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17:00
Conversely I don't have anything that relies on a range being finite either.
Bidi?
Nah, I guess you can make a bidi infinite range.
{1, 2, 3, 4, ..., 4, 3, 2, 1}
Ye. There is a provision that a bidi range must 'meet' in the middle if it does, but not that it must meet at all.
(That's sorta cheating, as it's pretty much two infinite ranges glued at the infinite ends)
(I actually fixed my frontback_cache not to rely on that req. but I feel it's sane.)
@R.MartinhoFernandes Don't see what's cheating about this :s what's the point of bidi otherwise
@LucDanton The "it's pretty much two ranges" part.
17:03
zip(a, b) is pretty much two ranges.
user142019
Why are all Chrome themes so incredibly awful?
user142019
This one is the only nice one I've seen so-far.
But the thing is, if you have a non-bidi infinite range, you can move along it, stop at an arbitrary point and take every item before that as that's a finite amount. Your bidi alternative doesn't help there.
Ell
Ell
unless you go from the other end too
17:08
Actually, I'm not really worried about the infinity, but more about unknown-length or ginormous length.
Ell
Ell
I shouldn't say things in this conversation, I will make a fool of myself xD
@Ell There isn't another end: being infinite gets rid of that.
Xeo
Xeo
ghci> let g = (length .) . filter
ghci> let f p = g p >>= take
ghci> f (<3) [1,2,3,4,5]
[1,2]
hmhm @rightfold ^
Size is optional, and I don't assume it unless mentioned.
@LucDanton So how would bidi help then?
user142019
17:09
@Xeo That's not implementing take in terms of takeWhile.
Xeo
Xeo
@rightfold Other way around.
And I still have filter there, which is wrong...
But that did look like the reader monad
Maybe takeWhile could work as a primitive.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Reducing [a b c d e] to e.g. [a b c] is fundamentally pop_back.
Reducing the front is fundamentally pop_front.
17:11
@LucDanton Only if you know the size.
If you want [a b c] [d e] out of forward [a b c d e] it's cheating.
@LucDanton Yes, that's what I need.
@R.MartinhoFernandes No. filter is bidi, doesn't require size.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I can see if it makes sense for bidi but for forward it seems insane to me.
ergh... reorganising code projects is never fun ¬_¬
It doesn't make sense for bidi because I don't want to consume the entire range.
17:13
If I partition (starting from the back) over a vacuously true predicate, did I not just pop_back a forward range?
but what must be done must be done!
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton Isn't that partition?
@R.MartinhoFernandes That's what saving is for.
Xeo
Xeo
Oh wait, it's called span in Haskell
27 mins ago, by Luc Danton
It would make sense to provide that capacity in some form, yes. span right?
17:14
@LucDanton What? If advance 3 times, and still have 10k elements left, I'm not popping back 10k times.
Then you want even more than bidi. Not less.
I should not need to touch on every position to get those two ranges
No, I don't need a back.
(FWIW for my specific needs in ogonek I can do fine with just popfronting and storing)
Here's my spam of the day:
0
Q: Combine shell script and data files into one runnable script?

StackedCrookedI have a server that accepts HTTP POST request and runs the post data as a bash script. E.g. at the client side I can do this: ~ $ curl http://stacked-crooked.com/sh -d "echo hello" + echo hello hello At the server side the post data is stored to a file and executed as a bash script. I would...

Okay, two conflicting approaches here. I was trying to fit as many concepts at once to try to reduce the burden of implementing. You're trying to start from as little as possible to make sense of the operation as a primitive.
@LucDanton Because I don't think it can be built from the existing primitives :)
17:17
@LucDanton Stuffing concepts into code just to make implementation easier sounds like it could be a bad idea.
What if you save and filter with converse predicates?
Stateful predicates mind you. So not very predicate-like predicates.
Sorry I think there are terms to describe that (left/right catch?) but it escapes me at the moment.
Oh, I was trying not to think of the state, but the predicates for, e.g., decoding must actually be stateful.
Filter goes over the elements it visits exactly once so that's manageable, assuming I manage to sanely express what saving does in this case (i.e. we want two separate predicates) nevermind saving happens before filtering.
for(start(r); !empty(r); pop_front(r)) {
    if(accumulate_and_test(front(r))) {
         break;
    }
}
Hmm, maybe I don't need so much.
Xeo
Xeo
> Conclusion: Lambdas generate overhead, although it might be negligible depending on the use case. Lambdas prevent optimizations on some compilers.
Ugh
That hurts so much
17:21
Well, it's probably got some truth to it.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Right. And I'm curious if it's convenient in filter form.
Xeo
Xeo
@ShotgunNinja No it doesn't.
@Xeo Optimizing compilers?
Though that's only because I can just store as I test. But since I don't have a use case for lacking that possibility, I'm not caring.
Xeo
Xeo
A lambda is exactly the same as a handwritten function object.
17:22
@Xeo Where that from?
Xeo
Xeo
1
A: Overhead of recursive lambdas

stefanAt least with the gcc compiler, there is overhead using recursive lambdas, although they are basically functors. It seems that gcc is not able to optimize recursive lambdas which can be seen in a direct comparison. Implementing the behaviour of a lambda, i.e. creating a functor, enables gcc of o...

@Xeo Right; but don't function objects have slightly more overhead than straight functions or function pointers?
Xeo
Xeo
@ShotgunNinja No
In fact, function pointers likely have an overhead as opposed to function objects.
@Xeo They do if not inlined: *this pointers.
Xeo
Xeo
Screw this! :|
17:25
78
Q: Why can lambdas be better optimized by the compiler than plain functions?

bamboonIn his book The C++ Standard Library (Second Edition) Nicolai Josuttis states that lambdas can be better optimized by the compiler than plain functions. In addition, C++ compilers optimize lambdas better than they do ordinary functions. (Page 213) Why is that? I thought when it comes ...

maybe somehow related
@LucDanton Actually, that's just takeWhile. I might have been trying to get too much.
yo
do you even span
user142019
I only div.
Xeo
Xeo
takeWhile = (fst .) . span?
17:29
FOR THIS BEARD I PAY THE IRON PRICE
@Crowz wat
@ShotgunNinja See Etienne's video
I think so. I tend to check the signatures to make sure I have the predicate versions though.
Xeo
Xeo
> let g = (fst .) . span
> g (<3) [1,2,3,4,5]
[1,2]
Seems fine
@Crowz Can't; stupid Barracuda Web Filter at work...
user142019
17:31
g ( loves ) [1,2,3,4,5]
Um, is a constexpr decay a bad idea? constexpr and function templates annoy me so much :(
psh, work... you fancy cityfolk and your jobs
@Xeo The cool thing is that that doesn't evaluate the rest.
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes I know, lazy stuff
But I think it does evaluate the 3, right?
Has to, I guess.
Yes.
λ> let g = (fst .) . span
λ> g (<3) [1,2,undefined]
[1,2*** Exception: Prelude.undefined
λ> g (<3) [1,2..]
[1,2]
λ>
Xeo
Xeo
17:34
I like how that shows the lazyness.
In the error
Since it errors while printing, not before.
@rightfold sssshhh, don't tell them why I like <3 as a predicate...
See you guys later.
Xeo
Xeo
o/
I also should get home
2
A: C++ nested referece directly vs via template argument

Andy ProwlThe first commented line is legal, and your compiler is probably not conforming with C++11. Because of C++11's reference collapsing rules, in fact, it should declare an lvalue reference to File named fRef1 and bind it to the lvalue f. The second commented line is illegal: you cannot bind an rval...

Didn't C++98 already allow reference-to-reference through typedefs / template parameters?
It's from too long ago, who remembers?
sigh, move files around, shit breaks ¬_¬
17:46
@EtiennedeMartel #sotrue
@BartekBanachewicz -10 Imaginary Internet Points for using a hashtag outside of Twitter.
^
Anyway.
I have a question.
@EtiennedeMartel
@Pawnguy7 Then ask away, my boy, ask away, said Professor Slughorn.
I have this countdown timer, of sorts. I had it echo out the count at intervals, say, 90, 60, 45, 30, 15, 10, 5...1
Which is good. But I was wondering how I can do the same thing with a configurable second coutndown.
list of ints? or queue.
17:49
Um... neither.
I mean, if I have a given time take from a file.
How can I subdivide it into periods with the curve like above?
With a fixed number of periods.
Ell
Ell
I am confused
Your file contains the intervals?
@Pawnguy7 you need maths :)
Yes :D
Ell
Ell
I don't understand the question >.<
I don't know how to correctly impliment some sort of exponential equation though.
Like...
in the file - let's pretend it is a .ini file. It would have seconds:90
Now, I basically want to take that number, and get, say, a list of integers, of at what seconds to make an announcement.
Whether, as it gets closer to 0, there are more, as in the pattern I specified above.
17:54
@Pawnguy7 here
IMHO looks more like a polynomial of second order
Well, I am bad at guessing
Ell
Ell
Oh that's cool
didn't know you could do approximations
it's a goddamn mathematica
it would be useless if it couldn't do that.
Ell
Ell
@Pawnguy7 is it always that number of intervals?
as in, is the list always that long?
it doesn't matter
like, at all.
Ell
Ell
It does to me
17:59
yes
if you have a function, you can sample as dense as you might wish to
Ell
Ell
he could get it exact that way
without using logs n shiz
meh, that would be lame.
I mean how hard is to use a logarithm with fixed interfals?
interfal? more like interfail :p
Hello, C++!
Ell
Ell
18:02
hardcoding the pattern just seemed simpler to me :P
@Ell you are going by the weird definitions of simpler
Ell
Ell
easier to think about
not at all
let's compare:
eventTimerIntervals(90, 10, Interval::Logarithmic);
// vs
eventTimerIntervals(Intervals { 90, 60, 45, 30, 15, 10, 5, 1});
@thecoshman By the way, what position(s) were you interested in, again?
Ell
Ell
I don't really know where you got your code from
18:07
@BartekBanachewicz definition*s*?
@Code-Guru use s/// notation newb.
@Ell um? I just wrote it.
Xeo
Xeo
@EtiennedeMartel Tool stuff was the main one, I believe?
Ell
Ell
@BartekBanachewicz Well I can't see the innards which is what would be the simple bit
unless I've just missed something
@BartekBanachewicz The first one is a smaller range, and the second one is not actually logarithmic at all.
Xeo
Xeo
@Ell Who cares about the innards.
18:09
@DeadMG scroll up for the discussion about said intervals
Ell
Ell
If you don't care about the innards they are both equivalent?
eventTimerIntervals(90.0f);
@EtiennedeMartel well, I think tools programmer is the best fit for, and probably the one I would most like, but I also think that game programmer would be a good fit too. There was a role for some sort of networking position, but I think that might just have gone.
what the fuck are innards?
Ell
Ell
@BartekBanachewicz inside the function
@Xeo I remember that one. I was wondering if there was anything else.
18:10
@Ell that's so unscalable it makes me wanna cringe. It's kind of code that lands on TDWTF
@thecoshman Yeah, we hired a network programmer two weeks ago.
@EtiennedeMartel ¬_¬ my mortal enemy
@thecoshman Ha.
Hi all, C++ noob here
May 29 at 13:26, by thecoshman
New here? Why not spare some heartache and read the newbie hints.
Ell
Ell
18:13
@BartekBanachewicz why? His number of intervals remains constant
@Ell what if he wants to change it :/
I mean this is the kind of thing that might change
Ell
Ell
Then change it inside of the function
His interface will still stay the same
oh wait
but the function sucks by itself.
Ell
Ell
change it to a vector first xD
I have a simple piece of code that I want to clarify
18:14
@Ell You should rename it "DecreaseByTotallyRandomSteps"
@thecoshman Hmm, I need to send an email.
Ell
Ell
@DeadMG well yeah, they are arbitrarily chosen
I stumbled across a game development company that doesn't use any C++ technology. I am traumatized.
lol I am trying to launch an olda game
18:18
@BartekBanachewicz Dosbox that shit.
It prompts me for "Riva GL", "Ati Rage GL", "Standard GL"... xD
Ell
Ell
You're code is probably better, it's just the simplest thing which came to mind
@EtiennedeMartel not THAT old
@BartekBanachewicz Ah.
Ell
Ell
Qemu that shit
uh oh
@TharinduRusira RUN!
18:18
Lord Binmaster disapproves of your shit
@TharinduRusira did you read the newbie hints?
Dammit.
Puppy is too fast.
@TharinduRusira We told you to read the rules.
Puppy is masturbinner
7
@BartekBanachewicz I was asking for clarification, not suggesting a correction. Maybe you pluarlized on purpose shrugs.
18:19
@Ell it's more challenging to run it normally
He's also a master debater.
I'm starting to see a pattern here.
Ell
Ell
haha
Mastur-everything
I am the Mastur of everything
Ell
Ell
I just had a realisation
if you have a function like that, just plot it graphically then draw a bezier curve to fit it
and then you have an approximation
18:21
@Ell why a bezier curve
Ell
Ell
cos you can draw it in inkscape xD
Did you ever see leaked Windows source code? It was quite ugly. And nearly all of it was written in C.
why not just an approximation like the one I did?
Ell
Ell
@BartekBanachewicz yeah that is preferable, I just meant if you didn't have wolfram alpha or whatever
it would be a quick and dirty way to do an approximation
good evening
anyone registered in topcoder?
user142019
18:25
You?
i am just curious, why i got just 75 points for my first finished practise exercise. is there possible to see somewhere why I got so few points?
crapfcuk
software renderer has inverted colors on fullscreen
and OGL crashes
I'll try on Windows XP in VirtualBox
Whoa
The Xbox One only works in 21 countries.
18:32
xboxdone.com really is a great domain.
That's fucked up.
@evening only one answer: you suck.
@Griwes is that NSFW?
@TonyTheLion It's SFW
As SFW as PS website.
lol lol lol
18:34
Who doesn't have resources to manage?
@Rapptz you know, it says a lot about the xbone launch so far, that this hasn't really gotten a mention until now. There are sooooo many other things with it that people need to finish complaining about first. :D
lol
Xbox one = FAIL
1
Q: Closing the loop: The closing overhaul is live

JaydlesTITLE: Closing the loop: The closing overhaul is live. After a ton of discussion, work and input from the community, we're rolling out the remainder of major closing changes that you've helped us design, as discussed in these prior posts: The close reason rework project: Changes to "...

18:49
@Mysticial ugh, what are they doing now
user142019
@Griwes Haha.
They got rid of "Too Localized". Does that mean we don't close stupid debugging questions anymore?
I don't have an opinion either way.
user142019
Hmm.
user142019
I'm wondering.
Meh.. stupid meta.
18:54
Just means it needs a more descriptive reason to close :P
user142019
I hate the renaming of "subjective and argumentative" to "not constructive".
user142019
It's retarded. Many of those questions are actually very constructive.
Xeo
Xeo
What
> Not a real question" and "not constructive" are being replaced
It's "not constructive" that goes away
user142019
Two years ago that was called "subjective and argumentative".
Xeo
Xeo
So far, the changes seem good
@Mysticial We do, but with the other close reasons

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