« first day (1310 days earlier)      last day (2407 days later) » 

00:44
Shep state machine: shep get bored => shep found a old question => shep edit question and all answers => shep answer himself => shep is not bored anymore => shep get bored
@Stargateur to clarify, "found" is because someone else answered so it showed up on the active tab
I usually wait for things to surface naturally (if I reference them, someone edits them, if it's one of mine that is voted on, etc.)
01:05
my state machine is a work in progress
doh
I answered and then found the duplicate
@Stargateur the rest of it is pretty spot on
bye bye easy points
02:20
/shrug I have no idea 'whats best', I was just trying to help the OP instead of posting a comment, because getting a comment on your question instead of an actual answer is pretty frustrating, from personal experience. If answering the OP's question is someone the wrong thing to have done on a Q&A site, then I'm sorry. You're the mod with 100+K rep; do whatever it is that SO mods do in this kind of situation. — Doug 8 mins ago
> If answering the OP's question is someone the wrong thing to have done on a Q&A site, then I'm sorry.
Ze snark is strong
@Shepmaster XD
@Shepmaster this question is literally 'what is the syntax for adding a lifetime to an impl Foo'; that question is 'how do I write an iterator that returns objects with references in it?`; the answer may be similar, but the questions are not the same. — Doug 24 mins ago
amazing
don't understand that duplicate
mean same answer
not same question
@Stargateur It's a very SO specific phrasing
yes, a 10k should know this
02:44
agree, but its an imperfect world
 
8 hours later…
Tim
Tim
10:45
@Shepmaster How do you format "See also"s in answers?
1
A: How to deal with inexact floating point arithmetic results in Rust?

TimSince you know why this happens, I assume you want to format the output. As in the official docs: Precision For non-numeric types, this can be considered a "maximum width". If the resulting string is longer than this width, then it is truncated down to this many characters and that tru...

 
3 hours later…
13:20
@Tim just a list
Tim
Tim
Ai, thanks
Tim
Tim
Yup, edited this way :)
 
1 hour later…
14:25
because UTC is mainstream
14:45
@Stargateur That also rustles my jimmies. When the audience is international, there should be no excuse not to include time instances in UTC. :(
14:58
@E_net4: At the same time, I am not sure casual users would understand what the UTC is :x
@MatthieuM. there wii understand CEST PDT KST but not UTC ?
if those are the common timezones of users, then yes :-)
what it cost to just add UTC ?
I have no clue how my timezone is called, but I know it's UTC+1 (or UTC+2 daylight saving time)
Uuuugh. Yeah I had to look up CEST. I think they picked three they thought likely to be understood by users.. but IDK why not just UTC.
15:09
@Shepmaster this might be a silly question, but how can one create an sxd_document::dom::Text? Does it have to be a Document that needs to be broken down? I'd expect some From<&str> :)
@ljedrz Document::create_text
Im not sure i understand what you mean by " a Document that needs to be broken down"
@Shepmaster I wanted to fill in an empty element found with an XPath
so I opened the Value, then the Nodeset, then Element
@MatthieuM. There has to be some reference point. And UTC is intentionally universal.
and was hoping to just add Text to the Element
but Element doesn't have a set_text method
@ljedrz gotcha. i could see shortcut methods added for that; would you like to submit changes?
i'm thinking a set_children method (and maybe set_child) and then set_text can build atop
15:18
I could, sure; let me just dig around a bit more to make sure it
is not available and what shorcuts could make sense
it's similar to set_attribute_value
@Shepmaster hmm, element.document().set_text("foo") doesn't seem to do the trick
@ljedrz wait, i'm missing something - why would you set text on the document?
@Shepmaster I just want to fill a tag with textual data - this might not be the way to do it :P
I might be a bit rusty (heh) with the XML standard naming convention
I just need to fill a <foo/> so that it becomes <foo>bar</foo>
15:36
@ljedrz Nah, I think I understand your goal.
With the current API, you'd do
let t = element.document().create_text("...");
element.append_child(t);
but!
Which XML crate is that?
This highlights there's no easy "remove all children" method, no easy "replace all children" method, and no "set the text of the element" method
@PeterHall only the best.
One of the few that actually exposes a DOM
Interesting
I'd have thought a pull parser would be more rusty
best cause I authored it, natch.
I mean, there is a pull parser under it
Not for every use case though, I guess
15:39
but, really, those are annoying a.f. to deal with
Yeah, but you can have zero copy :)
and the pull parser is zero* heap allocation
(it allocates a little to track and report errors)
Fair enough
Because it has a DOM, I also implemented XPath
Does the DOM own all of its strings?
15:40
indeed, all interned
I once implemented XPath :)
Only XPath 1.0 though. With a couple of extras
Ok, I might browse the code a bit. I'd be interested in how you deal with optimising for mutation
@PeterHall yeah, 1.0 is where it's at. all the new is like, 100x harder
@Shepmaster does this mean it is possible or not :P? I didn't see an "easy" before "set the text of the element"
@PeterHall I'd love that, since I haven't and it sounds like you might have ideas ;-)
@Shepmaster heh
I'd have thought you could have zero allocation on names, even in the DOM
15:43
@ljedrz It's possible (see chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/42562918#42562918), but only "short" because the element is already empty
but then it gets tricky once you start adding and removing nodes
So all the names would have to be Cows
@PeterHall and you have to have lifetimes
@Shepmaster coll, I'll try it tomorrow, then; I'm done with work for today
@PeterHall could be interesting to have an immutabledom though
@Shepmaster I don't think that would be so useful
15:45
webscraping. mostly
@Shepmaster luckily I'll only need to fill in empty elements or add missing ones
So.. with zero allocation, mutating would still create owned Strings. But then you can canonicalize() the whole structure, to rip out the owned strings into a string pool, and then replace the node values with slices into the pool.
@Shepmaster have you benchmarked against other DOM implementations?
The C/C++ implementations out there must be pretty mature and well-optimised by now.
@PeterHall that's my white whale - to beat libxml2
16:01
@Shepmaster If all goes well I'll soon be processing thousands of files with it on the reg, so I'll be happy to run benches if you need randomized test material
I forget the last numbers, but i think if libxml was 1s I was 1.4s (read, domify, print)
I mean with the sxd combo
real world data boiii
@ljedrz yeah, real data is always great
@Shepmaster With my own XPath implementation (which was for Actionscript btw!), it was basically 1.0, but I added the ability to define custom functions from outside, and then call them from XPath expressions.
@PeterHall that's pretty cool
At least as cool as it gets with XMLs ;)
@Shepmaster I feel like these crates have lots of useful functionalities which are not exposed well enough; I'll add some examples if I introduce some practical things in my code
There is some atrocious stuff in there.
In my defence, it's more than 10 years ago
And I'd imagine if you ran your perf test against that, we'd be talking 20s :P
@ljedrz That's entirely possible. I know everything that's in there, so it's very obvious to me ;-)
A "cookbook" could also be a good solution.
@Shepmaster like csv has? yeah, that'd work too, especially with a more complex single example file
 
1 hour later…
17:31
@Shepmaster I don't think, stackoverflow.com/questions/34622127/…
answer the question
@Stargateur why so?
OP want to convert contigus memory to Vec
this one to not do that
not answer the question
@Stargateur I dont understand why you say the proposed dupe doesnt do this
OP didn't create a vec
it's an pointer from C allocate by the C function
your proposed dupe are from something allocate by rust
17:51
> Do not use Vec::from_raw_parts unless the pointer came from a Vec originally.
that answers the q
18:14
@Stargateur but if we think that the right solution is to restate the points, we can do that too
@Shepmaster That not the primary point of the answer
there is not way to copy the content of a raw C to a vec rust ?
18:34
@Stargateur sure, op is going it
slice then to_vec
18:46
In Soviet Russia, vector slices you.
 
2 hours later…
20:46
Ah, my old frenemy AlexanderSupertramp
Tim
Tim
21:42
Clippy fails at chrono. Anyone know how to fix this?
@Tim did chrono compile alone ?
Tim
Tim
yup
It is indeed copy-paste; why would I rewrite a perfectly serviceable example when the Rust documentation already provides it? I copied it here in case the link breaks over time. If you aren't able to translate from the examples in the documentation to your specific case, then you should have linked to the docs in your original question and asked a specific question about the part you are having trouble with. — Shepmaster Jan 24 '15 at 15:17
What are you trying to convince me in? — アレックス Jan 25 '15 at 4:54
haha
0
Q: How can I group continuous integers in a vector in Rust?

Sergey YakovlevSomething like this: [1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 9, 10] -> [[1, 2, 3], [5, 6, 7], [9, 10]]

@Stargateur do you actually not know what they want, or are you playing dumb? ;-)
well, It's so easy that I wonder if OP want something else
21:52
I think they have an unknown input vector
and want to group the integers that are consecutive (+1)
so 1,2,3 get grouped
but then there's no 4, so start a new group
As I said I think this question need more clarification
Tim
Tim
other example would be [1, 4, 6, 7, 8, 10, 11, 15, 17] -> [[1], [4], [6, 7, 8], [10, 11], [15], [17]] I guess
@Shepmaster ah OP fix the question
you were right
Tim
Tim
22:00
Okay, since this seems to be a bug; is there a way to downgrade cargo/rust?
Nevermind, found a solution
22:47
@Shepmaster I'm block here
@Stargateur you trying to be functional again?
I give up to be totally functional on this one
that will confuse the OP
But I think it's possible ;)
14
Q: Requiring implementation of Mul in generic function

Maxim SloykoI'm trying to implement a generic function in Rust where the only requirement for the argument is that the multiplication operation should be defined. I'm trying to implement a generic "power", but will go with a simpler cube function to illustrate the problem: use std::ops::Mul; fn cube<T: Mul>...

help at all?
I am delighted by structopt. The power of clap with the expressiveness of macros 1.1.
@E_net4 yeah, pretty nice. you try quicli?
22:59
@Shepmaster Uhh...
Oh yes, I looked into it once. But I didn't feel very motivated towards it use.
@Shepmaster perfect ;)
and for the second error ? do you have another magic link ? xd
Although it fills in the boilerplate for the main function, turning it into a macro is not very good looking. And RLS is still not very good at pointing errors in macros.
Oh wait
"cannot borrow i as mutable more than once at a time", nooooooooooooooo
haha that doesn't work at all

« first day (1310 days earlier)      last day (2407 days later) »