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10:00
@ThePhD ask what? we already told you why what you where initially trying will not work, why it was a bad idea, what you could do instead, why you are probably wasting your time. What more is there to ask?
@sehe Even if it's bad, I'll get to give someone upvotes and accepts.
@thecoshman I'll just ask a pedant language-lawyer question and let someone get upvotes for wanking with standard quotes.
:O you can create short hand versions of namespaces namespace bip = boost::interprocess; well fuck me with a spanner
user142019
ThePhD is a bad C++ programmer who isn't willing to learn. Case closed.
and you are condescending
Xeo
Xeo
@thecoshman lol
10:09
Namespace shortening is in most Boost tutorials I've seen.
@Xeo what? I'd never seen that before, nice to know it exists.
usually the first line up top.
'tis how I learned about it
'the trick with IO is aim to have as much queued up as possible to make the most of when you finally get to do any of it.' If you have alredy read a couple MB of data, why not start operating on it while waiting for more disk I/O? If a considerable amount of CPU-intensive work is required on the data, why wait for it all to be read in?
@Rapptz Boost::Reason::Is::They::Nest::Far::Too::Many::Name::Spaces
Erm. WRONG ANSWER
(you were supposed to correct "[ask] an SO question" into "[ask] a question on SO")
10:10
It's usually one to two isn't it?
@MartinJames obviously if it is CPU bound then reading from disk is not a concern, but you want to speed up IO bound operations, aim to read as much as you can in one hit.
@Rapptz You mean aliasing? Shortening sends half the message: namespace standard_library = ::std is perfectly fine
@Rapptz I just wanted to write that :P
@sehe well, I just called shorting, didn't realise aliasing was the proper name, thanks
Downvotes, ahoy!
0
Q: Accessing buffer values via 2 differently typed pointers

ThePhDI have 2 questions: a general one about pointer type-manipulation in general, and then one for a specific case I have. So for a while, I've been wondering about what happens when you access a buffer of memory using pointers of different types. In practice on many different compilers, it seems t...

@sehe yeah I.. kinda figured that "namespace shortening" isn't the technical term but it's easy to understand/digest.
> c++1y
10:13
@Rapptz Gotta give room for pedants to specify answers for any version of the standard.
there is no c++1y standard
also you're looking for probably
It's in the works. :D
Xeo
Xeo
@ThePhD Just tag it , since there's nothing C++11 or C++1y specific in it...
There
retagged and 'd
@thecoshman Yeah - it's difficult to decide when to start work on stuff, and what size of data to read, to get the earliest completion time for the overall operation. If such an operation was a serious bottleneck, I would probably make it tweakable to find out how much data to read before starting work on it, (ie. buffer sizes).
10:18
@MartinJames well of course you want to have it parameterised. Potentially even set up a script that will run it over and over with tweaked parameters, some sort of genetic algorithm to work out the 'best' solution.
user784668
@sehe it's legal, but stupid, so not fine
@thecoshman did you ever send your CV over?
=[
It's being voted to close. D:
@TonyTheLion not yet... need to talk with GF about the concept of moving.
see, the PHP guys don't mind a self-answered question
2
Q: Why am I getting such accurate results from `filesize`?

Lightness Races in OrbitWhen I run this code: <?php $handle = fopen('/tmp/lolwut', 'w') or die("Cannot open File"); fwrite($handle, "1234567890"); fclose($handle); print_r(filesize('/tmp/lolwut')); ?> I get the result 10, which is the correct number of characters in the file. However, because filesystem blocks ...

10:28
@LightnessRacesinOrbit ಠ_ಠ
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Help me with my most recently asked question. D: Post an answer so I can give you upvotes before everybody closes it.
OH GOD
LIGHTNESS -1'd me q_q
@ThePhD hmm
@ThePhD I didn't
@ThePhD careful, that is very close cheating the system
Oh. Well, someone did.
I guess I deserve it for treading the pointer-manipulation waters. D:
@ThePhD Let this be a lesson regarding assumptions on anonymous actions!
user784668
10:30
> However, because filesystem blocks are much larger than this, I expected the file size to be "rounded up" to more like 512 bytes or even 1KB.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Well, you usually downvote my stuff anyways. D:
@ThePhD you know, this lounge is a subset of SO, not the other way around
user784668
It may as well take 10 bytes. Or 0 bytes.
user784668
Depends on the tricks the filesystem uses.
@ThePhD that's not true!
@Fanael Indeed - dumbed it down though and the expectation is fairly reasonable in a way
@ThePhD I could probably answer it, but with more time than I have
sorry
10:32
It's okay. It's gonna get closed soon anyways. =[
@ThePhD also, this 'color' class of yours, why not just make a constructor that takes four bytes (or a byte array) and add a function that returns a bytes array? the key point is, you only need to have one vector of data
it's a valid question
though I bet it's a dupe
hurts my brain just thinking about that
it might be valid, it sure as hell is moot
user784668
@LightnessRacesinOrbit
user784668
so, it isn't
10:40
mmmm, caek
@ThePhD by me :D
@thecoshman ohhh, ok, well I wish you good luck :)
room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: A derpstorm has raged. [c++] [c++11] [no-helpdesk]
Xeo
Xeo
@jalf Why is everyone around me seemingly having cake today at work. :| I only had cake yesterday.
I had cake at work last Friday
:)
I have swiss roll now, and coffee.
10:44
@TonyTheLion yeah, I didn't want to start applying, get to say phone interview and then have to say no. Feels like it would be closing doors to me
Welp, even though it got closed, I gave that guy his upvotes and an accept.
At least he was perfectly honest with me. :c
I upvoted him too
@thecoshman makes sense
@thecoshman lol
10:47
@R.MartinhoFernandes welcome at long last
@ThePhD Meh, his answers lacks substance. Just a lot of waffling about supposition that we all know.
or perhaps I'm just not in the reading mood this morning
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Well, it was closed, so I'm not gonna get anything else out of it. =[
Does it really make sense that rep can be earned from questions closed as a dupe or off topic? Obviously close for historic reasons should still grant rep. But what stops someone from spamming rehashed questions in the hopes they some how get a bit of easy rep from those who do not know it is a dupe?
@thecoshman I think asking zillions of closed questions will earn you a question ban.
@thecoshman do you think that's a serious problem? Remember there are thousands of bored meta police officers forever vigilant for something to delete and someone to ban
and even if you get away with it, it sounds like the slowest method of rep-whoring ever conceived of. ;)
10:53
so, your taking the stance of 'yes, that makes sense, but it's easy to just manage the problem then prevent it'?
The issue you speak of is basically non-existent.
My stance is that I am not convinced that it never makes sense, and I'd rather accidentally award a bit too much rep than too little
Also, that you haven't really made the case that it is a problem at all
I've never seen people spam duped questions for rep
Cue thecosh's sock puppet spamming dupes.
If I post a question, and it gets upvoted before getting closed as a dupe, then at least it wasn't a bad question. People thought it was worth upvoting. And as long as people think that, I don't see the problem with awarding rep for the upvotes it gets
Remember that dupes can serve as additional entry points, since they may be phrased differently so they show up in a search where the "canonical" question doesn't. If you phrased your dupe well, it still does some good overall
10:55
I wasn't really saying it was a problem. But if a question is closed as a dupe, both the OP and potential answers can get rep, but they are not really helping anything. Still, like you said, probably not a big deal.
Of course they're helping
@thecoshman The fact that it doesn't happen solves the problem
I guess the traffic thing makes sense.
Also, given how zealous many people are about closing as dupes if there is the slightest similarity, I think a lot of people would feel justifiably ripped off if they lose the rep for the question too, in addition to being closed as a dupe of something tangentially related
At least they stopped the close-delete thing
Well, slightly remedied the problem.
10:57
yeah, the close-aholics are a bit mad :P
lol wat (topic)
I guess the question is, should you get more rep for asking a question last year than for doing so tomorrow? If the question is the same, and is asked equally well, would it suddenly be worth no rep, just because someone else beat you to it?
also hi folks, missed you all
q_q
RIP, question.
I will miss thee.
@ThePhD what's going on?
10:58
ahahaha
@BartekBanachewicz Hi, the feeling is not reciprocal.
hahahahaha
@R.MartinhoFernandes Brrr, it's chilly.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I reciprocal you too, whatever that means.
Robots don't have feelings
you must remember that
10:59
@BartekBanachewicz Nothing >_>
and if that means what I think it means I ain't going to look it up
Oh man. Bartek was gone, no wonder it felt so good in here.
@BartekBanachewicz It means 1/feeling.
heheh.
the reciprocal of 4 is 1/4.
10:59
reciprocal: Given, felt, or done in return: "a reciprocal comment or gesture".
The reciprical of love is 1/love ?
He's just complementing you, I'm sure
Should I say I 1/missed you?
@Neil The pun is strong with this one.
11:00
@ThePhD wut
I don't get it :(
I don't see a pun
@Rapptz For shame.
A mathematical complement?
complementing angles
@jalf I would somewhat argue, that if the question has been asked already, your version of it does not deserve as much rep, unless asked better. What happens with votes after the close?
It's like reciprocals?
Cmon. D:
11:02
@ThePhD A complement what?
57 secs ago, by Neil
complementing angles
2's complement
All that good stuff
That's conceptually like a reciprocal
The shit does that have to do with reciprocals
;_;
Complementary angles are two angles that add up to 90 degrees.
What kind of horrible pun is this
Yeah, and a reciprocal * original = 1
E.g. 2 halves to make a whole
The whole pun!
See? Seeseeseseeseeseee?! :D
wasn't it about complimenting?
But he spelled it complement. D:
11:04
that's the pun, no?
user142019
One's compliment.
Yes!
See, it's a mega pun!
Complement and Compliment are two different words ;_;
w/e I am bad at puns.
It wouldn't have been very punny otherwise
11:04
@Rapptz Your math humor is just terrible.
@Rapptz Also Newton's Method. :D
No, that pun is just awful.
Well lets see.. how often do you make chemistry jokes then? I'd be willing to guess periodically...
...
ohhh puns
11:07
It's not Bad Pun Friday, I am sure, given that it is Tuesday/Wednesday/Thursday
Huh, what about Monday?
It's whatever the fuck day
anyway,
I had birthday yesterday, and now, being 9 years old, I've decided to change my life
I've been cleaning the apartment for 3 hours.
@BartekBanachewicz I was going to wish you a happy birthday, but you weren't even fucking here. So never mind.
You'll have to wait until next year now.
11:09
lol
@LightnessRacesinOrbit yeah well sorry for not throwing the party at the Lounge
My SO birthday is today.
@BartekBanachewicz you'd better be sorry
thanks to my uni I had classes from 9am to 21pm
I got that lame Yearling badge.
11:11
@LightnessRacesinOrbit I am :(
9 am to 21pm eh?
yes.
well, I was home at 21pm just after last classes
military time doesn't append am/pm
oh lol I've just realized
yea from 0900 to 2100
Oh man, the Javascript board seems to be a hopping. Should we all switch to Javascript?
11:16
Javascript board?
user142019
JavaScript*
user142019
Javascript doesn't exist.
user142019
And it looks fugly.
@Rapptz lol "military time" the rest of the world just calls it "the time" or "24-hour clock"
see, in countries that are not the US, you do not require Armed Forces training to read a fucking clock
Nice strawman argument.
11:20
thank you!
Anyway it isn't only the US.
lol
bwaargh
shared_ptr everywhere
Yes
@BartekBanachewicz I pm :)
11:26
@LightnessRacesinOrbit looks shopped
@BartekBanachewicz aw
@Fanael just because you can't think of a use for it doesn't make it stupid, you know :/
@jalf The Lounge does that to you.
"Of all sad words of mouth or pen, the saddest are these: it might have been." —John Greenleaf Whittier
@R.MartinhoFernandes who do you pm?
11:39
oh no, I thought it wasn't bad pun Friday
@TonyTheLion that's not necessarily bad... where?
@sehe A class full of them, like 20 or so, in the code I'm looking at
@BartekBanachewicz I think you a digit
@TonyTheLion mmm that's a smell. Unless they were all thread safe and lockfree (in which case you'd have caught on to that too)
yes, it reeks of ugly
@sehe there is only one thread
ohhh I have a driving lesson soon
drive all the drivings
drive you away
11:42
yep
grrrarrrrghhhhhhh I broke it
damn it
fuck fuck fuck fuck
gahkfl;djkafl;jdsa
have to start all over
user142019
:D
NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
user142019
OWNED
Oh, I couldn't edit and now I can't retag anymore also :o
1
A: Is while(1); undefined behavior in C?

Bryan OlivierIt is well defined behavior. In C11 a new clause 6.8.5 ad 6 has been added An iteration statement whose controlling expression is not a constant expression,156) that performs no input/output operations, does not access volatile objects, and performs no synchronization or atomic operations in ...

dat answer
needs more upvotes
11:48
fuck it
pulling an all nighter
hahah
tomorrow is going to be a bitch
just warning you
@TonyTheLion for you? (when was your driving test?)
@TonyTheLion Nice answer +1
@Rapptz Worst idea ever. And I know you know it.
yeah I know but I don't have work and it's already 7:50 AM
11:49
@sehe Next Tuesday. And that comment was directed at Rapptz
@Rapptz oh lulz
and going to bed now would be quite retarded..
you've done an all nighter already
yep :(
@Rapptz Yeah, I wasn't really trying to convince you not to do it. Just relating to the feeling.
> No, no, it doesn't. I seriously have to question how much you know what we are even talking about here.
Puppy brings the big guns.
@R.MartinhoFernandes source?
11:50
Sadly... the sentence that follows it is wrong :( @DeadMG
this is hardly the first time that guy has spouted some nonsense so I'll live
but feel free to correct me
@DeadMG The line break algorithm finds opportunities for breaking lines for visual purposes (i.e. text layout).
For most processing purposes, a line ends at a line terminator/separator.
@DeadMG But yes, I don't feel your remark was off the mark.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Is \n the only line terminator/separator in Unicode?
@R.MartinhoFernandes ah thanks
11:55
then my point is still quite valid.
LF and CRLF are widely supported.
CR sometimes as well, and then there's crap no one cares about like LS and PS.
IIRC there's a total of 7, but most protocols pick a subset.
> Optionally, if the unicode string is a cord/rope type
what he hell is a cord/rope type?
In computer programming a rope, or cord, is a data structure for efficiently storing and manipulating a very long string. For example, a text editing program may use a rope to represent the text being edited, so that operations such as insertion, deletion, and random access can be done efficiently. Description A rope is a binary tree. Leaf nodes (as well as some single-child internal nodes) contain a short string. Each node has a "weight" equal to the length of its string plus the sum of all the weights in its left subtree. Thus a node with two children divides the whole string into tw...
ah thanks
I think emacs and vim use a gap buffer instead, though.
To be honest, I don't actually know when a rope would be appropriate.

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