« first day (825 days earlier)      last day (4352 days later) » 

16:00
^ interesting war story. hard to tell why small files should be soooo slow though
user142019
@ThePhD Ewwwclipse FTFY
I just hope you are not trying to say that maintaining three different build scripts is better than maintaining one.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I dunno, it feels like having one for each platform might actually be easier.
user142019
Use Waf.
You're either crazy or incredibly naive.
16:01
or both
It's probably both. =[
@sehe I'm guessing overhead per file.
I've never worked on a really big coding team so I'm by no means super duper expert.
scons is not all that bad. until you have to mess with the build script :)
Also q_q why u no find python27.exe when I rename you? q_q
16:02
@ThePhD How did you change the PATH?
@EtiennedeMartel No shit. Why sooooooooooooooo much overhead per file :)
@ThePhD is your symbolic link still to python.exe?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah. It's got C:\Python27\ and C:\Python33\
Did you set PATH... or did you use the dialog thingy?
There's a separate python27.exe in Python27. And a separate python33.exe in Python33 (not made by mklink)
I set PATH manually
16:05
@sehe Because there's a lot of files.
If they were large, you wouldn't have lots of them.
@EtiennedeMartel ? per file
There's all that metadata and directory access thing.
And suckage :)
@R.MartinhoFernandes Wait... what Dialog Thingy? o_O
OOOH
Yeah I used that
Maybe I need to reset, to make sure it all registers.
I mean, I closed and reopened all command windows, just to make sure PATH would be re-resolved
@ThePhD Then you need to restart the application.
16:07
but restarting is probably a better idea.
In completely unrelated news...
image not found
JUST A SECOND
Alright, sweet, it's working.
I had to reclose and reopen the command window twice.
Not sure why.
now build vendor first, or scons will shout at you :)
@ThePhD because superstition
16:09
.......
.........
FUCKING HELL THAT WAS HARD
@EtiennedeMartel That was a long second.
I'll blame that on friday.
@EtiennedeMartel FunnyJunk sucks.
16:09
Also.
@ThePhD one too many
@R.MartinhoFernandes They rock. And they fully support bears and cancer. Or sumtin
@sehe I think it's the opposite.
One can never have enough DOTs applied to themselves.
@EtiennedeMartel I think the fall hurt his head.
16:10
Yeah.
@EtiennedeMartel :)
ITT Etienne is a constant failure.
I keep failing today.
@EtiennedeMartel works. also, D'AWWWWWWWWW
16:12
I don't know if that bear is currently in the process of strangulating the other.
@EtiennedeMartel again, Bear Love
So much love.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Did you see that video I sent you?
About sexy robots?
Weebl? :3
16:20
Er.
> Let's interface
2
Design question
user142019
Ask.
And you shall maybe receive.
I have a class seq<dna> that stores a DNA sequence (reminder: DNA consists of just four possible values, A, C, G, T)
user142019
dna is a fdsfds, right?
16:21
because of the constrained value space, it sometimes makes sense to bit-compress DNA sequences – kind of like std::vector<bool>
@Zoidberg precisely
@Zoidberg I though codons were used to prevent mixing the DNA.
user142019
No a codon is a group of three. I should go back to high school.
So now the question is: how do I best model the possibility of having both compressed and uncompressed sequences, with a common interface (as far as possible)
night all
night
16:22
@KonradRudolph Type erasure?
@thecoshman Niiight
@Zoidberg And so should I … lol, my PhD thesis topic is about codons …
user142019
lol
@R.MartinhoFernandes nooo, compile time
@KonradRudolph lol the DNA representation problem.
16:22
@KonradRudolph Oh gawd, you suck.
a pretty good library has solved this problem by having a “template subclass” – i.e. two specialisations:
String<Dna> and String<Dna, Packed>
Use an array of integers, and have a single size value denoting the number of 2-bit items packed into the array.
user142019
enum class StorageKind {
    Packed,
    Unpacked
};

template<StorageKind SK>
class DNASequence;
@KonradRudolph Iterators that go through either compressed or uncompressed DNA sequences should return the compressed-version representation for each Base.
@ShotgunNinja The implementation isn’t the problem – the class design is
@ThePhD Hmm. I disagree, I would return the actual dna value (where dna is an enum class)
16:25
@KonradRudolph That's what I meant: always work with the dna enum class, and have the implementation either insert directly or convert to string.
@KonradRudolph I would find the "core interface" (i.e. as little as is needed to abstract away the two different storages), and make a seq_storage<Thingy, PackOrNot> that implements that. Then seq derives private from that or has it as member and implements the full blown interface on top of the core..
user142019
Is OpenTK decent?
@ThePhD yes, of course
@R.MartinhoFernandes Okay, but how to specify whether I want to have a bit-packed seq or not? Template argument as I’ve shown above?
okay
thanks
next question: is there a good, short, comprehensive overview over C++11?
not a complete tutorial, just the changes from C++03
16:27
@R.MartinhoFernandes So, yeah, that video makes me think of you for some reason.
@KonradRudolph You realize those are conflicting goals, right?
Is Wikipedia comprehensive enough for you?
yes
I forgot to mention “free”
brb
C++11 (formerly known as C++0x) is the most recent version of the standard of the C++ programming language. It was approved by ISO on 12 August 2011, replacing C++03. The name is derived from the tradition of naming language versions by the year of the specification's publication. C++11 includes several additions to the core language and extends the C++ standard library, incorporating most of the C++ Technical Report 1 (TR1) libraries — with the exception of the library of mathematical special functions. C++11 was published as ISO/IEC 14882:2011 in September 2011 and is available for a f...
user142019
> Additionally, you should add OpenTK.dll.config to your project and instruct your IDE to copy this file to the output directory.
user142019
Tutorial I NO USE IDE Y U ASSUME IDE.
16:29
@EtiennedeMartel Not sure if I should feel flattered or creeped out.
-5
Q: Change chat stars to Jon Skeet's avatar

Kyle TraubermanKendall Frey posted this bookmarklet in chat: https://gist.github.com/4565435 I propose making this feature permanent. Please?

@R.MartinhoFernandes Well, since there's an ocean between us, I'd say flattered. For now.
Hi.
"You didn'y follow instructions, shame on you."
Well thanks, scons-kyrostat.
You jerk. :C
It tells me to run scons <vars> vendor, which is what I'm running, and it fails, and it tanks on me. Then it's my fault.
16:36
-10
Q: Is it because C++ has pointers while Java doesn't that C++ is faster than Java?

LoveRightI heard from some people who said C++ is faster than Java because C++ has pointers while Java doesn't. Now I'm learning C++. I may not totally understand pointer but I learned that the pass-by-reference types of Java are kind of pointers. So, when dealing with pass-by-reference types or custom c...

(thanks for the C++11 suggestions)
I think the Wikipedia article is a good one.
I would just save it locally via the "Download as a PDF" link on the side.
PuTTY fatal error: no supported authentication methods available (server sent: publickey)
@ThePhD You have not loaded your key.
Maybe I need to register a public key or something...
16:40
Security audit finds dev OUTSOURCED his JOB to China to goof off at work. http://www.theregister.co.uk/2013/01/16/developer_oursources_job_china/ #outsorce #dev #job
@R.MartinhoFernandes Uh. What is that?
There's an idea^
@ThePhD pageant.exe
@sehe FFS, again?
@R.MartinhoFernandes ... sorry?
The puppy was already berated for reposting that repost.
16:41
@sehe Isn't that old news?
room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: We already know some dude outsourced his job to China; no need to mention it again. [c++] [c++11] [c++-faq] [get-out] [no-questions]
posted on January 18, 2013

The C++ library facilities for sorting, binary searching, and ordered containers work only on types with appropriate order relations defined on them.

It's like the fourth time already.
Oof.
I'm terribly new to using PuTTY too, it seems. The most I've done is Over-the-Serial-Cable into a robot, not this fancy remote stuff. @_@
How I use pageant.exe ... maybe they have a -h
@ThePhD Ok. Do you have a key?
16:43
@R.MartinhoFernandes ... Uh. No.
Yes?
Maybe. I don't know. Does one come when you fork the repo?
Open PuTTYgen and make one.
We're using RSA keys, right?
Default settings are fine.
Also... uh. I should save these keys, right?
What have you been using so far to use bitbucket?
16:45
@ThePhD yes
I've been using Tortoise HG
I think it generates a key for me.
And typed your password every time?
Yeah
Every single time.
I was wondering how to get around that.
@ThePhD by running "pageant yourkey.ppk" :3
Didn't the cat write a tutorial on this?
16:46
enter password once
I think so.
If he did, it's not on the clounge 'Getting Started' or 'Build System' wiki.
I think they just had assumed I'd be that smart by then.
Little did they expect the Spanish Derpisition.
Well, anyway, once you have a key, save the private one somewhere safe. Also save the gibberish on the textbox atop the window.
he can get kinda snooty if you're not a hardcore Unixer
@ThePhD bitbucket has a tutorial
and doesn't understand how anyone could not know SSH and such
@R.MartinhoFernandes Like a thumb...drive? And I guess the public one can go anywhere?
@ThePhD if you eat the thumb drive, it might be ok
@ThePhD I just keep mine in ~/.ssh
@melak47 Nah, cause then you'd have to eat it again once it comes out the other end.
What's the "proper" way to typecast, nowadays? I imagine something like char(someInt+48) is a no-no?
16:49
It's not national security.
@MarcusStuhr What would that do?
@R.MartinhoFernandes where do you keep those keys?
@R.MartinhoFernandes I assume ASCII
@R.MartinhoFernandes Convert an integer to a char equivalent, e.g. 5 -> '5'
._.
Windows is so fucking retarded
I want to make a hidden, private folder, so I append '.' to it
It tells me to name my file.
@MarcusStuhr well, first off, please, please '0' + number.
16:50
'0' = 48 is it not?
why on earth would Windows assume that . at the end means "hidden, private"?
or do you mean just for clarity
Does not matter.
@MarcusStuhr Avoid magic numbers.
16:50
Rationale?
Gotcha
@MarcusStuhr Much more readable.
@ThePhD why would a . at the end make it hidden?
beginning. Append.
Er
also, static_cast
Prepend*
16:51
Often you don't need a cast in there anyway.
I'm a dumbass.
probably not for your scenario though
@R.MartinhoFernandes A follow-up to the seq class design. What should the signature of the template be? template <typename T, typename Spec> class seq or template <typename T, typename... Spec> or template <typename T, enum spec S>?
@KonradRudolph What's Spec? The pack-or-not thingy? Why not just a bool?
Alright
I saved the private key somewhere safe
should I save the public key?
16:52
Put it on BitBucket.
hmmm
@R.MartinhoFernandes “why not just a bool” – because that constrains the interface unnecessarily: say I later want to add another specialisation such as seq<dna, external> (for memory-mapped file backing)?
~x = x ^ 0b111....
@KonradRudolph Ok. I would use just use typename, typename then.
16:53
ok
(me too, and the other library does the same)
@ThePhD Once it is on BitBucket you can just retrieve it from there. You can share it with anyone anyway. I save mine, but I often use one key for each thing so I never really need them again once I have put them in place.
@EtiennedeMartel probably
Once you have that set up you run pageant, load the private key, enter the passphrase for the key if any, and then shit just works, no more passwords (until logoff, at least).
@R.MartinhoFernandes TBF, the point was not that some dude did. The point was
15 mins ago, by sehe
There's an idea^
Xeo
Xeo
Soo... in a ranking table of size 1000, removing 500 entries took 0.3s ... after optimization to not move half the fucking table around with memmove when a single entry is removed and instead just sort at the end, removing 50000 from 100000 entries took 0.7s.
16:58
You can also drop a shortcut that runs pageant your_private_key.ppk on startup or something.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Sounds like a plan. I think I got the hang of this.
Xeo
Xeo
The time to remove 5000/10000 in the old version took something like 30 sec, btw. that's quadratic or something.
Alright, I'm all pageant'd up
> C is a fantastic high level language - [The Unreasonable Effectiveness of C] Damien Katz
Should I have one key file per repo?
Or multiple repos, one private key?
Xeo
Xeo
16:59
@sehe Wait, what?
Truth in advertising. I thought the news would interest you guys

« first day (825 days earlier)      last day (4352 days later) »