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sbi
sbi
12:00
@BartekBanachewicz I like that pic!
I gotta go now.
See you guys!
Good luck!
Xeo
Xeo
@sbi Good luck.
@BartekBanachewicz o_0 what a picture to come back to
@sbi good luck... but considering the timing of this message I think 'hope it went well' would be more apt
@R.MartinhoFernandes I'd say it's worth a try
@sbi Viel Glück!
Ell
Ell
Good luck!
12:04
just 'dumb found' them into doing what you want :P
user784668
@R.MartinhoFernandes Viel Glock
user1182183
hm if my laptop has 4 DDR3 1600mhz SODIMM slots, does it make any difference if I buy 2x 8 gb or 4x 4gb?
user784668
@GamErix buy 4x 8 gb
user1182183
@Fanael sry max 16 gb
user1182183
supported by mobo
user784668
12:07
then buy whichever is the cheapest
Ell
Ell
Then buy cheapest
Or 4*4
Then if one fails you still have 12gb
user1182183
yeah but I;m wondering what will be much better in the context of performance
@GamErix AFAIK it makes no difference
user784668
@GamErix premature optimization
it won't make any significant difference
Ell
Ell
12:08
Although now it is more likely to fail
the only factor about RAM that actually improves performance is having more of it
Ell
Ell
Performance won't be any different
I suppose 4 sticks might provide slightly better cooling as there is more surface area... which might let the chips run slightly better
user1182183
meh in a laptop cooling for ram is kind of near zero
user1182183
so ye the 4x4 will be better if one stick fails
user1182183
12:10
will go with that
Ell
Ell
Iirc dual channel and above is noticeably better than single channel
I could be wrong
probably depends on the memory controler
and these days, quantity is all the really matters
@Ell You are wrong.
ok... so this videos starts about cold stuff... and then blows your mind even more o_0 science is fucking mad
and also, every motherboard and CPU now is dual channel
12:20
haven't most CPUs 'absorbed' the memory controller now?
for a few years at least IIRC
user142019
Omg.
user142019
The guys who designed Android were on meth, crack, heroine and gasoline at the same time.
user142019
How can you fuck up that much. ;_;
hehehe
@rightfold switch to Ubuntu Phone
user142019
iOS
user142019
12:29
Compared to Android SDK, iOS SDK is an euphoric orgasm from Heaven.
Ell
Ell
What android app are you writing?
My android app doesn't work :'(
user142019
Note-taking application.
@rightfold you should look at blackberry. I've heard that it's amazing
user142019
Is that sarcastic?
no, not at all
12:33
@thecoshman nice
@BartekBanachewicz ...ly good or ...ly bad?
> I know there are lots of forums with equally uneducated programmers, but IME they are often much, much less "sophisticated" than std-proposals.
that exists?
Well it's true that some people do write extensive and in-depth rebuttals to the crazy stuff of std-proposals.
@thecoshman it's good.
> Then, you e-mail that guy and yell at him. - git's advice when working with sub-modules
Ell
Ell
12:41
oh dern I messed up fstab config :O
> note: template argument deduction/substitution failed:
To hell with this fucking error.
damn
I hate it when source control goes wrong
my real parent was commit 18 but merc thinks it was commit 17
You fucked up?
now I have a whole bunch of merges and shit to do and no idea what I changed between commit 19 and commit 18
@R.MartinhoFernandes I had some changes, and I wanted to revert one file, but I accidentally reverted them all.
ah, I am not the only one. Feels somehow comforting
the Mercurial site said that hg rollback could rollback one change, so I tried that
nope
rollback from 18 to 17.
@DeadMG I thought it was a dog, your parent
so I hg update from bitbucket to get commit 18 back
rollback is quite limited.
No problem, just ask the Bin right over there.
12:45
^ that
Don't use rollback for anything other than fixing commit log typos or adding forgotten files.
Ell
Ell
I should learn git properly cos I'm gonna screw something up badly at some point
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah... too late for that.
user784668
lol@vim
user784668
-#define VIM_ISDIGIT(c) ((c) >= '0' && (c) <= '9')
+#define VIM_ISDIGIT(c) ((unsigned)(c) - '0' < 10)
12:45
I was, of course, going to ask on Stack Overflow before doing anything, but apparently "How can I unrevert?" doesn't meet the quality standards.
hg update file1 file2 file3 to change some files individually. It leaves you with a backup unless you add -C.
user784668
That's a part of the diff of fc7f985df537.
@LucDanton Yeah, I used Tortoise, not the command line.
user784668
Seriously, wtf.
also, apparently Mercurial thought that "merge" meant "Copy and paste from both commits into the next file".
12:47
I don't see what's so WTFy.
@R.MartinhoFernandes They're obviously both broken (ASCII only, for one thing), but the second is identical in function to the first, just expressed in a more obscure way.
No, it isn't.
The first one uses c twice, and that's a bad idea in macros.
Macros are messy.
@R.MartinhoFernandes C is WTF.
user784668
@R.MartinhoFernandes C has functions.
fair enough
but if you want to solve that problem, you use a function, not a macro
12:48
and that double (c) is bad
@Fanael Meh, that's not WTFy.
"Further obscure our logic in order to continue using a macro" is a WTF.
user784668
^
12:49
@DeadMG there is also git rebase -ithat you can use to tweak things (before gonig public) like merge commits together, change messges etc
user784668
@thecoshman git, sure
@thecoshman Sadly, doesn't work with mercurial repos.
WTF, right?
@R.MartinhoFernandes oh, I thought he was bitching about git :P
user784668
WTF, right, WTF, left, WTF up, WTF, down.
man
12:50
(FWIW, there's the histedit extension for hg or something like that which is similar to git rebase -i)
I don't even know what the difference is between the merged and the previous version.
why doesn't VS come with a diff tool built in?
Because VS sucks?
kdiff3 ftw
@R.MartinhoFernandes except for me it didn't work out of the box
(Also, it does, in some versions)
user784668
12:51
vim doesn't come with a diff tool built in
@DeadMG what?
it does
and it's very good imho
@thecoshman The extension?
ah
apparently, according to KDiff3 they are binary equal, but never mind Mercurial just keep the original around anyway to confuse me
@LucDanton it's built in now, you just have to edit you .hgrc to enable it, which I did, but it didn't work
I'm not in the mood to debug this :|
12:52
I was converting to git anyway, thought it would be easier to fix history first
@thecoshman That doesn't make it any less of an extension.
@LucDanton I never claimed it wasn't an extension
@thecoshman Meh, if you are converting to git you can just git rebase in the end, no?
just that it didn't work out of the box for me
(Though editing the first commit tends to be a bitch)
@R.MartinhoFernandes exactly what I did, but I didn't know about rebase at the time
@R.MartinhoFernandes is there a way?
@thecoshman I know one, but I heard more.
You can make a graft as a parent of the first commit, and then rebase from that one and remove the graft afterwards.
But grafts are the kind of feature that just makes you wonder WTF is going on.
12:56
I said it was INTERESTING.
@R.MartinhoFernandes so you sort of ram in a tempt extra first commit?
I didn't say it was real...
Though, that would be quite funny.
@Pawnguy7 and I said it was bullshit, what's the problem?
Nothing, just want to make myself clear.
@Pawnguy7 aye, and I want to make it clear that story is bullshit
12:56
man
@thecoshman Kind of, yes.
my uncommitted changes included stuff like implementing destructors :(
So we are mutual on wanting to be clear. Good :D
@thecoshman But pretend I didn't say anything and that grafts isn't a feature.
@R.MartinhoFernandes lol
well, AFAIK once your repo is 'public' it's too late, so I guess I will have to live with that spelling if 'implimenation' for ever more :P
12:58
btw robot
I was thinking that it might be time to begin work on a development environment
lol
I remember Zoidberg working on that.
well
but only for Wide or C++ too?
12:59
@DeadMG what do you mean? an IDE?
@BartekBanachewicz Zoidberg? For nothing, eventually.
@thecoshman DE certainly, dunno about I
I want to feel reassured that my design will cope with serving both as a command-line style compiler, and as the backing for environments, tools, and such.
@R.MartinhoFernandes No, not Zoidberg's one :P
it's gonna suck to implement more of the language only to have to change designs because it won't support IDE integration
C++ already made that mistake and I'mma learn from that history
13:00
@BartekBanachewicz so... a computer?
Expose a suitable API?
yes
The command-line compiler can then just be a driver over that API.
That reminds me, where the fuck is Roslyn.
well, I think that my current API should be good for at least some stuff
but the only way to find out for sure is to use it
@R.MartinhoFernandes meh
user142019
13:01
Hurray.
user142019
My first gradient in OpenGL. :P
user142019
@thecoshman What?
so I figure I'll crack up WPF, create a really crappy thing, and then see what I can get done
I wonder how easy C#->Python bindings are
@R.MartinhoFernandes 'meh'
13:04
@rightfold Unless I've forgotten how to count, that would appear to be your first and second.
@thecoshman I haven no idea what that's supposed to mean in response to "where?"
user142019
@JerryCoffin It includes my first.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I don't care
user142019
It depends on which one it rendered first.
@rightfold well... depends one when exactly you consider them rendered...
user142019
13:05
That too.
someone uploaded another pic of meh the fattie making tea during hiking
I think I have to write a constexpr function that completes a (from, to, stride) triplet by filling in missing values via reasonable defaults. This is going to be messy :(
@Telkitty猫咪咪 you savage! where is the pot!
damn
create initial WPF project -> open code-behind file -> two-phase initialization
Microsoft plix lern2code
@thecoshman thought I was too civilized ... using a stove
13:11
also, I realized I forgot everything I ever knew about WPF.
isn't WPF shit?
better than using MFC
ah, that's the shit one I was thinking of
guys
also, you are writing this for wide? why are you locking your self to MS?
13:14
are you kidding?
I don't even have a Mac or Unix system to work with
and even if I did, would those users really be interested in a graphical environment?
and finally, fuck Mac and Unix, I really don't care
@DeadMG no, I am dead serious.
@kbok oh, so you are alive
@DeadMG Not a crappy one. Well, Mac users prefer crappy ones, actually.
13:15
@BartekBanachewicz I'm half alive. I'm so sick I had to stay at home
@kbok oh poor you
Ell
Ell
I am doing sudo chown -R ... and it is taking ages
I hope I don't mess something up
user142019
Now the animation. :D
@kbok I was going to ask you about the future plans WRT Lundi, but if you're sick it can wait. I won't have time to work on it until end of June anyway, probably
Ell
Ell
I think you a word
(sick of it?)
13:17
@rightfold spinning bar?
user142019
No.
user142019
I have a plant that I want to animate.
Ell
Ell
Lemme see the plant!
user142019
It's more of a mutated plant.
user142019
user142019
13:18
It needs some thorns but I'll do that later.
@BartekBanachewicz I'm not sure where we should go from here
@kbok I still think that table support is the most important improvement. In form of either map or vector
hehe
I just used CClass.
user142019
GL_LINE_STRIP is great.
@rightfold oh, you are using OpenGL
user142019
13:22
Jawohl!
user142019
Code is kind of crappy but it works. gist.github.com/rightfold/c278824bf84cc9d271b3
Xeo
Xeo
@rightfold Whenever you say that, I have to think of Graf Eisen.
user142019
Still don't understand what VAOs are for, though.
user142019
Do they keep track of the vertex attributes?
@rightfold yes, more or less
13:26
@rightfold They store metadata to tell OpenGL how to use the data in a VBO.
user142019
Can I just rebind those instead of using glVertexAttribPointer every loop iteration? Say I want multiple glDrawArrays calls each with different attributes.
mhm. Exactly what they are for.
user142019
Neat.
user142019
Time to encapsulate that in a class. :P
@rightfold wait
user142019
13:27
NO!
Can I ask you to do the experiment and try out my wrappers first?
user142019
You can ask that, sure.
I mean, I expect you to find problems that I've missed
user142019
As long as they build on OS X.
user142019
And OpenGL 3.2.
In other news, FF builtin PDF reader still sucky.
Sigh, time to enable Adobe Reader again.
@R.MartinhoFernandes get with the times, PDF readers suck
@R.MartinhoFernandes fox it
@thecoshman Not to the point of FF's.
@rightfold VAO VBO
I also want to expand gl_id soon, so it supports proper deleters
user142019
Will try in a moment.
13:31
@thecoshman Meh, same thing.
@rightfold I want to know everything you dislike about them.
user142019
@BartekBanachewicz The naming conventions are different from the ones in my project.
user142019
:trollface:
@BartekBanachewicz they look usable enough to me
that said, I am only just getting close to getting back into OGL, so very rusty
@thecoshman they did look usable on first iteration, too. But I am constantly improving them.
13:33
@BartekBanachewicz FUCKING RETARDED
I want my basic building blocks to be as good as I can get them too
any flaw in them will propagate to higher levels
@R.MartinhoFernandes Ä…
@BartekBanachewicz oh I'm sure, there will almost always be new things that you have overlooked
@thecoshman that's why I like to people to even try trying them out, because that provides invaluable insight and data. Even when they are bad, comments can point me in the right direction
@Fanael the English monarchy generate more money for the country then it costs to keep them
I think I've been wrapping OGL for quite a significant part of my life now, and I want to build something that's good.
13:35
hmm
@BartekBanachewicz oh sure
for the CAPI, perhaps it would be a lot simpler to support just dealing with strings, instead of trying to support some kind of range.
I wish to expose a C API for some of the Wide components so I can use them from another language
the original component takes a pair of iterators
Why it has to be C? I mean, I am just wondering now.
13:37
er, Wide is the only language, ever, which could possibly use a C++ component.
every other language expects a C API
All tries on CORBA were too big, but why people didn't try to make something small, yet still good for interoperations
@DeadMG and that's a big thing
yes
but it's going to be useless if I don't want to develop the Wide stdlib because there are no tools :P
I am thinking about some sort of low-level intermediate binary spec, that would make exporting, say, classes easier
&#3129 is html entity that was converted unicode — AnilHoney 1 min ago
@BartekBanachewicz Not gonna work.
13:39
@DeadMG because of lack of support or because of technical reasons?
@BartekBanachewicz Because C is the lingua franca of interoperation?
for technical reasons.
@R.MartinhoFernandes which doesn't necessarily mean it's the best we can do
@BartekBanachewicz Too many features already.
the main feature would be modules instead of headers :P
13:39
@BartekBanachewicz I don't think it's very far.
I mean, standarized binary description
simple fact: exposing classes means exposing constructors, which means exceptions, mangling, etc.
C has very few features which is what gives it a lot of advantages on that field.
not to mention how you expect C# to import a C++ class with a destructor, say.
but it wasn't designed as an interopt language
13:40
@DeadMG Exactly.
they don't have the language features for RAII to use it correctly
what about all that dispose stuff?
@BartekBanachewicz sure
@kbok well as I said I want to start coding when I will really have time do to it properly, but I can always review something of your creation :)
@BartekBanachewicz Is absolutely nothing like actual RAII.
13:43
Okey, but what about that description stuff? Do you think at least that might work? Because headers are far from optimal, we do agree here I guess.
@BartekBanachewicz I don't have a lot of time right now, but I'll see what I can do
yes, but languages don't have enough common concepts for what you want.
you'd get further if you wanted to output a Java class as a C# class.
i.e, not actual classes
so basically making such spec would have very little benefit over C in terms of practical usage? You might be right here.
You would just reinvent some C ABI.
Xeo
Xeo
C is basically the lowest common denominator.
13:45
which is why I decided to build Wide's compatibility on top of compiler compatibility.
at least, I'm going to try that.
Xeo
Xeo
As C is portable assembly, you can't really get lower than that
meh. any compiled language can be looked at this way
@BartekBanachewicz Such a binary spec already exists: it's the C ABI. C just happens to be the most readily available human interface for that ABI.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I think that better can be done, if you're very careful.
but technically C ABI has little to do with C language itself, right?
13:47
You can write some tool that generates (for publishing APIs) or processes (for consuming APIs) C headers to make it "easier", and in fact that is what some languages already do.
except they have 100% coverage both ways.
@R.MartinhoFernandes hm so maybe only this part could be changed.
basically speaking, C modules.
they can be even more useful than C++ modules.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Like Wide invoking Clang.
@BartekBanachewicz Right (as long as you read "little" as "nothing, really").
@JerryCoffin that's an interesting observation, at least for me
it isn't very pronounced
std::add_pointer<char(void*)>::type curr,
yay type_traits
Xeo
Xeo
13:50
lol
Wuss.
Afraid of a couple of function pointers.
lol
just to make sure I remember correctly
C# can bind member functions as function pointers into a trampoline thing, right?
@DeadMG AddPointer<char(void*)> yay alias templates.
:P
alias<char(void*)>*, speaking of aliases.
Xeo
Xeo
Alias!
13:52
would what Luc wrote work?
@DeadMG You mean to be called from native code?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yes.
@BartekBanachewicz Yes.
@R.MartinhoFernandes fffffffuuuunky.
13:54
k
so strictly, I would actually not need to provide a void* context parameter.
user142019
Man.
user142019
T const (&elements)[N] so fugly.
std::add_reference<const T[N]>::type.
or, probably, Alias<const T[N]>&
Xeo
Xeo
Alias<T const[N]>&
lol
13:55
ahaha
user142019
Does that work with deduction?
The alias one, yes.
user142019
Neat.
btw, is alias coming in C++14? Because that would be heck of an addon to std :P
@rightfold Good. Now remember that when you ask why you cannot specialize alias templates.
@BartekBanachewicz Meh, really?
13:57
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yet another thing you don't have to spell yourself.
I don't think I have ever used it, even though I have it in my library.
Xeo
Xeo
@rightfold Using aliases are basically transformed to whatever they alias when parsed.
@BartekBanachewicz Alias is more of a theoretical thing.
user142019
Why isn't the syntax just T const[N]& elements. ;_;
user142019
And a function pointer just void(T, U, V)* foo.
Xeo
Xeo
13:59
@rightfold Because C.
user142019
Dear C,

Fuck you.
Xeo
Xeo
C had this "rule" that a declaration looks like the usage.
@BartekBanachewicz He means that it has little to no practical use.

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