« first day (935 days earlier)      last day (4240 days later) » 

00:00
it really depends on what you can find on said other planets
Oh I saw that movie, I thought it was silly
really it's just a plot device that says "The heroes go forth and encounter something", where "something" can be pretty much anything the writers can shoehorn in.
user142019
Well, time to sleep.
user142019
See you later.
@DeadMG reminds me of Doctor Who. "They can go any time, anywhere!"
00:01
hmm, it's not really like that at all
Doctor Who is overwhelmingly aimed at children, really
I preferred SG Atlantis.
their plot sums up as "The power of love and humanity wins the day".
user142019
Doctor Who is secretly the pope.
also, there's no (regular) time travel in Stargate
Hm, does std::atomic specialize enums to act as integers?
00:02
I like shows like The X-Files
@MartinJames Hmmm. SG1 had it's moments but I generally preferred Atlantis.
simple fact is, McKay is fucking awesome
@DeadMG SG Universe did not work for me :(
@MartinJames Hmmm, I agree.
I think it would have been a lot better without Rush, personally
he didn't really have any redeeming qualities and a lot of the stuff he pulled was just batshit insane
@Xeo What's going on with that? :O
Xeo
Xeo
@ThePhD So much bullshit and red herrings from that one guy...
00:08
well, one side is filled with morons, and the other likes new char[N].
@DeadMG Yeah - McKay was, at least, funny - arguing about exactly what fraction of a solar system he blew up.
@MartinJames Agree. Whereas Rush was just constantly bitching and I'm-so-much-better, he never really got any character development, and he didn't work as a team or anything.
Xeo
Xeo
Some bullshit just needs to be set straight before heading off to bed...
@ChrisCM: That's a red herring. The discussion there is about char on_stack[N]; vs std::vector<char>. The discussion here is about char* on_heap = new char[N]; vs std::vector<char>. — Xeo 13 mins ago
@rightfold Holy crap, so much "nigger" and other swear words in every post.
Xeo
Xeo
The reason that vector is "significantly" (just no) slower here is that it default-constructs every element, unlike new char[N]. With a proper allocator that does the same, the numbers are exactly alike: vector here and new char[N] here (minus small fluctuations on both sides). — Xeo 57 secs ago
Now I can sleep in peace.
G'night
(Although I'm sure that guy will find something else to beat his head on.)
00:15
night
Weee
00:57
don't you mean, popanutritious? ;D
user142019
2 hours ago, by rightfold
what do you expect
@MooingDuck The best I could do: stackoverflow.com/questions/16430904/…
Not sure what he really wants though
user1981444
01:20
if a parent has the line if(wait(&status) > 0) and recieves a signal while waiting for the child process to terminate, does the parent resume processing, or just continue waiting?
user1981444
Oh, no-helpdesk tag.
7
user1981444
Nevermind then.
01:40
Hello, World!
-4
Q: Time series for analyzing data with C++?

user1739581I would like to know if I can use time series to analyze data looking at various time windows (intervals) of these data? What part of time series should I use to write an algorithm in (potentially) C++? Is there a statistical model I can use? I have looked at this site and others on internet but...

Really?
I always wondered, is it "Hello World" or "Hello, World" ?
I believe "Hello, World" uses the correct punctuation, just like "Hello, Nican"
user1981444
Thello, twurld?
01:47
Gosh the questions today are abysmal
user142019
@Nican "Hello, world!"
@ShafikYaghmour Compared to what?
I feel like there are a lot more no effort or wildly off topic questions today than normal
sounds fun...maybe I should check out the Close Question queue when I finish what I'm doing...
I can't believe someone actually understood that.
01:59
lol
user1981444
Yes, I'm feeling somewhat silly already
user142019
You can always ask on Stack Overflow.
So Diablo 3 has reached Zimbabwe levels of inflation due to some gold duplicating glitch
user142019
LOL
@shatterspike1 You shouldn't feel bad. You are the only person walking into this room that actually read the tag list and understood that and withdrawn the request for help. You should definitely feel good about it.
02:11
RIP Diablo 3, we hardly knew ye.
user1981444
Ah, well, thanks
@Rapptz huh?
user1981444
@Rapptz you can always play it on consoles...
What happened to D3?
Hyperinflation reference :|
02:14
I haven't played it yet ;-(
I didn't like it too much.
I feel as if the Auction House ruined it
user142019
Time to sleep.
What is this sleep thing people refer to?
33 secs ago, by rightfold
Time to sleep.
cya angels
user142019
@ShafikYaghmour What is this people thing programmers refer to?
02:21
Arbitrary select statements in Go generated via runtime reflection. How batshit crazy bad is that stupid shit?
> Go has a cool built-in select statement that lets you try and read from multiple channels, potentially blocking until at least one of them is available.
more "Library features as language features" nutjobs?
I checked and it's really something in the library that ships with 1.1. I hope it's experimental.
yts
yts
02:49
hi
any good ideas for a simple two player console game to demonstrate client-server capabilities?
hey can we declare an expression in the #define directive
Like
yts
yts
with text input and output so I don't have to mess around with a gui
what is going on here
@AnujKaithwas Use an inline function for that.
#define SUM x+y
02:50
@Rapptz People who don't read the newbie hints, that's what.
@AnujKaithwas inline int sum(int x, int y) { return x + y; }
yts
yts
ok, read the newbie hints. bye ;)
I was reading a sample code in c and there was this question that asked for the output of the program, if not an error, that had an expression in the #define
@LucDanton Given its number of users, I think nearly everything in Go qualifies as experimental (at least compared to the standards we're accustomed to with C++).
02:59
@AnujKaithwas It's legal, but remember that the preprocessor is just a dumb text parser.
SO lacked a room for Just C -> chat.stackoverflow.com/rooms/29552/c (not now!! ) :)
gee, but there was no need, I think.
Everytime someone creates a C room, it ends up dying because of a lack of interest.
It's like C programmers don't like interacting with others.
lol
03:04
@EtiennedeMartel there's more relation between c and C++, aye?
#defines are just fancy macros to save you typing.
@EtiennedeMartel ...or (despite Tiobe's contention) there just aren't enough of them to find each other dependably.
At least that's how I always look at it
yeah, right @Rapptz, that's the only use of it.
I'm not sure if that's a sarcastic "yeah right" or if you're actually agreeing.
03:05
@cipher Define "relation".
@Rapptz If those are fancy macros, I'd hate to think what you'd consider a bare-bones macro (hint: even most assemblers have much more fancier macros).
@Rapptz In C, they're quite useful because of how few features the language has.
now see :)
@EtiennedeMartel as in correspondence, or similarity
@JerryCoffin The fancy was tongue in cheek!
I don't really use them because I don't care much about them.
03:06
@cipher We're trying to forget about C++'s C heritage, because it's more of a liability than anything.
Most of C++'s flaws actually comes from its C subset.
Do you think C++ would have succeeded if it didn't ride on C's coattails?
@Rapptz Maybe then, but now?
Way back then, pre-standard.
@EtiennedeMartel But i don't think you could have been using C++ , with out C
@cipher When? Fifteen years ago?
03:08
I don't use anything in the C standard library i.e. <cstdlib>
well, i personally don't think that should even be discussed... Both are great languages, they have their own legacy.
Right now, with C++11, it's kinda hard to use actual C code in C++ code, if you follow a more "modern" approach.
@AnujKaithwas Yeah!
@AnujKaithwas Both are rather crufty.
@JerryCoffin Let's not forget that Tiobe measures "hype", not "use".
i.e. How many people are talking about it right now. And I'm sure "C/C++" counts towards both C and C++.
@Rapptz Not a chance.
03:16
Yeah, that's what I figure too.
That's why it's kind of sad that C is now a large amount of the cruft left over.
 
1 hour later…
04:40
Google is fancy today.
04:54
Xeo
Xeo
05:41
@Feeds Ahaha, something for the robot
@StackedCrooked main is empty
@Pubby That's not an error :)
@StackedCrooked returning a const ref?
Wow you used mutable
I rarely see that
05:55
@Rapptz it's pretty common in multithreaded stuff AFAIK
Yeah for mutexes.
user142019
06:45
@StackedCrooked You're using C++.
Very original.
user142019
this->age = age; requires indirection, don't know if/how well that works with std::atomic?
user142019
Probably doesn't matter.
user142019
@StackedCrooked You're returning a reference to a string but using that reference later is not thread-safe.
user142019
You have to return the string by value.
user142019
user142019
Oh I see now Pubby has already answered that. :v
07:08
@Rapptz Of course it wouldn't. Not then, not today, not ever. The need to actually embed C code into C++ source might have more or less gone away, but the ability to #include C library headers is still absolutely essential
user142019
@Rapptz You don't use size_t?
I said stdlib!
user142019
Oh you're referring to only <cstdlib>. :v
user142019
That's not the "C standard library".
user142019
It part of ~.
07:10
I know, that's why I put an i.e there
user142019
Should have been "by which I mean".
Should have been "e.g."
No.
user142019
No.
user142019
Of course not.
07:11
I'm not using stdlib as an example
Who cares about the C standard library? That's the easy part to work around. If C++ were to ditch all pretenses of C source compatibility, they'd just add a clause that "the implementation shall provide C++-ified versions of the C stdlib"
the problem is all the other C libs. OpenSSL, zlib, libjpg, freetype, opengl and a squillion others. If you can't #include those, C++ might have a problem
user142019
Meh. C.
Would it drive people to make a C++ version of it?
user142019
I need to sleep.
@rightfold then you're still breaking every program which currently includes them with #include
07:14
There are already wrappers around some of them but they're just wrappers.
user142019
@Rapptz No, because nobody would use C++.
This question is a bit off, but I am just looking for programmers in general to answer: Do you think it is valid to call Java a Managed Language?
@rightfold Nobody does.
@Rapptz it would drive people to say "this C++ revision is a fiasco, I'm sticking with C++11"
user142019
Oh hey Cicada.
07:14
kinda like people stick with Python 2.x
@Jeremy Do you think it's valid to call Java a Language?
@rightfold Hi
IMO Yes
@Rapptz Then the first part of your sentence was incorrect
"I don't use anything in the C standard library i.e. <cstdlib>" => "I don't use anything in the C standard library that is (in) <cstdlib>"
@Jeremy Well the problem is "managed" is a Microsoft term. Not sure how it would apply to Java.
07:16
@Jeremy Yes. Conventionally Java runs on a virtual machine, which is what "managed" means. However, in my mind this isn't really a property of the language itself but of the Java platform as conventionally used.
> Managed code is a term coined by Microsoft to identify computer program source code that requires and will only execute under the management of a Common Language Runtime virtual machine (resulting in bytecode).
@Rakkun, I am aware of that and that seems to be the argument against it. But my argument is more in line with @Lightness Races in Orbit, I suppose strictly speaking it may be controvercial but I always thought it could loosely be identified as managed code (Memory managed by a gc or some other means etc..)
^ Kate made unmanaged C++ sound like 1960s C :(
Well I would say that "strictly speaking", as LRO said, "managed" is not a property of the language but the platform.
Unmanaged/Managed is a dumb term
@Rakkun Yeah --- unfortunately the term as coined by Microsoft is applied to the language or the code... go figure. They're idiots.
woahhhh a valid flag
07:20
I agree it is more of a property of the platform as well actually.
Also C# can be compiled down to native (without a VM or JIT), so would you still call it a Managed Language? C++ can be compiled down to MSIL which then executes in the CLR, does that make it Managed?
@Rakkun I would say it's a property of the language, actually. Whether you compile C# down to native or MSIL, it behaves as what Microsoft describes as a managed language: ie. it's "safe", with no UB, it is garbage collected and all that
But "managed" is a Microsoft term. It means whatever they want it to mean. And if you use it, then it can mean whatever you want it to mean
something's Managed when you manage it. not because you can, or because you usually do
So if you want Java to be a managed language then hey, you can safely say that it is a managed language
There is no universal definition of the term
I always thought Managed meant you had managed memory, garbage colleection etc; i.e if C# were compiled down to nativley executable code, the memory would still be managed by a garbage collector (or behind the scenes in some way)
07:26
@Jeremy I would tend to agree, but again, we're just interpreting Microsoft's terminology. There is no single correct answer
I guess a Managed platform can do that stuff more easily than a non-Managed one, since the runtime library has loads of semantic information to work with
however, there's no reason that a C++ variant compiled to assembly couldn't have GC added into it, implemented by your toolchain's runtime library (statically linked, perhaps)
in fact yeah I don't see a correlation tbh
Morning guys and girls. Do I need to refresh or is the ape still in need of a tranq' or two?
Today's XKCD is sponsored by @R.MartinhoFernandes
Is there anything that can read program's (self) virtual memory usage in bytes ?
under Linux ?
@NeelBasu from within the program?
@thecoshman yes
07:34
Mawning
@NeelBasu without falling back on external system calls?
@TonyTheLion rawr, going to try real hard to not be a dick... to you at least.
fuck the rest 'em :P
@thecoshman falling back on external system calls ? What that means ?
@NeelBasu using some sort of shell command, via system()
@thecoshman Yes That is okay.
But /proc/self/statm or status shows in KB
and its rounded to KB so I'll miss exact byte informations if I multiply with 1024
@thecoshman :)
9 hours ago, by sbi
@EtiennedeMartel Now you're tickling my funny bone.
apparently, I tickle @sbi's funny bone
whatever that means
?!?!?!!?!?!?!?!???!?!?!??
07:37
@TonyTheLion ... erm you are Tony... not Etiennede
@thecoshman I know, but the line before that was Etienne talking about me
@NeelBasu might be worth reading the first goolge result
9 hours ago, by Etienne de Martel
So, Tony hijacked sbi's account?
this
yeah... I don't think sbi was saying you where funny at all... and is the phrase 'tickle my funny bone' alien to you?
it is
2 mins ago, by Tony The Lion
whatever that means
failures, too early this morning
@thecoshman apparently it means that you made someone laugh
07:40
@thecoshman I've tried reading both /proc/self/statm and /proc/self/status but statm rounds by page size (?) and status rounds by KB. So if I allocate say 50 bytes its not there. I see neither statm nor status is growing at all
To see them growing I've to allocate higher memory at least higher than KB
@TonyTheLion well, you have a literal funny bone, the elbow, well the humorous (upper arm bone)... you know the way when you bash it it feels all funny. Then figuratively, when you find something humorous, you would say it has been tickeled.
@TonyTheLion stop finding out things whilst I try to type a coherent response for you (╯°□°)╯︵ ┻━┻
@NeelBasu strange, I would have thought they would always round up, going with some sort of crude 'allocate a page at a time' method to try to reduce the amount of allocations...
@thecoshman But I need axact memory usage in bytes
well... one way you could do it... is manual memory management... but that could only let you track what you are allocating yourself. You would have no way of knowing how big all the runtime shit that is loaded is taken up.
@NeelBasu what for may I ask, perhaps you are trying to solve the wrong problem
@thecoshman lol
@thecoshman thanks for explaining
@TonyTheLion grumble grumble, ungrateful furner
07:45
@thecoshman I am writing a storage structure for associative matrix. and I need to check its memory requirements in different places
Like
a = memory_usage();
allocate_50_bytes()
b = memory_usage()
//Now I need to check b-a
oh, so you do not need to know how much memory your program is using, you just need to know how much memory things you allocate are using. that is a very different problem
@thecoshman ahahahaha
@NeelBasu You could overload new?
@TonyTheLion I (and I am sure many other people here) can never tell when you are genuinely loling and when you are being sarcastic :P
@Rakkun KISS... size_of
@thecoshman What? He does dynamic allocation
07:48
@thecoshman Yes you are right. I think you are going to ask about using valgrind or something like that that already overloads malloc ? However I need to check not only malloc/new. I need to check stack usage also. and just checking how program usage is growing will also let me know how much memory this block is taking. as there is no other thread
@thecoshman lol
^ sarcasm
how can lol be sarcastic?
lol is lol, its nothing else
its merely, lol
woooosh
@TonyTheLion you really do not get sarcasm
@NeelBasu side note, if you are writing C++ never use malloc. if you are writing C++ never use new.
07:53
@thecoshman Yes I am using new only. no malloc. I was just saying
@NeelBasu yeah, do not use Foo* myFoo = new Foo() instead favour auto myFoo = make_unique<Foo>() (I think I got that right) (make_unique is also not actually part of the standard (yet) but it is a standard implementation that you can find easy enough)
but still, back to the memory issue :P
Why do you want to track the memory usage from within the program? I am trying to understand the root problem you're trying to solve.
Xeo
Xeo
Cool. Howard fixed the __invoke ambiguity bug for libc++. /cc @LucDanton

« first day (935 days earlier)      last day (4240 days later) »