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05:48
@Shepmaster I wouldn't expect to be able to hide from you somewhere in the Rust community :P
@Stargateur What exactly do you mean? The problem here is that there is no one way to display a duration. You can either do it like 3h 12m 9s 6ms or... 3:12:9.6 or... many other ways. That's why most time related APIs contain a strftime function to let the user decide how to format. I don't quite think there is "the ONE" formatting that everyone agrees should be the default. But well, that's exactly what I have written in the "Open questions" section :P I'm also not 100% sure
Oh and also: Debug doesn't need to be #[derive(Debug)]. There are plenty of examples where the Debug output is not the derived one. I think the only thing that the Debug output must fulfill is to give the programmer all the information about the type (without omitting information) in an easy to understand way. Which is still given in my PR...
well, for me if I would like debug my duration, I would like to know what is second and what is nanosecond, your debug implementation now "hide" the intern value of the structure, how to debug duration bug if your debug implementation bug ? I think your implementation is overkill for a debug output
For me, the feature you code could be a display implementation but not a debug implementation
Maybe you could do two thing:
1. show the nice result you produce
2. and show the real value of second and nano too
@Stargateur Please raise your concerns in the GitHub thread then ;-) if you think this should be the Display impl and not the Debug one, this shouldn't be hidden in this SO chat
But I think I disagree with you on that one: deriving the number of seconds and nanoseconds from "my output" is pretty easy (as everything is just off by a factor of 1000). But yeah again, go for it and state your opinion in the thread ^_^
"deriving the number of seconds and nanoseconds from "my output" is pretty easy (as everything is just off by a factor of 1000)" to do that I need to trust your code and do the calculation myself... it's the inverse you wanted "The output of the derived Debug impl is hard to parse for humans" ;)
I will tell my mind on github
I just follow up here as shep link the pull request here ;)
06:15
Hello there @nareeat126nareeat126!
 
2 hours later…
 
4 hours later…
11:40
@Shepmaster Your struggle is pertinent. :) Consider sharing your latest approach perhaps? meta.stackoverflow.com/q/367459/1233251
12:09
As with @deceze, I'm puzzled by the message. We're trying to get a discussion going but I'm still waiting for the mod who sent you that message to come back online. — BoltClock ♦ 1 min ago
This sounds like it could be very interesting for @Shepmaster indeed
seem that there is a lot of people who abuse it and don't want loose their privilege xd
there are fighting with rage and bad argument
How about quality of the question / answer, in the eye of the close-voter? I'd place that at a solid first place. I honestly don't care about the votes a answer got. If I disagree with the answer, I'm not going to use it as a dupe target, regardless of the 100 votes it got. — Cerbrus 4 mins ago
like "I am right and all 100 peoples are wrong" ;)
there is a fatal flow here XD
flow?
ah, it's flaw.. sorry I was confused
*flaw
sorry sound like flow in my head...
sometimes people get funny ideas
@Stargateur I pretty strongly agree with that comment actually, and I think number of votes on an existing answer is a poor metric for deciding whether it should be marked as dupe target.
12:23
@trentcl (actually I agree too, more a question/answer is old more it's get vote)
my position is just that in that case it's hard to determine what it's the best answer
and tell "I know better than you" sound wrong to me in this democrat site
@Stargateur which is why we have gold hammers
but this particular case the gold hammer is the one who post the question
@trentcl and gold hammer are specifically warn to not abuse it...
and many time SO say to them that if they abuse it they will remove it
it's not gold badge know better, but gold badge probably know better
@Stargateur "Abuse" would be marking questions as dupes of my own question when the questions aren't the same, or in obvious preference to an older question or question with better answers.
@trentcl yes and this is exactly the case...
In this case I will just ask another gold hammer or just chat room of the language
I will not take the decision alone
@Stargateur Perhaps I'm reading it more generously than you are.
12:32
It would be nice if the system allowed a gold user to choose between vote and hammer.
@Stargateur Because you disagree with jpp's actions does not mean they are abusing their powers.
It should be easier to merge answers too. Or maybe just have "linked questions" without the need to hard close
@trentcl modo can do that I think
the best would be that the UI show the answer of the duplicate in the "original" question.
@Stargateur I've flagged questions before and asked to merge the answers but mods never seem to listen to me.
@Stargateur That would work well, I think. Maybe a visual break and a header saying "These answers to other questions were flagged as answers to this one" or something like that.
yeah to warn that the answer could "seem a little bit off topic because the question isn't exactly the same"
13:04
It's just unrealistic. I don't know any goldbadgers IRL outside of SO. I don't frequent the chat much. If I'm on the fence, I rather abstain completely. If the system has entrusted me with the power, I shouldn't be bound to double check myself, implicitly or explicitly. — deceze ♦ 2 mins ago
when a modo tell you that...
I'm quite afraid
13:22
seem he didn't understand my point
@Stargateur TBH it's hard to agree with your position. What's the point of giving a very experienced user Mjölnir if they still should audit other users?
just sometime
like shep sometime ask our opinion
this is a decision that doom hammer user should be able to take
In a way, yeah. But the main point of leaving the comment first these days is to actually have some backing votes. To make it look like he didn't do it singlehandedly.
they should be able to know when ask an other opinion
You call it a doom hammer? No way.
13:31
@E_net4 that a solution too but on a old question a comment isn't gonna be read fast
Hmm, on old questions, this matter is a bit trickier, yet less important. It can be dupe-hammered in the event that it receives some activity (e.g NATO).
 
2 hours later…
15:42
@Stargateur It's actually had it "forever", but it's been nightly only
@Stargateur yeah
Our own @oli-obk has done a huge amount of the work for it
@Stargateur honestly, the ability to allocate memory at compile time is still magical to me
you can't allocate memory at compile time
this doesn't make sense
actually I wonder what there are doing to do that
i mean, string:: / vec:: new dont actually allocate
just some pointers and numbers
I suppose they set intern pointer to rust "NULL" something and size and capacity to zero in that case
15:55
but what about const X: usize = (String::from("a") + "b").chars().count()
so when program startup the data is just init to default value
@Shepmaster this work ;) ?
also remember that const != static
but this could be done in compile time
@Stargateur i dont think right now
but it could
@Stargateur yeah, that's my understanding
something like that const X: String = String::from("a") + "b"); will probably never work (and probably should be never write ;))
15:57
well, i can see usages of it
13
Q: How to create a static string at compile time

maximiI want to create a long &'static str made of repeating sequences of chars, e.g. abcabcabc... Is there a way in Rust to do this via an expression, e.g. something like long_str = 1000 * "abc" in Python, or do I have to generate it in Python and copy/paste it in the Rust code?

ofc, but I can see that this should need to do global constructor ;)
so a global destructor...
and all problem that come with these thing
welllllll
you dont need a destructor ;-)
but yes, it's non-trivial
theres discussion on this
lemme search
destructor is not even the biggest problem, you call the prog, it's init a library that have a global constructor that fail... what to do is obviously is to stop the prog, know you get a problem but you have nothing to fix it, your prog just don't work
worst is that diagnostic this kind of bug are a nightmare
yeah because these struct don't allocate anything when empty
but that doesn't change that const X: String = String::from("a") + "b"); need to allocate something. And here you are in trouble ;) in fact even just const X: String = String::from("a");
maybe not in fact
16:12
remember that a const is real similar to a C macro
everywhere you use X, substitute the definition
related ^^
I see, it's a lot of trick for me
look like C ^^
I don't think there's any reason String::from("a") + "b" can't be done at compile time.
It won't end up in the same place as if you did it at run time, but that's an implementation detail
16:37
string is normally allocate this is in fact very complex to do that
const would indeed be possible but a static variable become very tricky
yep, very true
 
2 hours later…
19:02
I'd like to encourage some vote manipulation ;-)
1
A: Is mem::forget(mem::uninitialized()) defined behavior?

Ralf JungNo, this is not defined behavior, at least not for all types. (I can't tell how your code would be called as part of mutation, so I don't know if you have control over the types here, but the generic impl sure makes it look like you do not.) That's demonstrated by the following piece of code: ...

The OP of that answer is deeply involved with Rust's unsafe world
but you need 50 rep for that
so if they could get some upvotes (and you agree it deserves it), that would be useful
Seems like a good answer - you didn't even have to edit @Shepmaster :)
@kazemakase right? Those are comparatively rare; everyone makes typos, afterall
@Shepmaster I have to admit, I sometimes catch myself paying less attention to details when posting in [rust] because I know it's going to be edited...
@kazemakase I wonder how true that is in general; it's something I've wondered about
but honestly, I'm OK with small typos and grammar. Not everyone is a native English speaker
It's the big stuff that annoys me — when the rendered post just looks wrong
@Shepmaster nope. I can testify that :)
Right, code formatting and paragraphs can make all the difference
but it's also a matter of taste to some extent
19:19
@kazemakase oh certainly. I don't expect most people to be as heavy-handed at editing as I am. It does make me happy when I see other people editing though. I wish that's what my example spurred in more people
@Shepmaster i don't feel confident in english enough to edit more than the most obvious formatting/grammar/typo mistakes ;)
but it seems to me in [rust] there is more (and more constructive) editing going on than in [python]
also from other users
so i'd say your spurring is bearing fruit

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