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06:50
Hi!
Does anyone use SDL 2.0 with C?
user3079266
07:48
helloc all;
user3079266
heh, codegolf can be quite interesting, I learned a lot from this one: codegolf.stackexchange.com/questions/44680/… (submitted an entry of my own, too =P)
11:46
@Mints97 pretty nice and non-standard xD
user3079266
@Kamiccolo: what is? =)
@Mints97 linked codegolf thread :} though You've posted it... xD
user3079266
oh yeah, that's one weird language =)
user3079266
my submission was the weirdest of the languages I can write working code in, Mathcad
user3079266
I also gave another entry for Mu-recursive functions (it's at the very end), but I don't think it'll be as interesting =)
13:14
@Mints97 maybe it's way more interesting for algorythmers... :} I guess I saw Mu tetris somethere
user3079266
Mu tetris? guess it's something different from Mu-recursive functions... =P
user3079266
helloc @deckard; //Welcome!
aaah, no, SKI combinator calculus tetris:
user3079266
oh, I see. Well, I don't know much about SKI combinator calculus anyway: just can't get time to actually learn even plain lambda calculus...
user3079266
lol, this contest is such a reputation-booster. I got 100 rep points in just 2 days on CodeGolf.SE. That's, like, 1/3 of my hard-earned SO rep =D
13:33
helloc all;
user3079266
hey, @deckard. Say, from what end d'ya eat a chocolate cornet? =)
hahahaha :D
user3079266
(BTW, I haven't watched Lucky Star =D I just know the meme)
(great show, you should watch it, surrealistic at some points but quite funny)
user3079266
well, I know, but I haven't had time for anime in ages now... =(
13:37
me too :/
But I saw it ages ago, more relaxed times
I'm struggling with this BTW, stackoverflow.com/questions/28148816/…
I know it's probably redacted in an awful way :(
but if you could take a look, any help would be appreciated :)
user3079266
#include "variable.c" throw that out. Including .c files is bad practice by default
user3079266
that's from the first look
thanks!
user3079266
printf("tururu\n"); ye'r a Steins;Gate fan, too? XD
XD, never watched the show, but kinda liked the string yeah
user3079266
13:43
soo... you can make your code work in by just throwing out #include "variable.c" and leave everything else as it is, should work
o.O
it's working!
wow
thank you very much, really
I've been struggling with this for quite a few hours
If you post it as an answer I will gladly accept it and you'll get some well-earned rep :)
user3079266
you're welcome =) see my answer to your question for an explanation.
user3079266
actually, I think another way to do the same would be to #include foo.h in variable.c and remove the extern keywords.
Im already including foo.h in variable.c
user3079266
*woops, sorry, you don't remove extern
user3079266
13:53
oh, right, sorry
user3079266
yeah, than that's correct
user3079266
I'm not in my best state of mind now, you see =)
hahaha
@Mints97 loool... because the You can actually work for each reputation point xD
your not best state of mind is by far better than my best it seems
user3079266
13:56
@deckard heh, don't be hard on yourself. Anyway, here, take a read: stackoverflow.com/a/1433387/3079266 what I love SO for is that it produces such nice and detailed programming guidelines =)
yes
When I read that now I can understand it
user3079266
well, that's nice =) BTW, you can do the same thing with functions, but you don't have to use extern in definitions: it's added there implicitly, IIRC
yes!
I use it for functions
I declare the prototype in the .h and then put the code in the .c
I "inherited" this project and I'm trying to improve the design a little bit
user3079266
@deckard that's right =) as good an encapsulation technology as any other, IMHO
user3079266
well, good luck with it =) may I inquire what is this project?
14:08
its a key-generation algorithm
i fear cannot disclose much more than that =)
user3079266
oooh, I happen to be going through a bout of cryptography interest right now =) Is it for RSA?
nop
cryptography is very interesting
what are you working on?
user3079266
sure it is! Out of the several projects I'm working on right now, one is an attempt to implement the most commonly used public-key encryption and signature algorithms: RSA, ElGamal and DSA
from scratch?
user3079266
nearly =) I'm doing them in C# first, because it has great arbitrary-precision arithmetics support, and then I want to port 'em to C, implementing my own arbitrary-precision arithmetic mechanism.
user3079266
14:13
That's the way I work: I do everything by myself to learn, and do it nicely to get something handy done.
it's great, but implementing that from scratch must be very hard
user3079266
not really, the algorithms are not that complex. Well, if you don't use ellyptic curves in algorithms like ElGamal, which support different groups. Which I didn't =)
@Mints97 You can look into the crypto part of the Linux Kernel
If I can give you my humble suggestion:
Truth is public-key crypto is easier and elegant that symmetric =)
It's also much more resource consuming
14:18
sure
And slower
This is implied in "resource consuming" :p
user3079266
I've got RSA single-chunk encoding working all right in the C# version, with the exception of satisfying the requirement for the modulus factors being strong primes (which is not really necessary for large enough key length), and ElGamal single-chunk encoding churning along fine with multiplicative groups of numbers modulo safe primes (takes a long while to generate them with a good key length though)
user3079266
@Rerito thanks, I'll definitely take a look at it. But I want to implement as much as possible without looking at someone else's code doing the same thing =P
@Rerito :( u're right
user3079266
but they are safer =)
user3079266
14:20
and they grant us the wonderful benefit of electronic signatures
user3079266
oh, yeah,
user3079266
helloc @Rerito;
user3079266
=P
heclloc @all
user3079266
helloc @setevoy; //Welcome back!
14:24
:-)
helloc @setevoy;
@Mints97 do you know any adequate tutrial about C? something like tutorialspoint.com/cprogramming/index.htm
adequate may be wrong here.... let's say "good" :-) or "recommended"
user3079266
still didn't get around to learning it, eh? =) As before, I can only suggest one tutorial - practise...
user3079266
and once you get the hang of it, just go to the C standard for anything you might want to find out
@Mints97 yep.... my current job far enough from C :-( sometimes Python only
@Mints97 to practice - you, at least, must know how to create structure, or know how opointers works :-) Kernigan && Richi of course perfect, but...
14:28
@setevoy What's wrong with a beginner's book?
@DrorK. nothing wrong! it's perfect :-) but i'd like to read something more... structured... I read this book too, of course
@setevoy K&R is usually very well considered
@setevoy I'm afraid no random tutorial is going to be even remotely as 'structured' as a decent book
um...
(but then again, I'm not sure what you meant by 'structure', so I could be wrong :)
14:31
You can also check this: c.learncodethehardway.org/book
@DrorK. cprogramming.com/tutorial/c-tutorial.html // let's take a look here: few sections; each with few "under-sections", ech describes shortly one "term" (Pointers, for example) - here is what I call 'structured" :-)
I think it's free and looks nice
user3079266
@setevoy if you want something structured, take a look at the C standard =)
user3079266
although it's not very well written
@deckard That's not very recommended, if anything, it focuses on "implementation-specific" C, and not C
14:32
@deckard this looks good, thanks
^^^ That's not C, that's implementation-specific C
@DrorK. didn't know.
@deckard I find it amusing that your first suggestion was K&R, and then your second one was from an author that thinks the worst of K&R :)
@setevoy I believe it was a joke, the standard is not a useful resource for learning C
14:35
@DrorK. but it's good to have this doc nearby :-)
what's wrong with "Learn C The Hard Way" and K&G?
user3079266
@setevoy I don't think that's the newest draft, try looking for something fresher =) and yeah, @DrorK. is right, I wasn't entirely serious. But it's still a good reference for a C programmer
Sure, as long as you're focused on your primary resource: a book!
@DrorK. I usually like the good ol' classics like K&R or SICP but not everybody wants to read a book that old :D
user3079266
@setevoy well, about "Learn C The Hard Way", if I understand correctly (never used it), it focuses on non-standartized usages of C, as @DrorK. said
user3079266
@deckard but... but the air of ancient wisdom this book has!..
14:37
@deckard sorry, SICP?
Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs
ah...
not for C anyway
but a classic programming bible
sort of
Okay, I've been waiting almost 24 hours for a quote. I guess it's a bad sign?
user3079266
@DrorK. what quote? =)
14:39
@Mints97 For a license of a product that can recognize make/model/color/speed of vehicles from video input on-the-fly
user3079266
wow, that sounds cool!
I dunno, 24 hours seem like a long time
I have a feeling they're up to something
I have another quick question
user3079266
fire away =)
user3079266
14:57
you can leave the question here, I gotta go out for a second. Brb!
user3079266
goto afk;
15:08
I have an array of constant int, const int foo[1337]
which AFAIK will make foo not a constant pointer, but a pointer to a constant array
the thing is I want to create a pointer to the start of this array but doing it like: int *foo_ptr = foo; generates an "initialization discards const qualifier from pointer target type"
which doesn't look very good
and if I do int *foo_ptr = &foo; it generates "initialization from incompatible pointer type"
free @Mints97; // see you
user3079266
15:25
@deckard why don't you use
user3079266
const int *foo_ptr = &foo;
um
in that way i will be defining a pointer to a constant int right?
reading it from right to left that is what i see
user3079266
yep, that's right =)
user3079266
when you're unsure of what a declaration is, check it at cdecl.org (it's right there in the room header, too)
I guess you meant &foo[0]
&foo is of the wrong type
15:29
@DrorK. would be then or foo or &foo[0] right?
@deckard Correct. 'foo' is '&foo[0]'
@Mints97 thanks, great resource
user3079266
@DrorK. I meant just foo, without the &. Dammit. Can't think right this late in the evening =)
@Mints97 *think ---> drink
:%s/think/drink/g
15:46
@Mints97 btw, recently found Russian guy who makes shitload of nice photos from different places --- from Latin America to Africa. Might find it interesting. One of those series "Vilnius Nice'n'Ugly part": zyalt.livejournal.com/1096687.html
user3079266
oh, that's Ilya Varlamov! He's a well-known blogger.
those are very nice pics
@deckard probably You'd enjoy "Martian Chronicles" too: zyalt.livejournal.com/300984.html :}
freaking amazing.
@Mints97 agh, thanks, didn't know that...
i will check those
user3079266
anyway, my uncle takes better photos: kharit_on_off.livejournal.com :D
16:00
that blog goes directly to my bookmarks
hahaha, just check'd that the link to the photobucket album says it's armenia
well guys, i'm leaving
see you!
free all;
user3079266
free @deckard; //see you!
see You later, @deckard;
@Mints97 :O

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