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22:00
@BartekBanachewicz Emscripten is realy cool
WTF. This offers more transfer than my current one paid 50pln/year...
@Dippo hey, you should now say you like Lua and we gonna be best buddies
3 mins ago, by Bartek Banachewicz
I found a great polish hosting
But I think that 50pln/year gives me some more guarantees ;d
And I am not going to use those 50GiB anyway, so...
22:02
For free it's not hurting to try
sec.
@BartekBanachewicz The only thing i saw about LUA is in Theme hospital (they update often). That is the only LUA i am interested in. :)
Hrm, I should probably do something with my website.
Work in progress... for 1.5y now isn't any good.
@Dippo Lua is not an acronym
22:03
yay
I can officially syntax highlight comments.
@BartekBanachewicz ah
@Griwes dude. This site gives you even SSH shell for free. Kinda limited, but still
@DeadMG you have syntax highlighting for english?
no, for Wide.
@BartekBanachewicz I need to get my little pet project going to the level of needing a build server, then I can start worrying anything about off-personal-PC accesses other than PHP and shit.
22:07
I guess I gotta refresh my PHP skills
That said, I should probably start doing some design work to get a working via-FCGI web framework in C++ experiment going... So much to do, and life's so short...
There has to be a way to write sane code with it, no?
No.
I mean any? Wrappers? Libraries? Whatever?
Style guides? Whitelists of standard library?
Well, you could try to write a preprocessor for it that makes $s go away, that would be some start.
22:08
and lemme guess, I should write it in PHP? :D
C++, obviously.
Or in that brand new Coliru #pragma meta language, dunno.
how am I going to run it on PHP-only server then?
put an executable on server, use system call to execute?
@BartekBanachewicz You've got SSH shell, man!
@R.MartinhoFernandes You remember it because it was a great idea. <3
@Xeo Perforce's swarm looks nice but only runs on Linux and Mac. You can imagine Microsoft not liking the sound of that.
22:11
@Griwes which is limited
I think I should go sleep.
@DeadMG it's a free hosting
Xeo
Xeo
@ThePhD Oh... didn't see that, sorry
<6 hours till waking up, eh.
I doubt I can use system
22:12
So, for maximal performance, it looks like I'm going to write a tool that checks out perforce code, and then pushes it into a Team Foundation Server repo. Then, later, it'll do the reverse. If anyone has any experience with writing against the Perfroce or TFS APIs, pls halp.
Wide now ready for production use! :P
hehe
well I guess I can write everythin in JS
and use PHP to only create REST API
@NokImchen no.
@NokImchen Why, yes, I can downvote you.
@NokImchen hey you know php?
22:13
@NokImchen Already did.
@NokImchen I was going to ask ya something but the way you put it...
Just takin' out the trash.
@DeadMG what a proudnes? lolz dumbass!
user142019
Next insult is coordinated flagging.
@BartekBanachewicz i dont care
22:14
@Flexo I summon thee!
we don't need him
user142019
@NokImchen We don't care about your question.
how many 10k+'s are there?
@Xeo It's not mentioned until the README, so don't feel bad. I proposed it to my boss and then he laughed at me. :D
user142019
@BartekBanachewicz Puppy and me.
22:15
meh, 3
user142019
People from other rooms too.
just remind me to go repwhoring after finals
user142019
Maybe. xD
@rightfold That makes at least three.
wow Zoidberg, you're a 10ker
Xeo
Xeo
22:15
<-
I always assumed you had like, -1 rep
@JerryCoffin ohai :3
user142019
@DeadMG Almost 20k, my friend.
user142019
@DeadMG Assumption is the mother of all fuck-ups.
22:16
@BartekBanachewicz Hello.
Ell
Ell
I have like 509 rep or something
user142019
I wonder how to best use LLVM JIT.
okey
time to make a favicon for my website
user142019
It's gonna be a real pain in the ass if I want closures to work the way I want them to work.
user142019
GC'ed stack frames would be i-fucking-deal.
22:17
@rightfold How do you want closures to work?
@rightfold would you expect favicons to be 64x64? I am thinking retina here
Lua-like?
user142019
@DeadMG Capture locals by reference, but if their stack frame is gone they're still available.
user142019
I need either extra indirection or GC'ed stack frames.
@rightfold So if I pseudo-do f() { int x = 0; closure { x++; }(); print(x); }, the result will be 1.
user142019
22:18
Never used Lua, dunno.
user142019
@DeadMG Yes.
LLVM IR will not natively support GC'ed stack frames, I believe.
but extra indirection would be simple to implement.
user142019
// And when you do this, it will also print 1:
f() { int x = 0; return closure { ++x; return x; } }
c := f()
print(c())
@rightfold Yeah, that's Lua-like.
user142019
I would also like to be able to return from the function in which a closure is defined, which is Ruby-like, but I have to investigate that.
user142019
22:20
Maybe with a special construct.
@rightfold What would that look like?
user142019
f(list) {
    list.for_each(closure (x) {
        if (x == 2) {
            some-special-return "found two!"
        }
    })
    return nil
}

f([1, 3, 4]) // returns nil
f([1, 2, 3]) // returns "found two!"
ah
that is a substantially different beast.
you're more like an anonymous statement rather than an anonymous function.
that's not going to be simple at all
user142019
you're
user142019
lol
22:24
er
shut up
user142019
Well, the lambda would have to capture the stack frame of the function invocation in which it's defined.
@rightfold More than that.
Added /plain.html for a simple editor (html textarea). This works for mobile. (At least it works on my iPhone.) (Experimental.)
user142019
Then it can get the return address of that and jump.
you're talking about gotoing over for_each.
that's gonna involve a bunch of stuff like local cleanup, etc.
user142019
22:26
Oh yeah resource management.
I usually say "Don't use exceptions as control flow", but in this case, your desired behaviour is exactly modelled by an exception.
the problem is knowing where to catch
user142019
That's a good point. Didn't notice that.
and what happens if I do something like f() { return closure(x) { special-return x; }; }?
i am going to tackle that challenge
I will write sane code in PHP
and fuck the system
user142019
Well, f() already returned so it won't return again.
22:28
you're gonna bring a lot of pain on your head for such a feature.
user142019
:P
@rightfold Right... but your system is going to have to keep track of every single invocation of f, ever to know that.
i.e., a massive memory leak.
and what is the defined behaviour if I call f()(2);?
user142019
struct Closure {
    boost::optional<StackFrame*> weak_reference;
};
1
Q: C++ error trying to bind function to lua

jamolnngI think I found an answer, will return with results soon I get this error and have no idea how to fix it while not having the methods be static. If they are static I don't get the error but then I'm not able to use any of my non static variables or functions. Also before you say it may be that i...

Fcuk, and I can't recommend Lundi :/
There's a lot of weird shit on youtube.
user142019
22:30
@DeadMG error since the closure takes a parameter.
user142019
f()(42) == 42.
user142019
I'm mentally drunk.
user142019
I think I'll just leave that feature out.
user142019
Because what would happen when you do this:
user142019
f(g) { g(); }
h() { f(closure { special-return 42; }) }
22:36
lol
user142019
You would have f's stack frame's return address pointing to a stack frame that doesn't exist anymore.
user142019
It's like, a stack with holes in it.
Ell
Ell
@bartek why can't you recommend it?
yeah... seriously, this is a massive headache
@Ell not mature enough
Ell
Ell
22:38
Fair enough
I will use it in my projects for sure I think
user142019
It would be doable if the closures aren't first-class objects and you can't pass them around.
Ell
Ell
Whenever I need it
yay, I can now syntax highlight keywords too.
user142019
Which is how Ruby does it.
user142019
You can wrap them in Procs but that changes their return behavior.
22:39
the real question is
Ell
Ell
Was about to say that
why the fuck does the editor lag so much considering that there is basically zero functionality.
Ell
Ell
When you take &block are you taking a proc?
user142019
Just write a Vim plug-in.
user142019
@Ell Well, consider this:
Ell
Ell
22:40
I remember a Lambda and block have different return semantics
user142019
def foo(&block)
    yield 42 # calls block
    block.call 42 # calls Proc
end
Ell
Ell
Alternatively you could do every statement is an expression so you wouldn't need to return
And ahh right
user142019
Explicit return in Ruby is different from implicit return.
Ell
Ell
how Do you mean?
Besides exiting the function which obviously can't be implicit
user142019
def meh
    def foo
        x = yield
        puts x
    end
    foo { puts('foo!!'); 42 } # implicit return; prints "foo!!\n42\n"
    foo { puts('foo!!'); return 3.14 } # explicit return; prints "foo!!\n"
end
user142019
22:42
meh returns 3.14.
Ell
Ell
Right
What is your problem again? :P
You don't want implicit return?
user142019
I do.
user142019
But I was thinking of being able to pass around blocks and keeping the behavior of explicit return.
user142019
But that will obviously not work.
Ell
Ell
For me explicit return behaviour is strange. I don't think you should be able to escape your fathers function
user142019
22:46
I could do break, which can be caught in the caller of the closure.
Ell
Ell
For ex if there is cleanup code after a block call. I know it should be documented and stuff, I just can't think of a use case. Right now anyway :P
user142019
Returning from the outer function is indeed meh.
user142019
Or just return wtf.
user142019
I should sleep.
Ell
Ell
Just use return
22:47
hai, what is the difference between a std::array and std::dynarray anyway?
Ell
Ell
Without returning from outer function
Or. Throw an exception and catch In outer func
Kidding xD
user142019
@Jeffrey std::array has a size known at compile-time, std::dynarray is like std::vector but not resizable.
Ell
Ell
What
Why would you use that?
0
Q: Use "include stdafx.h" when teaching C++ to children?

m00nbeam360I'm teaching high school students programming in C++ this summer. I have to teach them material in a week's time. Reading through the tutorial the company gave me, they suggest that I use "include stdafx.h" in the programs right at the get-go. So do you think include stdafx.h is necessary wh...

user142019
The compiler can ~~optimize~~ it to alloca in some cases.
22:50
I hope he does it right.
@rightfold can't you use a variable to define the size of a std::array?
@rightfold I think you mean ~~~~~~~~~~~~OPTIMIZE~~~~~~~~~~~~~
user142019
@Jeffrey The size has to be known at compile-time.
user142019
std::array<T, 42> xs; // 42 is part of the type!
@rightfold And has to pessimize it to O(N) moves and other things in those cases.
user142019
22:51
Haha.
also violating iterator invalidation semantics compared to if it was forced heap allocated
user142019
Btw I got my parser working so-far in C++ for the first time!
right
COBOL is next
@rightfold Gratz
user142019
22:53
And I really need to implement makeUnique.
not having variadics in MSVC can suck for that kind of thing
make_unique ;-;
user142019
I'm not using MSVC. :>
yeah I guessed that
user142019
Lexing was kind of a pain in the ass.
22:55
really?
I just re-wrote my lexer and it was super-fucking-easy
user142019
I have significant newlines except within parentheses and brackets and braces so I needed a stack of opening parentheses and brackets and braces.
I need to cross compile my project eventually. Know any good cross compilers for Mac OS X? <:
Ell
Ell
I wrote a teeny recursive descent calculator parser in ruby
@rightfold Sounds to me like you're doing the parser's work. Even if you have significant newlines, just put them as a token.
Ell
Ell
@rightfold that doesn't sound lexer ey
What deadmg said
user142019
22:56
Wouldn't that make the parser very complicated?
Ell
Ell
I think the lexer should not need a stack
meh dns propagation y u slow
Take your input,
@rightfold No. It would be exactly within the parser's normal realm.
Parse it to become uniform,
user142019
22:56
ohlol
THEN lex it
depends on exactly what "significant" means, of course.
the only place I did something similar for Wide was nested C comments, like /* /* */ * /.
you want to just go through the entire thing and tokenize without having to worry about denormalized code
user142019
Well, something like this:
user142019
print 'hi' # statement because newline
print 'boo' # statement because newline
print [
    'a', # no statement even though there is a newline
    'b', # no statement even though there is a newline
]
22:58
wow
I still have php sources of my site from high school
yeah, that is definitely parser work.
user142019
PHP
user142019
Print and burn them.
No No No
Print, photocopy indefinitely, THEN burn
Ell
Ell
@deadmg are you familiar with ruby's code inside a string? Do you know how that would be lexed/parsed ?
22:59
from the parser's perspective, whether you do print "hi"; or print "hi"\n is pretty irrelevant.
it's just comparing one constant over another.
and the parser knows whether it's expecting a terminator or not.
so really, you should find it pretty trivial to deal with that in the parser.
@rightfold I am thinking about reusing them
user142019
Oh yeah right.
I liked that site
user142019
Rewrite it in Python.
It was buggy as hell and whatnot
23:00
@Ell Not particularly, but I'm guessing it's not that far from, say, .NET's formatting stuff, or PHP's?
@rightfold My hosting supports only PHP. Can I run Python in PHP?
Ell
Ell
"Hello #{gets.chomp}"
user142019
@Ell It's called string interpolation.
what he said ^
@Ell If it involves expressions, then it must be parsed.
Ell
Ell
23:00
You can have arbitrary code in there. Yeah what rightfold said
user142019
"foo #{some expression} bar" == "foo " + (some expression).to_s + " bar"
Ell
Ell
So I guess it must have its lexer and parser as one thing?
yeah, what everyone said
@Ell Nah.
23:01
I even required user to calculate an integral before registering
lol high school
@BartekBanachewicz lolol
Wait, since when are scope guards a hack?
there's no reason why you can't have, say, a "String into interpolation" token that represents all the " ... #{" stuff.
$resource = mysql_query("SELECT * FROM matematyka WHERE Identyfikator=" .$numer);
@GManNickG Since we decided we can't have nice things anymore
Ell
Ell
23:02
Then it must keep a stack of brackets
and then "Interpolation"- i.e., everything between { and } (still requires some slight parsing action here to recognize when {} scope ends)
user142019
@BartekBanachewicz :D
@Ell Yes.
Ell
Ell
Right okay cool
assuming that {} is legal Ruby in an expression.
user142019
23:02
It is.
@DeadMG It definitely is
user142019
10.times { |x| puts x } # prints 0 to 9
@DeadMG It stands for one-line block procedure or hash
user142019
@Jeffrey block
23:04
@rightfold The name of the block class is Proc...
user142019
Wut?
this hosting even has backups
user142019
Blocks aren't objects.
it's damn amazing
for fucking free.
Ell
Ell
23:04
Procs And lambdas are objects
if only it had Node.js or Django :/
user142019
Procs can wrap them.
Ell
Ell
Blocks need to be bound to a name with & before the are objects
@rightfold Everything is an object in Ruby. Literally anything...
user142019
Uh no.
Ell
Ell
23:05
No
Have any of you guys used pagehub?
Ell
Ell
They'll have you believe it
It sounds cool.
Ell
Ell
And almost everything is an object
I need to implement lazy re-lexing.
23:05
@rightfold In this example {...} is just syntactic sugar to create an object
user142019
No, it's syntax for creating a block.
although now I come to think of it, calling into the lexer too often being really slow might have something to do with, say, the lexer being built in debug mode.
user142019
Blocks aren't objects.
Ell
Ell
But a block Is one of few things which aren't objects
user142019
Procs are objects that can represent blocks.
user142019
23:06
That's different.
Ell
Ell
Listen to tightrope! He is clever.a
user142019
Haha tightrope.
Ell
Ell
Damn that autocorrsct
Damn that non autocorrect
user142019
@Ell It didn't catch that one!
Ell
Ell
What else isn't an object in ruby?
23:07
whitespace
Ell
Ell
unbound methods or something
I always get caught out by alias being a keyword and not a function
user142019
@Ell while/until/if etc…
user142019
Though they yield values since they're expressions.
Ell
Ell
Yeah
So which is better? Ruby or Python? Tell me!
user142019
23:10
PyGem!
Ell
Ell
Ruby. But I havent used python that much
@rightfold Blocks can be objects. In your case you are right, but when you capture a block with (..., &b), b is of type Proc which is an object.
user142019
Proc, not block.
Ell
Ell
Ruby is just so succinct, so quick to write in
0
Q: Facebook auto accept specific friend invites

user2484115Hello I am currently seeking any information on how one could automatically accept a specific friend. For example: "Person A invites person B to be friends, Person B will automatically accept person A. However ignore any other request." I'm looking for a solution in any programming language. ...

Those tags.
user142019
23:11
@StackedCrooked I like Python more, actually.
user142019
Except in some cases where Ruby shines, such as DSLs.
@rightfold Proc represents the block, therefore yes it is a block object
Ell
Ell
@Jeffrey when you do &b you bind it to a name by wrapping it with a proc, but if you use yield you don't do this. I think this is why there is a performance difference between & and yield
@Ell yes of course.
Well, I didn't know about the performance difference, but yeah...
@rightfold cough, Sinatra
Ell
Ell
Im pretty sure a block isn't an object
23:13
Yeah, I was wrong :)
Well, YOU'RE an object
user142019
I want to enforce four-space indentation.
don't
user142019
Otherwise is syntax error.
In ruby?
user142019
23:14
No.
Ell
Ell
oh right cool. Well done for admitting it :P
user142019
Well, at least tabs are syntax errors already. :P
what is the language man
@Ell I was pretty sure everything was an object. I've just checked into my Ruby bible and apparently it is not :(
I remember the chapter about BasicObject and Object. Like that one is the parent of the other and the other is the parent of the first one. It was very inception-like...
user142019
Ell
Ell
23:17
Can I ask one question about tabs vs spaces? I will accept one message and not ask any questions/make any retorts after the one message. What is wrong with tabs for prefix indentation, spaces after? Everything still lines up but programmers can choose most aesthetically pleasing for themselves without affecting others
Yeah I can never remember the object hierarchy, but it certainly is inception
user142019
@Ell It will eventually go wrong unless your editor warns you.
@rightfold lol.
My library is called gears :(
A bit weird.
Ell
Ell
I think I'm gonna sleep now anyway. Night folks :)
user142019
Bye.
Ell
Ell
Call it cogs!
But yeah bye haha
23:21
@Ell The primary issue with tabs is and always has been when different editors and settings render them differently, making a tabs-indented piece of code unreadable.
Bye man
user142019
By the way I use yes and no for Booleans. :trollface:
Bye
@rightfold ;__________;
@rightfold who are you, Apple? ;__;
23:25
I'm looking for way to check return value of a function without wasting CPU
user142019
And throwing an object that isn't of an exception type throws a NonExceptionThrownException.
@pourjour you mean, you want to do it on compile time?
user142019
@pourjour OH NO PRECIOUS CLOCK CYCLES OH NO WHAT DO WE DO NOW
        if (parentheses.empty()) {
            throw "fuck";
        }
WTF
@Magtheridon96 on runtime
23:26
            switch (c) {
                case U')': return Token(Token::Kind::RParen);
                default: throw std::logic_error("well fuck");
            }
        } else {
            throw "fuck";
        }
user142019
@Jeffrey too lazy to create custom exception type.
throw std::everything("no content for you Mister");
@Jeffrey think will abuse CPU
23:27
std::what("wat");
throw std::make_table(); would be lovely, no?
@rightfold you really are, I though you were kidding :/
@pourjour It really depends on what this function does
and what inputs it takes
and the range of these inputs
@rightfold when dividing the code into blocks, you can give users more freedom when it comes to spacing by making the good assumption that one block will be indented forward with at least 1 whitespace character more than the previous block
because if people are writing shit like this:

def func
int x = 2
if x == 4`
print "wat"
end
end

They deserve to be kicked in the face with errors anyway
hello, c++
Hello COBOL
@Magtheridon96 it checks if a folder is locked or not
23:42
If I tell visual studio to clean my solution and get bored in the meantime, that's bad right?
@Magtheridon96 throw std::unique_ptr<int>::get; (Can you guess the catch statement?)
catch (int*)?
hmm
@Magtheridon96 it's not calling the function
oh right
I think it's catch(int*(std::unique_ptr<int>::*exc)()) {
where exc is the name of the "exception"
I was about to say something similar
I was off when it comes to the name though :D
the only reason I know that you have to put std::unique_ptr<int>::* in there is because of a huge list of syntax errors I got while working with function pointers back before I used C++11 features
and I'm like "BUT IT'S MEMORY, WHY IS THIS NOT WORKING, GAH"

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