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21:10
What's a pusher?
Hey guys
It's a service
@CaptainRedmuff Thank you very much. Its hexadecimary, right? I'll fix it in the next commit. :)
makes web communication easier
No idea how they got that domain
21:12
creative bargaining
Is the correct spelling hexidecimary or hexadecimary?
2nd, i think
thanks
I just realized we haven't actually met, matt
Nice to meet you lol
Haha
Nice to meet you, too.
21:16
oh fail its hexadecimal
.
Are you a professional dev?
Freelance
Not in iOS, though
iOS is kind of...a hobby.
I'm working on a eReader app
cool :)
What do you normally program for?
That app idea is the only reason I picked up Obj-C, actually
Web Developer, so HTML, JS, PHP, etc.
Sprinkling of C#, although I'm rusty in it now
You?
21:24
Objective-C for iOS and Mac OS X as a hobby.
I'm only thirteen, but I want to be a really good programmer some day.
That's when I started, I turned 18 recently.
12, actually
You're off to an excellent start!
I started two years ago programmed for real, but I've messed around with AppleScript for a while.
Thank you!
I really like it :)
Right now I'm working on this open-source clock that can randomly generate math expressions that equal the time. It can translate the time into hexadecimal and binary and stuff too.
I know, I read your SO profille
First thought is omg, no, why
But it's excellent experience
21:27
Its mostly for experience and fun
I say that only because I'd be bored and fustrated out of my mind writing it (now and younger), you obviously aren't - that's good.
Its been really hard because up until now I was only doing console programs, which is way more like task-orientated programming, not OOP
all the classes I used were basically just fancy C structs
Let me know when you come up with that billion dollar app idea
If I tell you, you'll be able to program it in like a sixteenth of the time and get all the money XD
Haha!
Ha...tell me
21:33
XD
Kidding
I'm serious about the sixteenth part. I know eventually I'll get faster, but remember that little clock project? Spent around eighty hours so far and still got some polish and debugging to do.
:P
Hey, I'm a newb in Obj-C too. Well, intermediate, I'd say. I've been working on this eReader 8 months now.
So I probably couldn't write it faster than you.
That said I'm nearing the final stages and have been learning as I go, so.
And I'm coding in a plugin system using JavaScriptCore
I think web languages are pretty different then software languages, but still, after you learn one language many things carry over and you learn much faster.
user457812
I think jazz will grow up into a proper web-dev hater.
user457812
21:38
As all programmers should be.
user457812
We must frown upon the silly people.
Wait... you've been using JS for iOS? How does that even work? I thought JS was just for flash games and other internet stuff that requires more interactivity.
lol
user457812
Flash is ActionScript.
user457812
Which is more like a weird offshoot of Javascript.
I'm actually like a total wannabe web developer (who doesn't really want to be one, but still)
21:39
It's diverged much more in AS3
you get classes and all that jazz
user457812
I think it's also statically typed.
My pastor set me up to do some easy maintanence projects on the church website.
@jazz14456 Exactly (in regards to it carrying over)
user457812
At any rate, it's full of bugs that Adobe doesn't want to fix because legacy software depends on the bugs existing.
@nil Don't spread your ignorance
21:40
you don't get classes in JS :O (the horror!)
No, you don't :(
user457812
That's not ignorance >_>
what does statically typed even mean?
user457812
And yes, you get classes in Javascript, it just happens to be prototype-based
You get these weird Frankestien things.
It's not the same, and it's not as easy.
user457812
21:41
In programming languages, a type system is a collection of rules that assign a property called a type to the various constructs—such as variables, expressions, functions or modules—a computer program is composed of. The main purpose of a type system is to reduce bugs in computer programs by defining interfaces between different parts of a computer program, and then checking that the parts have been connected in a consistent way. This checking can happen statically (at compile time), dynamically (at run time), or as a combination thereof. An example of a simple type system i...
Anyway, I'm not writing my app in JS, I'm making it so users can write plugins in JS that will run in my app.
so stuff like preprocessor statements are part of dynamic typing?
user457812
No.
21:42
oh
confused
user457812
The preprocessor is the preprocessor. Does what it says on the tin.
Uh, changes code at run time
which is what dynamic typing is, right?
Meh, its above my head right now
XD
user457812
Not necessarily.
I have a set amount of time each day to use the computer (remember when I told you guys about parental controls?), so I get by that by reading about programming (and now chatting here) at school for a while and programming at home.
I'm at school right now, so I got to bike home.
Be back in fifteen minutes or so if I don't die
user457812
I still find the parental controls thing weird.
21:45
Why lol
user457812
Because my parents never used anything like that and I'd never use anything like that if I had kids.
I find it incredibly annoying and frustrating, mainly the time limit thing and not having root control, but I kind of understand why my parents' think its a good idea.
user457812
There's just no good reason for them.
user457812
At any rate, I'm not your parents, so it's none of my business.
lol
see you later
:)
Thank you for ruthlessly crushing my ignorance.
21:48
"There's just no good reason for them." nil always says statements like those and never explains his reasoning
2
user457812
What on a computer do parents need to control to make sure their children don't access?
user457812
Let's consider what the parental controls on OS X offer. You can limit specific apps: why bother? Chances are all you need to do is require only app store apps that can be run. There's the simple finder option, which I still haven't figured out the point of.
user457812
Limiting access to websites? Well, you can use a whitelist, but then you block out the vast majority of the 'net, and that's not really very smart. There's a thing to limit access to only adult sites, but that's at Apple's discretion. The upside is you can both whitelist and blacklist stuff that way to get around Apple. Downside is you'll probably never know about what needs whitelisting.
user457812
There's a thing that only allows you to message specific people and so on, but that seems kind of pointless because, again, whitelisting.
user457812
Time limits? Silly. If someone has nothing else to do, the time limit just arbitrarily forces them to do nothing.
user457812
21:56
Then the other things you can limit are all mostly useless.
user457812
So, again, I see no good reason for them.
user457812
@Lukas You've got write access. Read the rules and acknowledge that you've read them when done, please. You have ten-ish minutes to do this.
Wait BRB,I'll reply to that after I come from class
user457812
It's chat, it's not going anywhere, so you've got up until the room shuts down to reply
22:40
That was a little longer then 15 minutes... wasn't it?
user457812
Dunno.
"If someone has nothing else to do, the time limit just arbitrarily forces them to do nothing." agree with that
Some days I feel compelled to use my computer time, when if the time limit wasn't there I probably wouldn't have used the computer at all because I know if I don't use it today, I won't be able to have more later.
I guess simple finder could be useful for really young users, but I think I'd rather just let them cultivate basic computer use skills on the normal thing.
22:56
Minor style question of the day: Do you typically put a space after the // before starting the actual comment, or no space?
<br>
I don't put a space because I'm lazy :P
I'll put a space when I'm trying to make a table out of comments or something
user457812
I put a space between the slashes and the text.
user457812
I think the important thing is to just be consistent.
user457812
Though I think most people put a space in for readability's sake.
The extra keystroke is too much of a pain for me. But yeah, consistency is important
23:05
good morning
its five pm here
and Xcode won't run
-.-
Its not even starting to run my program
gunna go try and see if it will do a "hello world" app
It does so its probably my app :P
BRB, going to restart
See you soon
I've just upgraded my work laptop to Mavericks
Pray for me that nothing will go wrong.
We get so many problems because our computer is a Hacintosh.
When my dad built this computer, he cheaper out on the graphics card, and didn't realize having a graphics card that wasn't very compatible.
So now we gotta buy a guard dog to make sure our computer doesn't get in to trouble.
user457812
O______o
O_o
why the face nil
user457812
23:13
A guard dog?
whatever gets the job done, nil
you should know that
user457812
If you have a dog that can use a computer, I think you've basically got a million bucks in TV advertising right there.
oh no
the dog is going to just watch the computer
and make sure
nothing goes astray
HAHAHAHAHA nil
user457812
That raises some serious questions about your computer.
user457812
23:15
Like on what astral plane it was created.
Hey it works and its a kind of a powerhouse sort of.
user457812
'Cause it definitely wasn't this one.
Less so then a Mac Pro more then other Mac desktops
I'd say Euler's?
user457812
I'm guessing Phyrexia.
Flatland is an astral plane, right?
user457812
23:16
.. May have just outed myself as something by saying that.
third dimension is too much.
I'd rather just have two ways.
its convient
convienctde
convenient
darn
Xcode still doesn't work
I buy this rumour: macrumors.com/2013/11/19/…
13" iPad, sounds legit.
I'd expect something more like an iPad with a keyboard.
I mean a physical keyboard.
user457812
Given that iOS already has very poor physical keyboard support, I wouldn't count on it
Style question: ++variable or variable++?
I like ++variable
user457812
23:20
Considering they do different things, depends on what you're doing.
they do different things?
O.o Don't they both mean variable = variable + 1?
user457812
x = i++ means x = i; i += 1. x = ++i means i += 1; x = i
Writing a gist
I always use variable++
But nil is right. They are different.
user457812
If used without storing the result, they're functionally equivalent and the compiler will usually optimize i++ into ++i, basically.
23:23
Oh
user457812
If storing the result, then it's important to know which one you're using.
I meant without storing the result
user457812
I always use ++i unless I need the current value and want to increment after getting it.
I always thought it was some weird unary operator that stores the result into its input
I didn't know you could store the result
/me not writing a gist anymore.
fun fact: -, +, and * are native operations in Intel x86, but / is not.
23:25
lol what do you use then?
user457812
Here's a fun question to consider if you aren't aware of it: what are the values of x and y in x = y = x + 1, assuming x is originally 1 and y is originally 3.
3
* reciprocal
wait
how can you do a = b = c
Intel x86 uses + and % to approximate /.
I thought you had to do one at a time
what does that mean
I'd say as a Cartesian data point (2, 2)
with (x + 1) evaluating to 2
and then y turning into 2
and then x turning into 2
Both me and Erinco starred that at the same time XD
x will be 2, y will be 4.
23:28
how
you just entered it in didn't you lol
No, C evaluates expressions from the left.
So it will evaluate x = y.
whattttttttt
Then evaluates y = x + 1
user457812
Also, another fun one: what's the value of x given x = (1, 2).
this is why when you have if (flag1 && flag2 && flag3), it will check the first bool value and short cut it if it's false.
user457812
23:30
@EnricoSusatyo That's incorrect, re: x = y = …
int x = 1;
int y = 3;
NSLog (@"%i", (x = y = x + 1));
Whattttt
it breaks
uh, why does that code break?
user457812
It stores x + 1 in y, then stores y in x.
it gives me a breakpoint at the first line
23:31
wtf nil are you using python?
and then says (lldb)
user457812
@EnricoSusatyo No, that's C.
why is that code breaking?
user457812
The answer is 2, by the way.
user457812
23:32
I don't know why your line is breaking, but I'm guessing it's something to do with NSLog.
the breakpoint happens at the first line O.o
I just tried int x = 1; by itself right now
it broke
????
Oh that happens a lot to my code. Its a glitch, but I know how to fix it
What do you mean it broke?
It says Thread 1: breakpoint something.1
with the green highlighter, and then sets a blue breakpoint where the code number is
user457812
Did you set a breakpoint?
with (lldb) in the console
nope
it sets the breakpoint
user457812
23:34
Well, if it says breakpoint, that means you set a breakpoint.
Err... I didn't
user457812
Otherwise it'd actually say something like sigsegv or what have you.
You probably have breakpoint on all exceptions enabled.
This happens a lot
user457812
Did you compile it to use lldb?
23:34
For code that shouldn't break
like super simple code, and stuff that I've already tried and works many times, but without making ANY changes, it just starts breaking on some line every time
its annoying
What's lldb?
user457812
Well you're running it in lldb.
how do I shut that off, and what is it?
little lefties debugger?
lol
user457812
user457812
23:37
I'm guessing Apple switched to LLDB by default.
Yeah nil, Apple switched to LLDB since last year.
I'm not against it. I like lldb better than gcc.
well it break's code
user457812
I still use gdb since I do all my debugging in a terminal.
or something
but its annoying lol
user457812
Specifically using cgdb
23:38
Why would you code in a terminal?
that seems like way more work and time
user457812
It's better if we don't get started on that topic.
But its interesting lol
user457812
It's a personal preference thing and depends on what you're familiar with.
oh
21
Q: Choose a destination with a supported architecture in order to run on this device

user1297301 my Xcode is Version 4.4.1 The project thoroughly before, but now I can't who can help me?

We have to remember that jazz thinks that MS-DOS is Microsoft Denial of Service.
user457812
23:39
Well, it basically was.
Found why I can't run Xcode
lol
HAHAHAHAHA
user457812
Does your hackintosh have a 32-bit CPU?
err.. I don't know my specs
When one runs on a hackintosh one needs to take a lot of precaution in their every day life.
Let me show you one hidden area in Apple Store, refurbished store: store.apple.com/us/browse/home/specialdeals/mac
23:41
I don't know much about hardware but it says in About This Mac
When I was still in school I check that page every single day.
2.8 GHz Intel Core i5
for processor
does that help?
user457812
I point everyone towards the refurb section since "refurb" usually means "returned after a week" and nothing damaged.
user457812
Plus the warranty's the same.
I'm saving for an iPod Touch, because its weird to try and develop when I don't actually own any iOS devices
user457812
23:42
Well, I'm assuming if it's relatively modern, it's not 32-bit.
Yeah, exactly. You get quite a lot of discount.
I'm getting my iPod Touch from refurbished
its relatively modern
user457812
I miss my student discount.
user457812
I got a ton off my retina MBP because of it.
I get a student discount?
23:43
But the problem with refurb store is that I can't customise it. I had to buy a Macbook Air with 8GB of RAM so I couldn't use the refurb store this year.
user457812
If you can prove you're a student, Apple will usually offer a discount.
Holy crap, it says I only have 4 GB of memory?
Is that hard drive or RAM
user457812
RAM.
I thought I had a TB
oh good
In 5 years time jazz will be an amazing programmer.
From today onwards we have to teach him the ways.
23:45
My code doesn't look too ugly actually
user457812
Oh, by the way, I forgot to explain why x = (1, 2) is 2.
user457812
Basically, the comma operator evaluates both sides of the operator and the result of the expression is the right-hand side.
user457812
I say evaluates but I guess executes is the better term since it's not interpreted.
lol what
user457812
And yes, I just said "comma operator."
23:46
so it just picks the second thing
user457812
It does both and returns the right-hand side.
so x = (a, b) always returns b?
user457812
Yes.
that seems futile
No one ever use that in C, nil...
user457812
23:46
Nobody does this. Ever.
Exactly
Just like that feature in Python where you can say def true = false.
that seems bad language/whatever that thing comes from design
user457812
@EnricoSusatyo for (x = 1, y = 2; …; ++x, ++y) ;
No one unless trolls are using it.
@nil Ah, that makes sense.
its used for job security
and making sure nobody else can read your code
XD
user457812
23:47
The comma operator is used a lot in for loops. It's very rarely used anywhere else unless you have a deathwish.
why would you use that?
user457812
Use what?
you could just remove the first operand and the operator
and BOOM, its the same thing
user457812
I don't follow.
@jazz14456 Imagine you are going through two arrays in one loop. You would use that.
user457812
23:49
Actually, no, you wouldn't
user457812
If the arrays were the same size, you'd just use one index. If the arrays were different sizes, you'd use separate loops.
so (a, b) is the same thing as b because the comma operator always returns the right operand
user457812
Yes. The exception is when a has side-effects.
side-effects?
user457812
And if a has side-effects and you're using the comma operator, you're basically a horrible person.
2
user457812
23:50
In computer science, a function or expression is said to have a side effect if, in addition to returning a value, it also modifies some state or has an observable interaction with calling functions of the outside world. For example, a function might modify a global or static variable, modify one of its arguments, raise an exception, write data to a display or file, read data, or call other side-effecting functions. In the presence of side effects, a program's behavior depends on history; that is, the order of evaluation matters. Understanding and debugging a function with side effects requi...
user457812
Before long, my messages will consume the entire list of star'd messages.
but they are so good
user457812
I'm going to start canceling most of them.
aww
you can do that???
hey
user457812
23:52
I will leave the judgmental and trivia ones.
I can only star 20 messages per chatroom per day
your wasting my stars lol
Who has Xcode open right ow?
someone gave help that doesn't make a whole lot of sense
user457812
> nil is being a jerk, you should remind him that he's being a jerk.
21
Q: Choose a destination with a supported architecture in order to run on this device

user1297301 my Xcode is Version 4.4.1 The project thoroughly before, but now I can't who can help me?

That doesn't make sense.
23:53
@nil It's not necessarily for arrays, can be for dictionaries too where you want to iterate through the keys.
It should be "If nil is being a jerk, then you should remind him that he's being a jerk."
user457812
That too.
Or "Nil is being a jerk. You should remind him that he's being a jerk."
user457812
I have a degree in English and wrote the rules. I win.
as it is its a run-on
lol then fix it
anyway
Who has Xcode open right now?
user457812
23:55
Run-ons are not incorrect, just hated by random pedagogical oddities.
really?
user457812
← has a degree in English, remember?
/me jaw drops
mmy.. my whole life is a lie
user457812
The silly elementary school rules you learn from people who don't have a degree in English go out the window in university.
In each target project > Build Settings > Packaging -> Product Name
from the answer
Where the heck is that path?
user457812
23:56
English is flexible. You can break the rules if you want, provided it's for a good reason.
English sucks
Lojban is the only thing that makes sense
anyways
where is that path?????
user457812
Next thing you know someone will tell me I can't end a sentence with a preposition.
user457812
Pfft, Lojban. I use Esperanto.
I believe you about the run-ons.
Where is the path?
user457812
Dunno. I don't use Xcode.
23:58
@Erinco do you know?
user457812
Enrico uses ed, he definitely doesn't know and is probably confused by all this 21st century business.
Found it
Booyah
Whats ed?
And why do you guys not use ed?

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