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user142019
19:03
What fucking moron flagged that.
@ScottW Oh you!
@Zoidberg'-- Use a different PATH_SEPARATOR if it's a common thing.
user142019
@LeviMorrison Good point.
There's a lot of hate in that room
user142019
I'm writing a shell in Ruby. xD
user142019
19:12
def path
    ENV['PATH'] || '/bin:/usr/bin'
end

def path_separator
    ENV['PATH_SEPARATOR'] || ':'
end
user142019
@StackedCrooked How coincidental, a blog post written by the creator of Ruby on Rails.
I saw that.
Apparently he's a dick.
user142019
lol
user142019
He looks like one.
19:14
Nevertheless, it's a good post.
@Zoidberg'-- duckface
user142019
I'll make my shell configurable and extendible with Ruby.
@StackedCrooked Under certain circumstances ;)
@ScottW Hey.
Quoting me costs money you know.
8
Q: Does const mean thread-safe in C++11?

K-balloI hear that const means thread-safe in C++11. Is that true? Does that mean const is now the equivalent of Java's synchronized? Are they running out of keywords? [Note: This is a self-answered question]

user142019
19:18
@StackedCrooked indeed; you need to pay for the food you need to swallow to acquire the energy you need to do it.
lol
Now this is getting silly.
he added the tag on it o.o
user142019
No shit.
user142019
gets
if /foo/
    print "bar"
end
user142019
In Ruby prints "bar" if the user enters "foo". T_T
user142019
19:24
Who the hell thought this was a good idea. xD
I'm sure it makes sense in context.
Ell
Ell
Gets.chomp
No wait, you're right
It makes sense
user142019
if /foo/ matches /foo/ to $_, which is set by gets.
Ell
Ell
I'm an idiot
3
user142019
4 mins ago, by Zoidberg'--
No shit.
Ell
Ell
19:25
If /too/ is just if true
wtf, I'm the only guy to star that?
user142019
@Ell No, it's not.
you all suck
user142019
if /regex/ matches the regex against $_. It's not always true.
Ell
Ell
/too/ is a regex literal
it doesn't match anything
user142019
19:27
It's neither false nor nil so it should always be true.
user142019
Problem is, Ruby is inconsistent here: it matches the regex literal against $_.
Ell
Ell
Are you sure?
user142019
Yes.
Ell
Ell
I didn't think it did any matching at all
user142019
Yup.
user142019
19:28
if /regex literal here/ matches the regex against $_.
Ell
Ell
Hmm I'm not convinced
I'm gonna try
user142019
user142019
> prog.rb:2: warning: regex literal in condition
user142019
LOLZ
Ell
Ell
well it works for me :L
user142019
19:31
> If you write an if or while statement with just a regular expression as the condition, that expression is matched against $_.
Ell
Ell
No idea why it's printing bar for you
user142019
Maybe it's fixed in Ruby 1.9.
user142019
Oh no wait.
user142019
Ideone always uses 1.9. xD
user142019
@Ell define "works".
Ell
Ell
19:32
@Zoidberg'-- matches the regex to $_ and does foo if you type foo
user142019
@Ell yeah that's the same output I get.
user142019
Ell
Ell
Ugh I misread what you typed originally >.<
onoes implicit variable
user142019
@Collin and implicit comparison to it!
19:40
@Zoidberg'-- goddammit perl what have you done to us?
user142019
I don't know what's wrong with if gets =~ /foo/ but oh well.
Ell
Ell
@Zoidberg'-- that looks much better imho
if /blah/ is mysterious
@Zoidberg'-- because it looks like gets licks /foo/
user142019
@Ell and confusing.
user142019
19:44
@StackedCrooked All but C.
Now now.
Ell
Ell
ugh C#, y u no free functions?
@Ell Just make statics, it's not that bad
@Ell They don't need to free; there's a garbage collector.
Ell
Ell
@Collin they still need to be in a class though
19:45
@Zoidberg'-- Your score is 3/4.
@Ell Yeah, so?
user142019
@StackedCrooked All are thread-safe since the object is only accessible in one thread.
Your C++ free functions need to be in a file
Ell
Ell
@Collin but I don't need Utility class
@Zoidberg'-- That like saying your phone is water proof because it's not in water.
user142019
19:47
So what?
@Ell Give it a real name that isn't Utility then
user142019
You asked whether the operations were thread-safe, not whether the functions they called were generally thread-safe.
Ell
Ell
@Collin like what? The class is there just to contain the function, the class would have no meaningful name
@Zoidberg'-- Dude.
user142019
My answer is correct and your argument is invalid.
user142019
19:47
:D
Ell
Ell
-.-
user142019
^.^
@StackedCrooked OMG I suddenly realize that I am magma proof.
user142019
19:49
(\/)(;,,;)(\/)
Ell
Ell
@R.MartinhoFernandes you're a robot, of course you are ;)
@R.MartinhoFernandes What material are you made of!?
@Ell My kitchen robot doesn't work in magma.
Ell
Ell
@StackedCrooked have you tried it? You might be pleasantly surprised :D
What a wonderful site
@StackedCrooked Does it matter? I am not in magma.
user142019
19:50
@R.MartinhoFernandes but are you set proof?
I got an email invitation
I registered
They want to validate my email
Ell
Ell
lol
user142019
lol
19:51
@Ell Actually I lied. I don't have a kitchen robot :(
Some analytics tool for mobile apps
user142019
The Cat and mobile apps? Who are you in disguise?!
why does programming involve so much programming geez
8
user142019
Because you use inferior languages.
@Zoidberg'-- Says the Haskell programmer.
user142019
19:54
Haskell is superior!
Haskell makes writing programs impossible. But the ones that work work well
user142019
lol
Writing stuff in Haskell is an exercise in hardcore mind wanking.
2
Ell
Ell
hmm. are c# tuples enumerable? o.O
user142019
19:56
And as a result you're less involved in programming. xd
Ell
Ell
aww man they are not :(
they should be :o
wait, they can't be
user142019
@Ell Could make sense; C# has a unified type system.
Ell
Ell
there needs to be a way around this
@Zoidberg'-- unified type system?
user142019
But then again, you'll probably get evil code.
user142019
@Ell one base class of everything; object.
Ell
Ell
19:57
@Zoidberg'-- yeah exactly :/
user142019
Like Ruby and Python.
user142019
> Some languages like C# have a unified type system. This means that all C# types including primitive types inherit from a single root object. Every type in C# inherits from the Object class. Java has several primitive types that are not objects. Java provides wrapper object types that exist together with the primitive types so developers can use either the wrapper object types or the simpler non-object primitive types.
Ell
Ell
Meh I'll just have to leave it as object like it is currently
@Zoidberg'-- That is somewhat inaccurate, btw.
user142019
@R.MartinhoFernandes Because of int and friends?
20:00
No, those are just aliases, kinda like builtin typedefs. The thing is that value types in .NET are not quite objects.
user142019
Ahyeah.
user142019
But from what I remember from the standard, they do inherit from object. Could be wrong though.
Just like in Java they need to be boxed. The difference is that the boxes are transparent and don't get in the way like Java.
Ell
Ell
I can't remember how the boxes get in the way with java
You have to think about them.
Ell
Ell
20:02
ahh right
The funny thing is that in C++ it's idiomatic for user-defined objects to behave like int. And Java is like the other way around.
Somewhat.
@R.MartinhoFernandes .NET value types do have methods and properties, though. And they inherit from Object.
So, it all boils down that what an "object" is. Is it only for reference types?
Ell
Ell
@EtiennedeMartel I think people associate reference type to object
I'm confused, I forgot what a reference type is :o
@Ell I'd assume Java programmers would.
I mean, in C++, "objects" doesn't just mean stuff that's heap allocated.
Ell
Ell
I got confused as I was typing that sentence
reference doesn't automatically mean heap does it?
20:06
@EtiennedeMartel What do you mean Java is the other way around? like, primitives act like objects?
In C#, it does.
user142019
> The type object is the ultimate base type of all other types. — ECMA 344 §8.2.1
@beta0x64 No. In Java, primitives are essentially second class citizens in that they don't really work with the rest of the type system.
user142019
So in C#, all types inherit from object, even int.
@Zoidberg'-- Yeah, int is an alias for System.Int32.
20:07
@EtiennedeMartel I wouldn't say they're second class citizens, I'd suggest they're just the raw materials
user142019
This seems weird though.
If we define "object" as "an instance of a type that inherits from Object", then, primitives are not objects in Java.
user142019
How is it implemented? Is it just compile-time magic or do ints have vtables/runtime information?
@EtiennedeMartel It does not matter what it is. There is a divide in the type system, even if it is neatly smoothed so it does not hurt you when it should not. What you want to call the two sides is irrelevant.
@EtiennedeMartel That is my understanding of what Java considers objects and non-objects.
20:09
@Zoidberg'-- Of course they do. How else could you reflect on it?
user142019
@DeadMG box them (implicitly or not) before using reflection.
@EtiennedeMartel I wasn't suggesting they were. I meant, primitives are the raw materials objects derived from Object use to do what they gotta do (Like Integer, Double, whatever)
@Zoidberg'-- They don't.
@beta0x64 What I'm wondering is: why do we have both int and Integer?
You have to box ints to use reflection on them.
20:10
(And yes, I know the answer is "because back then people didn't know it was a bad idea to do so")
user142019
So in memory ints are just plain ints, right? No other information attached to them?
user142019
Like in C.
@EtiennedeMartel An int is the literal integer, while Integer is a class that manages ints.
Ell
Ell
@Zoidberg'-- I don't think so - I think they have stuff attached
> A class provides a definition for dynamically created instances of the class, also known as objects
Quoting from the C# spec, btw. (note that "class" in C# only means what is declared with class, i.e., reference types)
user142019
20:12
There is a difference between object and object, though. :P
user142019
Good guy C# spec is free.
hehe this naming gets kinda cruddy
int and integer, object and Object
Ell
Ell
@beta0x64 yeah I find myself using different ones because I autocomplete sometimes and sometimes not
This nomenclature is used consistently throughout and there is an example with a value type Point and Point[] points = new Point[100]; where it is clearly stated that "only one object is instantiated—the one for the array—and the Point instances are stored in-line in the array."
@Zoidberg'-- IIRC, C# ints have the same memory layout as ints in COM (i.e. VC++).
20:14
@Zoidberg'-- Yes.
user142019
Aight.
@Ell They don't. That's why you need to box them.
A C# int is exactly like a C++ int32_t.
Ell
Ell
@R.MartinhoFernandes oh right
Makes interop much easier.
user142019
In Objective-C you have to explicitly box using @. :<
user142019
20:16
@42 or @(a + b)
Yeah, but Objective-C is crap on a biscuit.
user142019
eww
In C# you have to explicitly box by converting to object.
user142019
Always?
Though sometimes the conversion can be implicit, and in insidious ways.
user142019
20:17
If you just use 42 in Objective-C you get an implicit conversion from int to NSNumber *. XD
user142019
And a warning, usually.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I don't think so.
Boxing is implicit.
user142019
C# has a good type system.
@EtiennedeMartel ... whenever you make a conversion to object.
It's still implicit in that you don't have to cast it by hand.
user142019
20:18
But if you box an int, what is the type of the box? Is it a magical type or really just object?
If I have a method that takes an object as a parameter, I can pass an int without casting it.
@Zoidberg'-- It is magic.
user142019
I see.
@Zoidberg'-- Calling GetType() on it does return the type for Int32, though.
Point some_point;
lock(some_point)
{
    DoSomeRacyStuff();
}
// This is soooo wrong
Ell
Ell
20:19
does anyone know what "Lucyyyyy you got some 'splainin' to doooo" is from?
user142019
@EtiennedeMartel ah, ok. Nice.
@Ell Seriously?
Ell
Ell
@NeilMonday Yeah
@Ell It's from I Love Lucy
@Ell I think if you google it you can find one of the classic scenes from that show.
user142019
20:22
@Zoidberg'-- It's all so transparent you can see through it and not even realize it's a performance hit.
user142019
How does it look in the debugger? Does it also show System.Int32 for boxed ints?
user142019
Hmm.
A boxed int is basically an int with System.Int32 metadata attached.
20:23
As far as the programmer is concerned, a boxed value type is the value type.
Is there an HTTPS for chat.stackoverflow?
@NeilMonday No, so don't write your password here.
user142019
:^)
20:25
Sorry for one-upping you. I don't normally do that.
user142019
Huh?
Now try locking on an int.
Don't know how that works in C#.
What do you mean with locking? Adding a mutex and lock to the code?
20:27
lock(expr) { statements }
@StackedCrooked Every object has a mutex.
That seems wrong.
user142019
@synchronized(expr) { statements } // Who doesn't love Objective-C? :^)
@R.MartinhoFernandes Why do you lock?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Right, my FUTILE_LOCK concoction was inspired by that.
I can't recall the last time I used lock, but yeah. Bad idea.
20:30
what's wrong with lock?
One of the problems could be that it encourages locking of large scopes.
Which leads to waiting.
Which is bad.
@StackedCrooked It does not compile. Because ints are not objects :P
what do you mean encourages locking of large scopes? You just scope the lock(expr){} as big as you need
If they were they would have mutices.
I love saying mutices.
20:33
Sounds like some weird vegetable.
@StackedCrooked I think it used to compile, but no one complained about the breaking change.
It's probably not a big deal in practice. Just replace the int with Integer.
user142019
This talk reminds me of Objective-C#.
@StackedCrooked There is no Integer.
C# has no wrappers for builtin types?
20:35
If you want to lock, create a dedicate mutex (i.e. private static readonly object the_mutex = new object();)
user142019
@StackedCrooked it's all transparent.
user142019
17 mins ago, by Zoidberg'--
But if you box an int, what is the type of the box? Is it a magical type or really just object?
user142019
17 mins ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
@Zoidberg'-- It is magic.
banana pudding!
Uh, 50% off on Skyrim.
20:41
You mean like every fucking Steam sale?
I wonder if I should buy it.
holy shit, I'm so fucking sick
I just had to pick up a stomach bug
You are a sick person.
yep
Hmmm, that didn't come out as wrong as I expected.
user142019
20:49
auto tok = this->operator()();
user142019
This is so ugly. xD
Ell
Ell
trudat
@Zoidberg'-- "It's funny 'cause it's true." - Homer Simpson
Ell
Ell
damn, entered my age on steam, now I can't get black ops :'(
lolol
Change it?
20:52
hahah
is it 18+?
why would you even want black ops thou :C
Ell
Ell
@R.MartinhoFernandes I'm trying now :P
bf3 for tha win <3
Ell
Ell
@Tuntuni apparently bf3 is not friendly for newbs?
lies
you gotta start somewhere
well doesn't that make you want to get it even more?
being a part of an elite group :D
:D
black ops is filled with raging kids
any cod is, for that matter
Ell
Ell
I've played cod and liked it on xbox so
20:56
Do FPSes still segregate console players from PC players to avoid unbalances?
@Ell i'm not saying that it's bad, it is a decent game (i don't really find anything exciting in it though) but it is filled with kids who constantly trash talk, etc.
Ell
Ell
@R.MartinhoFernandes Most do, I think
@R.MartinhoFernandes yes
Ell
Ell
In fact I don't know of any current ones which dont
@Ell indeed
@Ell have you played any of the bf games before?
Ell
Ell
20:57
I can remember one (forgot the name) where they didn't, and PC players just pwned all the console players online
@Tuntuni Nope
@Ell i think you should get bf3
I feel like a noob. Can someone explain what you mean by "boxing an int" or a "boxed int"? Is this a C# term?
it's a whole new experience
Can't you buy keyboards and mice for consoles, though?
you could buy a pc instead then lol
20:58
@NeilMonday Yes (but not exclusively).
@R.MartinhoFernandes I think they tried putting them together on a few Windows Live games, the PC players destroyed everyone on consoles.
@Collin lawl
@Tuntuni I am sure they try to get your firstborn when buying a console mouse but they are probably still cheaper than an entire PC.

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