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user142019
03:00
With clang it prints 42 even with optimizations enabled.
What I find more odd, is that this is UB: char c; puts(c);
The value is undefined OK. But why is the behavior undefined here?
user142019
puts takes a char const*, not a char.
user142019
In C, I think the char gets implicitly cast to a pointer, but it's uninitialized.
user142019
If you don't get an error, at least.
user142019
And if you don't get an error, I suspect you forgot to #include <stdio.h> and C will incorrectly infer the type of puts.
03:03
@StackedCrooked The better question is why define it?
user142019
@StackedCrooked Because anything can happen. Any behaviour can happen. It's unknown how puts will behave.
@StackedCrooked it's not undefined. char is pretty special. all bits are value representation bits
otoh it's not defined either
@R.MartinhoFernandes Because once you have UB then nothing is guaranteed anymore. But that seems too harsh a judgement for this case.
user142019
Well, what could be guaranteed?
i'm not sure what the situation is, because an implementation can't be required to define an indeterminate value like that (or its use)
user142019
03:06
You pass an uninitialized value of the wrong type to a function.
i think he meant to write putc
or putchar
@Zoidberg'-- To the wrong function!
whatever the name, so that it compiled
cpx
cpx
@R.MartinhoFernandes But UB can also be unspecified behavior, no?
user142019
Oh you mean putchar?
user142019
03:07
THEN WRITE putchar YOU FOOL XD
user142019
@StackedCrooked Well, printing a value is some kind of behavior.
@cpx No one ever means that, and if they do they will get lynched.
user142019
putc('a'); behaves differently from putc('b');.
@cpx no, they are mutually exclusive. in the UB case the implementation is not required to document the behavior, in the unspecified case it is. and that's the difference
user142019
lol
user142019
03:09
Random behavior.
@Zoidberg'-- How unreliable!
@Cheersandhth.-Alf No, it is not required to document anything.
It is required to pick within a specific set of possible behaviours outlined by the standard for each situation.
Oh, it's multiple choice? It's like a VN.
@R.MartinhoFernandes oh right
cpx
cpx
@Cheersandhth.-Alf Oh, I meant both undefined and unspecified starts with U.
user142019
03:12
Ongedefinieerd gedrag.
Ongespecificeerd gedrag.
For example: "The order of evaluation of function arguments is unspecified." This means that any order is valid, but it does not have to be documented. However, there must be some order, and the program cannot order pizza instead of evaluating the arguments in some order.
@Rapptz yo
? hello
you get 408 yet?
Basically, the difference is in the ordering pizza bits.
03:14
I gave up when you made me close my program
:(
undefined = can order pizza; unspecified = cannot order pizza.
you mean the program that I gave you a replacement for that finished in under a second?
o_o
user142019
Well I'd rather have my program order pizza than doing something unimportant like behaving like it should.
well it was already running for like 12 hours so by that time
03:15
those triples were like.. long gone
I think if I left it running I could have gotten the answer by now... ..maybe.
user142019
init(_Args) ->
    {stop, not_implemented}.
user142019
I'm so lazy.
How do I implement this? unsigned product(unsigned ...factors) { return ??? }
are you doing prime factorization?
Variadic templates and recursion?
03:20
@R.MartinhoFernandes Right, I need to define a case for 1.
@Rapptz Euler #12 still :/
I don't recommend recursion for prime factorization
But I'm getting closer.
It's probably easier to do unsigned product(std::initializer_list<unsigned> list) though.
user142019
@Rapptz It's a product function.
user142019
(Unless the naming is terrible.)
03:21
I know, I saw factors in it too
initializer_list is probably better
what's #12?
user142019
unsigned product(size_t count, ...); /* :^) */
@Rapptz It's all inlined here.
Have any of you tried to use the GPU for some Euler problems?
@JohanLarsson There's some people in the old problems that did it with CUDA
Oh this problem.
@Rapptz ok, I migh give it a go, could be fun to benchmark, could also be no fun to suck trying to get it to work :)
03:23
I heard CUDA was awful
user142019
Use CoffeeScript! product = (args...) -> ø.product(args)
are you doing prime factorization/
just use trial division method if you want to "get it done"
@AgainstASicilian no, problem 12 is that problem you can google the answer from mathworld
faster methods exist like pollard-rho/brent or whatever it's called if you want to make something like that
what's problem 12 again
composite triangle number lol
user142019
03:24
Or, you know, just because it rocks, product = (args...) -> ø.foldl1(ø.multiply, args).
I think he's over complicating it
ohh that one
there is a typo on row 3: in problem 12 right? Also it looks like a decent candidate for GPU?
user142019
@StackedCrooked you cannot use variadic templates without variadic templates.
03:25
Ah.
user142019
Do this
Don't tell me what to do!
:)
user142019
template<class T, class... Ts>
typename std::enable_if<std::is_same<T, unsigned>::value, unsigned>::type product(T t, Ts... ts) {}
That problem you can optimize to the hilt
you don't need anything crazy
just look at the mathematical nature of the divisors of triangle numbers
n(n+1)/2
I prefer product() { return 1; } as the base case.
03:27
@StackedCrooked how close, in time, are you to solving it?
since you're looking at many in a row you can take advantage of something here
user142019
@R.MartinhoFernandes ah yeah you can also do that.
@JohanLarsson [10 minutes, +infinity)
user142019
Beautiful monoids.
@StackedCrooked nice estimate right there imo!
03:28
I might suddenly die.
So that would count as +infinity I guess.
...I might be currently looking at the strangest bug I've seen in my life. And I've seen some shit.
user142019
You will die between now and in infinity minutes.
user142019
That's for sure. (Unless you just died before I typed that.)
I usually apply Math.Pow(initialEst, 3.14) to get a somewhat decent estimate
Damn it Zoidberg, I was about to say "Quick, prove him wrong! Die NOW!"
user142019
03:30
Which makes me wonder.
user142019
When a Lounger dies, how can we tell?
user142019
I think we should all implant chips in our brainz that post a message here when we die. xd
That would start to get really depressing around 50 years from now
user142019
lol
user142019
If this site still exists by then.
03:33
    [Test]
    public void Problem11Solution()
    {
        Assert.Fail("boring");
    }
user142019
Seems fine.
The template overload seems like an ugly hack.
user142019
If you don't want another global function you can use a lambda.
03:37
Ugh, damn OpenGL.
user142019
template<typename ...T> unsigned product(T ...t) {
    return ([] (std::initializer_list<unsigned> factors) {
        throw 42;
    })({ t... });
}
user142019
:P
I think you're over complicating it
:C
but it looks fun
user142019
How? It's not complicated at all.
user142019
You just call a lambda.
03:40
the question is a lot easier than what you guys are doing
What was the initializer list supposed to solve in the first place?
user142019
@AndreiTita So you can do { t... } instead of resorting to template recursion.
@Rapptz Yeah, I'm solving it on paper now...
But you can just expand t... in an unsigned array
user142019
That's also possibru.
03:42
I need the prime factors of the numbers up to 501.
Which is easy to obtain.
yeah for a trial division implementation it is simple
And then I need to do the rest.
user142019
import Math.NumberTheory.Primes.Factorisation (factorise)

let factorize = factorise in map factorize [1..501] -- XD
user142019
So ugly, factorise with an S.
BrE supreme
user142019
03:45
ITT: Europe still awake.
@StackedCrooked Thanks for reminding me I needed to implement something!
you don't even need trial division
user142019
Hmm.
user142019
factorise <$> [1..501]
user142019
Why is Set not a functor?
user142019
03:49
Oh wait.
user142019
It wouldn't satisfy fmap (f . g) == fmap f . fmap g.
Are you having a public monologue?
user142019
No?
Ok?
Lounce<C++> Where everything is a question.
Cancel?
user142019
03:53
Abort?
user142019
Retry?
user142019
lol
Ah I thought you were working on a standard UI window design and I wanted to help with the buttons.
Implementing this is actually pretty stupid.
user142019
Error occured
/tmp/foobar~~12.org.com/foo: no such file or directory
[OK] [Cancel] [Abort] [Retry] [Dismiss] [Yes] [No] [Delete]
user142019
03:54
Worst UI ever.
There would be a lot of multiple 2s and 3s
I think the solution is 1 + 2 + 3 + ... + (1 * 2 * 3 * ... 503)
user142019
Why the parentheses.
Not for you.
:P
user142019
:^(
03:56
I wanted to emphasize the grouping.
user142019
D^:{
user142019
D^:<
user142019
<^)))><
What are you working on @StackedCrooked ?
Euler problem 12
03:59
you don't need trial division
you can create an extremely fast implementation for solving that question by looking at the nature of triangle numbers
n(n+1)/2
user142019
@AgainstASicilian operator/(T a, U b) { throw std::runtime_error{"your trial period has ended"}; }
hm, my implementation of 12 is slow
user142019
@JohanLarsson Easy solution: abuse time dilation.
user142019
04:03
It solves everything!
user142019
Don't overdo it though, you may run into Y3K.
my implementation of 12 is pretty fast: constexpr int twelve = 12;
It's wrong though :P
user142019
@AndreiTita that's your compiler's implementation, you cheater.
04:04
try constexpr int answer = 76576500;
@Zoidberg'-- I have learned a lot from my compiler.
user142019
I have learned a lot from a potato.
@AndreiTita Noob, my compiler learns from me.
user142019
For example how incredibly dry food can be.
user142019
04:06
I hate dry food.
user142019
Why do people eat dry food.
user142019
Turkey and chicken are also fucking dry sometimes.
user142019
Especially in soup.
user142019
Blewrg.
shudder
I know.
user142019
04:07
I want to be able to chew and swallow my food.
user142019
Not having it absorb all my slime, drying my tongue till it wants to fall off.
@Zoidberg'-- you'd love the cinnamon challenge
how do I good at math?
hm, might be an intoverflow thing I have here
user142019
@AgainstASicilian yuc
user142019
04:10
I'd rather do that with pepper spray.
@Crowz don't accept authority. remember that nothing is serious. eschew associative arguments
user142019
Pepper spray is hotter than hell.
@Crowz You stop accidentally a mistake ;)
@Borgleader how mistake stop
@Zoidberg'-- many policemen in norway have thought that pepper spray is a good way to calm down a dog.
user142019
04:11
I want to participate in a pure resiniferatoxin challenge.
most of them but not all revised their opinion after first experiment
user142019
| Section2 = }} Resiniferatoxin (RTX) is a naturally occurring, ultrapotent capsaicin analog that activates the vanilloid receptor in a subpopulation of primary afferent sensory neurons involved in nociception (the transmission of physiological pain). RTX causes an ion channel in the plasma membrane of sensory neurons — the transient receptor potential vanilloid 1 — to become permeable to cations, most particularly the calcium cation; this evokes a powerful irritant effect followed by desensitization and analgesia. Research is being conducted at the National Institutes of Health ...
user142019
^ The food they serve in hell.
user142019
10666 times hotter than the hottest pepper.
user142019
10666, sure it's from hell.
user142019
04:14
> Resiniferatoxin is toxic and can inflict chemical burns.
user142019
lol
Many Indo-European religious branches show evidence for horse sacrifice, and comparative mythology suggests that they derive from a Proto-Indo-European (PIE) ritual. Context Often horses are sacrificed in a funerary context, and interred with the deceased, a practice called horse burial. There is evidence but no explicit myths from the three branches of Indo-Europeans of a major horse sacrifice ritual based on a mythical union of Indo-European kingship and the horse. The Indian Aśvamedha is the clearest evidence preserved, but vestiges from Latin and Celtic traditions allow the reconstru...
^ "steps forward in beastly fashion" how, what is IN BEASTLY FASHION?
user142019
What is trunk hair?
user142019
user142019
^ Owned.
04:43
Question: if I use "defer" as a function name with the meaning of "yield" (to the default implementation) rather than the more widely-used "postpone", is that likely to greatly confuse the users?
05:02
@Zoidberg'-- Looks more like vomit spray.
I think they should disqualify all contestants because they left their computer screens to be on national tv.
The number of divisors of n is equal to 2 + 2 ^ num_prime_factors(n).
@StackedCrooked lol
2 + 2^9 = 514 (9 is the smallest value where this results in > 500)
The 9th prime factor is 23.
So 1 * 2 * ... * 23 is the smallest number with 500 divisors.
However, we need the smallest triangle number.
The product of the first 9 prime factors will be a factor of this triangle number.
No.
12 has 3 prime factors, 3*2*2
05:14
I mean unique prime factors.
Ah I gotcha.
If n is even, then 1 + 2 + ... + n = n/2 * (n+1)
So we need n where num_prime_factors(n/2) + num_prime_factors(n + 1) == 9
num_prime_factors(n/2) = num_prime_factors(n) - 1
num_prime_factors(n + 1) = ...(use computer)
And now I'm close but I'm tired as well.
It's 6am.
I'm not a math genius and Euler isn't fun anymore.
Ah well.
Anime time :D
Wait.. How are you in #12?
I just looked at #13, and I remember I showed you a way to do that one
Yeah, I mistook then.
I need to solve 12 first.
I also haven't solved 13 yet.
Let me try 12.
05:24
I'll find it tomorrow. I'm sure I'm close.
I had 12 solved, then I started optimizing :)
Now it is fast but gives wrong results
At least it's fast.
eek.. 1.4s
I hope I can see ms soon
05:28
could try the prime factorization approach
I'm there now, trying to add all multiples and nested multiples
@JohanLarsson The disease? That's awful.
pun :( :)
Looks like I need recursive sh*t
It does not feel like I'm gonna get that right @06:32
I wish I had commited when it worked :(
hm?
@Rapptz You got the solution?
05:38
hm? yeah
I finished this problem a long time ago. I'm just optimising it now
22ms.. outputs wrong answer lol
@Rapptz I say keep it!
here we go
76576500
Elapsed time: 23 ms
@Rapptz "A program that produces incorrect results twice as fast is infinitely slower." - John Osterhout
A broken clock is right at least twice a day!
:(
05:58
@Rapptz How'd you get it to 23ms?
used recursion
You're a Java user?
Was looking through your answers and stumbled upon the fibonacci one.
I do C++ too
I like that fibonacci function, I use it too. :P
any of you do much game development ?
but for big numbers I do the memoization approach.
06:02
guess not :P
@Rapptz Huh? You mean my for (int i = 0; i <= n; i++) { answer?
yeah
I don't use a for loop either.
ullong fibonacci(ullong number) {
        ullong a = 1;
        ullong b = 0;
        ullong c = 0;

        while (number--) {
            c = b;
            b = a;
            a = b+c;
        }

        return a;
    }
ah, I see... still don't know how you use recursion for #12, though
kind of recursive. Maybe I need a better term for it.. Hm.
I just realised I haven't gone on reddit all day.
"teeth grew"?
06:13
baby.
@Rapptz It goes down to <= 15ms with a bit of memoization: stacked-crooked.com/view?id=4589b0f3b1e2683f5b044af0aaecc591, excuse the global variable
sometimes globals are necessary!
nice memoization
You can make it a static local instead of a global.
that's what I usually do
06:20
@Rapptz Babies eat oat?
oatmeal?
@Rapptz Oh, huh, there was a typo; it should have been k = fetch(i / 2) * fetch(i+1);... but it still works for n = 500
@StackedCrooked lol I found this
@Rapptz Ah, apparently they cat eat oats at 7 months.
yeah, my baby eat oats :-)
06:23
How useless to know (at least for me).
Got the right solution now again but it took over a minute, over & out
can anyone help me install clang 3.3 so that it points at the gcc 4.8 headers (/usr/lib/gcc-snapshot...) ?
06:48
Damn, lost my Civ5 game by one turn.
What difficulty do you play on?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Prince (AKA normal). I'm still a noob.
You suck then :P
Actually, I think I haven't played Civ5 above Prince yet. Just played a few games to hone some strategy and then never actually got to put it in practice in the higher difficulties.
07:04
I've played Civ4 for a while.
Winning by diplomacy was rather hard.
I usually win by crushing everyone.
I won by diplomacy with my friend last time
By ganging up with an AI against him
That's a while ago. I got some help from these videos back then.
It was entertaining how the guy could talk so enthused about his game.
07:53
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah, I was aiming for a science victory.
Military victory is the "easy" route (with huge quotation marks).
hehe - the Japanese word for betrayed is literal: 裏切り uragiri - lit. backstabbed
@CatPlusPlus oh noes, an ANIMATED GIF IN THE CHAT
Totally radical.
I find tedious siegeing of cities easier than any other victory condition
Plus, artillery
08:07
Of course I also have no bloody idea what I'm doing so
@EtiennedeMartel Well, you can get any of the other victory conditions easily when your opponents have lost their powerhouses and are reduced to a bunch of small uninteresting cities.
The guy goes skiing at the end. It's as if he's trying cleanse himself.
@CatPlusPlus Yeah, why risk your melee troops when you can pummel your enemies with siege and/or ranged weapons.
Steamrollin' through
The AI was laughably stupid before I got the expansion, though.
08:09
If I had better attention span I might even learn how to play and finally get to ICBMs or something
I mean, they would ask me to give them everything I have for a peace treaty, even though I was the one crushing them.
Through strategic resources to the heart
@StackedCrooked Why am I watching this lol
It's interesting.
08:10
All I learned is he doesn't like being fucked in the ass or kissing dudes
I also love that everyone agrees to open borders always
Who needs spies
Though bribing city states embedded in enemy territory works as recon too
My last game, I was constantly being gifted military units by Budapest.
So I made sure they would keep loving me by having a spy there at all times.
A wild penis has appeared.
I was not prepared for this since it was on youtube
ROCK DUST LIGHT STAR
You don't spend much time on YT do you
08:17
iTunes just shoved that in my headset.
I don't expect penises all too often on YT
Technically, it's not permitted.
Unlike on Dailymotion.
Videos with nudity generally get swiftly deleted.
What is going on here
And earlier there was some talk about a penis.
So business as usual.
08:40
Nothing to see here.
Most of my answers date back from 2009 and 2010.
09:06
@ScottW oh it's a dog! i always thought it was a brown hat!
note to self: needs new glasses
room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: Scott W might secretly be a hat. [c++] [c++11] [c++-faq]
There.

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