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00:00 - 16:0019:00 - 23:00

00:00
Well, I always said that if you don't enjoy using an existing tool for a task, you better yet build a tool that you enjoy using!
meh.. I told you, you are stubborn, didn't I?
:)
@PeterVaro BTW, what's the required recursion limit?
anyway.. I just bought (ordered) a budget ultrabook for myself! soooo excited, can't wait 'til it arrives!
@PeterVaro aha, last time I tried Python bindings for OpenCV. Yeah, good luck. In the process of pip install some-opencv-module it downloaded like... 3 different versions of OpenCV and compiled those for ages.. just some... simple module for image concatanation and encoding as video... sigh
so minimal, so sexy.. so cheap :)
00:02
@PeterVaro This thing cost me a whole day
@PeterVaro It doesn't support 64-bit bootloaders
@Kamiccolo package managing in python is still a nightmare -- and a known issue :(
@DrorK. nope, that's the only downside.. but the OS can be 64bit
but my first though was the same... "it's not that big"
@DrorK. I have no idea.. do you know? should we test it?
@PeterVaro It doesn't support legacy loaders too, so it's not merely a UEFI limitation
So as far as I know, Windows for example, and most linuxes, would choke
@DrorK. it is quite easy to create a 32bit efi: wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Asus_x205ta
@DrorK. 8.1 and 10 are working on it OOB -- but who wants to use Windows? :)
00:06
There are random patches I've googled, not sure if they even applicable to the current firmware (it seems that the firmwares vary greatly)
@PeterVaro You mean 32-bit W8 and W10
It cost me a whole day ^
> The Asus x205ta has an exclusively 32-bit EFI bootloader. Since Arch does not include a 32-bit EFU loader in the standard install image, we need to add one. This procedure may work for other exclusively 32-bit EFI machines.
@DrorK. do you have such 32 bit exclusive EFI bootloader machine as well?
@PeterVaro The #includes in C99 are only required to be as many as 15 levels
@PeterVaro I have one of the things you pasted above ^
EeeBook
@DrorK. umm.. I think I could've done it in 3 levels!
@DrorK. the x205ta? or one of the bigger brothers?
00:09
@PeterVaro does it make a difference if running a PAE kernel?
Let me look for it
@Kamiccolo PAE?
I denounced it since I realized it's UEFI 32-bit specific
Yes, x205ta
@PeterVaro some kind of fancy extension to address.... more memory extending addressing to... I suppose, 48 bits?
@DrorK. are you using it?
00:10
No, I denounced it
@Kamiccolo interesting.. though I like mint kernels.. but I will read about PAE, thanks for the heads up
@DrorK. pity.. well, we'll see.. I have high hopes :)
There were more issues that I didn't like
I have a monster desktop at home, and a slightly lighter one at work, and I wanted a good looking, ultra light but useable one on the go.. and it seemed that x205ta just fits
No SSD, no USB3, can't change the keyboard/touchpad mode in bios
^ those are none of my concerns
I want to add a 64GB SDXC card to it at some point -- but maybe that won't be necessary at all
00:14
Frankly I don't even know why I got it, my idea of 'on the go' are 2x17" laptops
I started with 17" notebooks, heck, I even created a messenger bag for mine
but I don't want anything in my bag that is heavier than 1kg
and I don't need that large display on the go -- I have 2*27" on my desktops -- that's enough
My shoulders are concrete steel
the concerns I got is the micro HDMI and the proprietary charging port -- why?
@DrorK. LOL :)
Just think... 2x17" ... dual drives, extended batteries, extra batteries, chargers, etc
00:16
I love it when females try to 'help me' with my 'suitcase'
when I'm travelling, I only want to commit patches, draft my ideas and surf on the web -- that's all
I've yet to see the female that could carry it using 1 hand
:)
you will marry her, if you finally find one!
Heh
And I have this routine, where I hand it over so 'lightly'
you and your famous routines -- you tricky bastard :)
anywho, I have to go to bed now, I have to get up early in the morning..
00:18
Good night!
@Kamiccolo So where were we?
be good!
free all;
@Kamiccolo You're doing any video cutting/joining tasks?
@DrorK. I used to do. At the moment I have one tiny project stalled. Because the issue I've mentioned with OpenCV.
You happen to know of any 'editor', virtualdub-style, that would allow you to cut/join already processed/transcoded materials, without the requirement of re-transoding the WHOLE thing, but only the mandatory segments? (intelligently)
I'm actually thinking of breaking my materials into small segments, so I could work on them in virtualdub without affecting the 'whole' thing, and later re-mux the changed segments, with the rest of the segments
I would do anything to avoid a re-transcode, I've gotten so far... I'm not giving up now :|
BTW
It's about 0 degrees here, and the kittens are outside
So I turned on their heaters, and I went outside to visit them
It's freezing, and they're extremely warm :)
@DrorK. like... Avidemux? Long time since I used it...
agh... 0 degrees and freezing :D
 
7 hours later…
07:32
Hi.....Anybody there?
Good morning.
good morning @iain
@Chirag always there is someone :}
@Kamiccolo Starting to wonder whether you sleep at all? ... Good morning.
Function pointers today - sounds ominous.
07:48
@iain sleep is for wimps :}
Ha, you must be running on a linux base sysetem then!
I do all my best thinking when I'm asleep :/
:28382102
Have you seen this, I thought it was the best short horror story that I have heard in years; well worth the time to listen.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GXXnPRhAZbI
Hi, @iain @Kamiccolo
Can help in python?
How to handle non-zero exit of subprocess.check_output()?
I have to use subprocess.check_output, because I have to store the output of it into a buffer, and then i have write that buffer into somefile.
I tried redirecting stodout with that file's descriptor, and executed instruction through os.system()
stdout is redirected but ouput of os.system() is not getting redirected to that file,
@iain heh, one of many experiments...
@Chirag I have extremely limited experience in python; what is your level?
@iain : Fresher
Anyways Thank you:)
07:59
Just surfed on to this one ... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ouqn-BsLVp0
Best I get back to function pointers.
@Chirag All ways good to ask.
@Chirag as I recall, subprocess.call() returns exit status. subprocess.check_output() throws exception on non-zero exit status, which contain it itself also. Source: docs.python.org/2/library/subprocess.html
@Kamiccolo I have already gone through that document, it only says that on failure subprocess.check_output returns non-zero, it doesnt have any information about how to handle it. :(
@Chirag handle it the same as any other Python exception.
> If the return code was non-zero it raises a CalledProcessError. The CalledProcessError object will have the return code in the returncode attribute and any output in the output attribute.
Oops, yes ofcource i can do it with "try" and "except"
Thanks @Kamiccolo
try:
    subprocess.check_output()
except subprocess.CalledProcessError as e:
    print "Exit status: ", e.returncode
I guess, it must be something like this....
08:10
Yes Yes, I am doing this only
 
1 hour later…
09:24
Hi, Through python I am trying to install rpm through subprocess.check_output(),
i.e.subprocess.check_output(["rpm","-ivh","Package name"])
Even though package is successfully installed, my python script is not executing below instruction and just stuck at this point
I included shell=True,
i.e. subprocess.check_output(["rpm","-ivh","Package name"],shell=True)
Then it is showing,
RPM version 4.11.1
Copyright (C) 1998-2002 - Red Hat, Inc.
This program may be freely redistributed under the terms of the GNU GPL
09:36
@Chirag mhm. And what's the Python version You're using?
2.7
I have asked this question,
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/35033496/python-subprocess-check-ouput-hangs-while-installing-rpm
09:59
Anyone alive? lol
am I alive or do I rather more simply, live; You tell me?
Both
@Xirol Hello :}
Does one define the other?
Maybe?
I'm working on pointers to functions; sorry bout that ;)
10:06
Anyways I hae a question about makefiles
@Xirol Shoot; I have studied them lightly but made some notes, I make no promises.
a.out: blahblah.o blah2.o blah3.o header.h
(tab) gcc blahblah.o blah2.o blah3.o
so before the semi colon
thats the desired name of ur executable right
Yep, I believe so.
the other lines have 'gcc --------'
does it do everything instantaneously? or does it go in the order u put after the semicolon of the first line?
You can berak it down and order it as you like.
10:12
so ur saying it works from top to bottom
@Xirol target: dependency (-ies)
:0
it executes deepest dependencies first.
@Kamiccolo right I forgot thats what it's called.
What do you mean by deepest?
@Xirol the one(s) which does not have any other not fulfilled dependencies.
10:14
Its a tree right?
Like... if we have dependency graph like... A -> B -> D, C -> B -> D. The D is going to be built first. And then - B.
@iain yup. It should be a tree.
Lets pretend blah2.c and blah3.c are functions, and header.h holds their prototypes; blahblah.o is the main driver and '#include<header.h>'
in this case the program would run blah2.c and blah3.c first right?
Im sorry if im confusing. I only started c this last week as well :(
@Xirol not sure what do You mean, but *.o file is and object file, product of compilation.
oh wait nvm i just got it
lol
Then You link those separate compiled object files into executable files or libraries using linker.
10:19
gcc -c .... compiles
gcc ... links
correct?
Hang on a sec I think you need to look at the compiler here not make, you are confusing your self perhaps unnecessarily.
Have you thought about the c compilation process yet?
i know of it
That the c files make .o files etc?
@Xirol that's... a bit misleading. More like.... gcc wraps a proper linker and takes care of linkage process for the user... In the ordinary world, ld is being used.
But yeah, from gcc user's perspective --- it looks like that.
starts with the source code, then you compile it using a compiler, which gives you object code (machine readable code), then you use a linker to link the file, and you get an executable (language readable for the CPU)
10:24
@Xirol Just checking ;)
its fine haha :p
There is a dependency tree right there.
@Xirol and.... what's the difference between Object "Code" and proper Executable? :P
o_o i feel like this is going to be on my test
and its sad i cant answer that haha
I have the link to a good lecture if you would like?
10:27
isnt the difference just that object code is machine readable only
I need to go through it again myself actualy ...
i've got notes as well from earlier this week xD
When does the preprocessing happen?
@Xirol and executable is not?
i remember that the source code may be the part where preprocessing happens
something something about the compiler directive..? hhaha
@Kamiccolo ohk u got me lol
10:29
and all the libs get added when?
isnt that at the same time as preprocessing
nope
@Xirol the idea is.... that Object File contains the same already compiled machine code + various metadata to help/instruct linker to do it's job. Probably the most important thing that all the code in Object Files is... relocatable. It means that linker can fix addresses of all the jumps, calls, memory access, etc. according to executable format and already generated machine code.
Ohhh I see
I guess.... at some point Object Files are even a bit more readable for human eye.... just because all the debug information, heck, sometimes even comments...
preparation for test, he he he :D
brb, shower
10:33
There is a switch to output the .o files from gcc, I forget what it is now ...
oh its -c I think mentioned earlier.
fge
fge
@iain correct; -c only compiles the files but won't link them
10:49
There is a way to do it so that they are still humanly readable, trying to find in my notes ...
Ah there we go:
gcc -E file.c > file.txt
@fge Interesting for dynamic libraries, just reading about them, must be tricky if the libraries change.
11:50
Hello all.
@iain aaagh, preprocessor dump. Wondering... if it works with C++ templates as well...
helloc @Owatch;
@Owatch Hello.
@Kamiccolo the -c command?
I'm liking pointers to functions; this is going to be really useful for making my own little functions for regular use.
@iain -E
> -E Stop after the preprocessing stage; do not run the compiler proper. The output is in the form of preprocessed source code, which is sent to the standard output.

Input files that don't require preprocessing are ignored.
Are you using the > to file?
interesting to see from the compiler eye view.
yeah, that's a common way of redirecting standard output :}
12:02
cat is my favourite note taking tool :}
ehe, or even dumping whole AST...
ha ha ha :D Sounds pretty funny :D
My note taking tool then: i.imgur.com/C2Lf0bq.jpg :D
I use "cat >> date -I.note"
all the time
then grep to search stuff; I love it, liberating really.
@Kamiccolo Laughing my arse off ... More punch when written fully.
@iain bash macro for this :}
yes macros, once I know the syntax by heart, will make one for this soon. I have a few in lieu to write at the moment, but if i do them to soon I forget the commands!
Doohh!
@Kamiccolo Is the c++ compiler giving a text file of the program at the object stage?
I have encountered a complication.
Given: [hyp](**url**) a situation unfolds where the end of the bold-range is detected at the same time that the end of the url is detected.
Thus, both will try to modify the string.
Of course, formatting a hyperlink is silly, it would never work. So I have decided that I will not create hyperlinks if bolding has been turned on after the partition inside the hyperlink. (Partition = ]( ).
Is this the best method of handling it?
You can, of course, still apply formatting around and inside the actual placeholder text. Like so: **[hyp](url)** or [**hyp**](url).
Just not: [hyp](**url**)].
12:19
@Owatch I'd say, only [**hyp**](url) makes more sense :}
Well, both that and: **[hyp](url)** works of course.
But yes, I guess I will not do anything if there is formatting inside.
@Kamiccolo This makes a rather ugly if statement.
if (partitionIndex && (italicsOpenIndex < partitionIndex) && (boldOpenIndex < partitionIndex) && (tildaOpenIndex < partitionIndex) && (caretOpenIndex < partitionIndex))
(Makes sure that nothing is open after the partition in the url by the bracket and parentheses)
@Owatch ewwww
Not sure how to avoid it. :|
Helloc all;
How's it going?
Alright, you?
12:26
Hello
I'm fine
A bit tired but listening to nujabes so everything's fine^^
Do not know what that is.
This guy did a big part of samurai champloo ost
12:39
Haha, I have to recode malloc()
Wait, what? Why?
@Kotshi Will you call it helloc?
@Owatch Because school wants me to do it :D
@iain I whish I could^^
That sounds interesting.
Makes sense as an exercise.
@Owatch Yep, that's interesting
We have to do work by group of two
12:44
Do you have a book or worksheet prompt?
What do you call a worksheet prompt?
Like: "Malloc works by doing X, and Y. You will implement your own version of malloc using the following basic functions"
Yep
You will rewrite the 3 library functions which are malloc, free and realloc using
only brk/sbrk and your mind. (Do not even think about using the malloc function
from the C library).
xD
-(type)kotshiMalloc(){
 return malloc()
}
Oh wat.
That's objectiveC.
type kotshiMalloc(){
 return malloc()
}
@Kotshi Sounds like you are going back to ticker tape then ...
12:50
How do your exams go, do you do problems live?
Exams are composed of four exercises that we have to code without internet in four hours
Our program instructor made his own web application on campus that compiles and tests our code as we work in the exam halls. (Small ass-desk with computers). We can only use some linux IDE like Geany or Kate and write our programs according to the instructions.
We have 3 hours.
And 5 exercises.
Well, the test paper had 4, the actual exam 5. So it depends I guess on the year.
We also have no internet.
@Kotshi Do you then have to stand on your head whilst twiddling your thumbs and sing 'hallelujah" ?
;) school is funny.
Sorry I shouldn't laugh.
But you couldn't get away with anything anyways. There are moderators walking down the rows all the time, and everything is wide open. Its just you on a small desk with a built in computer behind someone else.
We also have a written part, where we solve other problems.
We have no written exams
12:55
I had a friend who was determined to try and pass without coding anything.
Public school exams in France are like "Well code some shit on paper, we don't care"
So he practiced forever with me on the written part, so if he got it 100% correct he could get the lowest passing grade (on edge) and get through.
He did not manage, but only by one question.
@Kotshi France is retarded for that very reason ...
@iain Yep, our ministery of education is retarded and doesn't know what IT is...
fge
fge
Does anyone recall which SMTP server replies with "550 Polite people say HELO first" when one attempts to use MAILTO without HELO?
12:57
@Kotshi French ed loves IT, but doen't know what it is; that is why you are writing code on paper.
fge
fge
@Kotshi so, you're French too?
And the mayor office is full of people scanning the paper copy of everything into pdf.
@fge Yep, we already talked about it^^
Well, we used to have to write exams here on paper.
For code.
fge
fge
Sorry, my memory fails me :p
12:58
But they give some leniency in terms of syntax.
@iain I'm not
I'm in a private school now
Lucky for you then.
Thankfully they ended it a couple years ago.
@Owatch I mean just now, yes makes me smile to hear that.
What was? The writing in paper?
13:01
Ops, that one went into the edit above.
I see. Nice.
"yes" makes me smile too :D
Next week I'm beginning Program Correctness.
So I guess I'll be interacting with the online program judge a lot more. :(
@Kotshi very nice ...
@Owatch Is that ethically or grammatically?
How funny, all that whilst being totaly hacked by th US gouvernment.
Program Correctness is about efficiency and making things that work properly.
Not writing bad code, or code whose order of complexity is large.
13:10
@Owatch Now I am really laughing!
That does not describe France.
Well, it's a subject about programming. Of course not. If it were a course in a political program or something it might be more amusing.
I also have an introductory course to scientific computing.
@Owatch I get the picture though, important subject indeed, interesting too.
And then I have an Algorithms and Data Structures course in C.
@iain That's because he isn't in France...
@Owatch Yes I was imagining the bureaucracy (which is computer based since the 70's) in France.
@Kotshi Needs to be truly experienced, to be fully believed; else it is quite incomprehensible.
13:13
Netherlands is quite efficient.
I'd say probably top 5 of the world in this respect.
@Owatch Yes, I was impressed by the infrastructure when I visited.
@fge Where are you based fge, if you don't mind my asking?
fge
fge
@iain center, near Chartres
Ah French too :)
We're invading the C chatroom
Seems there are a lot of French writing here.
Alors, faut planter le drapeaux est changer le cote des conduite!
@Kotshi Duh de deh deh dehhh dehhh daaa du de ...
13:19
It's pretty much exclusively French if your count me.
At this moment.
Sorry for the terrible excuse for written French.
La Marseillaise is a dumb and violent song, such are french...
Puis moi je suis ici depuis des ane
I think Kamiccolo is French too, but he doesn't know it since he was kidnapped by those damn lithuanians.
"Alors il faut planter le drapeau et changer le côté de conduite!"
@Owatch Yep
13:21
@Kotshi merci monsiur
At least, they got snow right now
@iain De rien
Okay, well. URL's are detected and removed, and this seems to work properly with other formatting types for now.
@fge You are very near Paris there too.
Looks nice, rural or in town?
I now need to add attributes that color the text and save the URL, and then I need to work with some sort of touch detection functions and use that to implement the hyperlink part.
@Owatch heh :}
13:33
@Kamiccolo I had not realised how far north you are in Lithuania, same latitude as Scotland. Do you get to see the northern lights?
13:53
@iain sometimes :} Lately (last 3 years) it's been the thing.
Oh how wonderful; I would love to see it some day.
@Kamiccolo A little dip in the poles strength perhaps; Or the suns activity is higher.
14:06
@Kamiccolo Will be a part of my studies later on.
Grv
Grv
Hello everyone .. i have been in development in c for the past 1 yr..now i am facing saturation and if i try to switch job there are no jobs which takes me as a c developer
what should i do
@Grv Expand your horizon.
Find out why yoiu are not happy in your current job ...
See a Jyotisha ...
14:26
Now this is irritating.
When I add a dictionary key linked to NSLinkAttributeName, it automatically colors the text a crude blue and underlines it.
@Owatch That is basic css.
I'm not working with CSS anywhere..
You write a line to override all browser settings.
It is the browser that does it, they all do it differently too.
I'm working with Core Text, and Text-Kit, which are based on low level C-based libraries.
so you need to make a simple css to over ride and to standardise your output.
14:28
I'm not working with CSS....
but those are hyper links right?
That is the way they are output if you do nothing to style them; it is the default.
NSLinkAttributeName is a dictionary key for NSFontAttributes dictionary, that is a proper of an NSAttributedString, it has nothing to do with CSS or browsers. Its just special class of strings for rendering text with attributes onscreen.
on screen in what?
iOS, or OSX>
It can be placed in a UILabel class.
Or UITextView.
in what program are you viewing them, sounds like they are getting the browser treatment to me.
14:31
My own program.
html is a mark up language, your soft is marking it up.
it is usualy styled with css syntax.
I am writing the parser, so nothing can be applied unless I specifically add it.
css is rather similar to c actually; i've often wondered about this ...
Which is why it shouldn't be adding color and underlining if I add a NSLinkAttributeName.
depends on what the defaults are, sounds like they are the same as on the browsers.
14:33
I don't think you understand. I've written the parser, I'm applying the formatting. I am the text-formatter. Nothing gets applied here unless I specifically indicate. I'm not typing in my browser or anything.
@Owatch You are doing that within the bounds of an os; tell me that when you have written the os as well.
The OS just runs my App... it doesn't do anything in my App.
the browser is an extention of the os, for examining html mark up.
you are parsing html markup
I am not.
I am parsing plain text.
ok markdown, same thing really in this context as you are parsing to html
14:36
Has no effect. There is nothing affecting my program except me.
So perhaps the default in the browser originates in the same library settings; it is an interesting situation.
@Owatch And some libraries.
Libraries do nothing unless I call functions from them.
Which is why it should not affect the attributes of my strings when I add a specific attribute.
Something is telling your program that an html hyperlink needs to be blue and underlined.
Must be a gremlin in the code.
Oh, just read back, sorry if this is not for your hyperlinks; just thought of that straight away when you described what is occuring.
Found it.
"NSLayoutManager has a internal color hard-coded for glyph ranges belonging to a hyperlink. It ignores the NSForegroundColorAttributeName, we believe wrongfully so"
Stupid.
@Owatch Stupid in browsers too; but is the case.
15:15
@Grv mhm... what field exactly are You interested in? In my small country there still is plenty of embedded C jobs available...
00:00 - 16:0019:00 - 23:00

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