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23:00
> I had been quite a contributor, with a lot of reputation (500 before I was banned)
MY FIVE HUNDRED REPS
I don't even have 100. :3c
500 is what you can get in two-three days
I'd probably have a lot more if I posted all of my serious questions to gamedev.stackexchange and stackoverflow.
Or one if you're in top 10.
Or what Jon Skeet gets in 1 day.
23:00
But instead I come to you guys BECAUSE I TRUST YOU ALL SO MUCH. <3
Rep is in answers not questions
@ThePhD You're lazy. Or pure. Or pure lazy
You can get rep for upvotes on questions, can't you?
I've yet to post a question on SO
@ThePhD NAFAICT
23:01
@ThePhD It's worth half as much as an answer
Is there a badge for that? (Questionless)?
@ThePhD But questions tend to get fewer votes, and each vote only gives half.
You get 5/upvote on questions, 10/upvote on answers
@StephaneRolland What?
Also answers can get bounties and +15 on accept
23:02
Guess I need to answer more questions.
@CatPlusPlus I've only posted on behalf (self-answers). But I kind of regret most of them. They weren't that good. I just wanted to "answer" them - as far as possible.
@EtiennedeMartel I am guilty of proselitism
And accept rep is not capped
Upvote rep is capped at 200
/day
@StephaneRolland Eh?
@CatPlusPlus which pisses me off sometimes...
Jon Skeet is most pissed off by the repcap.
23:03
@Mysticial No passive rep for you you lazy bastard
@Mysticial I believe that to be untrue
He posts enough answers to get hundreds from accepts alone
He's made like multiple meta posts to get the repcap policy changed. All shot-down.
Stack Overlords know best
@Mysticial wokay. I never noticed. Good for me
23:04
I have a half bottle of Cognac in my veins !
@CatPlusPlus Well, honestly, do you think Jon Skeet requires (a) more recognition (b) more incentive?
What I don't know is why the "waaaah unban me" meta posts were deleted
They hate fun or something
@sehe I think it is good to post a question as soon as you find something that is not covered on SO
@CatPlusPlus Underage account. He can't be allowed to participate. Legally. Not even on meta
23:04
it helps me doing In Vino Veritas
@JohanLarsson Yeah yeah. But some things are just too localized :)
Jon Skeet is by far the biggest loser to the repcap:
But I want to laugh at him
So it's not a surprise that he hates it.
MY CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHT TO LAUGH AT STUPID PEOPLE
Holy fuck 1M rep
23:06
@Mysticial Doesn't mean he must be hating it. I mean, I hear he allegedly does, but the system is hardly unfair, right. It's not like Skeet would have become much more of a legend somehow
is it constituntional ?
Rep cap is retarded anyway
@Mysticial It is surprising to me. He's also a preacher, remember. I'd expect him to relativate things a little
I think it should level off at some point.
Like make the cap dependant on how much you have, but it's too complex
@CatPlusPlus do you represent the queen for saying that ?
23:06
If you play the rep game, you lost already
@sehe He's openly spoken out against the repcap on meta multiple times. So that's enough evidence for me that he hates it.
@Rapptz pun?
Not like it changes anything though.
He's still #1 either way - by a long shot.
@Mysticial "I hear he allegedly does"
23:07
what is the reason for the rep cap again?
lolwtf
"Because"
uncapped reputation, 1.7 million?
the world is round it make me cry
@JohanLarsson That's tricky. Because there's a clear discrepancy between what it's true purpose is and what SE wants the public to think it is.
I'll go through here.
Gimme a sec to type it up in one shot.
1
Q: Should I use header files in this specific situation?

sharethisMy application consists of several components, inheriting from an abstract base class. Except this the two member functions which each component overwrites, no component has any public declarations. class Component() { public: virtual void Init() = 0; virtual void Update() = 0; }; Sinc...

Is that class not silly? The comments are acting like it's useful :S
What they want us to think:
1. Prevents a new user from getting too many privileges too quickly.
2. Prevents a single lucky viral post from giving too much rep and privileges.
3. Encourages users to get out and take a rest.

What is probably the true motiviation:
1. Increases the addiction potential. Forces users to come back everyday so they don't "miss" any rep.
2. To avoid alienating high-end avid users when a new user gets lucky with a single post.
3
I had a few more on my mind.
Can't think of it now though.
> get out and take a rest
then why'd they invent this chat?
They should have a message cap.
2
yep but i grants us a new way of behaving as developpers. When you ask cause you don't know, you can get an answer.
user142019
Fuck.
user142019
My code doesn't work.
ANd most of my colleagues don't understand that.
@Non-StopTimeTravel "Image not found"
The repcap also places more value on posts with long-term value - instead of a one-time reddit-viral post.
23:16
@Zoidberg seems normal
@Mysticial I don't think what you list as true motivation are bad things, sure addiction has a negative ring to it but that can be rephrased as loyal.
@StephaneRolland I don't understand what you said
@MooingDuck He's drunk.
@JohanLarsson I don't deny that they are bad either. But it's probably easier to just not have to explain it to the public.
@R.MartinhoFernandes makes sense
23:17
13 mins ago, by Stephane Rolland
I have a half bottle of Cognac in my veins !
what's this stupid referer thing probably grr
or SO can't handle asterisks in URLs
I don't believe that asterisks are valid URL characters
5
Q: Chat / markdown do not parse links or tags with an asterisk in them

LeighI use the tag php* as a favourite, to catch all of the badly (version specific) tagged PHP questions. When trying to link this tag in chat with [tag:php*] that tag is not parsed. Also when pasting a link to http://stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/php* everything before the asterisk is converte...

Asterisks are reserved characters.
23:19
@DeadMG Regardless, they are.
@MooingDuck i think when one ask a question on SO, he is front of millions of developpers. He admits his not knowing everything, though I can know a lot of things. If he shows some effort, thne all of our effort are going the same way. Many of the developpers I know are too proud for that.
It's a new kind of being.
We are a super user brain and we are part of it.
@StephaneRolland definitely drunk
the trick is
I don't know everything; but I'd know where to look, and that's good enough.
ok there is literally no way to post that url and get the image to display. shame on you SO!
probably validating URLs with a shoddy regex, of all things
@MooingDuck and i thought i was saying things obvious...
23:21
Uh.. how does this fail to compile?
auto t = std::chrono::high_resolution_clock::now();
std::cout << std::chrono::duration_cast<std::chrono::milliseconds>(t).count();
man. How do I get it so I can ask questions on stackoverflow again?
user142019
Hurray my code works!
@R.MartinhoFernandes Nooooooooo
user142019
You know.
23:22
@Zoidberg Noooooooo
let's face it
@Rapptz What's the error?
user142019
I just wrote a lexer in Perl and it's about ten million times shorter than the ones I wrote in C++ or C#.
@R.MartinhoFernandes error: no matching function for call to 'duration_cast(std::chrono::system_clock::time_point)'
katee sackhoff would probably be hot whatever you put her in
23:23
You generate lexers
user142019
No.
@R.MartinhoFernandes what is this black magic!
@melak47 Photoshop?
@melak47 It's called an image
23:23
@Rapptz Oh. A time point is not a duration. Use .time_since_epoch()
You didn't use lex? I bet it's a million times slower too.
@Rapptz duration cast takes a duration, you're giving it a time point.
Okay, thanks. I thought I was going nuts for a bit.
23:24
@Pubby That shit is horrifically ugly C code, and I wouldn't touch it even if I couldn't write something faster.
the chrono section of cppreference is horribly organized
@DeadMG Well, if you're going to write a compiler in C(++) you're already in ugly territory.
@R.MartinhoFernandes how did you do that?!
sure, but there's "C++" and there's "The output from tools like lex and bison".
oh you imgurd it okay
23:25
@Non-StopTimeTravel Imgurd it.
JINX LIKE A BOSS
hmm I can't get used to my new identity
Well, are there any other lexer generators? The only one I've used is flex.
I should go to bed, but I think I can get word breaks to work before 1:30.
Ell
Ell
@Pubby antlr
maybe that's java though
I know there will be some bug that will keep me up until 3:00, though.
23:27
10
A: Are const_iterators faster?

Shree Our coding guidelines say prefer const_iterator Have a look at this article by Scott Meyers here. He explains why one should prefer iterator over const_iterator.

interesting
Ell
Ell
but it's pretty cool, you can design your grammar and see the corresponding graph thing
in antlrworks, it's a very interesting peice of kit
@Mysticial guys in C# pointed out a couple of minor things, points for accepting answers, downvoting questions and bounties are missing in the query. Not very important though
@DeadMG I read "put in her" first :)
@JohanLarsson Yeah. There's bigger problems with the query than that.
@Ell What's a piece of kit?
Ell
Ell
23:28
Antlrworks,
or if you mean generally, just a tool I guess :P
What does "a piece of kit" mean?
I'm new to SQL, so that was the best I could do.
Ell
Ell
@R.MartinhoFernandes a tool or utility
@R.MartinhoFernandes something British apparently.
I just realised (again) that segmentation algorithms cannot work without forward iterators. That is great.
Ell
Ell
23:30
@R.MartinhoFernandes actually you could describe anything as a peice of kit. Let me find a good definition
Oh internet...
user image
2
@R.MartinhoFernandes [re]alized
Ell
Ell
Meh. I guess a piece of kit is just a thing that can be used
class PeiceOfKit { virtual Use() = 0; }
nice piece of kit is idiom for "quite the shit"
Ell
Ell
23:33
@R.MartinhoFernandes I really have no way of explaining it :P
you know
Yes, everything.
I believe that virtually any function whose signature is void(void) is generally bad.
It's like "a class act", "top draw", "good stuff", IOW quality
@DeadMG Member functions are fine.
Ell
Ell
23:34
Well a peice of kit is just a thing
@R.MartinhoFernandes I disagree.
@DeadMG right. destructors are bad
Ell
Ell
This torch lasts 12 hours - it's a good piece of kit
@DeadMG what about when separating a long function into logical sub functions?
You'd never say "this is a lousy piece of kit"
Meh, you suck. I think stuff like pop_back() is perfectly ok.
23:35
@R.MartinhoFernandes It's just erase(--end()).
@Ell void(void) implies global state. globals == bad. Functional programming
Ell
Ell
@sehe well I guess you wouldn't, but it wouldn't be incorrect
@DeadMG Convenience
@DeadMG That should not even compile.
@Ell define incorrect. We're talking idiom and semantics here. Not grammar and vocabulary
23:36
Mutable state sucks anyway
@R.MartinhoFernandes Last I checked, you can -- an rvalue now.
or certainly could for an iterator
Anyway, stack::pop() cannot be replaced with that.
Ell
Ell
@sehe well I mean it would make perfect sense to say, it's just uncommon to say "lousy peice of kit". But it would be a correct use of the idiom imho
@CatPlusPlus what's the point in stateif it's not mutable? o.O I misunderstand.
@Ell Oh. That would stick out like a sore thumb to me
> One thing that struck me about the FASTA format is that there is absolutely no attempt to detect/correct errors in the data, for a file format that stores information where mutations are not without effect you’d hope they would at least put in some safe-guards to make sure that mutations are of the biological variety rather than the digital one (bitrot).
I need good movie recommendations please
23:39
@R.MartinhoFernandes Arguably, you could pass in an output parameter, as in try_pop, to receive the popped-off value.
@FredOverflow I can't find an answer there.
but I said generally, and I mean generally- not always.
@Crowz Oh, look, tits.
for something like std::stack, whose explicit purpose is to manage this state, it's not so bad.
23:40
@DeadMG Meh, I think they're fine most of the time. Yes, you can craft pathological examples, but bad programmers are bad.
oh, I had a question. What would happen if someone posted a link to a porno page in this room?
While we're on the subject...
@DeadMG Output args are bad
@MooingDuck Binned swiftly.
23:40
@R.MartinhoFernandes just curious
@CatPlusPlus You're right. I consider their necessity a defect, but I doubt it can be fixed now.
You could try it.
Ell
Ell
@MooingDuck Only one way to find out
pop() could return optional<T>
@MooingDuck it'd be flagged and moderated away pretty quickly
23:41
Actually, you can probably find prior art.
@Ell since flags were a very real option, I figured I'd ask instead of experiment
Ell
Ell
Yeah :P
@CatPlusPlus Nope.
it can't return optional<T> any more than it can return T.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I know breasts have been posted multiple times, so I wasn't sure.
Ell
Ell
23:41
Only one way to find out... FIIIIIIIGHT!
@DeadMG Because...?
Ell
Ell
^anyone get this reference?
@MooingDuck let's try posting some dicks instead
@CatPlusPlus Because you cannot sequence the potentially-throwing copy or move of the value into the return value before mutating the stack.
i.e., it is impossible to create a strongly-exception-safe pop().
of course, that game is changed slightly now with noexcept and move semantics
Right, C++
you could tighten the requirements on std::stack to permit it, but you would be binning compatibility with every non-C++11 type.
23:45
what would happen if I posted a picture of me programming in C++...
nude?
Ell
Ell
Depends if your private members were on show
ARwhjgreh. Making enums be flag-suitable by hand is so freaking annoying.
@Ell what if they were the ones programming?
@R.MartinhoFernandes A pity that bitfields (apparently) suck so hard.
   enum values {
        val0 = 1<< 0,
        val1 = 1<< 1,
        val2 = 1<< 2,
        };
Ell
Ell
23:46
@Crowz it's a judgment call :L
Yeah, that's what I do.
@MooingDuck yeah, now test for bitmasks, and assign adhoc flag combinations
-1
Q: heapify unknwn error C++

Benediktas Rimantas JacikeviiuAnd so, i am trying to implement a heap sort, and here i'm stuck at heappifying part #define LeftChild(i) ((i << 1) + 1) #define RightChild(i) ((i << 1) + 2) void Heapify(int * arr, int n, int i) { int temp, left, right, heapify; left = LeftChild(i); // get the left child ...

@sehe What do you mean?
23:47
@Non-StopTimeTravel finally a somewhat beautiful face
@sehe if (myvalue & val0 || myvalue & val1)?
@sehe somewhat?!
@sehe oh you mean a class would be better? yes.
if(wheels::has_flag(myvalue, val0) || wheels::has_flag(myvalue, val1))
23:48
@Non-StopTimeTravel i find the brows artificial. Overdone != good. There's real potential though. I can skip the brows for a moment
@R.MartinhoFernandes last time I checked val0 | val1 requires a cast before assignment. Is C# corrupting my brain?
@sehe #include <wheels/enums.h++>
Does youtube use UDP or TCP?
Sorry. Can't use wheels. Company policy[*]
[*] real reason: I shouldn't use it until I understand it better and not all my compilers compile it.
@Crowz Yes
23:51
@sehe I meant which one?
@sehe Actually, enums.h++ needs no C++11 support. std::underlying_type can be emulated well enough for it needs, and std::is_enum is C++03-able.
@Non-StopTimeTravel My lib of whatever little thingies.
@Non-StopTimeTravel Yeah (though I meant these bits bitbucket.org/martinhofernandes/wheels/src/default/include/…)
your headers aren't well commented
23:55
Do you use .h++ to troll people
3
23:56
Old story.
oh
> This documentation is a work in progress. There is currently nothing to see here. Come back later.
Great!
@Non-StopTimeTravel What do you mean? I admit I haven't put much work into it. I think I only have one or two headers with nice docs. Some of them are pretty straightforward, though.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I mean you essentially have zero documenting comments in your header files.
Read about Doxygen
ew.. Doxygen..
still waiting for movie suggestions

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