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16:00
I mean, I still think piano is easier even though I hate the thing :V
16:16
@tripleee should we typo close this as it won't roomba (nor will it with a simple close) stackoverflow.com/q/40238161
@Drew nope - that's not a typo - that's scoping issues
back to clipboard testing
cv3 worst net votes with answers 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 , 5 , 6 , 7 , 8
@TGMCians I've noticed you've started reviewing! I'll update your session record.
hmmm
thanks you take care of me a lot! :p
16:32
best question award there ^^
I did
:D
i edited so that its hurts the eye less and unless it is deleted
> i was not able to understand what to do
crap
lol yeah
delete-pls
hmm
I want to save my delete vote, Does not closed question with no answer with downvote automatically deletes now after x days ?
calls @rene ^
16:36
@TGMCians 9 days
ohh yeah roomba
yup
I used to get updated with these earlier, so remember a little bit
trying to get it again
> There are no items for you to review, matching the filter "off-topic, unclear what you're asking, too broad, primarily opinion-based; [d3.js] [android-layout] [android-fragments]"
I think we have or someone in here has a script that will let you know the roomba status of a post. goes and looks
nice will be helpful NO
@rene do we still work on particular tags as first ? or anyone
16:39
We are not burning anything so the top 3 are
@Closey next 3 tags
Refreshing the tag listing. Please wait...
@NathanOliver The next 3 tags are: 46, 36, 30
thanks @NathanOliver
as always android is there
we had same kinda
earlier
16:39
the crap tag
hahaha
crap things
yup
people asks what machine i should buy for android development
:D
lol people ask to make a complete app also
like hell that is gonna work
i suggest buy a machine which is being used at NASA or ISRA etc
:D
anways, things looks good at least better now
we have @SmokeDetector @Closey other bots here
16:41
i have stopped answering because of this crap only
nope not better still quality is crap
these bots are smart now
I cannot find the user script.
@ColdFire same here
i used to answer a lot
now going very slow
out of every 10 questions 6-7 are to be closed
16:43
1 is almost deletable
rest should have some downvote
rest 2 is either too specific
or not answerable
16:44
there is no helping android tag
your cv will run out but crap will not
@ColdFire It's a popular tag, posted in mostly by people whose English isn't their first (or second) language, who don't bother reading how to ask because it's too difficult for them (I'm not sarcastic)
yeah doesnt matter its crap
if i have spend 2 hours just closing crap and then to find 1 question which can be answered
and maybe user not everytime accept it also
not worth it
IMO
I'm not arguing.
It's a major problem
As major if not more major than and
anything wrong with reviews cron.
no audit till
yeah that is why most people have stopped answering
16:48
yesterday zero audit
in android room also most people has stopped
SO started to believe on me such :D
thanks shog
:p
and in all room most people have stopped
java audit passed
@TGMCians You've reviewed 40 posts today (of which 1 was an audit), thanks! The time between your first and last review today was 24 minutes and 19 seconds, averaging to a review every 36 seconds.
16:51
hmmm
smokey should have included language detection
smokey should post cat gif also on command
@Sam ^
feature-request
:)
post a issue on github @TGMCians
16:53
@TGMCians Come to SoBotics chat.stackoverflow.com/rooms/111347/sobotics . Sam has a better bot there
ahh ok
Probably
hey @JanDvorak !
whats up
user4639281
@TGMCians We tried that with foxes, it didn't work too well
how are things
16:54
caprica has that command
user4639281
Oct 31 '15 at 20:39, by Tiny Giant
@Closey who commands face fox help panic!!!?
user4639281
Yes, like that
@QPaysTaxes calloc zeros the memory while malloc does not.
@QPaysTaxes - After looking at your question, I am having deja vu and amnesia at the same time. I have a feeling that I've forgotten the answer to that question before
Can be. it has to write 0 to all the bytes you just allocated so the more bytes the more time that takes.
16:56
@TGMCians wow your self answered got you so much rep
yup
haha
@TheLostMind because you have lost your mind :P
wow, that got to -11 before he removed it
Impressive. I don't think I've seen a lower score
i have seen -15
Your missing the good ones then ;)
16:58
and -20 ones
19 views and 11 downvotes
The lowest I've seen on Meta is -310
@QPaysTaxes Typically use malloc if you are going to fill the space as why do 2 writes. Use calloc if you need the data zero initialized before you use it.
wow i can delete answers also now
@Machavity there's one of Jeff answers
17:02
got privilege
it became a meme
@Machavity wow
@QPaysTaxes If calloc and malloc cannot allocate enough memory then they return NULL. If the allocation succeeds then calloc will not go past the end of the array when zeroing.
jeff had -216 once
@kayess daily close vote limit reached :(
17:08
@TGMCians Good job
haha thanks man!
:)
@ColdFire do you code in android only ?
@QPaysTaxes Oh. calloc takes a size_t which is a unsigned integer type. overflowing that is well defined and what it does is wraps back around. So if you add 1 to the max size_t value then you get 0, if you instead add 2 you get 1, and so on.
yes unfortunately @TGMCians
hmm ok
and java
17:12
got a chance to see react native ?
nope
currently only native
anyone here ?
no hybrids :(
no android dev here
except you and me
hmm let me see irc
looks like that
you are working in react native?
17:14
just started
ohh is it good?
this is going to be much useful for mobile apps development
you are TL so why are you coding?
hahhaa
I love coding
nothing else
i mean company generally doesnt ask TL to code
17:15
yes I don't
I do at home
just for my interest
well at home you can do anything
take care of team of 12 tech guys
just like me
i dont want to code for office only personal stuff
@QPaysTaxes No it is not checked. The overflow happens before the value is ever passed to calloc.
The spice must overflow.
17:25
Oh, silly me. I was think you were doing something else
I would not think it would be checked and you would get 16 instead of 2^38. let me check my C standard
^ A C++ programmer always has a copy of the standard in their pocket, just in case.
tuna another NPE dup^^
Crossing the street in a certain manner migth invoke undefined behaviour.
lol the standards
undefined behaviour that sounds like java
The standard has nothing to say about it. My gut says you would have the same behavior as doing a malloc and a memset so no checking and the array you get will not be the right size.
generally you do not get safety checks in C and C++ as that is overhead. If you want the overhead then write a function to do it for you.
17:30
Read: by default, please shoot yourself in the foot. If you don't want to (but why wouldn't you want to?), just write your own function.
@Tunaki EXACTLY. SOMEONE UNDERSTANDS LOW LEVEL PROGRAMING :)
@Tunaki See, that's what makes PHP awesome. We have no standards. Nothing to violate :P
@Machavity hehe
Not as entertaining as the answer about the library watching him.
Why the hell wouldn't you want to shoot yourself in the foot?
17:34
Insurance premiums going up.
@MadaraUchiha Hey, my philosophy is to shoot first
Why would one want to shoot themselves into their foot if you can blow your whole leg off with c++?
:)
@QPaysTaxes It should be, though there's no guarantee. It's implementation defined.
AFAIK it only returns NULL on an error. I have never seen anyone consult errono after a failed malloc.
@QPaysTaxes No guarantees as mentioned.
Looks like UNIX requires it to be set so I would not be surprised if that was a POSIX requirement too.
No not C itself.
C only requires it to return NULL
C-standard 7.5p3states "The value of errno may be set ...". There is no guarantee it is used at all.
Do you really need the error reason?
lol
@QPaysTaxes: If malloc & friends return a null pointer (NULL is a macro with a _null pointer constant, which can be a different value actually), there is no use in further error checking. Just take it as allocation failure.
Problem is "optimistic/opertunistic allocation". malloc may even succeed without actually allocating memory (RAM resp. swap). On modern OS, the pages will be allocated on access only. If at that time there are no pages available, the access fails, although malloc succeeded. So, basically: check for a null pointer after malloc, but be prepared to fail lateron. If that is not suitable, you have to access the object (whcih can be harder than it sounds, because of compiler optimisations).
:-) - not necessarily. calloc might use an OS feature to zero-out the pages on first access. So you end up the same as malloc actually.
(I know why I prefer bare-metal embedded and my one memory allocation mechanisms:-)
Have fun
17:51
Just test for null pointer, close your eyes and drive. You might catch the signals lateron.
wow so much issues for c and c++ dev
@ColdFire: Well, we C and C++ experts are not just good looking ... :-)
Shit happens ...
might as well stick to java only
atleast we dont have to deal with calloc and malloc
17:52
Is there a meta post about the new changes to the display on the deleted answers (from review)?
@ColdFire: In Java you are busted at that level, in C (and C++), you can do something. It is just not worth the extra effort most times.
@ColdFire A real fun thing to try and do is zero out a object after you are done with it. Optimizers are so good they see you will never use it again and just get rid of the code on you.
@BhargavRao What changed?
@NathanOliver That's where volatile comes into the game ...
@Olaf even that doesn't work
@Olaf which level?
17:53
The ordering of the users there is based on their UserIds and not on the order that they reviewed.
Hmm. I haven't seen one.
@ColdFire Abstraction level. You just don't have full control to these lower levels with pure Java (same for e.g. Python and other HLOOPL)
@Olaf You don't have any control over it. You're not supposed to have control over it.
@Tunaki: To me "not full control" includes "no control at all". I wasn't exactly sure about Java, my knowledge about configuration options for that language is close to zero (approaching from -INF actually :-)
18:00
So Java does garbage collection?
lol mach
Serious question actually. I've never done anything with Java. I learned vanilla C in college (where we had to call malloc) and haven't done much with a core language
@Machavity They really should recycle instead. Got to be green these days
Oh. seriously. Yes they use GC
@Machavity yes
@Machavity Well, it does have GC.
18:03
concurrent and that advance shit stuff
In PHP, you dereference everything and GC removes it from memory
In Java, GC removes it from memory
You just don't need to worry about itâ„¢
magic
18:04
But if I'd use a language other than C (speed and full control) and C++ (comfort and speed), it was Python (comfort and abstraction, including full OOP in various ways) actually.
well i prefer java to c and c++ i guess
sinner ;)
well dealing with malloc , calloc vs NPE
wait i should prefer malloc, calloc
GC is very smart. 99% of the time, you really don't need to worry about it. And there are great language constructs to help GC as well.
18:07
@ColdFire: Java is a chimera. Not suitable for bare-metal embedded, where C (C++ for larger MCUs/SoCs) is the languge of choice. On the PC, where speed does not matter, Python is far better as it provides higher abstraction than C++/Java/C#/etc.
And the code is better comprehensible, even for non-Python programmers.
@BhargavRao Yep
yes that is NAA
it doesn't actually imply that using the latest version will solve the issue
@BhargavRao yes
@Machavity That question and both "answers" are bad.
@Olaf just CVing the Q @BhargavRao was talking about
18:10
@Olaf Just another NATO post.
@Olaf well java runs on VM so its pretty useful IMO
@Machavity What I did.
@ColdFire: VMs are overestimated. Python also uses a bytecode-interpreter. You can very well provide a compiled version (watch out for the .pyc file).
Once you get deeper into OOP, you really appreaciate function objects, meta-classes, etc.
meta-classes?
@Tunaki Classes to create classes. In Python, everything is an object, including classes.
Well, in Java too
18:14
^
Have a look at the Enum classes, that's a really nice example of what you can do with Python.
Well, in Java too :)
@Tunaki: So functions are also objects?
Since Java 8, yes.
More precisely. You can create lambda function since Java 8, but classes and methods of classes are also objects since 1.0.
18:17
Well, as I wrotre, I'm not into Java, so I'm not aware about all (new) features, just the basics. Anyway, you can hardly add members to an object, use template-based OOP instead of inheritance, etc. Those are closely related to Python's duck-typing approach.
@Tunaki eh?
I'm not talking about lambdas, but any function (methods are just bound functions in Python).
how are method objectS?
Method method = String.class.getMethod("charAt", int.class);
System.out.println(method.invoke("plop", 2)); // prints 'o'
Hmm, does that require some special measure to make a method a true object?
So they are no objects of some class by default?
18:21
@Tunaki but normal methods are not objects that is just reflection
In Python every function is an object. No special measures required.
I feel like we will devolve into the simple findings that everything is an object, doesn't matter how abstract it is...
Yes @Braiam, I think you're an object.
@NisseEngström Thank you in advanced
new Braiam(). There, your clone.
18:28
@Tunaki I think you're a clone now (a clone now?)
@Braiam: Well, that is the basis for higher abstraction, including meta-programming. I still have to completely comprehend all implications, but from my experience, every time I need a specific feature in my Python code, I find someone already thought about it and provides an easy way to implement. E.g. dynamically adding methods to an object (but not its class) from a config-file included at run-time.
Better be a clone than a clown.
@Olaf That sounds brittle.
(hard to track down bugs)
@Tunaki: It is very useful e.g. for a build-system with CASE features and a lot of other stuff. I didn't say I'd allow this for code run by unreliable ppl. Of couse you have to write your code to evaluate external files at run-time, so the programmer has full control as he should.
Yet all audits state typical Python code has not more flaws/errors than other language's code. But most ppl coming from statically typed languages have problems with dynamic typing. Don't forget: Python also allows deeper introspection, etc. than other languages due to these (and other) features.
But then, I'd not use Python for bare-metal, even iff the performance would suffice.
is static typing a prerequisite for oo?
not k
18:37
I N'd.
@cybermonkey You can have 3 20kers friend to do something about it. You would need 2 more.
@cybermonkey Where I come from we flag those as NAA. SO might deal with this differently though.
I just noticed that the code there actually starts the mail client on the server, lol.
@Braiam apparently not. But dynamic typing provides more flexibility.
18:44
I guess the 20kers friend are sleeping though.
3k. It only took me 2 years.
@Shadow delete candidates 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 , 5
@ArtOfCode congrats o/
You can join the CV reviewer club now :p
@ArtOfCode it took me 4-5 years
@Tunaki point, how do I do that

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