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00:00
Some people only open up to tell you that they're closed. (source)
Good morning!
Good morning.
00:54
Is that the @Unihedron?!!
01:28
@JennaSloan It seems that you know @Unihedron very much?
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
morn!
morn
02:00
@Pseudohuman current time
@萝莉w 9:00:37 pm CDT | Thursday, June 20, 2019
I must have eaten wrong things yesterday.
 
3 hours later…
Zoe
Zoe
05:02
@JennaSloan no, you're dreaming
@Zoe I don't dream
Zoe
Zoe
Everyone dreams.
But not everyone is able to remember
I used to dream, but now it just skips straight from when I go to sleep to when I wake
05:40
Eh?
06:30
How does one convert ArrayList<ArrayList<Integer>> to int[][]?
Can anyone please tell me why this code calls 'Child init()' instead of 'Parent init()'?
@TBag Concept of method overriding
You call new Child() at your main
the init() there was already overriden
overriden at the time you defined another init() in the Child Class itself
06:50
@RalfRafaelFrix Method init() in Parent class has been overriden by init() in the child class, but when I call the parent constructor using super() shouldn't it call init() from Parent?
The link didn't help :/
Like if I replace 'super()' inside child constructor with 'new Parent()', it would call Parent's init()
your super() invokes the Parent class constructor
How about this?
Integer[][] arr = new Integer[list.size()][];
for(int i = 0;i < list.size();i++) {
arr[i] = list.get(i).toArray(new Integer[list.get(i).size()]);
}
@萝莉w I'm referring to primitive ints
@RalfRafaelFrix yes ofcourse
convert it to int[][] not Integer[][]
@TBag You can try calling super.init() inside Child.init() and see how it goes
06:57
		int[][] a = new int[arr.length][];
		for(int i = 0;i < 7;i++) {
			for(int j = 0;j < 7;j++) {
				a[i][j] = arr[i][j];
			}
		}
Emmmm...
@RalfRafaelFrix super.init() would call parent's init()
@TBag yes it would
But that's not the point
@Ra
@萝莉w As I was going to St. Ives, I met a man with seven wives. Every wife had seven sacks, every sack had seven cats, every cat had seven kitts. Kitts, cats, sacks, wives, how many were going to St. Ives?
@萝莉w I've tried this before. Is there any other way? Like a one liner using stream() of the ArrayList
@TBag What do you mean?
07:02
When i call super() it calls parent's constructor and hence shouldn't it call Parent's init()? Like if i replace 'super()' with 'new Parent()' it would call Parent's init()
@RalfRafaelFrix
@萝莉w I know arraylist.stream().mapToInt(i -> i).toArray() does a conversion to int[] a 1D int array
@TBag No it only calls the Parent constructor
@RalfRafaelFrix yes it would call parent's constructor which in turn would call parent's init
correct?
if you have similar methods with the super class it will definitely be overridden in the subclass unless you explicitly state the method of the super class
using super.init() in Child for example
@Neil 2402?
@萝莉w Any ideas?
07:07
@萝莉w nope :P
try again
@RalfRafaelFrix just tell me whether the above statement (it would call parent's constructor which in turn would call parent's init) is correct or not
morn
morn
I can only think of a method that using loop...
@TBag it calls the "Child init()" instead of the "Parent init()" because the constructor in the "Parent" class just calls "init()". To call the "Parent init()" from the "Parent" class, the "Parent" class would need to explicitly call "this.init()" instead of just "init()". Similarly, to call the "Parent init()" from the "Child" class, the "Child" class would need to explicitly call "super.init()", not just "init()".
07:11
@TBag yes it called the parent constructor which call init() inside it
but again because of method overridin that init inside your Parent constructor was ignored
while(hans.equals("/cat) { return cat.gif }
@RalfRafaelFrix So why shouldn't super()? when it is actually doing the same thing i.e. calling the parent constructor
/8ball Do you understand ?
@Hans1984 As I see it, yes
good
07:14
because it is not the solution when you have similar methods inside your Parent and Child class
invoking super() doesn't help at all in method overriding
situations
@Neil Should the man also be counted?
@萝莉w I'll try googling more
@萝莉w so you're guessing 2403?
2401?
2401? no :)
I recommend you carefully reread the puzzle
07:19
@RalfRafaelFrix I searched with Baidu but I got the same result as mine, good luck...
@RalfRafaelFrix Thank you for the time but I am not satisfied with the answers. I will try to look it up more
@萝莉w Sure thing.
Seriously, don't people read the official Java tutorials?
@Neil 2800?
a lot of Java tutorials stink
@萝莉w nope, want another hint?
Rob
Rob
07:22
@Neil None? You never said the man and his wives were going
@JennaSloan I do.
@Rob This is the answer of the day, it actually makes sense.
@Neil I need hint.
@Neil at least one
@Rob definitely not none
at least one
Rob
Rob
Why definitely?
07:24
It isn't clear if the person I "met" was going with me to St. Ives, nor is it clear that the seven wives were with the man
> As I was going to St. Ives, ...
at least one, which means definitely not none
You never said he wife is going
Rob
Rob
Unless I is a wife, or a kitten, it can still be zero
Perhaps they're a wife. So it's either one or zero
> how many were going to St. Ives?
there is no condition other than the destination
Rob
Rob
> Kitts, cats, sacks, wives, how many were going to St. Ives
07:26
Me, so one
Rob
Rob
I take that to mean how many Kitts, cats, sacks, and wives are going
so I, independent of what it is, at least fits
Rob
Rob
But then again, it's a riddle with deliberately fuzzy meaning ;)
I think it's just a matter of phrasing, it tries to be a poem and ives ryhmed with wives
hmm...
I probably misread that, sorry
07:27
@TBag You're code should be like this -> pastebin.com/qUGXxaPH to call the super class init().
might be zero too then
so at least 0
(what a lame answer)
Rob
Rob
Definitely <>=0
@Niel change the question
<>= ?
what is that?
@TBag Sorry, but that's the way it goes in Java.
Rob
Rob
07:28
Less than, or greater than, or equal to ;)
well... it cant be less than 0
can it?
As I was going to St. Ives <- one?
Rob
Rob
I was just kidding, since you mentioned at least zero ;)
I like how you've derived that as a solution even though it's true for any value in the constructable numbers
Rob
Rob
But perhaps someone's coming from St Ives
07:29
@Unihedron hence "what a lame answer"
It's thinking outside the box, not that lame
Why the deuce do you give yourselves so much vexation,
And puzzle your brains with a long calculation
Of the number of cats, with their kittens and sacks,
Which went to St Ives, on the old women's backs,
As you seem to suppose? — Don't you see that the cunning
Old Querist went only? — The rest were all coming.
But grant the wives went too, — as sure's they were married,
Eight only could go, — for the rest were all carried.
@Unihedron @Rob Why are your names italic or blue?
I own this room. Rob works for stack overflow
Rob
Rob
Nope
07:30
I guess other room owners aren't around
Rob
Rob
Just a regular old moderator
@Neil you mean the answer is at least 8?
Worked for stack overflow, then ;)
@JennaSloan Thanks for your reply, I missed it earlier. Thanks for those extra double quotes too :)
Rob works for stack overflow ?
Rob
Rob
07:31
Nope, never worked there
@Wietlol That was just another interpretation according to the wiki
volunteer work :|
Did Mods earns from SO?
"As I was going to St Ives" is a traditional English-language nursery rhyme in the form of a riddle. Its Roud Folk Song Index number is 19772. == Lyrics == The most common modern version is: As I was going to St. Ives, I met a man with seven wives, Each wife had seven sacks, Each sack had seven cats, Each cat had seven kits: Kits, cats, sacks, and wives, How many were there going to St. Ives? == Origins == The following version is found in a manuscript (Harley MS 7316) dating from approximately 1730: As I went to St. Ives I met Nine Wives And every Wife had nine Sacs, And every Sac ha...
Rob
Rob
Unfortunately, there's no easy way to distinguish between employees and volunteer moderators, unless the employees mention it in their profile
07:31
well... the question doesnt state where the man and everything you met is going to
so, they might as well come from st ives
which mean none of the mentioned entities satisfy the condition
well there are multiple ambiguities here.. even if they were going to st. ives, is it just the man or the man and his wives?
if it is his wives, and everything else is being carried, do they count?
Do you count a cat as "going to St. Ives" if it is being carried in a sack?
I didn't read the poem but the initials of each line spells out "waowaobe" and wao wao be~ is exactly my reaction
whatever that means
are you going to america even tho you are carried by an airplane?
Rob
Rob
@Neil Sure. Would you say you're going to another country if you were carried by a car or plane?
Damn, beaten to the punch
hehe
07:34
If you guys like mind-breaking questions, you might find this interesting: mensa.org/workout
@Rob true, but I suppose the point is that I'm a willing passenger
still, the anser can handle the differences produced by the ambiguities
Coincidence, was just talking about iq tests this week!
"at least 0" is a perfectly fine answer
the cat isn't really going to St. Ives as much as its getting taken to St. Ives
07:34
and the only 100% correct one
and yeah, according to this: "Kits, cats, sacks, and wives,
How many were there going to St. Ives?" the narrator isn't included
if you're so stuck on semantics to write an entire poem on this, ... no offense but you have problems
so it could also be 0
I don't know who did this but this is one of those wikipedia articles that tell a weird story
which I think is a lame answer
because it doesnt outrule any other situation
there is no situation where the answer is invalid
07:35
I went to St. Ives and I meet a guy who counting on random cats
could be a nice question tho
well if it has a trick answer, then 0 is a perfectly legitimate answer
or, in other words, insufficient constraints
Program requirements: Write a window with 7 dialogs. Each dialog should have 7 input frames, each input frame should contain 7 input boxes. When can you get this done by?
5 minutes tops consider it done
07:37
@Neil I have one for you
> How many points are there on the earth where you could travel one mile south, then one mile east, then one mile north and end up in the same spot you started?
@Wietlol one I suppose, but that could vary depending on the tolerance of the measurement
south pole!
you are free to assume that the earth is a perfectly smooth sphere
and everything is walkable
I'm in hot water.
waowaobe
Rob
Rob
07:39
You can't walk south from the south pole ;)
But you're close..
1 is on the right track, but not the actual answer
oh I had a 50/50 guess and I blew it
@Rob I cant decide which way is north when I was in south pole
Rob
Rob
They all are
@萝莉w It's so hot that I don't have to be in hot water to feel like I'm melting.
07:40
@Rob you know this one already?
Rob
Rob
I haven't heard the constraint of 'how many', but yes, I know the answer to at least one position
@Unihedron As matter of fact, I mean I'm troubled.
Rob
Rob
Oh actually.
Yeah, just one
wouldn't it be like a little ring of points? so infinite?
how would that be possible?
07:42
I've heard that one before, it's the north pole
south pole wouldn't make sense
@Neil that is only a part of the answer
you are still missing another part
"one point"
Waowaobe
more than 1
north pole is a correct one, but there is another place where you can do this
is it like, a point on the inside of earth and not just on the surface
07:44
no, its definitely the surface
definitely one then
definitely more than one
Wouldn't it also depend on the definition of a "mile"?
yeah I've wondered that too, never heard of a mile in my life
no, the mile is meaningless
it could just as well be a kilometer
07:44
so it is
just a constant measurement of distance
I could say that 1 mile = 0 km
as long as it is less than half the circumference of the earth and all three directions are travelled with the same distance
your little riddle has broken this person
they're trying to define units with zero of anything now
and it must be larger than 0
Rob
Rob
07:46
@Wietlol The only way I can see this working is by cheating and being near a magnet that's messing with your compass
hmm...
you all gave up?
I remember reading about this but doesn't the magnetic fields change once in a while?
I could give you a hint...
I forgot the question
don't bother
07:46
> How many points are there on the earth where you could travel one kilometer south, then one kilometer east, then one kilometer north and end up in the same spot you started?
the first spot is the north pole
Which North Pole?
thé north pole
where every direction is south
the second spot is outside the wardrobe that leads to narnia
Don't you judge of my composure, 'cause I'm bothered everyday.
@Wietlol The magnetic North Pole or the rotational North Pole?
07:48
/cat
Jenna is working hard
Go jenna, avenge our brain cells that died
@JennaSloan No.
I'm not a person confirmed I guess ^
@JennaSloan iDunno, the north pole
07:50
So... probably the magnetic North Pole.
the one that would fit as a valid answer
so you all gave up?
Rob
Rob
It's probably near the south pole
There's only one answer
Rob
Rob
But other than that, not sure
the other one is indeed the south pole
07:53
waowaobe~
From south pole, to Russia. Just took three months.
if you walk south towards the south pole (but dont reach it) and then walk in circles east (just so that you make a multiple of full circles) and then walk back north, you reach the same spot
@Wietlol That's not how it works
that's a solution?
I think if you say that in real life you're risking being thrown out of the room lol
that is how it works
on the south pole, there are infinite number of spots where you would end up in the same location
07:56
so I was right
so, the answer is "infinite"
there's a little ring of points
WINNER: Uni
well... a ring, sure
but also infinite rings
Waowaobe
there are infinite rings of infinite locations where you could start from
07:57
I do believe the South Pole is larger than one kilometer or one mile.
(assuming measurements can be infinitely precise)
what a weird riddle. sounds more like they had a bad idea for a solution and used it to beg the question
@JennaSloan the south pole in this case is a location, which doesnt have a size
Also the magnetic poles move
the article I linked is probably able to explain it better than me
07:58
It's pretty awful
No, because that's like saying that the parabola crosses at two points, and both are imaginary
I clicked around the site a bit and they've been churning out articles non-stop, there's even one up yesterday
And it shows
If you're at the south pole, you cannot go more south by any traditional means
Rob
Rob
@Wietlol I think there's a finite number of rings. But infinite points on the rings
I'm going banana.
07:59
the coordinate system is literally designed in such a way that you cannot move south of the south pole and north of the north pole
Rob
Rob
The first ring would be exactly 1 mile north of the pole
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