« first day (2171 days earlier)      last day (1300 days later) » 

 
6 hours later…
8:27 AM
@EnnMichael Haha, I've had the same, I've given some in this chat a fair amount of upvotes by now :p
 
 
3 hours later…
11:50 AM
@Stargateur anything in particular you’d like to point out from that thread?
@Jason just wait until you try to upvote an answer and then find out that it was yours.
 
@Shepmaster My previous self taught me a lot of interesting things too
(I'm very good at clearing seemingly useless knowledge from my small head)
 
 
1 hour later…
1:02 PM
@10Rep E_net4 is my name, and reporting accounts is my game. — E_net4 the account reporter 20 hours ago
 
1:48 PM
 
2:06 PM
@PeterVaro mood.
("mood" is the hippest slang I know)
 
HAHAHA
Yeah. But to be fair, I have this mood more often than not.
Don't get me wrong, I love writing software. I also think I'm not that bad at it.
It's just.. I solemnly believe that what we do is in vain and useless.
(Not that working with wood and making things with is any better!)
#Existentialism
(@trentcl it must be a hipper word..)
 
@PeterVaro well, people do tend to appreciate well made furniture more than, say, a really tight n-dimensional constraint solver.
 
@trentcl Oh, ye, of little knowledge, eh?
TBF, I used to be an industrial product designer and jewellery designer..
so I know what it feels to create physical objects -- still do on an almost daily basis, but mostly with my 3D printer these days
 
3:07 PM
@mcarton I linked your answer in Zulip and got this feedback:
]] A &[Cell<T>] is almost like a &[&mut T],

I'm not super fond of that comparison, since the right hand-side has an extra indirection; what about:

]] A &[Cell<T>] is a &[mut T], if that were possible to write: a shared reference to a slice of mutable elements.

You could then even add something along the lines of:

This is safe since the Cell type is a wrapper type with a limited API that makes mutation within a single thread be always safe, and is also a type that Rust knows is not thread-safe (not Sync)
 
@Shepmaster how about now?
(Still no way to read content on zulip without creating an account?)
 
@mcarton looks ok to me (and the previous did as well, IMO) I also linked the changes back to that Zulip thread
 
 
4 hours later…
7:35 PM
> Obviously, this code doesn't pass borrow checker
oooh I hate this so much
Ain't nothing obvious.
 
First rule of writing in tech: don't use the O word
Nothing worth the words to write it is obvious
 
RIGHT?
Likewise: "simple", "just"
 
Obviously I'm out of context here, but whomever left that comment they were using that word sarcastically, weren't they?
As in "naturally" or "of course"
 
-1
Q: how to destructure enum in Rust and take it to variable as a whole at the same time

Michael IlyinI want to match enum variant, process it and then pass it further. The code should look like this: match event { e @ Event::WindowEvent { event: WindowEvent::Resized(size), .. } => { self.size = size; self.handle_event(e); } Obviously, this code doesn't pass borrow checker...

I don't think it was sarcasm
I often parse this kind of usage as "the compiler gave me an error, I don't understand it, but I want to seem smart so I'll say it's obvious"
 
I still believe they did
Look at the sentence following it
> I can fully destructure event and construct it again on pass to handle_event, but this seems wrong.
 
7:40 PM
I also think people use "obvious" in this context to mean "I'm not going to put the error message / MRE"
 
@Shepmaster TBF you're a native english speaker so your instinct on this might be much, much better than mine
 
@PeterVaro eh. It's the internet and text expresses nuances poorly
 
but I still think the meaning of this is: "quite naturally what I've tried doesn't work" (almost blaming themselves) "I could do this the other way but that doesn't feel right"
That's how I interpreted the above
 
> quite naturally what I've tried doesn't work
But it's not natural that it doesn't work
if it was, why would they have tried it?
 
That's where the sarcasm comes in
No, as in sod's law
Naturally, this happens to me
 
7:43 PM
(which you can obviously see I still don't see the sarcasm)
 
:D
Don't get me wrong, I'm playing the devil's advocate here -- I don't have a strong opinion on this
For me it could be both ways, both are equally plausable
Have you never said to yourself, when things were already bad and then yet another bad thing happened, that: "Naturally this had to break now." or "Of course this had to be faulty as well", or "Obviously this failed me now"?
 
8:30 PM
Maybe "because I'm asking a question on Stack Overflow, it's obvious that what I tried didn't work"?
still an awkward turn of phrase though, I agree
 

« first day (2171 days earlier)      last day (1300 days later) »