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06:00 - 17:0017:00 - 00:00

06:44
is it safe to assign a type of time_t directly into a long int ?
06:56
@KristianMedK it should fit.... :}
great, thanks
@KristianMedK For what purpose?
07:12
I'm making changes to queue handling in my asterisk installation, and need a number representation of a time_t variable
and i'm quite the newbie in c
I'm not sure what that means, but just so you know- the standard doesn't mandate what time_t would be
So what's your definition of 'safe'? :)
i wanted to know if i had to cast it
Okay then
there was an answer about static cast, but i got an undefined error, and this doesn't crash right now
but being very new to c i wanted to check if more experienced people knew something i had to look for on the spot
 
3 hours later…
AAB
AAB
10:00
helloc
helloc
anyone? producing union and intersections of two arrays without brute-force approach if the two arrays are not sorted already?
helloc @AAB & @Mahesha999
Morning guys
@Mahesha999 Could you elaborate?
@Mahesha999 do you mean like creating an array of common elements in 2 other arrays ?
@DrorK. Morning @DrorK.
10:20
@Apoorv yeah
A = {3,6,2} B = {7,2,8,9} , then A U B = {3, 6, 2, 7, 8, 9} Normal set union operation, just want to know if there are any non-bruteforce solutio
@Mahesha999 i don't know of any solution other than iterating over all of the elements
@Mahesha999 there is -- you can use hashing to make sure there are no dupes in the set
@Apoorv yess...iterating over all and then comparing is sort of bruteforce
10:23
however this way, the order of the elements won't be fixed
@PeterVaro but then those A and B must have used hashing to put elements in them
??
What if we accept A and B from user, then I dont think hashing will work?
how big are the arrays, we are talking about?
@Mahesha999 you have to build the array itself -- you can build the hashed-set almost the same amount of time
ohh u mean accept elements from user one by on and then hash them into the array?
10:27
not necessarely one-by-one, maybe delimited with spaces or commas
my concern is if we want to write function union(arr1[],arr2[]) and make it as efficient as possible
but still: how big arrays are we talking about?
no specific size, my concern is specifically to reduce the time required
not actual implementational purpose but academic purpose, learning algorithms
so just was guessing...
@Mahesha999 okay, but if you want "live-input" from the user
he actually won't type in 100000 and another 100000 number for two arrays, right?
I want this: union(arr1[], arr2[])
10:30
so it will be 1k and another 1k or something
I mean want to write this, size need not be same
two arrays might be of different sizes also input method is not concerned, I just want to know what could most efficient way to find unions
okay, I understand -- then hashing is your best bet
helloc @haris;
@PeterVaro helloc
@PeterVaro heard of binary search tree implementation
?
@Mahesha999 that could also work, but hashing is way lighter in a situation like this
@Mahesha999 you may be interested in this:
helloc @tristan;
10:42
@PeterVaro thanks for that site
user559633
helloc @PeterVaro
@Mahesha999 it helped me a lot too ;)
10:55
@PeterVaro Heya, just me- or the color-indication is not very consistent?
The B-Tree one says:
An average search of: O(log(n)) ... is good.
Oh, my bad, I failed to notice the different columns
I thought it said 'good' for average, while being only 'fair' for worst
@DrorK. ;)
@Mahesha999 are you using python as well?
because if you do, you should take a look at CPython's source => it has a quite nice set implementation
AAB
AAB
11:10
helloc
helloc @AAB;
helloc @AAB;
AAB
AAB
:)
how's life @AAB?
I'm trying to come up with a new syntax for my config files, try to visualize directives for entities/packages/objects that have dependencies. So far I have something similar to a shell syntax:
entity-name dep1 dep2
:label <<block
(...block...)
block;
... so when this config file is being processed, it would first call "dep1", then call "dep2", then finally- call "entity-name"
The labels are being used as tags, so I can globally decide if I want to 'enable' or 'disable' all relevant tags
11:27
@DrorK. may I ask, why to invent a new syntax/templating/markup system?
we already have INI, JSON, YAML -- just to name a few
and they all can do this notation
@PeterVaro Because I like my own!
but why reinvent the wheel?
you can spend you precious time building things which are not already implemented
Everything I do has already been implemented
you can focus on things which are matters -- by redundantly implementing something that is already working
Most probably much better than I could ever do
11:29
you loose a lot of time and energy -- for almost nothing
@DrorK. well, if it is for academic purposes => I'll understand that one
I'm not sure what you consider to be 'academic', I do it because I like to do things my own way
you have to parse and tokenise things, and use them somehow -- that's a nice task, I'm sure
I don't have a consideration such as "already been implemented"... by that logic there's no justification for my very existence :)
@DrorK. for learning how things are working
@DrorK. sure there is -- you can collect the best implementations, and use them as no one else before ;)
I just surprised how many things are not implemented
What's not implemented?!
11:32
but on the other hand, how many things has more than 10 implementations
which are almost identical
there are so many things to do
Like what?
@DrorK. almost everything
@Apoorv Go ahead, specify something useful
network/graphic/sound libraries
web browsers/text editors
terminals
Web browsers were not implemented?
Text editors were not implemented?
11:35
@DrorK. one sec on the phone
@DrorK. i was talking about stuff that has many implementations
@Apoorv Everything has already been implemented, if that would be a criteria for my doings... there wouldn't be a justification to do anything
@DrorK. okay back
@DrorK. and yet... another place for bugs... :(
so, what is not already implemented?
11:37
@PeterVaro Go ahead :)
well, there are several services, which are only exists in browsers, and could be used in a desklet/desktop app
let's talk about FOSS OSs
What kind of services?
@DrorK. well, there many things that need to be implemented (not necessarily writing code) like a good tutorial on C :P
most of the OSs (even BSD or GNU/Linux) are using the same X server/ windowing system
@Apoorv You wouldn't want the blind-leading-the-blind scenario :)
11:38
:P
and the lack of features of these systems' functionalities are amazing
let me tell you one example:
you want to set up an auto-hiding scroll bar in XFCE -- you can't
@PeterVaro On Linux based I don't even have a monitor, so it's irrelevant to me
how easy that task is... and you still can't do that.
@DrorK. okay, we were talking about SCons earlier
@PeterVaro not forgetting there are no good window borders
SCons is trying to move on to Python 3 -- for at least half a year now -- still no progress
@Apoorv the whole FOSS DE world is fudged up
11:41
@PeterVaro As far as I know SCons is already exists, so it wouldn't make sense "moving" something that is already exists?
so you can help developing a new and better building system => all you have to do is help porting it to Py3
the same for Kivy (a C/Python based ui-toolkit) it also lacks of working Py3 port
@DrorK. it doesn't exist with Python 3 support
It exists for PHP5?
everyone wants to use it, it is their own goal to make it
@DrorK. but the SCons team don't want to implement it in PHP
they have their own milestones
and goals and you can help them achieve that
So it's a good thing they invest their own time, and not mine :)
Heh
okay, another idea: Sublime Text editor lacks on good JavaScript syntax highlighter -- I'm writing one now, from scratch, it will take me at least 1-2 months to make it fully functional and feature rich
and ST is here for a few years now
JS is one of the most popular languages out there
and still misses an updated, clean and consistent highlighter
and I can go on and on
11:45
@PeterVaro Why invest time for products that are not free? (it's commercial, no?)
once you start using these programs you realise there are more things to do than things already done
that is the truth about the FOSS world
@DrorK. it looks like that it will be open in the near future
"open" means what? ... it's going to be free?
because the guy who is behind it, can't make as fast progress as the community wants it
@DrorK. free as gratis? free as libre?
Free as everything, free of charge, free to change, free to read, etc
I don't know. Either way -- still has no valid GUI competitor
widely used, supported, modern, truly cross-platform, beautiful, has large community, etc.
that's why I support them
BUT @DrorK. if you wish, you can support Atom or Brackets too
those are open source and free (most of their parts)
or the new builder for gnome
I can go on and on -- there so many things out there, the projects' issue lists are full
bugs are everywhere, new needs everywhere/feature requests everywhere
11:49
These are all fine reasons, but the fact is, you've chosen to support a commercial and closed product. I think that my decision to "reinvent" the wheel for things that I care for, is not second to supporting commercial products
that's why I said: don't reimplement things which are already working => do things which are not.
btw: you need to learn how to use others' codebase, external APIs, etc.
(what we talked earlier)
So far I have very little experience/need for third-parties, so there's no much incentive for me to bother with it
@DrorK. I just said an example -- although my produced tmLanguage file can be used in Ace Editor (Open Source Web-based editor)
in TextMate, in Sublime and in Atom as well
and it is (as always) released under GPL
so I'm not supporting one thing, I'm supporting a lot
I dunno, vim seems to be sufficient, all the other editors are "reinventing" the wheel, over and over and over, and people should stop wasting their time on those, and do new things! :)
vim and emacs are great -- they are, if you don't want to use a GUI texteditor
they both has GUI ports.. but those are terrible
if you want a nice-looking, super-fast, feature text editor -- than you are in trouble
you need alternatives -- and that's where ST comes in for example
but sure, I would be more happy about ST if it were FOSS
I understand and accept that -- but still, I was just brought that in as an example
among other examples
just to show you: there are plenty of features needs to be implemented
and we need good developers to do that
11:57
Personally I think there are too many alternatives, but hey- if people decide it's interesting enough for them to invest their time in such a product- that's the right decision. There's no such thing as a "bad decision"
instead of doing something which has already been done a hundred times before -- way better
@PeterVaro couldn't agree more... :( gVim just sucks. Hard.
anyway @DrorK., it is your free time, your energy, do whatever you want with it
all I'm saying, is that if there is one thing in life I've learned from programming
is that I have to stop reinvent the wheel, and stand upon others' shoulders and use what already has implemented and adopted widely -- and that's not a weakness, but a strength
That's exactly my point. People don't invest their time with "assignments" that are "required"... but with assignments they wish to take on! It's a matter of passion, not a matter of essence
@PeterVaro Do you know the sexiest joke... it goes something like this:
@PeterVaro A husband is being asked, who's making the decisions in his marriage... him or his wife
He says that they're sharing. She takes care for the general issues, and he takes care for the misc issues...
But I say which is which.
(sorry for the bad translation)
Sexist*
I'm not sure if I get it :/
oh....
now I get it.. ;) you dirty mind..
12:04
@PeterVaro The husband tells his wife which things she's allowed to take care of...
Same thing applied here, what you consider of essence, applies only to you (and others who share your view)
There's no universal decision/definition of what's right and what's wrong
sure, 100% true -- there is no absolute truth, I know that
I was offering you an alternative
that's all -- take it, or leave it -- it's up to you, sir
(but I had to offer it, it was obligatory ;))
relevant xkcd:
Fortunately, the charging one has been solved now that we've all standardized on mini-USB. Or is it micro-USB? Shit.
5
The more, the better!
to be faithful to my own principles: I couldn't disagree more! ;)
12:12
So you think there should be only 1 of everything?
1 flavor of ice-cream?
no, I didn't say that -- alternatives is good, but there is a difference between 2-3 alternatives a 100
you know, there a special number for this:
I'd hate to live in a world where you had only 2-3 flavors of ice-cream
if you see the menu, in a restaurant, and if there are less than 7 meals on it, you would say: ahh, only this much? there isn't enough!
@DrorK. there is difference between ice cream flavors but there are usually almost no differences between FOSS projects
however if you see more than 7: ahh, too many, I cannot decide which one to choose!
I don't know why this magic number appears to be right
12:14
@PeterVaro So there's only 1 kind of restaurant? :)
but most of the tests are showing that 7 is very stable and widely accepted number to measure this
@DrorK. lol
@Apoorv All FOSS projects are the same?
What do you mean by "almost no difference"?
user3079266
helloc all;
12:15
helloc @Mints97;
user3079266
@PeterVaro how do you format text like that? =)
`helloc` @Mints97;
@Mints97 We've made a decision that there are too many flavors of ice-cream in the world, and that's confusing. So we're taking a poll.. give us your best 3 flavors, so we'll render the top flavors we'll keep!
@DrorK. there is no difference between the work they are supposed, the only thing that is usually different is that one project has some extra feature which is not even aim of that project and other does not
helloc @Mints97;
user3079266
@DrorK. sorry, I don't have any 3 best flavors =) I eat ice cream so seldom that I am glad of any flavor
12:17
@Mints97 :D
@Mints97 and I use this for newcomers:
[`helloc`](bit.ly/c_chat) @Mints97;
user3079266
@PeterVaro thanks! :D
np at all
user3079266
wait, lemme try it
user3079266
wow
user3079266
:D
12:19
cool, right? if you want the full line to be a code (fixed-font), use 4 leading spaces
@DrorK. take emacs and vim for example (no i don't want to start a war), a text editor is for editing text and there is no difference in that job: they both work on wide range of terminals, both take time to get used to the commands but the difference is that one of those can do stuff like sending emails, browsing the web etc etc
</sensitive-topic>
user3079266
wait, does it really work?
user3079266
wow, it does!
@Apoorv I'm sorry, but I don't share you view. My experience with random projects... the were so different, even before looking at the product. Different languages, different attitude, different guidelines, differnent mentalities... there are more considerations even before looking at the actual product, nevertheless, 1 difference within a shared feature could make the world for a contributor
everyone has their own opinion :)
12:22
No! Only 3 opinions- and end it!
:)
The only thing I hate more than having too many options to choose from, is when I have too little!
btw i didn't find any modern tutorial on networking that covers the same topics as Unix Network Programming and the code in this book is very very outdated
I'm not sure what do you mean by 'tutorial'... book qualified?
yeah, anything qualifies as long as it has something to teach
What kind of networking we're talking about, low-level, or system dependent?
both of those options appear same to me (low level and system dependent)
I want to learn about the basic concepts
which i believe would be same regardless
12:30
@Apoorv This book has one of the better ratings I have stumbled, have outdated could it be?
How outdated*
the author passed away in 1990s, so my guess is that it would approximately be a 1980 book
I've found a suggestion on SO related post, saying that a newer (third edition) is likely to have shaped-up code snippets?
Which edition do you have?
i already saw that: 3rd edition has different bugs
for example, the server for which the client is demonstrated in the first code snippet seems to be dead
I dunno, even if you could find a book with all valid snippets, it wouldn't necessarily be a better book
I'd stick to the recommended one with the faulty snippets over an unknown/less recommended resource
@Apoorv but those two has couple of great differences. First probably would be size.
12:39
@Kamiccolo it is because of those features
@DrorK. how do i learn the correct code, then ?
@Apoorv Well, if some of the most recommended algorithm books don't come with qualified examples, I can only assume that it wouldn't be that hard to shape up outdated code?
Or better yet, if it's such a still recommended resource, isn't it feasible to find 'correct' variations online somewhere, by others?
In any case, using a less-recommended book, just for 'working' snippets, I wouldn't set that as my priority
I think the text/guidelines/explanations of the book- to have a greater priority than its snippets
I think I will see how can the snippets in this book be modified to work
user3079266
@Apoorv you want to set up your own server for the *nix platform? =)
nope, i want to write clients
i might implement a micro-server for practice though
user3079266
clients? you're looking in the direction of P2P? ;)
14:28
in Python, 46 mins ago, by poke
@corvid http://hackertyper.net/
very useful, if you want to pretend you are coding ;)
user3079266
@PeterVaro you've just discovered this wonderful site? XD
yepp ;)
user3079266
I've known it before I knew C well enough to understand the code there
user3079266
but now I understand it
user3079266
14:29
geez, they use goto
@Mints97 it almost feels like you wrote it, isn't it? ;);)
user3079266
@PeterVaro no, it doesn't. I don't use gotos XD especially like that
@Mints97 goto is not not a bad practice, if you use it wisely
user3079266
@PeterVaro I know! but there it's not used wisely, IMHO
user3079266
basically, it could be replaced with break; and wrapping the return call after the loop with a proper if ().
14:33
the hatred about gotos comes from one of dijkstra's writingd, but
it was written based on other languages, not for C => in C gotos are not bad in certain places
@Mints97 if you think about it you can replace everything with a single while loop
the for-loops, the if/else branching
you can write a fully functional program only with while-loops
but that doesn't make it a good practice
user3079266
the hatred of gotos comes from people who want to write in C and get an asm instruction wrapper that makes it super-easy to kill the entire app logic and crash everything.
anyway @Mints97 have you read the related paragraphs about _Generic? have you tried it? have you switched to a better compiler already? :)
user3079266
@PeterVaro no, not yet... I'm afraid I won't be doing much C for weeks to come now that I've finished with a stable version of my app.
helloc @ArdeshirIzadi; // you need at least 20 reps to talk in chat
@Mints97 :(
nah, I was kidding, I'm happy that your app is finally working.
user3079266
@PeterVaro thanks! me too! XD
user3079266
14:39
I learned so much when writing it
user3079266
it was totally worth it
user3079266
but now, it's gotta be mostly C# =)
yeah -- actually I understand why teachers may think C is a good first programming language
it really gives you very strong ideas about how the computer is working
user3079266
@PeterVaro I heard a programmer suggest once that people should be taught assembly first :D
but on the other hand as I stated before, you really have to have a greater knowledge in general to fully understand what's going on => so go for Python first ;)
@Mints97 well, learning assembly isn't a great deal
user3079266
14:42
lol, maybe =) C# actually also seems like a good first-learn option to me
the problem is when you want to build something big in it
user3079266
@PeterVaro it's learning to WRITE in assembly that is a great deal ;D
and want to make it portable => that will be the end of the world ;)
so I think learning assembly, just to have some basic idea what is going on is good => doing something in assembly if you are not forced to do it is a waste of time
(personal opinion)
user3079266
@PeterVaro if you're coding for Windows, it'll be portable if you write in x32 assembly
15:08
@Mints97 Hmm, what case specifically you wouldn't like goto to be used for?
It seems to me that this site uses it as a label for a cleanup, which is maybe universally accepted?
user3079266
I'm afraid I haven't heard anybody who classifies a cleanup label as "bad practice"
user3079266
@DrorK. goto isn't necesserily a cleanup label, that's the problem...
@Mints97 The sample you've commented on used it for cleanup
Qix
Qix
@PeterVaro I want to write an ASM language that is kind of like the middle of C and pure Netwide ASM, where it takes care of framing and argument stacks and whatnot for you.
user3079266
15:21
@DrorK. well, maybe there it was all right... but I'd do it differently ><
@Qix but you already are an experienced programmer -- and you have a purpose why you want to use it
I was talking about programmer newbies and education in schools
Qix
Qix
@PeterVaro I have some specific heavy lifting algorithms that benefit incredibly from writing them in pure assembly, but battling the OS with alignment and stuff is annoying.
user3079266
@Qix if by framing and argument stacks you mean all the work required to create a proper procedure, that is done by ready-made macros in common libraries for most assembly languages
Qix
Qix
@Mints97 Examples?
user3079266
usually these are the proc/endp/invoke macros
Qix
Qix
15:24
@Mints97 And stack cleanup/alignment for, say, IA32 architectures?
user3079266
@Qix I don't know, sadly...
Qix
Qix
And handling calling conventions across platforms?
user3079266
@Qix fasm has that, IIRC
Qix
Qix
For writing assembly for linux, mac and windows, on both 32-bit and 64-bit equivalent architectures, that's 6 different calling conventions you have to support.
user3079266
@Qix well, fasm supports the Linux and Windows conventions at least
user3079266
15:26
and it's far from being the only to do so
Qix
Qix
@Mints97 Doesn't support mac :P
user3079266
@Qix yup, but I think I saw another that supports it...
Qix
Qix
Because mac, while using the same convention as other GCC-compilable systems (i.e. linux) requires the stack to be aligned to 16 bytes.
Which can be a pain, especially for things like variadic functions and whatnot.
The greatest part - there's really no good documentation as to why it's like this haha
@PeterVaro :') You say the nicest things Peter
I'm trying very hard ;)
user3079266
lol, looking for cross-platform asm languages, I found this: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linoleum_(programming_language) does this look like what you want to implement, @Qix? =)
user3079266
15:29
and yeah, there's NASM, which runs virtually everywhere.
Qix
Qix
@Mints97 Not at all. It's its own DSL, you're not really entering in opcodes.
It's like trying to be C with a more ASM syntax.
user3079266
oh, I see =)
Qix
Qix
Nasm is great - I use YASM (which is a re-implementation) - but it is a true assembler in that it doesn't help out at all with platform-specific things (other than creating the binary objects in the specified formats)
I'd love to write a bolted-on NASM pre-compiler.
user3079266
@Qix why don't you just make a good set of macros for every system?
Qix
Qix
@Mints97 The macro system isn't great in YASM, admittedly.
user3079266
15:32
@Qix I heard that NASM's is really powerful
Qix
Qix
@Mints97 The macros in nasm are essentially custom instructions. They're powerful, yes, but not great for something like platform normalization.
user3079266
@Qix well, maybe, maybe, I can't judge since I never used nasm =)
Qix
Qix
@Mints97 :)
Basically you specify a macro, how many arguments it requires, and then you subtitute input arguments using $1, $2, etc.
Then you can use them in your snippet.
user3079266
oh, speaking of low-level languages! Today on discreet mathematics, we've been analyzing code in a custom "low-level" language. Geez, was that interesting!
Qix
Qix
I'd also like to write an x86 static analysis tool for optimization.
So you can write your ASM and it'd optimize it using a general set of rules, and then you can extend common patterns to be optimized, etc.
@Mints97 What language?
user3079266
15:36
@Qix one made up virtually on the spot by the prof ;)
Qix
Qix
@Mints97 Sounds fun
yield; // for work
user3079266
it had an accumulator register, an undefined number of variables, and 4 operators: get the value of a variable from outside; output the value of a variable; copy data from the accumulator to the variable; and place into the accumulator the result of the negation of the conjunction of its value with the value of a variable
user3079266
it really WAS fun =)
user3079266
free @Qix;
16:33
@Mints97 if you paste the xkcd URL directly, SO chat will recognise it and will capture only the image => with higher resolution
(at least higher than pasting the direct URL to the image itself)
user3079266
@PeterVaro wow, so SO chat has special recognition for xkcd? XD
for other SO and SE links, Wikipedia, Amazon, XKCD, etc. yeah
xkcd is super popular on SO (I think it deserves it)
@PeterVaro i love it too :D
i was looking at this defination of when to use BFS nd when DFS nd got this
Qix
Qix
16:53
I want to star all of the XKCD comics but I... just can't
user2620028
If anyone has a second to explain why this code doesn't work for me i would appreciate it a lot.

http://runnable.com/me/VD1RYm5B9JFE1LqF
@HatterisMad page does not exist, post code here
user2620028
#include <iostream>
#include <stdio.h>

int main ()
{
      n=29;
      if (n <= 29 && n > 0) {
        int g[n];
        for (int i = 0; i <= n; i++) {
            if (i === 0) {
                g[i] = (0);
                std::cout << (i + " = " + g[i]);
            }
            else if (i === 1 || i === 2) {
                g[i] = (1);
                std::cout << (i + " = " + g[i]);
            }
            else {
                g[i] = (g[i - 3] + g[i - 2] + g[i - 1]);
                std::cout << (i + " = " + g[i]);
@HatterisMad aint this c++??
user2620028
I am getting a lot of 'g' and 'n' not declared in this scope
user2620028
16:58
I am writing in a web c++ compiler but my class is for c hahaha :/
user2620028
I was under the impression you could code c in a c++ compiler as long as you used c objects and functions
"class" for c -- are you sure?
btw helloc @HatterisMad;
user2620028
I have that open and i am reading it :P thank you
user2620028
Although i have been trying to understand the significance of it :/
06:00 - 17:0017:00 - 00:00

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