me miss C++ :(
@nixeagle it just prints a bunch of stuff on the screen
vector < vector < long long > >(2, vector<long long>(2)) N;
^incorrect?
@JohnSmith no, name goes between the vector and the parenthesis
23:48
@Chimera @MooingDuck well the image was shown in the link provided in
No, it's not.
user406009
Oops, my fail.
@JohnSmith Do you mean vector < vector < long long > > N(2, vector<long long>(2)); ?
how is that different from what I posted?
bah, I wanted it to show that response inline. Oh well
23:49
oh, N first?
Read it maybe and you'll know how it's different.
@JohnSmith the N for one thing
@DeadMG Rich supports formatting based on the content. Normal text control just uses a single font.
Also use Boost.MultiArray or other specialised libs for multi-dim arrays, vectors of vectors stink.
23:50
.....MIND BLOWN — Will 38 mins ago
@DeadMG rich text also lets you bold/italic and so on.
^ that warm fuzzy feeling
Normal text is what your editor displays (minus any fancy syntax highlighting).
@sehe Of course you're warm and fuzzy, you're a bear.
@CatPlusPlus I like void ***MatrixOfPointers;
23:51
26 mins ago, by sehe
@JohnSmith boost multi-array, or just long[N*M] and index it wisely
Ell
Ell
Vectors of vectors are cache unfriendly. Not to prematurely optimise ;)
vatatzc
easy.
@sehe I tried installing boost once and had a hell of a time, couldn't get anything working
@LuchianGrigore If you want a 3D matrix, try this.
I don't :)
23:52
@Ell they're also far easier to understand
@kbok lol. It's not always about easy. It's about power for me. It's my core development tool and I need it to be powerful a lot more than I need it to be easy
@sehe I agree. I'm making fun but in the end in some other editor it's just not possible. Choosing tools for the sake of "easy" is ridiculous for a C++ programmer anyway :)
@JerryCoffin Reminds me of a 2d generalized Matrix thing that the robot posted on gist/ideone/... before, IIRC. Let's hope it wasn't LWS because that's down
@kbok Precisely
@JerryCoffin what if you want to reload that matrix?
haha
@JerryCoffin And what about char *a[128] will it be destroyed after going out of the scope?
user406009
23:54
The array of pointers a will be destroyed. Whatever the pointers were pointing to will still be fine.
@AlbertoBonsanto the array will, the things pointed at will not be destroyed
@mmmshuddup It's matrix3, so Trinity will help you out.
@sehe I love that hte newbie hints aren't on github for once
are there as many git fanboys in the C++ world as there are in webdev?
Is this a valid edit?
@Lalaland Where "fine" will typically translate to "leaked".
Ell
Ell
23:56
@kbok I don't know - ease of use and ease of deployement is a big factor, not everyone needs uber performant programmes
@LuchianGrigore Don't think so
@mmmshuddup absolutely. But also a great deal of Hg fanboys
@JerryCoffin Sorry I was making a lame joke (ref to the movie. terrible I know. those messages should practically get bin'd haha)
@LuchianGrigore Accurate, but the OP may not appreciate it.
@MooingDuck Very interesting.....
dammit, rolled-back
23:57
@mmmshuddup ...and just exactly what did you think "Trinity" was referring to if not the movie?
@sehe to balance it out a bit
@JerryCoffin no. "matrix"
Jun 8 at 3:23, by R. Martinho Fernandes
Nowadays, on questions about multidimensional arrays, I just post a comment with nothing but a link to http://ideone.com/gytw7 or http://ideone.com/oycrc and close the tab.
@JerryCoffin @JohnSmith @MooingDuck have a look overthere ^
OHHH hahahah oh that's weak I didn't even notice it :P
@LuchianGrigore lol... troll edit.
goddamnit
23:58
@DeadMG Ohai
the normal edit controls are supposed to respond to WM_SETFONT but now nothing is happening :(
why is it so unreasonably difficult to set the font of an edit control
@DeadMG Load the font first?
argh still overflowing
did
@JohnSmith "My cup is a-overflowing, Lord"
23:59
@sehe Looks like he based it on the one I posted earlier.
posted on October 27, 2012 by R. Martinho Fernandes

UTF-8 everywhere is a hack I think that using UTF-8 everywhere is nothing but a hack. Sure it may work if you put up with it, but it is a sub-optimal choice. As an engineer, I prefer to use the right tool for the job. Hammers are all nice and dandy if I’m nailing someone to a cross, but please keep them away from my screws. Right tool for the job Different encodings have different

@JohnSmith It literally is "copy files here and done" kind of thing.

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