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00:00
@CodyGray frankly I'm always surprised when I see "emoji" and "dictionary" in the same sentence
Especially given the definition of dictionary: a book containing listings of words...
@Dharman Probably, yes. Check back in 2 days? Not sure I want to refund that bounty.
@CodyGray ok, I set a reminder
oooh that reminds me, I should check up on a flag
@Dharman Very cool. Can I just ping you any time I need a reminder about things? I tried Siri, but she just doesn't get me.
@CodyGray You can ping Makyen. I use their script.
00:10
can you remind Cody to ping Makyen about the script?
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@CodyGray just search it. Use the almighty copy paste :)) you'll catch up soon @Scratte
Oh. Heh. Here I was thinking of a paper dictionary. Kickin' it old skool, yo.
flip through the pages until you find that parenthesis
@M-- Searching it gives me epsilon. Not really an emoji :)
Imagine how much fun emojis would be if you had to type them out in TeX.
00:19
How much fun would TeX be if it had emojis
It does.
You just type in the character escapes.
00:30
@Makyen You told me at one point you had some experience with FPGA programming, right? Does it match with your knowledge and experience that less logic is required to implement an "equals" comparison than a "less-than" comparison? I've been told that by a sub-contractor. It strikes me as a bit dubious, but I'm having difficulty finding confirmation one way or the other on Google.
00:47
@CodyGray Someone got a chat ban earlier today for using the "middle finger" emoji
When a link to a another answer is used along with a quote from that answer, does it also needs to include a link to the user answering?
@CodyGray Yes, I've had some FPGA experience. It was, however, quite some time ago, although I do have some FPGA chips sitting within several feet of me. :-) Yes, equals is less logic than "less than". Equals is easy to implement. You just have to check that all the bits are the same in both things you are comparing. Determining that number is less than the other is more complex. It's not extremely complex, but it is more logic.
01:11
@Scratte When referencing/quoting another answer, a minimum of two things need to be included: (1) display name of the user who posted the original answer, and (2) a link back to the original answer. This is true regardless of where you're referencing it, whether a comment in your source code, on Twitter, another SO answer, ...
@CodyGray Hmm.. but display names can change.
@Makyen OK. Having them sitting within several feet of you isn't actually enough to provide a thorough understanding. My depth goes all the way through microprocessors, but then it hits a wall when it comes to FPGAs. On MCUs, equality and inequality are the same, because they're just implemented as subtractions. Either way, you're comparing all the bits. Thanks for the sanity check.
@Scratte Yes, that's not really your problem, though. You should use the one given at the time of citing. Same as with research papers or whatever else. Someone might change their name or even their whole identity, but you're not responsible for that.
@CodyGray Ok. Thanks. Just fixed one of my answers. I gave a link to the user too, so it'll go to the user even if they change the name.
@Scratte Yeah, it's fine to link the name back to the user page.
I tend to think that's unnecessarily noisy, since that link is already there when you provide a link to their answer.
@CodyGray I just put into a []() thing.
@CodyGray What if I don't quote anything from an answer, but I'm just using the same idea?
01:27
@Scratte Doesn't matter. From where did you get the idea? You need to give that person credit.
> Based on [Cody Gray's solution to a similar question](...), I have written the following code:
@CodyGray Will do.. in slow increments. I can't just edit stuff without bumping it.
Unfortunately I will not be using your username in any of the edits.
01:45
@CodyGray What about links to official documenation? Where are never names on those. Should "Oracle" or "Microsoft" be mentioned?
@Scratte If there's no author name, then giving the name of the resource is fine.
"According to the Oracle Knowledge Base..."
or "As shown on MSDN..."
Common sense here. This is the same thing that you surely did all throughout school, whenever you were citing resources.
Ooops. I think I just used alter sequence. That doesn't even name the documenation
I mean, I don't think anyone is going to crucify you for failing to use the official name of the documentation website.
I have plenty of times just linkified the name of the API back to the official documentation.
But if I'm going to quote from the official documentation, or copy a code example, then I will name the resource explicitly.
01:58
Heh. As a programmer, I read "TLS" as meaning "thread-local storage". But there's no version 1.3 of that, so I guess that cannot be what they're referring to.
@CodyGray Transport Layer Security. Replaced the ailing Secure Socket Layer. You're using TLS to read this
Funny thing is we still call it SSL in most cases
Amusingly, I am also using thread-local storage to read this. :-)
02:16
@CodyGray Now I've just linked to an entire post with lots of answers with reference to the entire post. That's a long list of names.
@Scratte Hmm?
@CodyGray like this one. I just deleted the answer. I can't really fill it up with all the names from the post.
02:47
@CodyGray np. True, having some FPGAs near me only indicates that I tend to keep random hardware, rather than dispose of them.
Of note is that while both functions can be implemented in 2 levels of logic gates, the A>B and A<B functions each have logic functions in the first level which require progressively more inputs. FPGAs, really any gate array, are an array of small function blocks, each with a strictly limited number of inputs per "gate". When mapping to FPGA or GA gate equivalents, implementing these additional inputs requires using additional gates and additional levels of logic to combine them.
Really only when you get to the level of a semi-custom, full custom, or perhaps standard cell, where you can have different different lower level interconnects for the transistors, or different transistor topologies, can you combine them into a smaller single logic function (for some types of logic functions).
For the equals function, it remains a first layer of two input XNOR (one for each bit) followed by an AND of all the XNOR outputs (the multi-input AND is of equivalent complexity to the second level of the > and < function). Thus, the equals function will remain at a lower level of complexity than > or < as you compare more bits.
How all of these will actually map to the cells available within the FPGA, or any GA, and thus the real difference in gates required, will depend on the capabilities of the FPGA's cells and on if you're optimizing for speed or consumed area.
Note: I don't have much experience with the site I linked. It was just the first one I came across which had decent images of 2- and 4-bit comparitors.
Unfortunately, their image of a 1-bit compartor isn't good for comparing the complexity between the functions, because it's optimized to implement all three functions, rather than showing each one individually. Thus, for the 1-bit comparitor the A=B function appears to be more complex than A>B and A<B, when in reality it's just that it's lower cost/complexity to implement A=B after both A>B and A<B, iff you must also have both A>B and A<B.
dbc
dbc
03:43
Online Portuguese=>English translation suggests Brigas cretinas e bizzaros entre 09 e 01 e números formigas is actually rude & abusive, though it's so garbled that maybe the translation is wrong?
04:30
@dbc I agree that it was R/A. The user's self answer on that question also appeared to be trolling, given the non-content of the question, although it wasn't offensive.
 
3 hours later…
07:20
I'm here for the technical trivia, I take the cv-pls as noise ...
This downvoted question was closed as unclear after its answer was accepted. Is this OK?
@karel yes, it's not even particularly unusual -- accepts are not a good indicator of anything, people accept the weirdest things for the weirdest reasons
Thnx. btw It just got edited a few seconds ago.
@karel it was unclear, I just accepted the pending edit that I think makes it clearer. Whether it is clear enough now to be open is left to reviewers
even if someone was able to guess what they mean and post an answer which solves precisely the problem they tried to ask about, it is unlikely to help future visitors because how could they find it if the problem statement is unclear
it's absolutely clearer but do we know if that's what the OP actually meant ...? /-:
 
2 hours later…
09:58
4
Q: Should tag [mantissa] "an application server built on Twisted and Axiom" be deleted?

smcimantissa generally means "the non-integer part of a floating-point number" However someone created a mantissa with the wiki Mantissa is an application server built on Twisted and Axiom. Back in 2012. Seems to have gone unnoticed till now. Should that tag be deleted?

12:12
Morning
13:56
crazy gut check here -- has anyone ever heard of a case where a desktop shortcut to, say, Website 1 would work but an <a href> URL on Website 2 pointing to that same Website 1 URL would not work?
the two URI strings are exactly the same between the shortcut and the link (there are no additional parameters or commands in the address box of the desktop shortcut)
@TylerH Is the same machine being used to try and access both links?
Yes
Same browser?
Sam
Sam
not work == 404?
voting to close, lacks debugging information
14:39
@Sam no, it is going to a federated login page for ADP
I can go to the page via the shortcut or via the link, both methods work for me
15:04
@TylerH could be that they check the referer header.
@rene hmm, possibly, but then the link should just need Referrer-Policy: no-referrer to work...
Can you run fiddler or wireshark to check what actually goes on the wire?
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@Nkosi OP edited after your cv-req. Is it still valid? chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/41570?m=48804037
15:31
@rene Yeah I'll have to try that after lunch
15:53
@M-- ?
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is it on topic?
no, it's POB and too broad
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Thanks
dbc
dbc
@Adriaan That question sufficient code in my opinion, it's just very poorly written. It could be closed as a duplicate of Why do we always prefer using parameters in SQL statements? and What's the best method to pass parameters to SQLCommand?,
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16:02
Do you loose reps if a post gets locked? (obviously, if you have answered or asked the post, I mean)
@M-- no
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(y)
@M-- Locks don't affect rep, but some types of lock can prevent future voting
you lose rep if a post is deleted. The exception is if the question has a score of 3 or higher and is at least 6 months old at the time of deletion (if both of those conditions are met, you retain the reputation)
@TylerH It's 60 days, not 6 months, IIRC.
16:03
@Makyen ah right
It should be 6 months, though IMO
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@TylerH just deleted? what if it became wiki?
you retain previously gained rep?
@M-- if it gets converted to a wiki then you retain rep you previously gained, yes
and wiki posts are still eligible for other things like badges
you just don't get rep
@TylerH There are various things in your browser, which may be a browser extension or on the page that could result in your browser actually requesting a URL different from what you are expecting it to request. There are sites that routinely use such techniques for tracking (e.g. Google, Slack, etc.)
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Thank you all
@Makyen It's our webpage that has the link
we don't do anything to it beyond target="_blank" after the href property
16:07
@dbc My problem with that is the language issues, and a third person removing the Portugese, and then answering ad engaging in conversation with the OP in their own language
@TylerH Well, that does limit what might be happening, at least what might be being done intentionally by the website owner. :-)
@Makyen tl;dr - we have a link to our federated AD sign-in page for ADP (my company's payroll/HRIS vendor) on our intranet homepage, and we also have group policy that checks for an ADP desktop shortcut (using the exact same URL as what's on our intranet homepage); if the shortcut doesn't exist, it adds it to the desktop.
Our helpdesk sent out an email that happens to mention "you have to click the desktop shortcut, not the URL on our intranet page"
And I'm trying to wrack my brain as to why that might be
dbc
dbc
What happens if a question is deleted, and an answer was previously awarded a bounty? Does the bounty rep go back to the account that awarded it, stay with the answerer even though regular rep for the answer is getting pulled back, or vanish entirely?
especially considering it works the same for me (both use the same target URL, and the URL that ultimately loads in the web browser when I land on the federated sign-in page are the same) no matter which way I use it...
@dbc IIRC bounties are non-refundable unless a moderator manually cancels the bounty. In your scenario it would stay with the answerer, I think
I don't know what takes precedence: the bounty system or the normal rep-retention-on-deletion system
either way it wouldn't go back to the bounty creator
@TylerH Are there any weird shortcut options in the file that gets added?
16:11
@Das_Geek Nope, just the URL
I checked for anything at the end
@TylerH what is your default browser?
@rene Firefox
@dbc The most recent information I've seen on that is this meta post. That post implies that the rep for the bounty award, from the answerer's perspective, would be treated the same as rep from upvotes/downvotes (i.e. lost if score <3 or post not visible for >= 60 days). It also implies that the rep will be refunded to the person who offered the bounty, if and only if the answerer does not retain the bounty rep.
However, I have a vague recollection that there are some corner-case issues which have been reported. OTOH, that may be just me remembering things from prior to the changes made at that time.
16:15
works the same in IE11 though
the https:// in the shortcut is given to whatever protocol handler is set. Sysadmins control both so they can be sure when you click the desktop shortcut that they start Edge (or IE6, what ever they set in the group policy). If they let you start from the intranet page, it can be any browser.
and Chrome
I guess it is more of a helpdesk thing then a technical reason
@rene I guess the reason then is they want people to make sure it starts in Chrome
Sounds reasonable
16:16
there are some parts of the ADP website that don't work in IE (naturally) so they want users to use Chrome
@TylerH Did you ask them why they said "you have to click the desktop shortcut, not the URL on our intranet page"?
@Makyen I asked my team first, haven't checked for responses yet
@TylerH if you open a command prompt and do start https://google.com which browser starts?
@rene FF for me, but I'm a developer so security groups and settings are much different for me than for typical employees
At least it already different from the default, so that is good
16:20
HJey @TylerH you wanna help me out with my question or just close it
@adam_0 what question is this?
@TylerH Presumably this one
Is this on-topic?
@S.S.Anne Not sure, but it definitely would be better on Programmers instead
er, "Software Engineering"
as it's more of a high-level design question that isn't asking an objectively-answerable question
@E_net4fixesyourmistakes Don't reply to SD. It registers it as a false positive.
@TylerH I flagged for a mod.
@S.S.Anne Is that a new change?
I didn't even know I could interact with SD.
Or do you mean only certain replies register it as fp
@E_net4fixesyourmistakes Nevermind. Apparently it was flagged as spam/RA and deleted. Just don't reply to SD anyway. You never know.
16:41
@S.S.Anne @E_net4fixesyourmistakes A user cannot give feedback to Smokey unless they have privileges, which requires a MetaSmoke account first. You can check if you are privileged by typing !!/amiprivileged. If you attempt to give feedback and you are not privileged, Smokey will complain. If you only comment and you aren't privileged, Smokey will just ignore you and not post a comment
@E_net4fixesyourmistakes @S.S.Anne Unless you have SD privileges and a metasmoke account, then SD should ignore anything which it doesn't identify as a command. If SD identifies it as a command, then if the command is unprivileged, SD will run the command. If it is a privileged command, then SD will tell you it doesn't think you have the privilege necessary to run the command.
If you have SD privileges and a metasmoke account, and you are making a reply to a report, a feedback shortcut command with unidentified commands, (and some other cases), then SD will create a comment stated as being from you on the MS post for that report.
@TylerH @S.S.Anne Simply replying to Smokey without a tp/fp/etc as the first part of your message will only add a comment. It won't send a fp feedback unless you say so
ninja'd ... again :-)
@Makyen Only half-ninja'd :D
OK. I saw them post and then the message disappeared. I guess I assumed too much.
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17:14
to be clear, I think it needs further clarification and adding more context/code; but wanted to check with you first before voting.
17:32
@M-- you are correct .... I will ask to eliminate my request. Thanks
@Makyen please remove this request
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I am actually not! Good thing I checked :D
1 message moved to SOCVR /dev/null, by request
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17:49
Squanchy
18:05
@sideshowbarker Though attribution is nice, probably best not to link to a user profile
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18:19
is the natty reporter userscript up and running?
@M-- Do you mean Advanced Flagging?
@S.S.Anne I can confirm it's often frustrating replying to SD
the bot is definitely not Turing-complete...
!!/blame
@Machavity It's Andras Deak's fault.
And there we go. It's written in Python
18:27
is it really?
It uses Python regex. I can't remember which parts use Python itself tho
18:46
@IslamElshobokshy That looks like it has enough details to me. And "general question" is not a close reason. It's very low to say "But the question as is will get closed." and then post it on SOCVR.
Additionally, "the code he shared works" is not a close reason. Instead, choose "No MCVE", which means "No minimal, reproducible example".
He shared no code, he's basically asking us to do the work for him, so it is a closable reason. You think it's low, that's your opinion :)
And yeah at this time of night I tend to write the first thing that comes to mind, tired after a long day of work
No idea why what I said offended you but okay lol
@M-- Oh. I used to use that when I first joined up and it worked
Just did a quick re-install and test, and it reported just fine
@IslamElshobokshy Nothing you said offended me. I'm just saying that "this question will be closed" and then requesting for it to be closed isn't proving a point.
Sure whatever you say bro :)
Guess what tho? It did get closed, so..
Have a great night anyway!
18:54
@IslamElshobokshy in my opinion "needs more focus"
would be the correct close reason
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@Das_Geek do I need privileges to report? And Advance flagging doesn't show up for me. I just installed it.
its the old "too broad"
I would've probably closed if the request was "needs more focus". Still, please use the standard close reasons in your request. Good night to you too!
@IslamElshobokshy No question types other than debugging, which require a MCVE/MRE, and homework, which "must include a summary of the work" they've done, require code. A question which is not of those two types should not be closed just because it contains no code. Including code may dramatically help make the question more focused or provide the details and clarity the question needs, but just because the OP is asking "how to" do something without providing code is not a reason to close.
4
@Makyen: How to differentiate between a homework question and a how-to-question of similar level?
18:57
practice
@M-- Hm, not that I know of. Advanced Flagging need some extra setup if you want it to hook into Smokey, but for Natty it should just go. Did you accidentally deny the userscript's requests? It has to make a few calls to chat
@derM That's a good question. To a large extent it's if the OP says it's homework. You can strongly suspect that something is homework if it's formulated like a homework question, but unless it's stated, you never really know for sure.
@derM Sometimes it's pretty obvious, especially from the person used. For instance: "You will create an array filled with random integers" instead of "How do I create an array of random integers?". Outside of that it's harder to say, as others have mentioned
@Makyen Some of the best questions on Stack Overflow are "how to" questions which contain no code. Usually, those are very specific questions with narrow focus on the one thing the OP wants to do. That type of question can have wide applicability and be quite useful to future visitors.
4
@CodyGray What did you mean by your edit message here?
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19:03
@Das_Geek nah. I just reinstalled it. No requests. I have these user scripts enabled:
Advanced Flagging, Autoflagging Information & More, AutoReviewComments, CV Request Archiver, find reviews, Flag Dialog Smokey Controls, Magic™Editor, Natty Reporter, Reflag Review, Review Queue Helper, Roomba Forecaster, SE Comment Link Helper, Show Timeline, Stack Exchange CV Request Generator, Stack Exchange Global Flag Summary, Stack Exchange Global Review Summary,
Stack Exchange: "View Vote totals" without 1000 rep, StackExchange: Close hammer warning, StackOverflow close votes shortcuts, Unclosed Request Review Script, FIRE: Feedback Instantly, Rapidly, Effortlessly
Is it possible that they have conflicts? o__O
@S.S.Anne It's a joke. You said you were looking for testing, but couldn't find it.
There were only like 2 sentences in your answer. It should have been pretty clear what I was referring to...
The reason I made the edit is your answer was flagged as "NAA". I disagree with that. Saying that you confirm a bug report is probably a valid answer on a Meta site, and yours went one step further in pointing out an additional side-effect of the same bug. I think that's valid. The purpose of the edit was to clarify that you were pointing out an additional side-effect of the same bug.
The purpose of the edit summary was to make a joke. If I don't have anything funny to say, I avoid filling in the edit summary.
@M-- Not sure. I've had weird conflicts before, and had to use the good ol' "disable-all-the-scripts-and-reenable-them-one-by-one" method to fix them
Ah. That's not what you edited so I was confused. Thanks for clarification.
@S.S.Anne random would have really confused you.
A prolific editor on Meta (before the split into MSE and MSO), who is also a moderator on SU, used to leave completely...random comments in the edit summary. I guess his user name was quite apt.
random edit summary?
ah.
Linking to user profiles D:
call the mods
Meh, I wouldn't want to bother them
They probably haven't even had time to read the entire transcript. Or respond to their other pings.
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@Das_Geek This worked :shrug
@NathanOliver Sorry, practice questions are off-topic on Stack Overflow...
:-)
19:20
:p
@M-- Works every time
19:38
@derM That’s the point: it doesn’t matter. That’s why we don’t have rules or tags surrounding “homework” questions. We just have quality standards. Your motivation for asking is irrelevant.
That's contradicting Makyens statement, isn't it?
@derM Not really. Makyen says "how-to" is not a reason to close. whether something is homework or not is irrelevant. If it doesn't fall into one for the off topic reasons, then its on topic, even if it is homework.
He says homwork needs code (resp. effort), How-To not necessarily.
@derM Link please? I'm not seeing that
19:44
I haven’t seen that claim, either. We don’t treat homework questions specially here on SO.
We do have guidance that we offer to askers, to help increase the odds that they ask a good question and that their question is well-received by our community.
:48818124
@derM I said that homework questions '"must include a summary of the work" they've done', which is what's stated on SO's on-topic page. That "summary of the work" commonly does include code, but it's not strictly required that it be code. We often consider that requirement for a summary of their work to mean that they must show some code, but that's not actually what is required.
Ah, guidance offered by Robert Harvey in late Jan 2014
19:51
I really dislike seeing all of the missing diamonds
I see Shog9 on internal revision histories or chat transcripts and it makes me very very sad.
It made me to practically give up
Naturally, I blame the Belgians
lol
!!/blame
19:56
@NathanOliver It's Scratte's fault.
there we go ;)
@CodyGray Add "thnx" and "thx" to the comment flag blacklist.
@S.S.Anne Are you reminding me of why I miss Shog9? Thanks for that.
!!/blame
@S.S.Anne It's FOX 9000's fault.
19:59
No, it's Stack Exchange's fault.
He was the one who maintained the blacklists and had edit privileges. We mods aren’t trusted with regexes.
Is anyone really trusted when it comes to regexes?
Which explains why I haven't been able to auto-remove a comment in the longest time. Those regexes will probably go stale soon with nobody to care for them.
@NathanOliver jwz?
@NathanOliver as long as you are parsing html you should be fine....
20:01
@S.S.Anne They don’t really require a lot of care. Updates were rare.
Well, it turned out that witches never really had magic incantations, they just had crazy good regexes to sort the world
3
There is actually a book series where people discover that the world is a computer program and wizzards and witches are just people that have figured it out and have written macros that alter the code to do what they want
Yeah, the Malleus Maleficarum was really just a how-to book for regular expressions.
@NathanOliver Preprocessor macros? Sounds like a true horror series.
My imagination has it more like writing shell scripts, not preprocessor directives.
How would shell scripts alter code at runtime?
20:06
@CodyGray the witchhunting book?
Witches must be using #define sourcery.
@CodyGray Aveda Kevadra is just a greedy regex that recurses endlessly until you die
Hmm. Had to Google Aveda Kevadra...
@TylerH The very same. More than just hunting strategies, though, it actually attempted to describe the details of spells and magic.
Sounds like they’re looking for an image map. Anyone remember those?
Yeah, those things were a pain. One of those HTML 4 conventions I don't miss
Now we have JavaScript? Has our lot really improved?
20:18
@Machavity Avada Kedavra* btw
@TylerH Yeah, I'm not a huge HP fan :P
@Machavity More of a Dell guy?
20:38
@CodyGray do you have a minute?
@NathanOliver Maybe even two
You have time? What, did you step down as mod?
Hm, maybe such things are too serious to joke about
Haha, no. I have no time to do anything. So at this point there’s no point trying to prioritize.
:) With this question Turns out the real reason was they were not compiling in release mode. I also gave them a suggestion for improving their algorithm. Should I edit the Q to say the compiled in debug, and then make my comments an answer, or do you know if there is a good dupe target, or should I leave it?
If there isn’t already a “why shouldn’t I benchmark my C++ code with optimizations disabled?” question, I’d be very surprised.
20:44
@CodyGray Maybe this for a very version specific reason?
Would be a good canonical, if not. Once every couple of weeks when I try to answer a question, I just end up leaving comments about that.
Alright, closed as a dupe.
21:02
@NathanOliver But your suggestion of using std::shuffle was (possibly) what really helped - and that isn't covered in the quoted dupe. As stated in OP's comment.
@AdrianMole While it helped the un-optimized code, turning on the optimizer made both even better, with the original code becoming faster than the python code
I probably wouldn't have thought of shuffle!
Must be all the card games I've played. I'm always thinking of fun ways to use shuffle.
21:22
anyone for some proofreading for a Meta post I just posted: meta.stackoverflow.com/q/394552/578411? Thanks.
@rene Nothing incorrect that I can see.
wow. That would be for the first time ...
@rene Is it multiple choice? "Looks OK" | "Requires Editing" | "Unsalvageable" ... I would click, "Looks OK."
Ha. If you want I can nitpick about phrasing and optimizing readability. But they really would be nitpicks
@Das_Geek rene has a nit infestation, pick away ;)
21:30
D:
@rene like the 6-8 hours, +1 :)
We have to see if that planning is met ...
yeah, 6-8 hours... but starting when?
He is in the GMT-4 or so.
22:32
Does the "You have already edited 10 of your own posts today (not including very recent posts). Further edits are not allowed until tomorrow." ever increase above 10? Or is that a hard limit for everyone?
22:45
@rene I'll give it a go after work... :-)
Okay.
@Scratte I've never hit that limit in my life. So... I'm guessing once you get full edit privileges, that message goes away.
@CodyGray When you say full edit privileges do you mean mod privileges?
@CodyGray Ok, thanks :) It also says "Please contact a moderator if you require assistance." :D
It's going to be tough finding a moderator around here.
22:47
@NathanOliver Yeah, sorry I suddenly ducked out there. I was, unfortunately, all too serious when I said that I had two whole minutes to spare. :-) I do think that "why is my C++ code running slowly [when I'm in debug mode]?" is a question that gets asked very frequently, and I think it would make sense to have a canonical Q&A about that, if one doesn't already exist. If it were me, I'd start by checking Peter Cordes's profile for answers he's posted to look for candidates.
@Dharman That's what I thought, so I just decided to wait it out.
I give up. I don't know how the chat API works. I logged in, but I can't post anything. I keep getting 500 no matter what.
@Dharman Don't give up.. cheat instead. Do you have access to code from any of the other bots?
I tried checking how they do it, but I don't see any noticeable difference.
Maybe tomorrow I will try to do it in JavaScript to see if it makes any difference
M--
M--
23:16
Not that I am accusing @sideshowbarker, but I think it's best if this gets binned. chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/41570?m=48817660 @rene
@M-- yeah I agree; let’s bin it please
1 message moved to SOCVR /dev/null, by request
23:39
@Dharman No... I mean full edit privileges. Mod privileges are something different...
@Scratte Hmm, really? That's kind of a weird message. Where do they expect you to find a moderator? And raising a flag saying, "I tried to edit but I can't" is...not going to go well for you.
@CodyGray That's funny :) I didn't think it would. But that's not to say that other low-rep users know that.
I would expect to get the flag declined though. If that's what you mean with "not going to go well"
@CertainPerformance: please consider adding a language tag with your cv-pls request, here , especially when requesting closure of duplicates. This makes it easier for the right experts in that language to be able to review your request.
Didn't realize that part was added by a userscript
23:57
@CertainPerformance The USSR script does add it for us, but not everyone in this room uses this script.

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