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00:21
@Stargateur are you suggesting I add that line in addition? or replace something?
@Shepmaster No sé
was just working on this question
I'm still very confuse with the question
@Stargateur I parse it as "I have a webpage that has a date and an hour. I know this is in the Paris timezone. How do I get it to UTC?"
yeah but...
I'm like... read the doc ^^'
there is a lot of way to do this
@Stargateur I actually found it very difficult to parse just a date and hour
you can't do just %Y/%m/%d %H for example
you need at least years month day hour minute
that make sense because Utc is for hours and minute
if you only need a date
%Y/%m/%d is enough
00:30
how do you parse a string to a date?
NaiveDate::parse_from_str("5sep2015", "%d%b%Y")
actually the best way to understand chrono is to read, en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_8601 ;)
I'm passingly familiar with ISO8601
but it doesn't have generics or "naive" pieces
@Shepmaster Oh you mean, in respect of chrono ?
well it's not me who dev the crate
I suppose they have good reason
but iso define date from day month year
so I just search date in chrono xd
@Stargateur and linked the wrong page after you saw it couldn't parse strings ;-)
yep ^^, but I was on the fly ;)
at least you see that I just search it without "know" the information before
but ISO8601 is a nightmare for anyone who want implement it
I think chrono do a good job
"Duration is only positive, making implementing Add/Sub and various
iterators extremely unergonomic."
yeah...
because isize is not enough
let write -1s
because of course it's make sense !
by the way, I'm -56 years old
 
9 hours later…
09:24
This article about an alias based formulation of the borrow checker is interesting, but I wonder if those idea will be used in the compiler.
 
3 hours later…
12:27
@PeterHall I always forget about flat_map :).
@ljedrz Heh. I didn't realise split could take a char
I wonder if it's marginally more efficient than a single-char slice
@PeterHall Your answer is of course superior; I'll leave mine be in case it's easier for a newbie to understand what's going on.
It's cool that flat_map renders unwrap()s unnecessary
Yes. And it's not actually quite the same either
if the input has a double space, then yours will panic on the unwrap
mine will just produce an empty str at that step.
@PeterHall yeah, I supposed so
As @Boiethios pointed out in a comment, str.split_whitespace() would be better. And in particular would fix that possible panic
12:42
@Boiethios Because I didn't think of it! It would also remove the possible panic in ljedrz's answer. — Peter Hall 2 mins ago
@ljedrz
@Boiethios just saw it
I forgot it can accept any number of whitespaces in a row
@ljedrz Yes, that's a questionable "feature" of split
@Boiethios I read this article. I didn't follow all of it but it was fascinating. Maybe I should try it again
@PeterHall I didn't understood everything as well :p
But what I've understood is that it enhances NLL (more code could compile)
I used to play with DataLog a bit. But this syntax is slightly different and it confused me
Also, that was a loooong time ago :)
13:31
The last question looks like an XY problem to me
@Boiethios and a broad topic, too
@ljedrz Sure, this point is unquestionable :p
@ljedrz The last edition of the question makes it better tho
@Boiethios at least the asker is ready to negotiate the terms of answering :)
meh, I wanted to mark this as duplicate of question I linked, but a retracted vote can't be changed
13:52
The last state of the question was ok, it did not deserve to be deleted.
I was writing an answer :(
Oh, it's deleted now?
Yes...
I guess it really was an X/Y problem and OP found Y :)
or would that be X? :S
We'll never know :p
I wonder why the crate maintainer of fs2 does not use RAII for this
The lock methods should return a FileLocked struct (for example) with unlock in its drop.
There's no point though. Another program could just as easily break the constraint
So you can't rely on it anyway
14:09
@PeterHall What do you mean? How can you break it?
Oh, I know, maybe you can delete the locked file
Another program might start writing to the file or move it etc
14:28
@PeterHall You cannot if the file is locked
@Boiethios Of course you can
if you have the right privileges
Sure, but those kind of protection are only a security. You can always break it intentionally if you want, but then your program won't work correctly.
14:43
0
Q: Rust: Given an integer, return string of enum at that index

2080What would be the easiest way to achieve this? enum E { A, B, C } // Should return "A" for 0, "B" for 1 and "C" for 2 fn convert(i:u32) -> str { ??? }

don't make any sense
It does!
clearly no
@Boiethios I think I very aware of this kind of use
and I believe the OP have a xy problem
and your duplicate is the opposite of the question
Yes, I removed it
14:47
@Stargateur it's all mixed up
There are some nasty hacky, unsafe solutions to that...
which won't work with more complicated enums
With custom derive, this is easy
Yes
I would just have a match statement in there
You can also derive Debug, then unsafe transmute the integer to the enum
I wouldn't write that in an answer though
the OP want a str
this is what don't make sense
why not?
oh a str
14:50
@PeterHall for ton of reason
Yeah. He'd have to hard-code them then
oh actually str! I assumed you meant &str
Obviously, the OP means &str...
&str or str don't change a lot why I say this don't make sense
14:51
and LOL, he did exactly what I suggested a few messages back
why to you want to convert a raw int to a string that "represent" an enum
Well. Yes. There's that
@Stargateur I do not care about the why, but this is perfectly possible with a custom macro derive
@Boiethios I like to understand
by the way, 2080 the OP nickname => 2080 - My Megadrive
@PeterHall and now OP return a E and not a str
and now it's make sense...
@PeterHall @ljedrz .nth(0) -> .next()
clippy warns on that iirc
14:57
@Shepmaster true, will adjust
@Shepmaster Clippy is wrong
nth(0) is more readable
And, ah! @Shepmaster. Regarding this: stackoverflow.com/questions/50312999/… You are right of course that adjusting a DateTime<Utc> is horrible. I found a better way, in case you want to change the comment about it in your own answer.
I'm not sure that your answer fully answers the question though, as OP says he has a NaiveDate to begin with, not a string.
I have to say though, that the Chrono API is extremely difficult to get to grips with.
Conversions between the library's own types should be simple.
@PeterHall but maybe not semantically valid, with nth you check, if the iterator is finish and for the number. With next you only check the iterator
funny there is last method but not first
15:13
@Shepmaster - "This doesn't fit the original requirements as it doesn't return a str."
wow
@PeterHall I really just want them to acknowledge it. Advice on better phrasing?
I'm just thinking it's a new user, who may not feel particularly welcome. In the light of that blog post, which did have some merit.
Go ahead, make your memes while I'm away, working myself off.
@PeterHall I would certainly not use the term "merit". Many people go as far as call that blog post infamous.
I prefixed the word with "some" :)
There aren't enough prefixes to describe the mess that it brought. :)
15:24
I believe the infamy was more related to its inexplicable focus on women and minorities?
And doesn't change the fact that SO can be quite unwelcoming to new users.
@PeterHall yeah, it was just a really badly written post
If we can't use that post as an authority, I believe it was Abraham Lincoln who once said "Be excellent to each other". That's some wisdom right there.
being welcoming in itself is ok I guess
@PeterHall That too. It also stroke as an underestimation towards curators of the site. As if they aren't victims as well. :(
@E_net4 I think that post's author won't be doing any blogging for SO in the future
I'm glad they didn't double down, that would've been a disaster
15:29
@PeterHall this was debating too, actually, I was in the side, "I not a teacher, I'm not here to be nice to bad question/answer or to help SO to make more money"
Even a few days ago, I was called by a >1k rep user not being "in the spirit of the site", and my comments being a waste of SO's servers. The question was deleted the next day, which disproves that point.
@E_net4 haha yes I remember
@Stargateur Oui oui, je suis le victime
^ Yeah thanks, I don't claim to know French sufficiently well. :x
Well, back to work, see you folks later.
15:31
++
@Stargateur "victim" is feminine in French? I'm feeling some vibes from the blog post ^^
@ljedrz outch... generally genre in french are just "does it sound better"
in the past, french word got the 3 form f, m, neutral
@Stargateur ah, cool; I'm used to gendered languages
and it was just too much to learn
Yes, no real logic in French, in most of the cases
15:35
yeah, this reminds me of German grammar tables
too.much.
In fact, German is very simple compared to French in my opinion. French is full of exceptions
So you'll be glad that English grammar abandoned genders 800-900 years ago then :P
I'm not sure if that's because we're lazy or ahead of the curve!
Languages follow a cycle of decomplexification/complexification
@PeterHall actually, laziness is that make language better
@PeterHall yeah but now order words right sentence have we to put.
15:40
One thing in english that I don't understand is "I'm 55 years"
"I'm"
BE
@Stargateur Is it "I have 55 years" in French?
That makes no sense to me ;)
In Russian they say "At me 55 years" IIRC
not bad
Actually, even if I'm French, I find the usage of BE more logical...
15:46
@trentcl "Мне 55 лет" is really hard to translate literally into English ^^
@Stargateur No one says "I'm X years". They say "I'm X years old".
@Shepmaster thanks for editing!
@PeterHall or just I'm X
@PeterHall always forget that
I wonder if it's different in Korean given that they even count years differently
15:48
This code causes a segfault when run in the playground. This is not safe and should not be used. — Shepmaster 47 secs ago
@trentcl they start at 9 month no ?
@ljedrz Yes, true. "I'm X" is the shorthand
@PeterHall believe in yourself ;-)
@Stargateur ah, I think it starts at 1 year when you are born but it changes at the new year, not every year at your birthday
but I am not Korean, I just work with a couple
@trentcl strange
15:50
I wonder if the choice of verb (have vs am) affects people's sense of identity. AM implies that your age is intrinsic to you somehow and defines what you are. While HAVE is just an attribute of yourself.
@ljedrz oh right, I was misremembering anyway. "At me" would be closer to у меня, no?
Do French people get less stressed when they approach landmark birthdays like 40 or 50?
*BRB I have to get funding for a 5 year psychological study.
@trentcl I'm not an expert, but google translate seems to equate "Мне 55 лет" with "у Мне 55 лет"; this would mean "with/at me", yes
@PeterHall well, OP says they have a string from a webpage. They managed to get a naivedate, but why not cut to the chase?
@Shepmaster Yes. His question title and some of the details are not quite consistent. We each answered the other.
16:03
@LukasKalbertodt np, thanks for updating a useful answer
@Shepmaster I was a little relieved that there was a way to do the conversion properly.
Subtracting offsets from dates reduces us to the level of Java or (worse) Javascript developers.
@Shepmaster I have a bit of free time right now. Using it to update many of my answers. That's the problem with Rust, answers change too often :P
> answered Aug 14 '16 at 10:21
MFW 1.5 years is too often
16:27
At least it ain't like Python 3.
@E_net4 ...yet
@ljedrz Heh, terribly unlikely.
I hope so :)
16:50
@E_net4 I don't know which way that means — more or less churn?
0
A: How can deserialization of polymorphic trait objects be added in Rust if at all?

MilesA library to do this should be possible. To create such a library, we would create a bidirectional mapping from TypeId to type name before using the library, and then use that for serialization/deserialization with a type marker. It would be possible to have a function for registering types that ...

I don't know how to feel about these types of answers
"it should be possible"
but no effort to prove it one way or the other
17:05
> maximum golfing
Yeah it's nicer tho, I agree :P
@LukasKalbertodt yeah, and it gets the includes and everything
makes Rust look good. I might even suggest you reorder to put it first ;-)
@Shepmaster Yeah I thought about that. What I found tho is that with try!/? my students lost track of what this stuff is actually doing. And sometimes you are in a function not returning Result and then you don't have a clue what to do...
But yeah I guess you're right
@LukasKalbertodt And your current order is almost a progression
like, if there were a connection between exiting early from the match and the ?
@Shepmaster So much churn it turns into version 2.butter.
@Shepmaster It might be necessary to abandon Box<Trait> and instead define a TaggedBox<Trait> which carries with it a type name, and ensures that the type are mapped to constructors somewhere.
Ok, maybe not "necessary". But more realistic.
17:27
@PeterHall that' certainly seems like an implementation, yeah (the global registry mentioned in the other answer, right?)
but the answer I linked just doesn't seem useful.
17:37
@Shepmaster Yeah, I guess it's basically that. But you'd want to make sure that you couldn't try to (de)serialise an unregistered object.
Which you can ensure with a special Box type
17:52
@PeterHall I'm pretty sure it is necessary, because when you try to deserialize something you have to know what it is first. So the tag has to go in the serialization.
scala functional programming, sophisticate, beautiful, => ask for a global
So you can't serialize a T: Trait and deserialize it to a TaggedBox<Trait> because the tag isn't there
basically you reinvent most of enum to make this work
 
4 hours later…
22:18
@trentcl i was wondering when someone would point out repr(u8)
I figured it wasn't worth repeating it as both transmute answers in stackoverflow.com/questions/28028854/… mention it
 
1 hour later…
23:35
@Shepmaster I admit I was hoping OP would edit their answer to something that would justify an upvote.

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