« first day (766 days earlier)      last day (4411 days later) » 

13:02
@R.MartinhoFernandes ^ <- hat
^ <- circumflex.
^ <- thing with many names
I know more names than you. You suck.
ˇ <- caron
No such thing as a macret though.
@R.MartinhoFernandes that's when used as an accent above a letter, which AFAIK is not the same as what the keyboards normally have
13:04
@LucDanton hehe, nice one.
@thecoshman Portuguese layouts have it as a dead key. It's also what both Unicode and ASCII call it, even in non-combining form.
oh, maybe not
Caret () is an inverted V-shaped grapheme. Specifically, caret commonly refers to the spacing character ^ in ASCII (at code point 5Ehex) and other character sets that may also be called a hat, control, uparrow, or less frequently chevron, xor sign, to the [power of], fang, shark (or shark-fin), pointer (in Pascal), or wedge. Officially, this character is referred to as circumflex accent in both ASCII and Unicode terminology (because of its historical use in overstrike), whereas caret refers to a similar but lowered Unicode character: . Additionally, there is another lowered variant with ...
like I said, many names :P
user1357851
S͐͑́̄m͗̆ͩo͗͗͆̍̂̀K͛̈͊̆̚e͆ͣ͆͆ͪ
^ fail
user1357851
T̶͔͕̠ͪ̓ͫ̂ͫͯ͐̆͑͟o̢͙͈͍̻͎̬͍̝̒̄͝͞ ̢̪̖̼̤̬͍̦͉̓ͩͥͣ̓͛̑́i̪͓̟̻̯̖̝͋̊̓ͯ̂̈n̵̛͕̻̺̓ͦ͑̐̿̚͞v͙̘̣͇̠̱͈̱ͨ͂o͎̱̗̗͋́̎̿͗̀ǩͫ̊̿͏͙̱͈̭̭̮͉̱e̷̤͕̪̭̙̋̽̓̋̔͗͐͡͝ ̴̞̬̼̘̪̈̆̒̃̀t̨̤͈̗͍̫̜̭̮͉ͤ̿͠h̗͙͚̱̮͉͐̾̀͝ę̵̸͎̪̤̻͈̈́̿̋ͩ̋ͧͬ̚̚ ͙̳̳̙̉͑̈́ͥ͜h̪̭̱̍͆̆̒̏̒͐́̕i̵̱̳̥͆́̓͒v̻̬̋͗̉̕ē̫̼̯̦̮̼͖͔͒̊̑̄͢-͚̀̋m̡̺̰̰͎̜̆̿͛͂͞i̼̝̭͙̟͔̱ͪͮͥ͛͊ͣͫ͐̀n̛̻̟͍̥ͭ̍̊̆̓d̬̈́̌͟ ̛̓͊̍ͮ̚҉͙̬͎̱̯̩̦̠r͕̲̹͕̮̮̄͛͐͆̚ȇ̶̘̽̅ͮͪ̋ͅp̴̗̳̞̗͇̖̺̉͞r̦̰̻̦̤̠ͫ͊ͥ͂̍ͧ̐ͪ̐͝e̵͇͖͖͗ͥͭͨͭ͗͘ş̴͕͈̥̥̫͛ͥͥ̇͜ę̤̫̹͚̥͕̉́̕n͈͍͔̭̜̰̩͓̔̽̉ͮ̈ͮ́͞t̙̹̜̱̮̰̙̀ͪ̚͝i̹̜͔̻̟̤͔̖̋ͬͤ͊n͙̹͕͗̋͛̂̈͂̑̿͜g̔̉́͋̑҉͙̱̱̫͜ ̴͈͈̓͌c̷̘̭̙͖͔͚̝̗̊̑̂̽̿ͨͫh͖̭̖̅̂̚͝a̭͇̦͚̫̟̝ͭͯ͂̇̎̀̕͠ơ̝̰̜̦̙̼̗̖̤͗ͣ͒̿ͫ͂̑͐s̷̮̗͓͓͕͂͑ͥͮ̏́.̶̧̣͚̟͍͍̬̮͆̒̀̇͂͊̌̐̀
@thecoshman haha, wikipedia copied the list of names straight from the Jargon File.
Even the INTERCAL name is there (shark).
13:14
@R.MartinhoFernandes For showing your appreciation I shall reward you with the fact that German uses the dieresis.
@LucDanton It's diaeresis, but thanks.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I would think this is a regional spelling difference.
As in paedophile/pedophile.
paedophile is correct and pedophile isn't.
@LucDanton Unicode has no regions!
(goes back to check if there is an alias)
> As a medical diagnosis, pedophilia, or paedophilia
both are.
user1357851
13:19
@LucDanton as long as it is not pedobear
user1357851
@R.MartinhoFernandes I only seek to tame my spellcheckers, one of which is set for British English and the other for American English. I think.
Nope, no such alias.
user1357851
13:30
damn, why do I feel sick? :(
user1357851
Karma ... from all the downvoting you have been doing ... maybe
sbi
sbi
A std::tr1::bind() question. I have a vector of pointers to objects. I want to find the first object for which a certain member function returns false. I have been banging my head against that now for half an hour, to no avail. How do I do that?
Uh, now I have chased everybody into hiding. I am sorry.
0
Q: tic-tac-toe using opencv but i can stopped when recognize game board

user1838706Now I control robot to run tic-tac-toe game but i couldn't know how to use opencv library to recognize game board and inner square I wonder how to use algoritm to get corner of game board and 9X9 Game square This is what i do get the corner Binary Image: cvFindContours: #include <stdi...

Just digesting food
@sbi, I'm going to throw out the obvious question, why can't you simply cycle all items and break on the first object to return false?
@sbi If the semantics of TR1 bind are as in C++11, I think it should just work (bind(&class:member, the_this, the_args or placeholders...)).
sbi
sbi
13:38
@Neil I want to execute some code on the first sequence of objects returning false. If I do this on foot, it will be three loops. I'd have hoped to have this two calls to std::find_if() plus one to std::for_each(), which seems much easier to read and digest than three loops.
The placeholders are not optional in C++11. Again I don't know if anything changed from TR1 or if it's the same.
sbi
sbi
@R.MartinhoFernandes Uh. Ok, there's no args, what's the_this? Also, where's the negation in this?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Oh, placeholder!
@sbi The pointer to the object that will be the this in the member function. It can be a placeholder.
Things would be so much easier if you could just use _.js
There's no ready made Standard operator object for ! though I would think. bind(equal_to(), false, bind(&foo::bar, _1))?
sbi
sbi
13:39
@R.MartinhoFernandes Ah, that would be, um _1, right?
@sbi find_if_not?
@sbi Yes.
@Luc noexcept came in GCC 4.7, right?
I don't recall.
Or at least, noexcept in the standard library.
I do remember a period where noexcept was available, but worthless, because nothing in the stdlib used it.
sbi
sbi
13:45
@LucDanton What about std::not?
There's a std::not? Isn't not one of those alternative tokens?
sbi
sbi
OK, so std::find_if( v.begin(), v.end(), std::tr1::bind(&foo::bar, _1) ) works. Now how do I get !bar()?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Oh. I thought there used to be one, akin to std::less and its cousins. ICBWT.
Oh, find_if_not is C++11 only.
There's std::compl for ~ I think? But yeah not is special.
sbi
sbi
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah, I thought so.
13:47
@sbi The equal_to business :/
sbi
sbi
@LucDanton Can you elaborate?
7 mins ago, by Luc Danton
There's no ready made Standard operator object for ! though I would think. bind(equal_to(), false, bind(&foo::bar, _1))?
sbi
sbi
@LucDanton Ah, sorry, that scrolled off the screen while I was still making sense of the other stuff. Is non-sequence equal_to() C++03, though?
std::unary_negate? (aka std::not but with a non-reserved name)
sbi
sbi
@R.MartinhoFernandes Ah, that rings a bell.
13:49
@R.MartinhoFernandes -!
I think?
@sbi Or std::not1 for less verbosity en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/utility/functional/not1
@LucDanton That's std::negate.
@LucDanton This part of the library is a namewreck.
@R.MartinhoFernandes And would you think there would be an std::unary_negate with that?
sbi
sbi
Erm. I guess it shows that, so far, I hadn't done any of that fancy functional programming in C++. Because I am now sitting here with the pieces of this puzzle unable to put them together. Sheepish grin.
Considering I have std::tr1::bind(&foo::bar, _1), how do I fit a std::not1 in there?
std::not1(bind...)
Really, have you skipped lunch or something?
sbi
sbi
@R.MartinhoFernandes That gives me horrible error messages.
13:54
@sbi Nobody else did, either, hence lambdas :P
sbi
sbi
no type named 'argument_type' in 'struct std::tr1::_Bind<std::tr1::_Mem_fn<bool (Supervised_Task::*)()const> ()(std::tr1::_Placeholder<1>)>'
std::unary_negate is unusual and requires an argument_type argument in it's function.
Oh. Sigh. WTF? std::tr1::bind does not follow the old functor protocol?
@R.MartinhoFernandes No.
@R.MartinhoFernandes They had result_of, I don't remember any argument_type requirements.
sbi
sbi
13:55
@DeadMG Yeah, I remember thinking back then, while reading Pete Becker's book on TR1, that I'd rather wait until lambda becomes a language feature. Now, however, I am stuck with C++03, and still consider a std::find_if() easier than a manual loop.
maybe bind(equal_to<bool>(), false, bind(...)) would be easier.
@sbi I guess you will have to use the equal_to stuff.
sbi
sbi
"Is non-sequence equal_to() C++03, though?"
afaik
std::equal_to<T>() has always been the function object for bool operator==(T, T)
I don't know of any other equal_to.
@sbi There is no sequence equal_to.
The sequence one is named std::equal.
8 mins ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
@LucDanton This part of the library is a namewreck.
sbi
sbi
13:58
@R.MartinhoFernandes Ah. Lemme try.
And std::equal_range!
sbi
sbi
Well, std::tr1::bind(std::equal_to<bool>(), false, std::tr1::bind(&foo::bar, _1)) gives me a laconic error: expected ',' or ';' before ')' token.
Mummy, I'm lost! Fetch me!
Extra parenthesis.
Go grab some coffee!
sbi
sbi
@R.MartinhoFernandes Damn.
Robot can parse C++ in his head
14:00
@sbi Wait, is the error sill there without the extraneous parenthesis? (i.e. was it the error, or a transcription error?)
sbi
sbi
@TonyTheLion That's LISP, not C++.
@sbi oh he can parse LISP? Nice
sbi
sbi
@R.MartinhoFernandes Nope. I pasted an extra parenthesis from the enclosing find_if(), and meant to remove that. Then I noticed that there was yet another one. Now, that I removed that one, it works.
@TonyTheLion Actually, I didn't even look at the code. I only read the error, and "there's an extra parenthesis, dumbass" is what is written there, is it not?
@sbi Ah, then you should not have edited your message. That only served to confuse me. :(
sbi
sbi
@TonyTheLion It's not too hard to algorithmically parse parens nested deeper than three. As a human, this is very hard, though.
14:02
@R.MartinhoFernandes It is, but when I parsed the pasted code, I didn't spot one.
3 mins ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
Extra parenthesis.
the word "dumbass" is missing from the above statement
so what you claim was written is not what was written
I kinda wish the compiler would go "[here's the error], dumbass" sometimes.
therefore your argument is invalid and I'm a fish.
7
@TonyTheLion But it is in this statement: "error: expected ',' or ';' before ')' token" (hint: this is not English, this is compiler-error-ish)
@sbi oh right
@R.MartinhoFernandes oh lol
sbi
sbi
14:03
@R.MartinhoFernandes Ah, well, you know GCC's error messages. I know VC's.
@sbi It only shows that I have seen that one particular message way too much whistles
@sbi But I shall remember who I can ask for help next time I am baffled by one of VC's error messages. :)
yeah, me
^^
Speaking of which, let's go back to make VC generate error messages, aka work.
14:08
oh work, is that even a thing?
@TheForestAndtheTrees Clang is getting pretty good at that
I'm waiting for a compiler to tell me where the error is, then say, "Oh, it's okay, let me fix that for you"
I still don't think clang is that good.
I've never used Clang
no opinions
from what I've heard about it, it should be more helpful than other compilers
That was one, two years ago.
Meh, I think it gives that illusion because it includes the code in the error message.
Aug 22 at 11:43, by rubenvb
:5037279 Clang 3.1 says :
test.cpp:27:13: error: unexpected type name 'A': expected expression
            A a(5);
            ^
test.cpp:30:1: error: expected ';' after top level declarator
^
;
14:15
Aaaaand.... Gone again :) Getting the kids + 2 extra from school. This is good exercise
I actually decyphered that one in less than a minute, but that doesn't make it any better.
@R.MartinhoFernandes hey. that's my thought exactly. MSVC and Clang seem to think that making output moere verbose (and especially, more spacious, less structured) is automatic more user-friendly. It is to users who read only with their eyes.
I read with search patterns and text object navigation. I don't really like all the ascii art/indenting artifacts. It makes things harder to navigate
@sehe I thought you had kids waiting for you.
I can cycle pretty fast :)
14:20
Personally, I find the idea of outputting the code alongside the errors silly. I have the code available for viewing in my text editor, thank you.
@TonyTheLion You realize that they want a little pop-up to come up everytime google has to save information on their server related to you
That would happen, what.. every page load?
@Neil I think you are exaggerating.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Every other page load then
@Neil Or once per account? Or once per session? Or once per whatever? Or even once until notice in contrary?
@R.MartinhoFernandes If they have to ask for consent whenever they want to save your information, that would be often
14:26
@Neil Not if you give consent forever.
I'm not sure if they're allowed to accept a blanket "yes" for any information stored on the server
@R.MartinhoFernandes It'd still be a pain, even if once a month you were reminded that you must consent to google saving your data for you to be able to use gmail
@Neil Yes, you are not sure. Yet you did not have a problem with assuming it it was false.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Now you're being pedantic.. You have no proof to the contrary
Is there a warning in MSVC for when the initialization list is not in the same order as the data members declaration in the class ?
I have read nothing saying that it would require nag popups. For what is the worth, the stance on cookies is that you ask once and provide an option to revoke it.
14:29
@R.MartinhoFernandes Cookies doesn't count for saving information since it's on your own computer
If that information were sent to the server and saved, then it would violate this privacy rule without some sort of consent
@Neil But it's an instance where they could have required it on every page load, yet they did not. I don't see why the same idea could be not done for this.
I do like the idea of a right to be forgotten rule
In fact, just the mention of the "right to be forgotten" should imply that you can manually revoke it, which would not make sense if you had to actually accept it at every instance.
@R.MartinhoFernandes You can't manage e-mail by saving information in only cookies
Rule #1 of agile startup is never of use QA team when you can able pay customer for find worst bug.
@Neil I didn't say that. I said that there's no reason to not have it work like with cookies: you ask for permission once, and provide an option to revoke it whenever you want.
14:35
Why hello friends
Hello friend
@R.MartinhoFernandes And that sounds annoying to me in any case
I can't argue against that.
I can only say that is very different from the scenario you described.
I need 5 more upvotes to make 17k rep
@TonyTheLion Also, shame on you for linking to lousy journalism (i.e. they link to their sources: to another news site that doesn't link to sources). :(
14:39
@R.MartinhoFernandes oh right.
the question is, how deep do you have to go to check these things?
@TonyTheLion As deep as I can make sense of stuff.
Sometimes I follow stuff I'm interested in to the source, and then don't understand a thing of it.
2
I have a friend and coworker whose code looks seriously like crap. I don't know how to put it.
@kbok "sucks donkey cock"?
Mmm donkey cock
You know, on the internet you just say "you suck" but this is real life.
14:41
Invite them to the internet and there call them "you suck"
@R.MartinhoFernandes thermonuclear socials skills, too, I see
@R.MartinhoFernandes holy crap. But I'm not sure I want to do that everytime I want to post a link here to some tidbit.
@Pubby lol
Hey guys check it out hot topic here: stackoverflow.com/questions/13474948/… any help on this would be greatly appreciated! ;)
@McBob Y U DRIVE BY LINKING?
14:43
@TonyTheLion It's ok. I just get annoyed by journalists that don't link to sources. I can almost excuse it on a hard medium, but this is the Internet.
@R.MartinhoFernandes right.
is that why you followed TVTropes all the way down to it's first trope? :P
C++ for scripting? That sounds like using Python for OS development.
Or PHP for web developement.
I can also excuse it when you cannot link to the sources for privacy reasons or whatnot. But when the sources are public anyway, I don't want to spend my time chasing links and googling. (not that I spend much time anyway, I am awesome; but my point stands)
@Pubby: Check this out shacknews.com/article/74255/…
@Pubby: That will blow your mind...
gulls
14:45
@Pubby: It blow mine... That's why I can't stop thinking about how to make it work ;)
@McBob I saw that before. I don't know why you need C++ as a scripting language to do that though.
@Cicada You're the only gal around here, AFAIK.
Whats the point of "utf8 being self-synchronized"? From a practical point of view? I find almost no info on the topic.
What is the point of non virtual T* clone() const; methods seriously this sucks
@R.MartinhoFernandes No, there's also @Konrad.
14:46
@Cicada You can iterate backwards or forwards from any point.
Wait it's not even const
@Cicada Too cowardly to actually plink @Konrad?
@R.MartinhoFernandes but I thought you had indexed the interwebs in your Robot mind?! :P
return new T(*this); this is getting even better
14:47
@TonyTheLion Yeah, that's why I said I don't spend much time googling. But I am altruistically thinking of my fellow meatbags.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Is that useful?
Oh wait it's acuaely virtual nevermind
@kbok Are you sure the function is not virtual? The virtualness only needs to be declared once in the base class. The derived ones don't need it.
@kbok acuaely. yes.
@Cicada Yes. You don't need to start from the beginning to find character boundaries.
14:49
@R.MartinhoFernandes I know, but the base class was a struct so I thought there would be no virtual methods in it. There is.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Is there any practical use of that feature? I mean, I've always seen strings parsed from beginning to end, no matter the encoding.
@Cicada It also prevents errors from propagating forward and ruining the whole stream.
by the way
@Cicada You have to resynchronize (i.e. find the start of the next valid character) if the stream contains errors and you want to continue.
moronism bites even the best of us
0
A: Cannot set font on edit control

DeadMGThe damn variable shadowing in the constructor. The pointer being passed is actually a Render::Font*, not the HFONT from the stored variable. I, of course, did not correctly test whether it was SetFont which did not work, or the constructor which did not work.

sbi
sbi
14:51
@Cicada There's a std::string::find_last_of(), so it seems to be needed.
@sbi That member function doesn't really need to exist.
@DeadMG What the hell are you trying to achieve
@Cicada ?
A non-self-synchronizing code needs out-of-band for that. A self-synchronizing code does not.
@kbok An owner-drawn edit control. But the point is, it only didn't work because I did something fairly silly. Now it works.
sbi
sbi
@DeadMG But that applies to all of them, so it doesn't defeat my argument.
14:52
@R.MartinhoFernandes Okay, that would be more interesting, but we have other error correction mechanisms anyway.
@sbi Quite true.
@kbok Massive typo of yours.
@R.MartinhoFernandes that for that? wat
sbi
sbi
wat for wat
@Cicada You are seeing things.
@Cicada Not a typo, it's an intentional variation of "acualy"
sbi
sbi
14:53
@kbok Which, actually, is spelled "actually".
@kbok oh sury, me mistaek then
sbi
sbi
@R.MartinhoFernandes 'course she does. She got eyes.
@sbi Well actually acualy is spelled "acualy" :)
Dammit, now I a word.
lol
I giggled.
14:54
Well, I meant "(...) needs out-of-band data for that".
sbi
sbi
@kbok Yes, but t hat word, actually, doesn't exist.
What is wrong in my question? I ask about "software tools commonly used by programmers" and answerable. An expert in parsers, viewing my description, can answer me about libraries this expert knows and its adventages in relation to my problem. — Peregring-lk 36 mins ago
It is a question solliciting subjective opinions, and or lists of possible tools. In fact your question matches more than 1 explicitely listed examples in the Don't ask section (do click 'show more'!) — sehe 18 secs ago
^ Am I losing sight of SO's spirit, or am I not conveying it clearly?
@R.MartinhoFernandes I know. I just wanted to do what I do best.
@Cicada But yes, I agree with you that some of the tauted advantages of UTF-8 are not very relevant for most tasks.
@sbi butt hat word FTFY
14:57
@R.MartinhoFernandes Alright, so if you had to pick an encoding, which one would it be?
@sehe Too localized
@sbi Also, that doesn't make sense. What's a butt hat word ?
@sehe The dude probably hasn't read the FUQ
sbi
sbi
@kbok I bet you sat in front of your machine, drumming your fingers, waiting for the two mins to go past.
@kbok A word to describe hats for butts.
14:57
@Cicada 1) I'm not alcoholic 2) I wouldn't never drink something called "the singleton".
@sbi Oh the rage
@sbi two longest minutes of my life.
@EtiennedeMartel Only one of these statements is true.
sbi
sbi
@kbok Poor boy. Here, have a cookie.
@Cicada I never drink alone. So I can't be an alcoholic. Right?
14:58
@Cicada oh shit, you took the picture before me. I nearly took one this morning but was late :(
@EtiennedeMartel There is one negation too much in there. And it's neither the second nor the third.
@sbi That reminds me of something!
@Cicada IMPOSSIBRU! see:
Please read the FAQ on what questions are generally considered a good fit for SO. — sehe 45 mins ago
@R.MartinhoFernandes @sbi said that doesn't exist
@EtiennedeMartel You're a social alcoholic.
14:59
@sehe The dude probably hasn't understood the FUQ.

« first day (766 days earlier)      last day (4411 days later) »