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03:00
Apr 29 '12 at 12:23, by sehe
I did read Alicia in Terra Mirabilis back when. I also read 'Laus Stultutiae' and parts of the Vulgata. The latter was a bit to dry for my taste.
dunno how to quote the message directly, but:
@sehe It's quite funny how useful latin can be, sometimes ... :) (It's even funnier that knowing a language that's actually in use would be kinda more useful :P)
@ScarletAmaranth Yeah, it will totally save the day when 'Harrius Potter' arrives in the mail
May 20 '12 at 23:38, by sehe
@RadekdaknokSlupik You are a freak of nature. Make sure they don't hire you midway college. You'd be dealt a low deal if you skip college with that kind of learning ability
^ @rightfold yay for serendipity
the last afore-linked message says something in the sense that the order had been placed then
@ScarletAmaranth Yeah. I'm dumbfounded on how to explain my exuberance there. I expect to locate the related post where I explain how I had to pare down my order on Amazon for budgetary reasons.
@ScarletAmaranth About thrice now :) See ^
mmm, I see
03:05
@ScarletAmaranth Look for the "permalink" link when you click the arrow on the left of a message (like if you want to edit/star/reply)
@JerryCoffin In case you still wonder, it never resolved the issue. The only way I can have the runner main "hosted" in a separate solution is by (a) linking source objects of dependent projects - breaks linking, not worth the trouble (b) by manually referencing all objects that define tests in the runner target... Too tedious, also not worth it :(
@Code-Guru Don't tell me you edit/star/reply with the drop down arrow o.O
@sehe mostly, yes
=p
I know I can star and reply on the right, too, but I already established a habit...
You're not a programmer then.
Programmers continuously replace habits by lazier ones
Are there keyboard shortcuts?
That too
03:08
teach me, Guru!
how can I be lazier?
38
Q: SE Chat Modifications -- Keyboard navigation and commands for chat

Tim Stone Screenshot Use /command shortcuts to perform common chat tasks: See message history inline: Easily preview replied-to messages: And much, much more... About Legends tell of a prolific Meta Stack Overflow chatter who despised using their mouse above all things. In an effort to keep t...

I should get money every time I link that.
/command
=p
/star
oh...I mean I have to install a plugin?
@Code-Guru Not really, just Ctlr-Up/up/up/up, "R" for reply, "D" for delete etc.
@Code-Guru Yes. s/plugin/userscript/
I'll have to look into that some day
too lazy to do it right now, though
Jul 23 '12 at 1:27, by sehe
Oh damn. My Amazon cart now totals $594.13. I need to pare it down before checkout... :(
03:14
@sehe was I present then?! :)
Jul 23 '12 at 1:33, by sehe
There. I pared it down to $263.31. I threw out Bruce Eckel's thinking in C++ (since I won't need it, I would just want to browse it out of curiousity - occupational deformation) /cc @Ell let me put up a list if I can easily
@ScarletAmaranth Does it matter? I didn't know I was responsible for keeping your world view accurate :)
hahahah, fair enough
Oh and here's confirmation that Harrius Potter didn't make the cut: chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/4628487#4628487 (so now I can be even more lazy and not go rummaging through the bookcases)
I'm actually quite content that I did read a significant portion of the books there. (C++TTCG, LYAH, AccelC++, C++CiA). I think the worst years have passed then
oh, I see you needed something to burn in the fireplace, @sehe
" "JavaScript: The Good Parts" (Douglas Crockford; Paperback; $17.09)
"JavaScript & jQuery: The Missing Manual" (McFarland, David Sawyer; Paperback; $23.27) "
It was relevant to my job, then. I managed without actually reading them though :)
03:20
@sehe oh, that's when you fell into deep depressions?
Funny you should say that. Here's one that's shaming me from the "To Read" pile:
Jan 16 at 23:29, by sehe
Mark Williams
The Guilford Press

If you’ve ever struggled with depression, take heart. Mindfulness, a simple yet powerful way of paying attention to your most difficult emotions and life experiences, can help you break the cycle of chronic unhappiness once and for all. In The Mindful Way through Depression, four uniquely qualified experts explain why our usual attempts to “think” our way out of a bad mood or just “snap out of it” lead us deeper into the downward spiral. Through insightful lessons drawn from both Eastern meditative traditions and cognitive therapy, they demonstrate how to sidestep the mental habits that lead to despair, including rumination and self-blame, so you can face life’s challenges with greater resilience. Jon Kabat-Zinn gently and encouragingly narrates the accompanying CD of guided meditations, making this a complete package for anyone seeking to regain a sense of hope and well-being.
But I'm only just started in
Woah. Huge oneboxen
I bet jQuery was to blame
Nah. I'm not saying I was depressed (though I probably was). I just wanted to get more mindful.
By the way, did you catch that I switched jobs? If not, let me tell you all about this later. Time for bed now :/
yeah, I asked a few weeks back, as I re-appeared, you now do C++ with a lot of stress just for good measure
:) Has to do with the mindfulness goal
03:26
although I don't know what is it that you're exactly doing
Later then. Sleep well (what time is it in ~Slovakia?)
4:27
good night ;)
Here too
Amazon sponsored Stack Exchange obviously ...
user3010322
03:39
Nighty night.
I have not had unhealthy food for two days ...
I want grilled beef burger with cheese and fresh salad ...
@TomW It was a nice talk (stopped before the Q&A, bedtime). Re-learned a few things I already knew, and a few nice caveats to know (Enum.GetHashCode boxing, foreach being smart with valuetype enumerators, int.ToString() avoiding boxing in String.Format parameters (they should tell R# this))
Cheers
user3010322
03:56
@Telkitty I think you'll be alright if you don't have unhealthy food.
user3010322
@sehe Sleep well!
04:14
@sehe Bummer. Oh well, such is life (or Microsoft) sometimes.
@sehe More reading on Crypto, in case you care: cacr.uwaterloo.ca/hac. Good enough that even though it's now freely available online, I don't regret having paid for a printed copy.
04:34
@JerryCoffin oh great, now I need to read that too, I think I'm going to need longer days
0
Q: Feature needed to incentivize more positive activity mostly orthogonal to current incentives

Aaron HallWhy I think another feature is needed: There are currently 2 primary methods of gamification for the site: Reputation and Badges. (Hats seem like a tweaked form of badges, and as they're seasonal, don't they go away soon?...) Reputation most strongly incentivizes good answers, (which is certain...

^^ um...
@Borgleader lol
It is pretty much never useful in Java. Generics in Java are about Type Safety. There is almost no circumstance when this would have any type safety benefit compared to class A<E>. C++ templates do not have type safety; it's completely different. — newacct 5 hours ago
What the fuck.
@Borgleader How dare you accuse me of having been in the army? I was in the US Air Farce. It's a great waste of life.
Can anybody crush this guy's ego for me?
04:49
@EtiennedeMartel Where's puppy and cat?
@JerryCoffin o.O I was under the impression you had been in the military. My bad.
@Borgleader Yes, as I said, the AF, not the Army.
Jalf can also do it.
@EtiennedeMartel 10 years ago I'd have taken joy in doing so, but not any more. Java followers should be treated with pity, not arrogance.
[Most] Java users are merely ignorant, not stupid or evil.
their ego should not remain uncrushed though!
04:54
@EtiennedeMartel Dunning-Kruger effect?
@JerryCoffin Sufficiently advanced ignorance is indistinguishable from malice.
@Mysticial Hmmm...you may have a point there.
> I am an expert at the programming languages Haskell, OCaml, Java, Python, Ruby, Standard ML, Scheme, C++, Perl, C, Objective-C, PHP, Go, and JavaScript. I love making connections between programming languages. I also love calculus.
expert at C++ yet thinks templates have no type safety..
Wow, expert in 14 languages. He must be 150 years old.
ikr
04:59
Or not really an expert.
@Rapptz You cant be an expert at 12+ languages.
Hell, you cant be an expert at C++ to begin with. </Cat++>
oh god...
people have an odd fetish for anti-aliasing.
I stopped caring for anti-aliasing once my screen resolution reached 1080p
05:07
@Borgleader Aliased text is horrible at any resolution.
Oh I thought he meant in games
I do mean in games
05:48
I'm digging into some old file formats again
06:10
Going back to lovely Berlin today. Hope the trains don't screw me again.
Did you meet up with Cicada & kbok together or separately?
Cicada is in Korea, I think.
06:40
Oo, thought he went back to Paris for Xmas/NY
user3010322
07:25
Lol
user3010322
Dem commits.
07:57
0
Q: Condensing a do-while loop to a #define macro

Alex_WaterlooConsider the following sample code (I actually work with longer binary strings but this is enough to explain the problem): void enumerateAllSubsets(unsigned char d) { unsigned char n = 0; do { cout<<binaryPrint(n)<<","; } while ( n = (n - d) & d ); } The function (due to Knuth)...

> some badass #define macro seems like a cleaner solution.
08:26
morning
evening
How's things?
not much
holiday resting
lol
same here
Any nominees yet for room owner?
as Cat's message on the star board asks for
Not that I know of.
user1804599
08:38
@sehe COBOL is unreadable.
user1804599
APL is readable if you know what the symbols mean.
Is there such a thing as a stack string? (something like std::array<char, N> with string's interface?)
user1804599
May 20 '12 at 23:38, by Radek 'daknok' Slupik
Wut?
user1804599
@Borgleader MAKE ONE.
lol not worth it
user1804599
08:42
char const[] data = "Hello, world!";
std::string_view string(data); // lol
@Borgleader make your own
it's not that hard if you don't want the constexpr requirement
user1804599
That’s what she said.
user3010322
@TonyTheLion There's @rightfold and @LightnessRacesinOrbit
@TonyTheLion Lightness and rightfold
08:47
In C# every reg who does not troll is an owner
not much problem with that
@ThePhD Interesting candidates
@ThePhD ha I honestly did not see that you posted the same :)
I'm still unsure why we're nominating new owners just because of cat's potential obsessive compulsive personality.
What would be a better reason?
but if we're seriously doing it then I vote for rightfold I guess?
@JohanLarsson iunno
user3010322
08:52
@Rapptz Implemented erase ~
so much for being ezpz if it took you 2 hours to do :v
user3010322
I just started on it like 5 minutes ago. :c
Sure you did.
:P
user1804599
Yeah, this will totally not run the PHP code in the else branch. — rightfold 34 secs ago
user1804599
:lol:
user1804599
09:05
@Rapptz I vote for him too.
Hello everyone. I'm a begginer in C & C++. Is there a way where you could run a .c program several times, without having to type ./progr1 many times?
Of course. In Windows you can run a program by double clicking on it.
How about in linux, from the terminal?
batch file
yea rightfold is a good owner candidate
user1804599
09:09
@Andy Sure.
I also vote for rightfold.
@Mysticial a batch file in linux?
user1804599
for i in `seq 1 10`; do
    ./progr1
done
user1804599
This should run it ten times.
user1804599
Of all the Unix shells I know (Bash and Z shell), Bash and Z shell support this syntax.
09:11
@rightfold okay, I understand the for loop, but what does the 'swq 1 10' mean?
user1804599
Try it!
user1804599
% seq 1 5
1
2
3
4
5
user1804599
Also see seq(1).
@rightfold I get an error :bash: fg: %: no such job
user1804599
Remove the percent sign.
09:14
lol
it works
user1804599
Deposit your compensation to rightfoldbank.
but I can't get it to work for the program
user1804599
@rightfold Thank you.
I really appreciate your help :)
user1804599
09:17
The wiki answers didn't help budd :\ Thank you though — user2023050 7 mins ago
user1804599
Did that guy just try to call me a butt?
No I really mean it.
Today I just learned something new (The seq, which prints a sequence of numbers). Thanks @rightfold
user1804599
No problem. vOv
what's vOv?
user1804599
@TonyTheLion Telkitty and Crowz.
09:22
lol
user3010322
I vote for @LightnessRacesinOrbit, just because having a lawyer in the list of rooms owners is never a bad thing. :D
user1804599
@ThePhD lolwat
imho he's more of a troll than a lawyer
@Mysticial do you really work with YouTube/Google ?
user1804599
09:23
He works for the bakery, refining pies.
I meant to say how long have you been working with GOogle?
@rightfold Consulting for them. :)
@Andy Why do you ask?
Since June.
I'm interested in working with Google.
user1804599
Don’t go work at such a horrible company.
user1804599
09:25
Millions of YouTube users will hate you each day.
@rightfold What? Well, only recently that people started getting mad at Youtube,because of the changes. But you know what, it's good that it's free.
user1804599
It would be good if it didn’t drop the quality each time and if seeking just worked.
user1804599
And if they didn’t remove good videos.
"remove good videos"???
user1804599
@Andy But at least somebody has proven you don’t have to know C to go work there, so you might have some luck.
user1804599
09:28
Well I'm planing to work there later on. Not right now. I'm still learning
What's andy-so-confusion???
user1804599
It is ironic.
user1804599
TypeScript you piece of shit y u no abstract classes.
Wow!!! Come down there @rightfold.
user1804599
09:32
var receiver = new AbstractMessageReceiver(); // legal lol
user1804599
@BartekBananawitch you were right; TypeScript is horrible.
@rightfold are you really consulting for Google?
user1804599
No, of course I am not.
user1804599
What made you think that?
09:35
@Mysticial said that earlier.
user1804599
That is false.
Okay people have a nice day.
user1804599
Goodbye.
user3010322
@rightfold Would that ping reach him?
user1804599
@ThePhD I really don’t know!
user3010322
09:39
@Bartek hey, does @BartekBanawitch ping you?
lol
user1804599
@TonyTheLion Bartek.
user1804599
I am going to airfield. See you lator.
Is that @Jefffrey 's alter-ego?
09:44
hmm
morning
another Bartek? ;0
:D:D:D
10:00
> Ladies ;)
lol
huh
here was me expecting a real joke instead of just an incredibly childish dick joke
@DeadMG I concur.
Anyone here from NYC?
@DeadMG how's the new antibiotic?
I think I might be allergic to it.
10:11
What makes you say that?
the problem is, the label lists a bunch of stuff where it's like, "OH MY GOD STOP TAKING IMMEDIATELY if you encounter XYZ", but I already had half of them before so it's not particularly useful to work out what to do.
in partially observable decision processes you would model a belief state in such situation, but I guess you don't have a probability matrix and estimating it seems not feasible :|
did it do any good beside this?
nah
@DeadMG Ask your doctor for different ones?
10:15
I didn't take any yesterday and I'm feeling a lot better.
plus, there's the whole, "Have to eat to take them" thing and you know what happens if I try to eat things.
user3010322
@BenjaminGruenbaum Maybe. Why do you ask? :o
this really sucks, sorry to hear that :\
@ThePhD I have a friend who works frontend here at this company and she's moving to the states, she's pretty good and trustworthy and we don't like the fact we're losing her here. That said, I figured I can ask here if anyone is looking for developers first. Finding good developers is a PITA.
Good developers are so rare.
Exactly, and while I wouldn't rank her in the top 0.01% that do the impossible, she's hard working, pleasent to work with and gets the job done. She's done a good job here.
10:24
@StackedCrooked I prefer them "well done" ;0
lol, just answered a question asked 4 years ago ;0
but I guess OP can't unaccept the currently accepted answer now (which is a shitty solution)
or can he?
@BartoszKP the better approach imo is to ask the question again, answser it and close the old one as dupe. Also, of course OP can unaccept.
that's the evilest plan
@BenjaminGruenbaum The OP seems still active, so I'll wait and see if he likes my solution. I doubt that it will be still useful to him after 4 years though : )
but thanks for the idea, I'll try it in case this fails ;0 - I found he's question on google when I had similar problem, and there is really no answer there, just kludgy workaround
10:29
holy motha
the close votes count went down 100K
@BartoszKP OP accepted OP's solution. If you get more votes than his, it'll show before it.
@BenjaminGruenbaum indeed! didn't notice that
@BartoszKP "he's question"
I like that.
:E
whoops
cant spel, so sorrry
finally there's a new ep of hajime no ippo
10:58
i like the io tld
posted already
-.- might have guessed
11:28
@Rapptz I rarely touch the shell anymore.
You only use the kernel directly?
yes that's the good answer — Guillaume07 14 mins ago
11:55
Today is a good day.
why?
The sun is shining and I don't have to work tomorrow.
12:13
Is that not good enough?
@ThePhD nailed it
Good news - it's cards/beer at lunchtime day. Bad news - I have to walk the dog to the club first to get my car back, again.
You eat cards? What do they taste like?
@BenjaminGruenbaum the shell touches you? :)
@BartekBanachewicz no, I just use Python
12:16
@BenjaminGruenbaum My Python has a shell :P
lol
I found something you'd like, one sec
@BenjaminGruenbaum I am not done with metatheory of subtyping yet :D
there, this guy
12:19
@BenjaminGruenbaum aha, when I first saw Rust examples I was interested in it. Still waiting to allocate some time slot for it
Oh god
pa <- mallocBytes (len * sizeOf (undefined::Planet))
:/
Where?
That looks like Haskell because it's oh so pretty :P
@BenjaminGruenbaum that stupid language benchmarks game
I mean, that's the fastest C++ code, for example
"Python 3 #2	30 min	32 min"
Ruby 2.0 #3	1h 19 min	1h 19 min
dem speedz
@LucDanton If I ate the cards, I would lose much less cash:(
@BartekBanachewicz for the protocol, Python and Ruby are very slow.
PHP too.
(For all I mean the standard implementation)
How do JITed languages fare? How do dynamic languages like lua fare against staic languages like Java?
@BenjaminGruenbaum they didn't test LuaJIT :(
but it would be probably faster than Java
but that's the trait of Lua itself, not typing.
12:34
So dynamic typing is faster than static typing, got you.
@BenjaminGruenbaum ha ha ha
Is there anything, anywhere that is slower than Ruby, (ignore my car for now)?
Because it's a superset.
@MartinJames You could interpret ruby in ruby, I guess.
12:35
@MartinJames sure, lots of things. There is nothing slow about the language but I bet the interpreted C implementation I wrote in highschool is way slower than Ruby :P
@BenjaminGruenbaum Maybe, if you ran it on an abacus:)
@BenjaminGruenbaum Calling Java "static" is a bit of a joke.
@DeadMG do you have even the slightest of doubts about what I was talking about there? Or perhaps the fact everyone involved in the conversation understands the context?
12:41
..and bye! I gotta go clean up and walk doge.
even if I don't have any doubts and clearly everyone does know the context, that does not change the meaning or validity of my statement.
come on puppy don't be a dick
@DeadMG or was that just a jab at how broken the java static typesystem is and the fact you have endless casts and stupid stuff that breaks all compile time safety?
well, let's see.
if you have a virtual function that you look up, that's an index into a table, and if you're looking up a function on a dynamic type, that would be... you pre-hash the identifier and use the hash as an index into a table.
the only difference between Lua/JS style "dynamic typing" and Java-style "static typing" is that in Lua/JS/Ruby/Python/etc, you don't typically go through ten interfaces on average before reaching the real logic, you only go through one or two.
so I'm going to bet that it would be more than possible for the average Lua method call to result in substantially less indirections and dynamic lookups than the average Java call.
2
Have you ever inspected the actual assembly generated by a HotSpot JVM?
12:46
have you ever inspected the assembly generated by LuaJIT?
Because, frankly, it makes no sense to assume that Java's virtual method call would actually be this convoluted. FWIW It's faster than C# in practice.
Lua is a different story. But you're not praising lua, you're cracking down on supposedly incredibly stupid JVM mechanisms.
@ScottW Hey Baby! <3
well, it's a comparison.
@sehe C#'s methods are not virtual by default and its JIT is a lot simpler. HotSpot produces pretty strange code but that's because of the JVM and not the JIT
I'm willing to bet the same though, Lua can possibly be more efficient. It's also a lot younger and light weight
12:48
all I'm saying is that the exact same optimizations that apply to removing indirected calls in Java are going to apply to removing indirected calls in Lua
@DeadMG by dynamic I meant the typing and not the lookup by the way. I see that was unclear because of the way I phrased myself.
So far so good. I just picked up on
> you don't typically go through ten interfaces on average before reaching the real logic
(also, that Java's type system is a complete joke).
which is just...
@DeadMG It's not. It's horrendous, but "a complete joke" is unsubstantiatable rhetorics
@DeadMG Java's type system is pretty great.
Everything is an object
First order functions
And you have these cool extension methods so you can patch existing interfaces with functionality so it's forward compatible.
Also, events are at the core, you have an event type - that's prety useful.
And its runtime generics are pretty nice to work with.
12:50
er, I thought that was C#.
Oh wait that is C#, Java is shit xD
I was confused since the Java developer I know told me C# is a Java ripoff... almost got me there :)
@sehe Well, I guess that since humour is subjective, I guess that all I can really say is that I find it to be a joke.
@BenjaminGruenbaum It was. But then they backtracked as fast as possible.
@DeadMG Ack
of course some terribads they couldn't backtrack on.
like System.Object, Derived[] = Base[], that kind of thing.
12:54
@BenjaminGruenbaum Wut. Runtime generics? "Nice to work with". Well. The rest is ... type erasure. The definition and guarantee of suboptimal performance. Yes. It will share more code among instantiations (after, all generic code needs only be instantiated precisely 1 time. Everything is an Object Yaya)
@DeadMG that's because generics were introduced late on, it sucks :/
yeah, at least C++ shipped with templates in the first version of the Standard.
@sehe you talking about C#?
Oh. Well that explains. [sic]
<goot-in-mouth/>
although I guess that arguably C# wasn't Standardised until 2.0 which did have generics.
12:55
@BenjaminGruenbaum No I was talking about Java. Just like you said to be
both Java and C# had generics put in later, C# did it better
@BenjaminGruenbaum Same for C#, and even C++ (as pointed out before)
@sehe I was talking about C3, in Java generics are still very broken.
Java made a different tradeoff.
@DeadMG the good thing is that C# didn't get a standard library until it had templates. Java and C# still have many places where it's afterthought.
12:56
C# 2.0 broke compatibility to achieve their better generics.
they started off from an equally fucked position.
in the long run it might have turned out to be less bad, partly because AFAIK C# had a lot less pre-generics code.
@harold is there anything Java did better?
I've never used JNI but p/invoke is pretty bad.
@BartekBanachewicz not that I know of
so I'm willing to give JNI > P/Invoke a shot.
@DeadMG C# first language spec was from 2001 ECMA-334 1st edition, PDF and contained no generics
12:58
huh, I thought they weren't standardised until 2.0
@DeadMG It's simpler. Therefore it could well be considered "better"
@DeadMG You said this before.
Ell
Ell
P/invoke is nice imho
yay I got a bottle of whisky
@BartekBanachewicz @harold of course, plenty. enums for example are a lot better in Java.
prolly won't hold until the new year anyway

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