« first day (919 days earlier)      last day (4255 days later) » 

21:00
Flash is both really good and really bad.
@Borgleader Hope your exam went well. <3
@ThePhD You mean that guy? He's good. Very good.
@EtiennedeMartel Tee hee, true. I meant the language though. :P
Flash is a tool. You're thinking of ActionScript.
user142019
TOOL <3
You sexy pony.
21:07
My Little Pony: Battle for Ponyland
@EtiennedeMartel Hmm...first you say "He's good. Very good", then you turn around and call him a "tool"? Seems just a little inconsistent. :-)
@Morwenn Of course it references Grenier.
@Morwenn Urgh, G1.
@JerryCoffin Oh, you know what I meant.
It made me laugh. Thought I would share.
21:10
Real men watch the G4 exclusively.
@EtiennedeMartel Thing is I've no idea what you're talking about.
Ell
Ell
@EtiennedeMartel I apologise for bringing it up again but I still don't know what design to go for!
@EtiennedeMartel At the risk of being repetitive: when did I ever let a fact get in the way of a joke?
Ell
Ell
(regarding the opengl deleter smart pointer thing)
@JerryCoffin When did I ever made it clear that I was joking and/or being serious?
@Morwenn Friendship is Magic is the fourth MLP series (hence, generation 4, or G4).
21:12
@EtiennedeMartel Oh, I never watched a single episode.
@Morwenn You should. It's pretty good.
But only FIM. Every other generation before that sucked tremendously.
@EtiennedeMartel I don't like to watch things. I'm more into listening to music while reading crappy mangas.
Wait, you're in France, right?
@Xeo Boost.Heap already provides iterable heaps.
Yeah.
21:13
Why am I not surprised?
Why would you be?
Last time I checked, France was the second largest consumer of mangas in the world, after Japan.
You guys love that stuff.
It's understandable.
@EtiennedeMartel Ayup.
We already wrote our own bande dessinées. Manga is just another cheaper kind bande dessinées.
But while cheaper, they release soooooooooooo much crap.
21:17
Oh, I wouldn't say that.
There's lot of good stuff available. You just need to look past the fucking shonens and harem crap.
Don't misunderstand me: they also release some awesome stuff.
Mangas like xxxHolic or Angel Sanctuary are quite masterpieces.
These days I'm only reading the cheesy ultra popular stuff, like One Piece or Bleach.
But the plain shônen, shôjo or harem thing is just... well...
I read almost all One Piece.
@Morwenn Love BD, but I could never get behind manga
It at least has its own style.
21:19
@Morwenn And it doesn't take itself seriously.
@EtiennedeMartel Yeah, that's one of its strongest points.
@KonradRudolph How come?
What was it I read the other day... ah, yes, Bitter Virgin.
That was quite, erm, interesting.
Well, just sseing the title, I guess I won't read...
@Morwenn I find the visual style unappealing. I actually enjoy some, like Mononoke Hime (yeah yeah, anime) but I have to make a conscious effort to ignore the visual design
@Morwenn It's not porn. Just heavy as fuck.
21:21
@EtiennedeMartel I know what you mean there.
@KonradRudolph Well, there several styles, but it is still quite different from BD.
@KonradRudolph Speaking of Mononoke, man, Miyazaki is a fucking genius.
Yeah, Miyazaki makes awesome shit. Steampunk and stuff. I really love that!
Anyway, I mostly watch anime. Which reminds me, I still need to get up my lazy ass and watch Ergo Proxy.
And maybe Totoro.
At a time, one of my favourite mangas was GTO.
Just fucking hilarious.
TIL about Pro*C in an interview today
21:24
@kbok Vat.
hint: you don't want to hear about it
Pro*C (also known as Pro*C/C++) is an embedded SQL programming language used by Oracle Database database management systems. Pro*C uses either C or C++ as its host language. During compilation, the embedded SQL statements are interpreted by a precompiler and replaced by C or C++ function calls to their respective SQL library. The output from the Pro*C precompiler is standard C or C++ code that is then compiled by any one of several C or C++ compilers into an executable. External links * [http://infolab.stanford.edu/%7Eullman/fcdb/oracle/or-proc.html Introduction to Pro*C Embedded SQL] *...
I found your sarcasm detectors. I put them in your brain. You can go get them now. referring to the topic :P
@kbok I used it last year. Oh joy. And I cross compiled from linux to windows.
21:25
@kbok I already heard too much.
@KonradRudolph On the off chance that it's a specific aspect of the visual style, I'm sure you can ask for specific recommendations.
@Doorknob Those are fake.
hmm... must do more searches
55 mins ago, by sehe
They were on sale via craigslist. Strangely, no one wanted to have them. So I bargained to take them of the seller - a symbolical amount :/
21:26
@sehe As far as I understand, it's LINQ, preprocessed, from Oracle, in C, from the 90's ?
@KonradRudolph I really need to locate my Tintin collection.
room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: Sarcasm detectors have been recovered. We're still interested in stocking spares! [c++] [c++11] [coliru] [no-helpdesk]
I left it behind when I moved out of my parents' house.
@kbok ?! Wut. No. It's just "SQL" inside your C (or C++) source, being pre-preprocessed into ANSI C
@EtiennedeMartel Hmm yeah, haven’t read that in ages myself. My father has almost all of them – in French
21:27
int x; char *y; int z;
/* ... */
EXEC SQL INSERT INTO emp(empno, ename, deptno)
        VALUES(:x, :y, :z);
@EtiennedeMartel In more recent years I became enamoured to De Cape et De Crocs but that’s finished now
@EtiennedeMartel I've seen those before but I never really looked at them. Should I?
@EtiennedeMartel Haha, Tintin was soooooo racist xD
@Morwenn Only at first.
21:28
@Doorknob It's pretty good.
After all, Tintin was French :/
@sehe It's queries? Integrated? Into the language?
@sehe Belgian.
@EtiennedeMartel Yep, but reading the first episodes is now quite a shock.
Yeah the one where he goes to congo is hilarious
21:29
You have to take the historical context into account.
@kbok Absolutely not. It's queries, alright. But not integrated into the language. Unless by "integrated" you mean dumb MACRO magic.
@EtiennedeMartel Shute
argh, my friend thinks he is a "programmer" and proceeds to ask me "why do I have to type 'void' on every function" "have you ever made a function that returns something?" "no, I use global variables" -_-
Also in america, traps, traps, traps everywhere
I'm much more amazed by the fact that the only main female character is Castafiore.
@EtiennedeMartel And I have never seen a hero with no personality such as Tintin.
21:30
@Doorknob "Tell me who your friends are and I'll tell you..."
@EtiennedeMartel Fact which, still, is discutable
That's french, anyway
he somehow managed to amass 95 rep :O
@sehe How they did it doesn't matter, it looks integrated to me
@Morwenn Everyone knows the real interesting character in the story was Haddock.
21:31
Tournesol.
@EtiennedeMartel Yeah, Tintin would be nothing without him.
@kbok Haha. They fooled you. It's really nothing more than a little bit of code generation to avoid talking to the OCI API layer directly.
@kbok Damn youuuu.
And Dupont.
@Morwenn And Dupond?
21:32
:D
Anyway, Tintin was just a blank slate for the reader to project onto.
The cast of characters around him was quite varied and interesting.
A so-called journalist.
> The rockets bear a striking physical resemblance to V-2 rockets, the only rockets to have struck popular imagination by the early 1950s. The similarity even goes as far as including the checkerboard pattern on the hull, which the V-2 designers used to measure the roll rate of a rocket during test flights.
I have a particular TU that compiles 'a' == std::string {} without complaining. I'm baffled.
Talking about old BDs, I really prefered Spirou, Gaston or Achille Talon.
21:33
@kbok Hergé, nazi sympathizer.
@EtiennedeMartel It's "the protagonist" like in RPGs
"We lost our sarcasm detectors"
|
@Morwenn Gotta love Franquin.
Spirou never was the same without him.
@EtiennedeMartel One of the best BD authors IMHO.
And his Idées Noires is so creepy of a BD.
@sehe clang++ is nothing more that a code generator too
21:35
Apr 3 at 22:22, by Luc Danton
Abuse of language via 'really', 'just' and 'basically' basically really annoys me, sorry.
Have to commend you for using 'nothing more' though.
@Morwenn I'm gonna have to check that out.
@LucDanton It's MSVC, right? Does`'a'` get promoted to int? Did they miss an 'explicit'?
@sehe Interesting that you thought that. No, I don't use MSVC.
@LucDanton Then it is truly amazing. Is it really tied to the TU? Then it's probably time to (a) check PCH (full rebuild) (b) view preprocessed source. But I'm baffled too
21:37
I don't use PCH. Running the PP scares me though.
@Doorknob nah, these are worthless, they have been blown up already
ok, I'll go find more :P
@LucDanton Of course not. It'll probably lead to insight. Either that, or a bug report :/
The code is getting compiled, e.g. I just attempted a static_cast from const char* to int and it complained. I put in the missing dereference, and now it compiles an int to std::string comparison.
@LucDanton I don't get it
21:40
@LucDanton if it is gcc/clang, just add -E to command line
@LucDanton mmm? const char*? 'a' looks like char
2 mins ago, by Luc Danton
I don't use PCH. Running the PP scares me though.
@EvgenyPanasyuk FIM. Too helpful :)
@sehe Hence the 'missing'.
@kbok I dislike lazy uses of the copula. Pet peeve of mine, nothing to worry about.
@LucDanton "copula"??
You're just making me feel dumb now.
21:42
Hah. 'copula' - this goes right where 'postprandial' sits gleaming :)
In probability theory and statistics, a copula is a kind of distribution function. Copulas are used to describe the dependence between random variables. They are named for their resemblance to grammatical copulas in linguistics. The cumulative distribution function of a random vector can be written in terms of marginal distribution functions and a copula. The marginal distribution functions describe the marginal distribution of each component of the random vector and the copula describes the dependence structure between the components. Copulas are popular in statistical applications as ...
^ You'll love the irony of the first ToC item: "The basic idea"
Woo, this smells like an overzealous variant operator== where the variant type accepts both int and std::string. That sounds 'fun'.
Reminds me of simple examples of TMP when I started
Implementation of scope(failure)/scope(success) for MSVC/GCC/Clang/Intel - LIVE DEMO(scroll down to main).
@LucDanton Mmmm. And implicit conversion constructors. That's the culprit, right? (?)
Not reading that
21:46
Just thinking: what about a language where 0 evaluates to true and operator== returns a type sign from a three-way comparison instead of the regular bool?
@EvgenyPanasyuk Where's your blog?
@sehe Oops, I dont have a blog
@EvgenyPanasyuk You should probably start one, this code looks interesting, but it's a bit much to drop /without commentary/
So it appears that having a friend operator only being able to be looked up via ADL is a feature. Is this some familiar advice I need to rediscover?
21:48
@sehe comments are at link
@EvgenyPanasyuk Ewww
@EvgenyPanasyuk Nice. I love 'wild sutff' - good weld of form and function
Because if I declare operator== in the enclosing namespace, then 0 == std::string {} finds it even though no ADL is going on.
(As long as I'm in the namespace of course.)
screw stages of grief; i am going through the stages of focus. Staring Into Space → A Lot Of TV → Two-Minute Conversations → ???
@sehe wild stuff means very experimental, controversial - EXPERIMENTAL STUFF: Throwing Destructors, etc
21:49
@LucDanton Mmm. Yeah. I'm pretty sure the trick involves a template argument type to contain the friend?
That would mean I'm going somewhere
@EvgenyPanasyuk I meant the wild sepllnig
@sehe ah, I am not native English speaker
@EvgenyPanasyuk Surely you knew sutff was a misspelling of stuff
@sehe That's different.
21:51
@LucDanton Then I'm interested. Oh. Wait I missed a message
@sehe oops, that is misprint
@LucDanton Hmmm. You are saying you're in the namespace. Of course the Koenig lookup will see the operator==, right? It's basically as if you using NS::operator== since you're in namespace NS? Am I misunderstanding?
No ADL. std::string and int are not connected to the namespace of operator==.
Regular lookup finds operator==, then conversions etc.
Precisely. Koenig lookup is not just ADL (in my book). I use "Koenig lookup" to mean the whole of all namespace resolution rules. And of course it includes the enclosing namespace. So, to answer your question, then, no: I don't think "having a friend operator only being able to be looked up via ADL is a feature"
What's your proposed fix to my operator==(variant_like const& lhs, variant_like const& rhs); then?
@LucDanton ... Move it to another namespace? Only use it explicitely when needed? Mmm. I still don't know wheter I completely understand your situations. Lemme try something
Friend operator can be used "without ADL/Koenig", but it should be declared specificly.
I think he knows
I have a type in namespace ns which is variant-like -- it's implemented in terms of variant</* stuff */>, and is meant to be used like one, e.g. with implicit conversions and such. Eq. and rel. comparisons are useful, too. In that selfsame namespace I accidentally wrote an equivalent of 0 == std::string {}, which calls that operator== because both int and std::string are convertible to that type. Now what?
22:02
@LucDanton ideone.com/uxCwLQ I think there's only a problem if (a) namespace Foo is either 'used' or the enclosing namespace OR Foo is the same namespace that declares the string (so, it's actually namespace std)
what header is std::size_t declared in?
@LucDanton You can't hide from the operator overloads...
@DeadMG cstdtype or something?
@sehe Well yeah I can.
15 mins ago, by Luc Danton
So it appears that having a friend operator only being able to be looked up via ADL is a feature. Is this some familiar advice I need to rediscover?
@LucDanton I don't see how
Oh. Wait! (parens)
Ugly, but should work: (operator==)('a', std::string{})
@Xeo Ix-nay on the declaring friend operators in the enclosing namespaces! Who needs their addresses anyway?
22:04
@sehe I tried <cstdint>
@DeadMG <cstddef>
cheers
Well, gotta go. Got a video game to finish tonight.
Se y'all later!
@Morwenn lol.
22:06
I've seen Martinho use decltype(sizeof(0)) rather than include that. I found it funny.
it is
@LucDanton Are you talking in code (no pun intended)?
Pig Latin is a language game of alterations played on any language, though this article focuses on its use in the English language. To form the Pig Latin form of an English word the first consonant (or consonant cluster) is moved to the end of the word and an ay is affixed (for example, pig yields igpay and computer yields omputercay or truancy yields uancytray). The objective is to conceal the meaning of the words from others not familiar with the rules. The reference to Latin is a deliberate misnomer, as it is simply a form of jargon, used only for its English connotations as a "s...
@EtiennedeMartel "first quarter 2013 net loss of $6.7 million, or ($0.05) per diluted share compared to a first quarter 2012 net loss of $2.6 million, or ($0.02) per diluted share;" ...ummm...yay?
@LucDanton That's a "yes" (vere/ita est)
@sehe I left that up to you. Wikipedia simply calls it a game.
22:11
@JerryCoffin Yeah.
> "The objective is to conceal the meaning of the words from others not familiar with the rules"
^ a code
I made a code once. It looked sort of like /3+3/9+1/3+2/3+1/
That sentence hurts so much
Xeo
Xeo
22:14
@LucDanton hum?
@JerryCoffin They're still making profit.
13 mins ago, by Luc Danton
I have a type in namespace ns which is variant-like -- it's implemented in terms of variant</* stuff */>, and is meant to be used like one, e.g. with implicit conversions and such. Eq. and rel. comparisons are useful, too. In that selfsame namespace I accidentally wrote an equivalent of 0 == std::string {}, which calls that operator== because both int and std::string are convertible to that type. Now what?
But I guess they'll have to drop some dead weight.
@Pawnguy7 My toenails curl up at "I made a code once" - simply because the mis-idiom is so oft abused on SO ("So I have made a code", "I found a code"). And then... the beauty that is the code itself.
Xeo
Xeo
haha
22:15
I made a code, and a decoder program. I'm restarting C++. I kind of dropped it two years ago when I started to do other stuff. What do ya'll think of the book "Sam's Teach Yourself C++ in One Hour a Day"?
No one knows if it's a joke or not
It must be
Xeo
Xeo
The timing is certainly excellent
Yeah, I bet now would be a good time to read for about an hour.
If it is, then it's actually funny so it makes me happy
22:17
@sehe As in it being a rather simple code (for example, a=3, b=4), having difficulty implementing it (though it is simple), both, or neither?
Easily satisfied
@Pawnguy7 E_TOOVAGUE
@sehe In that case, I confess I don't know what your response meant, in terms of why they are bad.
@EtiennedeMartel I certainly don't claim to know much about accounting, but my impression was that "net loss" meant "not making a profit".
@Pawnguy7 "they"? I completely lost you
@sehe the questions of people making codes
22:19
@sehe I think he means "code" as in "an encoding scheme"
@Pawnguy7 Aha. Yeah, they're usually not the best.
@kbok IKR
@Drue We try not to think about it, and hate anybody who reminds us that it exists.
like C++ is a daily workout or something
@JerryCoffin Is it that bad of a book? I'm looking into the C++ Primer that the one page person mentioned.
22:20
Is there a way to turn a character into its binary representation and back?
I already have the other for ebook. Got it for free.
@JerryCoffin It's true that I've never seen 'not making a net profit'.
@Drue C++ Primer is a good book (but beware that C++ Primer Plus is not).
Please, for the love of Knuth, 'code' is a mass noun. You don't write 'codes' and you don't need 'a code'. It's just code, okay?
@EtiennedeMartel What about Harry's code?
22:21
Perhaps a giant switch with a handbook of ASCII values? Actually, I think they sort of have a predefined pattern - for example, I seem to recall "a" was a bit off from "A".
@kbok I'm talking about dem codez right now.
@EtiennedeMartel Thanks for finding that for me - again. I was tired of digging it up
@Drue "the one page person"?
@sehe The one page person???
@Drue Please, not cplusplus.com, and especially not their forums.
@Drue Come on. Hover the message. Read your own message. Correlate, understand, be happy
22:24
May I ask why? If the tutorial works then why not use it?
@EtiennedeMartel saying "a code" is like saying "a porn"
Weird, I just asked a question, got a good answer from a person named "john" and by the time I was going to accept his answer his comments and answer dissapeared from the question. What might have happened?
Not even worthy for the "Real" room
cppreference.com is what we prefer yes?
@Drue The tutorials don't work. That's the thing.
22:24
@Chimera It got deleted.
@Chimera Very much
They teach a very bad way of writing modern C++ code.
@Chimera I can see it.
@Chimera He deleted it.
@LucDanton Hmm I guess with my low rep I can't see deleted answers?
@Chimera You need 10k.
22:25
@EtiennedeMartel Thanks... too bad for him.
@EtiennedeMartel That's not "made a profit", but "would have made a profit except for <reason they didn't>." To put it slightly differently, virtually every company that goes out of business, has quarters (often quite a few of them) where they would have made a profit but for costs of restructuring. That's not to say Hasbro's in danger of going out of business -- just that "would have made a profit except that we didn't" still isn't really making a profit.
@EtiennedeMartel Dollars! And hand them to me. I'll vote to undelete
Xeo
Xeo
alright, bed time. g'night
night
@sehe thanks
22:28
I'm trying to implement bound_function, and man, it's surprisingly tough.
@Crowz Which is to say that both are actually perfectly acceptable -- when the "mass noun" is being used as an adjective, as in "a porn star" or "a code browser".
@DeadMG As in conceptually difficult, or are you struggling against your tools?
@Xeo G'night.
@JerryCoffin Better than "a code star" and "a porn browser".
@LucDanton A bit of both. The lack of type safety, and the fact that I have very little idea about assembly
22:29
@EtiennedeMartel Indeed!
@Chimera Show me the money :) (srsly, I'd always talk to the guy first before doing such a thing)
@LucDanton He's writing it in C++, need we say more?
@sehe ??
I didn't vote to undelete. I joked that I'd do so for 10k$
@sehe Kinda. I like to see mmap+PROT_EXEC tricks go up in flames and blow up. (Or whatever equivalent.)
I guess I don't understand why he would delete his answer... it actually helped me..
Don
Don
22:31
Hey ya'll~ question.. if I have two classes : 'World','Entity' World has a few Entity objects inside of it, and I now want Entity to call public methods on World? I thought of giving a reference or a pointer of World to Entity but it doesn't seem to work well
@sehe Ah, got it... a bit slow today.
You might ask him in a comment
@sehe Can you comment on your own question and address anyone such that it reaches them?
@Don There's a site for questions. Perhaps you've seen it: Stack Overflow
@LucDanton Yeah, why not
22:32
Wow, having to use pointers for an answer on SO makes me realise just how far C++ has come
@EtiennedeMartel This is main site material.
Don
Don
Eh
Thanks
0
A: Print out the values stored in vars of different classes, that have the same ancestor

Konrad RudolphOs others have mentioned, you need to implement a virtual function (e.g. virtual std::string ToString() const = 0;) in the base class that is inherited and overridden by each child class. However, that isn’t enough. Your code exhibits slicing which happens when you copy your child class instance...

@sehe Indeed, but I still feel the need to send the newbie hints to any newcomer that gets in with a question.
Don
Don
So you can't ask simple questions here either?
What's the point of this chat then really
22:34
Chatting.
hmmm
can I expand static_assertions?
like static_assert(thing<T>(), "msg")...; for typename... T?
balls
I have And, Martinho has All. I think Xeo as well?
Don
Don
Meh, yeah thanks anyway
22:35
well I'll leave it at this for now
time to crack open some ABI documents
¹ It makes you way too helpful for a simple answer. I'd have pointed out the essence (std::unique_ptr or Boost Pointer Containers). Then, link to the c++-faq "Rule Of Three" question :) — sehe 51 secs ago
@EtiennedeMartel Best not to, because it actively invites them to stick around. This was clearly an "I have this, and this is where I'm stuck". The main site will be far better equipped to triage that
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton all_of, any_of in my case
and none_of for convenience
@KonradRudolph ^ judging from the speed at which the OP concluded it was "very clear", I'm going to guess he'll not actually try to read it all. But maybe I'm having a pessimistic day
Xeo
Xeo
I'm still struggling on whether to make them short-circuiting
@Xeo We need std::basically, std::just_about, std::more_or_less (e.g. for floating point elements) /cc @LucDanton
22:38
Pics and jokes on the Internet are becoming increasingly shitty as a function of time. :(
wow, didn’t even see that reply yet. Depressing :/
@Xeo I never ping people when I'm just mentioning them and not addressing them. You can't use me as an excuse for preventing you going to sleep :p
@sehe I voted for std::close_enough personally.
@DeadMG lol
throw std::no_dice();
the amazing thing is how it psychically divines from the programmer's mind the definition of "enough"
Xeo
Xeo
22:40
@DeadMG std::insert_meme?
what meme?
Xeo
Xeo
lol
@DeadMG static_assert(std::this_developer::quality_norms() > std::numeric_limits<double>::epsilon(), "you are not worthy");
The turp goin to my head
@DeadMG maybe with small helper
22:43
@EvgenyPanasyuk This has got to be the worst (lack of) spacing for C++11 declspecs: auto &&t={....};
I think auto&& t = {...}; is so much more legible
@EvgenyPanasyuk Nice job though
@sehe I used to write char *t; because of char *t,*u;
@EvgenyPanasyuk Okay, auto &&t = { will pass...
The point is, = is completely lost in the noise there
Too many periods :) Or is that a French interpunction thing.
> That's nice and all, but why do you need to write the signature of the function you just typed?
22:48
(also, steroids are 'serious stuff')
Begging the answer: using auto.
@sehe where?
@sehe Oh well, that title sucks anyway
I'm open to title proposals
22:50
@sehe ok, I see.
@sehe Is that better?
@kbok I like the title. Just, drop the trailing periods
decltype(&LambdaType::operator()) is it legal?
@EvgenyPanasyuk Is it useful? Yes it's legal as long as the overload is umabiguous
not any more so for lambdas than any other function type
22:52
Are you saying it's not legal?
no, what I'm saying is that the fact that it's a lambda is irrelevant.
it's no more or less legal than another function object.
I guess it maybe illegal for C++14 polymorphic lambdas
Yeah the requirement is that it is neither a template nor overloaded
@kbok Won't work for surrogates either.
22:53
Which may or may not be, in your use case, reasonable
@LucDanton What is a surrogate?
Xeo
Xeo
struct X{ operator function_ptr(){ ... } }; :)
@EvgenyPanasyuk You should have to disambiguate (simple: ideone.com/GKee9u, slightly more interesting ideone.com/k2VsIx)
struct trololol { operator alias<void(*)()>() const { return [] {}; } };
Xeo
Xeo
Can be called as X x; x(...); and invokes the conversion operator.
You two should do sidekick shows
22:56
Hmm, it seems that terrorists now have a beef with Canada. Two men tried to blow up a train from New York to Toronto.
At first glance make_function_from_lambda sounds redundant
@sehe I think we do.
:)
@LucDanton @Xeo Oh, I never worked with those. Can you point me to such things encountered in the wild?
Oh, one of them is Raed Jaser from Montreal. Etienne discovered the terror plot and is now a true Canadian hero.
22:57
Nope, because nobody uses them.
Okay guys, don't forget to put the detectors on their chargers overnight; be good while I'm gone
Night
@DomagojPandža Did you just send the FBI to Etienne's?
make_function_from_lambda maybe usefull when lua.register(lamarck); register is overloaded/templated.
@kbok (if riddles by the Schaub are wild...)
@EvgenyPanasyuk When it's not, otherwise it wouldn't work.
22:58
@LucDanton Oh, then I guess that's cool.
@LucDanton Maybe the RCMP?
@LucDanton I talked about register
@JerryCoffin And I know what that stands for. Ain't I a citizen of the world?
@EvgenyPanasyuk Yeah, that's the point of make_function.
@kbok maybe add some comment to lua.register(lamarck); line (about overload/template)
@EvgenyPanasyuk True. Where would it come in?
They drive with style.

« first day (919 days earlier)      last day (4255 days later) »