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00:57
@DrorK. At the last struct the next field doesn't point to NULL but to the last valid element of the list, so it points to the previous struct.
So it has to look as in the picture above.
@MaryStar I'm not sure what it means for the tail to point to the previous node
What it suppose to represent?
Anyhow, go ahead and post once again, a complete, compilable, and "standalone" testcase that represents your problem
(which means, without any user input)
I might be back later on
Morning
01:13
helloc @Jefffrey;
long time no see -- where have you been?
we were missing you ;)
In the Lounge.
Here's calm as always I see.
ahh.. chatting with the enemy.. I see.. watching suspicious
helloc @jonny;
I think I'm just passing by now, though.
01:15
@Jefffrey well, still the speed is 1/10 of the Lounge, but hey => we are talking 3.5-3.8k a week!
Nice :)
well, in that case, I get back to coding ;)
Whacha coding?
(btw don't forget to update the user-script!)
Oh yeah.
01:16
do you know what cassowary is?
I've reset my old computer so I don't have the script currently .
it is a simplex-based linear constraint solver -- for example apple is using it since Xcode 5
I'm trying to implement it in Rust
:)
@PeterVaro Seems like a bird
oh
(and learning/practicing the language as well at the same time)
I see.
I'll leave you to it, then. :D
See you tomorrow or some other time.
01:20
very well then -- you are always welcome here ;)
free @Jefffrey;
goto back_to_hacking;
 
1 hour later…
02:31
@DrorK. I edited the program: pastebin.com/Kmsp4nnd
 
4 hours later…
06:10
I must say, I never thought much of Julia Louis-Dreyfus... but after a couple of episodes of Veep... she's #1 on my list.
(not to say that Veep is all that, but her performance/character... brilliant)
 
4 hours later…
09:53
Hello world
10:13
Any fans of police tv shows?
Well guys, I hate to highlight... but if you plan on leaving me alone during my third shift (straight), I'll have no choice!
11:12
@DrorK. It appears that everyone else is sleeping right now
..and I don't have a stable schedule
That's a scheme
They want us to think they're sleeping
But we know better... they don't fool us!
how do we find out then? :/
We need to intimidate them!
also... if you look at the time zones of their countries, it is sleeping time for ordinary humans
helloc @Anatoly;
Hi everyone
11:17
welcome to the C room :)
@Apoorv
Hello @Anatoly
@Apoorv tnx :)
@DrorK. Hello :)
Actually I have a very little question about the C, is it right place to ask it here?
Sure, go ahead
Trying to undestand unsigned int getbits(unsigned int x, int p, int n) from K&R, here explained that ~0 = 1111 1111 (depends on OS) but why when I try to do int a = 0; a = ~ a; printf("%d", a); I get -1?
here I mean this link stackoverflow.com/a/197652/947111
11:23
@Anatoly It happens that "1111 1111" represents the value -1 with your signed integer representation
when I tried unsigned int a = ~0; I also get -1
@Anatoly Have you printed it as unsigned int?
Try %u
@DrorK. Is the way I calculate the gap wrong?
11:25
@MaryStar Good morning, unfortunately I don't know, feel free to post your code and wait for others to respond
@DrorK. you rule, thank you very much :)
@Anatoly It makes me wonder, why did it state "depends on OS"?
one last question regarding the getbits(unsigned int x, int p, int n) why do I get getbits(123, 7, 7) = 61 and getbits(123, 7, 8) = 123? 123 only 7 bit, am I wrong?
unsigned int, its size depends on CPU I mean, am I wrong?
Oh, right. I thought it was referring to promotions
(it's not really depends on CPU, but it's implementation-specific)
(I'm looking up the getbits() in the book)
@DrorK. page 45
11:35
@DrorK. Ok!! Thank you!!
11:58
@Anatoly Well, I must be missing something obvious
(p + 1 - n) implies that for the right-shift to keep the whole original value, n must be bigger than p ... p + 1
1,2 ... 2,3 .... 3,4 .... 4,5 ... etc
@DrorK. I think I get it
@Anatoly So the 'correct' values are actually 6,7 ... for getting 7-bit values
i.e. position begins counting from 0, i.e. 0..1..2..3..4..5..6 ?
Technically yes, but I'm not sure what's the purpose of +1, let me try to get rid of it and see what would happen with other cases
I dunno- seems fine to me. You play with it
Remove the -1, and now use 7,7 for your 7-bit value
0xff,7,7 ... 127
0xff,8,8 ... 255
Seems straight forward to me, I'm really clueless of what would the +1 serve here
From K&R "We assume that bit position 0 is at the right end", perhaps it has done especially for this reason?
12:12
Oh, I'm silly :)
"returns the three bits in bit positions 4, 3, 2, right adjusted"
I think it's the first time I 'thought' of bitwise operations from the opposite direction
@DrorK. thank you very much, I began to understand but it will take a few time to get it. ))
But still:
0xff, 8, 8 == 255 ... makes sense to me
0xff, 7, 8 == 255 ... makes less sense
12:30
7+1-8 = 0
x >> 0 doesn't make change
value & ~0 doesn't change anything
or you apply it to modified version of getbits?
@Anatoly 8,8 was for the version without +1
7,8 is for the version with +1
(if your value has 8 bits, and you would like to 'get' all of them, then the initial right-bitshift should make no change to the value, such as: x >> 0)
 
2 hours later…
14:33
@DrorK. Now I changed something at the point where I calculate the sum of the gaps : http://pastebin.com/UpLkDBcd

Have I done something wrong at the while loop:

while(g < ast->gap && last != NULL){
g=g+last->gap;
last=last->next;
}

? Because I get a segmentation fault...
15:25
I have an array of command options to read from stdin: options = {"list", "print"} and a function readCommand(). In my main function I want to use readCommand() and decide which function (list(), print(), ...) to call. What should I return from readCommand() to make the decision in main?
user3079266
helloc all;
user3079266
@JuttaWinson you don't have to make the decision in main(). You can do it in your readCommand function just as well. However, if you want to make the decision in main(), a good approach (IMHO) would be creating an enum with values like LIST and PRINT and returning it. That's just IMHO.
16:32
@helloc However I do not know how to map it to the enum values. I use strstr() to compare the input with an array of valid options in a loop, but then how to map it to the enum?
user3079266
@JuttaWinson well, obviously, in your function readCommand, you return a different enum value for each strstr comparison result
Then I can not to the comparison in a loop anymore, see
*can not do
user3079266
why not? Here's what can be done to your code to make it work:
change

enum COMMANDS {
LIST,
PRINT
};

to

enum COMMANDS {
LIST = 0,
PRINT = 1
};

then, in your if statement inside your loop, just write

`return i`

; then you'll be able to compare it with enum values in your main program.
user3079266
this is by far not the nicest solution, but it should work
user3079266
and anyway your strstr is screwed
user3079266
16:44
and anyway, this is outright bad: ` length = sizeof (options) / sizeof (options[1]);`
No, that is really not nice. You would rely on having the same array index as the enum constant, but I see no better solution
what is the problem with the length calculation?
user3079266
@JuttaWinson well, that's a quick solution, a better one would be to make an enum typedef; make the function return the enum type; and make two if statements inside the strstr and return an enum value for each specific index. more code-consuming, but better-looking
user3079266
@JuttaWinson because 1) if you know the length of the array beforehand, just specify it; 2) if you're not supposed to know it beforehand, make calculations that will work in all cases, not in specific ones like this.
If I return the enum type the problem is just moved from main to readCommand, I still rely on the indexes
Why should the calculation not work? If options[1] is not set or what do you think?
user3079266
@JuttaWinson yep, what if you have just one element in the array? =)
user3079266
16:56
moreover, I don't understand why do you even use an array and a loop if you know all of the values beforehand. Wouldn't it be easier to make several if-s, each comparing the text to a certain value and returning an enum value if the comparison succeeded?
My concern was maintainability, what if I have to add further values?
user3079266
@JuttaWinson you just add more if-s! =)
user3079266
no, really, how is it different from adding new elements to your array?
user3079266
also, it's going to be more easily readable
user3079266
but if you really want to use the array, I guess you'd have to rely on indexes
user3079266
16:58
and really, fix your strstr, you got the return value check wrong
" Returns a pointer to the first occurrence of str2 in str1, or a null pointer if str2 is not part of str1."
user3079266
ooh, hmm, sorry, I've misread your code
user3079266
yeah, it'll work that way, sorry =)
user3079266
BTW, also, getting user input in the function that operates on it is sorta not nice. Better grab it in main and pass it to the function. Encapsulation is the key! =)
Just a question: Are you a C / programming professional (I am obviously not)?
user3079266
17:02
@JuttaWinson I wouldn't call myself a professional, but I do have some experience with C
So do you program privately or in a company?
user3079266
@JuttaWinson privately, for fun and study =)
user3079266
I'm just a first-year univ student
me too
thanks
user3079266
oh, what a coincidence =)
user3079266
17:06
@JuttaWinson you're welcome =) always glad to help
Qix
Qix
19:15
Hellur
helloc all; // I mean
 
2 hours later…
20:58
Heya @Qix
21:14
Hi, I'm working in a cs50 exercise where I have to print a matrix with number and a "_" in the last position...should I use a char matrix?
Qix
Qix
You should star this message for no reason.
@JuttaWinson Technically as long as the order in the array match the order of the enum members, it will always match. But if you would like to change the order of your array elements, (for some random reason), you could simply explicitly-specify the association within your array's initializer-list
Qix
Qix
:D
@carla The range of the numbers that you require, is suitable for a char?
@DrorK. well, actually it may contains numbers untill 81...
The original matrix was an int, but when I try inserting "_" in the last position it gets the error of 'assigning int for char'...
so I thought that I would have to change the matrix type
Qix
Qix
21:21
You're calling atoi on them, right?
No, I don't have any problem when inserting the numbers, the problem is the "_" and I guess I can't use atoi on it
21:38
@DrorK. you could simply explicitly-specify the association within your array's initializer-list
How?
@JuttaWinson Something like: enum { E1, E2, E3 }; ... array[] = { [E1] = 1, [E2] = 2, [E3] = 3 }
@Dr
@DrorK. OK, I did not know this syntax, is it standard C?
As of C99
"Designated initializers"
Make sure to read only the paragraphs related to the C standard, and not further gcc-specific features/behavior
21:55
So the syntax you mentioned is standard C99. Thanks!
Btw, about your 'sizeof' usage:
The parentheses are redundant, the first member is obviously 0 so I guess '1' was a typo, and there's no need to specify any specific element
Which translates to: sizeof arr / sizeof *arr
@DrorK. Yes, 1 was a typo, but I think arr[0] is no problem.
It's not 'a problem', it's simply redundant
Any object within an expression is an array (of at least 1 element), we don't specify +0 to each object we address
int i; int *p = &i; ... would you: p[0] = 1; ? ... or maybe: *(p+0) = 1? ... or rather... *p = 1;?
22:11
Do you know even a better way to read the command whilst saving the commands in an array? This is my current program: pastebin.com/DMYbzzAR
At line #16, the assignment of = 0 ... is redundant
@PeterVaro ^^^ what do you say of his/her comments-style?
@DrorK. OK, but else no better idea? What is the problem with my (actually it is someone else's guideline) comment-style?
Oh, I actually didn't comment on that, I was referring to Peter to comment
@JuttaWinson Seems fine, although you could apply the explicit association to the initializer-list of 'options', but obviously you don't have to
I added it directly after pasting
in my local file
And notice that generally, a success-state of a function is actually 0, not 1
And I don't see much point of using a boolean for a non-boolean function, which actually returns an error value
22:26
You probably think of randomNumber()? It is just a placeholder implementation
No, readCommand()
Generally speaking: a success state of a function is 0. And when it's not, a failure is generally being represented by either a sentinel value/macro, or simply -1, but not 0. (the obvious exception is for pointers, which are objects and not states)
Oh, yes, that is an error
No, it is not. It returns a boolean value
Your function has only two states? If so, the 'error' argument is redundant
Commands was successfully read or not, but there can be different error codes
Hence why generally, the return of a state is an integer- and not a boolean
22:34
Thanks again, that is enough for today ...
Qix
Qix
22:52
I never return error codes.
Messy.
I have a separate set of functions for working with errors.
/me is currently contributing to the American obesity rate, one piece of tiramasu at a time.
Well, it's not very consistent with the rest of the world :)
Qix
Qix
@DrorK. Which part; the error codes, or the tiramasu?
Error codes
Qix
Qix
Well if the rest of the world prefers to blur the line between errors and actual return values, they can be my guest. :)
That's only true when you actually return values, and not states
Qix
Qix
23:02
I feel like error reporting in large programs is a crucial, foundational component that shouldn't be handled through return values.
How would your shell scripts look like, if your commands/statements didn't return meaningful return values?
Qix
Qix
@DrorK. Shell scripts do exactly what I'm doing, only in reverse
How practical would cli utils would've been, if they didn't return meaningful states?
Qix
Qix
There are return codes, and then there is STDOUT for return values.
int obtainSomeIntegerSomehow();
^ If that produced an error, how would you differentiate a meaningful error from a valid return value?
That's why this rule is applied to states, not values nor objects
Qix
Qix
23:06
define state
And when it comes to values and objects, there are sentinel values/macros to represent error states
A function of: void function(int *error); <-- that makes no sense
Qix
Qix
exactly.
Just as a return of a boolean type, would make no sense, when you actually have more than 2 states
(and when the boolean represents a state, not a value)
Qix
Qix
I think we're on the same side of our debate.
:00100000 Test
weird.
:19856520 test
I wonder if message IDs are all of SO...?
Hmm, seems unreasonable?
Qix
Qix
23:13
@DrorK. It is.
Can you comment to other channel's messages?
Qix
Qix
@DrorK. No I think they check rooms
Test1
test2
Qix
Qix
The 1337th message ever on Chat.SE was by Jeff Atwood. LAWL.
in General, Oct 15 '10 at 9:15, by Jeff Atwood
@knu we are looking at: Jewish proposals, Parenting proposals, Security proposals
Chat message #42
Conspiracy
Yup, definitely
Say, out of curiousity
In the US, there are obviously areas/neighborhoods which consist of a specific ethnic group/race ... right?
Let's take blacks for example
Qix
Qix
23:18
@DrorK. Yes for sure. Depends on the city.
Are white police officers allowed to enter black-regions?
user2620028
yes they are lol
They are? ... what would happen to them if they entered?
Qix
Qix
@DrorK. Of course
I see
Qix
Qix
23:20
Nothing.
user2620028
Nothing?
user2620028
Or Michael Brown
Qix
Qix
^ lol
I mean not lol, that was sad. But lol.
user2620028
Your welcome lol
Now let's say, that white police officers entered a neighborhood, for arresting a black man, which attacked another black man
Qix
Qix
23:21
Mmhm
Which means, one black male was the victim of another black male
Qix
Qix
Yep
user2620028
Dror lets be realistic here. Yes there is tensions between skin colors, however it entirely depends on the individuals in these hypothetical communities to act. It is NOT common for these individuals to act to things like this
And during their arrest, a random black male, decides to start attacking their vehicle with a knife, stabbing at their windows, and being hostile / manic
What would you consider a reasonable police response to be?
Qix
Qix
@HatterisMad He's providing a hypothetical
user2620028
23:22
Oh
Qix
Qix
@DrorK. Well seeing as how the man is damaging property and assaulting a police officer (both crimes in the US), the man would be arrested.
So you're sitting in a police vehicle, a person tries to stab you with a knife and attacking your windows from contact-range
And you expect an arrest?
Qix
Qix
@DrorK. Well detained and then arrested. Meaning they'll get him to stop however they can because he is posing a risk to other people.
How would you suppose they would "get him to stop"?
user2620028
Hey guys i am doing a little bit of c for homework, anyone want to help advise as to what i am logically doing wrong for an if statement?
23:25
@HatterisMad Post your questions/pastebins etc... if one could, he/she would
Qix
Qix
@DrorK. They have a number of things.
@HatterisMad Don't have to ask to ask ;)
@Qix What if they only have a firearm, and a wooden stick
user2620028
char input[100];	/* print to file or print to screen */
fgets(input, 100, stdin); /* Take user input and store it in variable input */
if (input == "screen") {
user2620028
I wasn't asking to ask, i was asking whether it would be beneficial to ask lol
Qix
Qix
@DrorK. Cops don't just carry a single firearm and a wooden stick. They are required to be fully armed with multiple forms of deterrents before going into the field.
23:27
@HatterisMad strcmp()
user2620028
thanks
user2620028
figured i had the wrong compare
Qix
Qix
@HatterisMad What your if statement is doing is comparing the pointers to eachother. C doesn't have a "string" type
user2620028
ok
@Qix In Israel we have seen cases where a policeman used 'non-lethal measures', ended up with the policemen being murdered, and a few other civilian casualties
@Qix We even have a famous case where the policemen used his firearm, and got the attacker in his leg, and still he managed to murder the policemen and a couple of more casualties
Qix
Qix
23:29
@HatterisMad The fact you can use null-terminated strings to convey textual information is purely convention :)
@Qix Under such circumstances, would you, as a policeman, would rather risk your own lives and others, for saving the attacker's?
Qix
Qix
@DrorK. I am not trained a police officer, so I wouldn't know how to accurately gauge the situation to be honest. However I know cops here don't hesitate to put someone on the ground if need be.
user2620028
hmmm my code here is not working with strmp
@Qix Do you consider it justified? Or you think police officers should risk their lives for the purpose of saving the attacker's?
user2620028
char input[100];	/* print to file or print to screen */
fgets(input, 100, stdin); /* Take user input and store it in variable input */
if (strcmp(input,"screen")) {
Qix
Qix
23:33
@DrorK. And I, as a civilian, am protected against killing someone if it's self defense.
user2620028
this is not what i am wanting is it? Because no matter what the second value is it equates to true
Qix
Qix
@DrorK. No, I don't think an attacker's life should be placed one's own or another innocent's. Neither do police officers.
Return Value
This function returned values are as follows:

if Return value if < 0 then it indicates str1 is less than str2

if Return value if > 0 then it indicates str2 is less than str1

if Return value if = 0 then it indicates str1 is equal to str2
user2620028
Yeah i am reading that :/
Qix
Qix
So if you want to check if they're equal, then == 0....
user2620028
lol i just got that :(
Qix
Qix
23:35
:)
user2620028
This just sucks lol i hate being this helpless. I don't code c but a class wants me to do a big project in it
Qix
Qix
@HatterisMad C is easy. Just lots of referencing :)
The site I linked is actually not bad; I just found it the other day. You can search functions by the standard headers.
user2620028
yeah in a another class im working with binary right now
Hey all! Just wanted to get the word out about a new StackExchange client – this one is for Emacs! It's almost ready to use as a read-only client. If you use emacs and would be willing (at some point in the future) to extend it, won't you express that interest here? We're trying to decide whether to follow advice and submit it to the GNU ELPA – but would like to know if there is community interest before we impose restrictions upon it like that. Thank you!
I have already brought this to the attention of Emacs.SE, but I figured you guys would be the next best bet. Do you know of any other ways I could get the word out? This one just feels… spammy :(
23:50
@SeanAllred Hello there
Oh, hey @DrorK. :)
Unfortunately it doesn't relate to me so I can't comment, but on freenode I'm positive you'll find relevant channels, but please try to be more subtle there
Or better yet, first try to raise the question whether it's relevant/on-topic, etc
Qix
Qix
@SeanAllred Because it is. :)
@Qix Sorry again :) I'm just at a loss on how to go about this. I've never had a project that I actually wanted to 'advertise' – I don't know how to do it in a way that's, well, not in the way.
How do you think I can improve my little blurb, or does the entire idea of a 'blurb' need to be thrown out?

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