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10:12
good morning, lower forms of life
Good morning, my highness.
@FredOverflow very interesting
@StackedCrooked It's one of my favorite videos on the subject.
user1804599
Hello!
10:33
Hi
what does radiation actually do to the body?
@StackedCrooked It alters molecules, which can ultimately lead to cancer.
user1804599
@FredOverflow Did you just say you should wear clothes made from lead?
and high exposure leads to burns
@rightfold Are you talking about natural radiation?
user1804599
10:36
@StackedCrooked Makes bones visible, duh.
is that because the molecules are changed so much that it starts disrupting at the biological level?
That the cells start falling apart, or something.
user1804599
They will be damaged and will start malfunctioning.
> Ionising radiation has enough energy to remove electrons from atoms. It can cause damage by breaking chemical bonds.
user1804599
@FredOverflow Maybe that’s why it’s called ionising radiation.
Why are you such a smartass today?
user1804599
10:38
Because it is weekend.
I saw Fates Warning last night.
Are you into them?
user1804599
I never heard about it.
Xeo
Xeo
Interesting read, but I never understood why people think lenses compose backwards.
I don't even know what "compose backwards" is supposed to mean :)
never heard of lenses before
10:45
Are you into Haskell?
I've dabbled.
Xeo
Xeo
@FredOverflow With (1, (2, 3)), fst :: (a, b) -> a and snd :: (a, b) -> b, how do you get 2?
Because I don't think anybody outside of the Haskell community will have encountered them :)
I did the YAHT tutorial back in 2006.
Lenses probably weren't invented back then. ICBWT.
10:49
They weren't mentioned in the guide I read.
But I forgot most of it.
I have a copy of Real World Haskell, but never got to it.
That's like complaining that an introductory C++ course doesn't cover template metaprogramming ;)
Ah, so they are advanced stuff.
At least they appear advanced to me. @rightfold might disagree.
Xeo
Xeo
Lenses work beautifully with State
Would you consider State advanced?
Xeo
Xeo
10:51
I wouldn't say so
It's a Monad, so eh
user1804599
State is simple.
Xeo
Xeo
some people will certainly think that's advanced
but State really isn't complicated
user1804599
@FredOverflow Advanced TMP is advanced.
I don't think I ever really grasped State :)
user1804599
What’s not to grasp about it?
10:52
(No matter how often @rightfold tried to teach me.)
I think I'm on my way to a Great Answer badge on meta... aha
The way I have explained the bug (yes, it is a bug) is perfectly fine. I am an end-user, in end-user mode, in the retail side of the consumer market. I should be able to simply say that the damn icons don't work. That is the bug. They don't work. End of story. There is nothing more to add to my bug report. It is for the developers of the software to go figure out why they don't work and then patch it. This is a real gripe with the Ubuntu community. They still think we are all developers but want to push into retail. So, there is my bug report. The icons don't bloody well work. End of. — sectornitad 19 mins ago
It's hilarious and stupid at the same time.
I have a light toothache. Should I post on stackoverflow? It's not my job to figure out what's wrong!
10:54
That's the dentist's job, right?
well, you're right, it isn't, it's the dentist's.
@FredOverflow "Can someone recommend me a parsing library to fix my toothache?"
not that you should post on stack overflow about it.
OT, XY, recommendation, all at the same time.
@FredOverflow get the dentist to drill you a hole, then you have a toothcache
10:55
the rest of his comments are pretty good too
"toothache" is one of those words that looks stupider and stupider the more you look at it.
user1804599
tooth cache
morning
user1804599
What about it?
11:07
Dictionary definition of "virtual". Simply out of curiosity.
user1804599
Virtual functions.
So many fields where virtual has a special meaning.
user1804599
I should learn Funciton.
user1804599
@StackedCrooked Virtually all fields have something to do with virtuality.
You are virtually right.
user1804599
11:09
In computer science, for example, it means that your design is probably shit.
user1804599
It is interesting.
A guy asks a question "how to do X", I say in the comments "what's the problem, docs you gave reference to, say that you can do X", he says "but I don't understand", so I say "why not just call this function?". He deletes his question after a while. Today - he undeletes his question and says in the comments that he runs the function and got an exception. I say, "so post the code and the exception details". He deletes the question :|

^^^ Handicapped version of FredOverflow's "Solve your problem by almost asking a question on SO"
user1804599
> The format in which these strings are encoded could be referred to as UTF-21: every 21 bits form a Unicode character.
user1804599
11:15
LOL
user1804599
-7
Q: Can golang be used for server-side web development?

Ratkovich98How is golang different from C and C++. Can golang be compiled into C++ , so you wouldn't need to know C++ at all ( not a opinion so dont you dare mark this as one)

user1804599
> not a opinion so dont you dare mark this as one
user1804599
lol, what a dick
:DDD
hey, why "unclear"?
I wanted to mark as POB
user1804599
It is a bad question.
user1804599
11:23
Downvote, close, delete and ban.
yes, but the reason
should be "primarily opinion based" :o
user1804599
Why?
user1804599
Whether or not Go can be compiled to C++, and how Go is different from C and C++ is objective, not subjective.
because "not a opinion so dont you dare mark this as one"
the fun
user1804599
Let’s see if I can implement monads in LiveScript in a rather nice way.
11:31
@rightfold Can't every compiled language be compiled to C++?
user1804599
No.
user1804599
@FredOverflow An architecture may have an instruction for which there is no C++ equivalent.
user1804599
@FredOverflow JavaScript, lol.
user1804599
LiveScript is different and you program in it in a different way.
11:32
@rightfold Can't every compiled mainstream language in use today be compiled to C++?
user1804599
Yes, it can, in theory.
user1804599
:D
I wrote a compiler that compiles C to C++. All it does is s/this/self/
user1804599
lol
// Can't touch self!
It also translates comments :(
11:35
: D
@Mysticial don't know if you've noticed, your meta answer is #1 on hackernews
> 3. The "repwhores" who answer everything they can (or can't).
LOL
user1804599
user1804599
And the notation isn’t even that bad.
What does .ls stand for?
user1804599
11:40
LiveScript.
Oh. I thought this way Styx code :)
user1804599
Let’s implement State.
@FredOverflow please, make it go away.
user1804599
user1804599
11:53
Prints [10, 42].
Make a guess: how long does elephant pregnancy take?
18 months
user1804599
A day.
user1804599
Then the elephant is shot for its flesh.
@rightfold lol
11:55
"Basically everything that returns this is kind of a monad", mfw.
@DeadMG pretty close
user1804599
State is boring.
user1804599
Backcall notation is so nice.
user1804599
12:15
@StackedCrooked 617 days
where does that number appear in the link you posted?
user1804599
:DDDDD
user1804599
Je bent en blijft een Belg.
12:51
lol @ unittest python's standard library that uses, non-standard, camelCase for functions
Or maybe it's standard.
user1804599
Camel case is unpythonic.
user1804599
It’s for backward compatibility.
user1804599
Always use underscores in new code bases.
I see.
13:11
There's a song called "Shouldn't Have to Be Like That". Have you heard it? If yes, can you estimate the release date of that song?
I like these kind of mental exercises :)
user1804599
Hmm.
@StackedCrooked No.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit what's special about this picture? illegal parking spot?
@Jefffrey good
@StackedCrooked How did you estimate it?
13:25
I googled it.
Because I was clueless :)
But I assume you had heard the song before?
Awww, fuck you, man. I've just spent 10 whole minutes listening to that song ~3 times to figure out any clue at all.
I thought it was a riddle
lol. sorry man.
But no, never heard it before.
:)
13:27
I wasted 10 minutes of your life.
@Jefffrey I got a lot of airplay in my country. I kinda assumed it was known universally.
It has a catchy chorus.
user1804599
Please refrain from listening to such music.
Just so you know. It's a song from 1986.
lol
@StackedCrooked Yeah, I googled it. ;)
13:40
youtube comment:
> Can't believe people in the '80s dressed and danced LIKE THAT.
that pun
a guy decided to introduce me to dota 2 and now I can't stop playing :(
why me
you are having fun
no reason to complain :)
yeah but too much fun can get me to forget about other stuff
like the fact that I have to do a semester's worth of assignments in two weeks
starting tomorrow
wat, there's no prebuilt split function to split a list, in python?
13:52
oh
holy shit!
user1804599
@Jefffrey What do you want it to do?
strings are not lists, wtf?
user1804599
No, they’re not, and it’s a non-issue.
@rightfold I have a list of booleans, and I want to get the number of Falses before a True, from the end of the list
I was thinking count(split(list, True)[-1])
@rightfold It is for me.
Instead I'm probably gonna need to map the list into a string of 0 and 1
because fuck python, that's why
user1804599
13:57
@Jefffrey Ugh, no, wtf.
user1804599
XY problem.
user1804599
You don’t have to implement this algorithm with splitting.
I'm all ears.
meh, anyone good at assembly?
user1804599
len(list(itertools.takewhile(lambda x: x == False, items)))
user3010322
13:58
I really don't understand the lua API whatsoever.
@Jefffrey here's a solution for you
@rightfold don't you also need to reverse the list?
user1804599
No.
from collections import Counter
Counter([x for x in my_list])[True]
user1804599
Oh, from the end of the list.
user1804599
13:59
Then yes, you do.
Are you telling me takewhile takes the elements from the end of the list?
Oh ok
user1804599
You can also do this:
user1804599
reversed(items).index(True)
user1804599
No.
14:02
depends if index starts at 0 or 1
you can get the last index of false also by using rindex, I believe. my_list.rindex(False)
user1804599
It takes the index of the first True, which is the number of Falses.
Oh, right.
You are good.
user1804599
>>> list(enumerate([False, False, False, True]))
[(0, False), (1, False), (2, False), (3, True)]
14:03
luckily I am actually mediocre at python!
user1804599
Hmm.
user1804599
== True or is True?
user1804599
identity!
>>> my_list = [True, True, False, True, False, True, True, True]
>>> Counter([x for x in my_list[len(my_list) - my_list[-1::-1].index(False):]])[True]
3
user1804599
lol
14:14
tons and tons of overhead, but isn't it cool ?
Alright here's a question -- how do text editors know when comments start and end? Do they push onto a stack structure when something starts, then pop it off when it ends, and evaluate if len(stack) > 0: # ignore everything else
user1804599
It depends on the editor.
user1804599
Some editors use language-specific lexers and other editors use regular expressions.
well I'm just trying to make a really basic program which will parse "human readable" machine code, and make it into the "real" machine code
user1804599
That is called an assembler.
for example, move (direct_mode 12) (gpr 1) becomes 56011\n 12
yeah then I guess this is a VERY basic assembler
user1804599
14:22
Assemblers gonna assemble.
user1804599
Assembled in China.
user3010322
Negative fucking indices
user3010322
don't make any fucking goddamn sense.
yeah they do, what's wrong with negative indices?
user3010322
Oh, that was out of context...
user3010322
14:30
Negative fucking indices in the LUA API make no goddamn fucking sense.
in what way? I've never used lua
user3010322
It's impossible to figure out what they're actually pointing to at any goddamn given time.
user3010322
And so many examples jump from using absolute indices to negative indices
user3010322
It's ridiculous
Max
Max
General question: Out of 10 programmers, how many would you say are familiar with the waterfall model and / or the V-model? 10?
user3010322
14:35
... The V-Model?
user3010322
What does this model even fucking matter?
user3010322
Does it have any relevancy to what you're working on?
isn't waterfall taught in all colleges?
user3010322
Uh.
I thought it was; they certainly emphasize it in mine
user3010322
14:36
Maybe?
Max
Max
No, I'm writing a thesis at the moment and am trying to decide if I can take the knowledge of these two terms for granted
user3010322
Define it. ez extra word count.
user3010322
Footnote if you want to keep it out of the way.
Max
Max
hahahaha ;)
Good point.
hello guys how u are think what the best engine for 2d games.. like cross platform with capable to port the dame on phones...
Max
Max
14:39
Hmm, a Footnote might do fine, actually. But in general I am right to assume that pretty much every programmer should have heard the terms, right?
user3010322
Nope.
@Klasik I'd rather keep the dame to myself and not port her anywhere
Max
Max
ThePhD, is that nope for me?
user3010322
@AlexM. Exactly. If you port her, she might end up becoming promiscuous and become a code babe.
user3010322
@Max Yes. It's "Nope: better safe than sorry."
user3010322
14:41
Can always ask your thesis adviser or professor if they expect that shit to be common knowledge.
I get the impression that the quality of the lessons on that site is inversely proportional to the amount of babes they show
or is it satirical?
Max
Max
@ThePhD ok I'll probably do that then.
@Klasik, what platforms are you on?
user3010322
@AlexM. codebabes is a very serious website aiming to teach code properly by selling it with sexy babes, complete with gratuitous tit, bra, and ass shots.
user3010322
The philosophy encourages you to rub one out while you're learning, for maximal fun/entertainment while you learn.
I hope it's satirical
user3010322
14:44
I think this one is intentional.
also, rub one out? seriously?
the Internet for masturbate is "fap" and the English for masturbate is "masturbate".
user3010322
I dunno, I thought rub one out was also a term for it. vOv
@Max now I'm using windows. but I can work with Linux too.. I need universal engine with what I can write good quality 2d game to several platforms. like ios android windows etc...
Xeo
Xeo
nom nom
user3010322
Is that an example picture
user3010322
14:47
or what's actually in front of you?
Xeo
Xeo
I just took that.
user3010322
Oooh.
note the keyboard
user3010322
.... Mind turning the camera 180 degrees ♬~?
hmmm
I had something else I really wanted to say, but I forgot what it was...
oh yeah
I just remembered being in school
we treat my dog that way.
14:51
@ThePhD for some reason I'm both amused and disgusted after hearing that
personally I'm amazed there isn't already a Twitterverse rampage about it
user3010322
@Xeo Haha, well played.
user3010322
I never specified the axis.
let's face it: you just wanted a picture of his penis.
Xeo
Xeo
14:53
user3010322
I was hoping there'd be at least some shading to indicate the shapes below, but unfortunately lights are on the ceiling. =[
user3010322
y u no live in dark room with monitor casting shadow?
Xeo
Xeo
@ThePhD That still wouldn't show anything, as I've moved out of the way. The camera was in the exact same position :P
user3010322
Awww. Damn.
user3010322
I'll just have to go to berlin and see you in person then. ♥
Xeo
Xeo
14:55
do that
ITT: ThePhD is still a slut.
user3010322
I'm not a slut. ;~;
are 60 lines long functions ok?
Xeo
Xeo
man that cake was awesome
user3010322
As long as its doing its job.
14:56
probably a dumb question, but is there a keyword for telling a for loop to cease execution of the current condition, and just go back to the conditional?
user3010322
@Xeo I can't go on the Berlin trip this year, though.
user3010322
Because MONEYZ.
Xeo
Xeo
@Jefffrey Does it all fit on the screen?
user3010322
@Crow continue;
@Crow continue?
14:56
@Xeo ~1.2 screens
Xeo
Xeo
@Jefffrey Too long, split it up
@ThePhD that will make sure that it doesn't do anything beneath it?
user3010322
Yes.
@Xeo But if you set the font size to 11 it fits in one screen :D
Xeo
Xeo
@Jefffrey Still too long
14:57
I was joking. :(
It's a "login" logic. I can separate it into: ["Check form input", "Brute force band aid", "Check if credentials are ok", "Log login attempt for brute force band aid"] functions, but they would be way too specific to be reused ever again.
Xeo
Xeo
They don't have to be reusable
user1804599
@Jefffrey It depends on the function.
user1804599
Number of lines is a useless metric.
Xeo
Xeo
it's about clarity and being able to grasp the whole thing at once. Giving specific parts explicit names only helps.
user1804599
Ohh my I fucking love function composition.
15:04
@Xeo I see.
Xeo
Xeo
That's at least how I write my code.
user3010322
@Rapptz Do we have any stack-visualizing functions?
user3010322
I think that'd really fucking help me here.
user1804599
I want a combination of <- and >>. :<
user1804599
<<-> :D
Xeo
Xeo
15:14
wat
@ThePhD Btw, the light is off. It's just bright outside :P
user3010322
:(
user3010322
Curse the Sun
user3010322
(^ Video Game Title)
right, I need to do some internet trolling! :D
1
Q: Can't get boolean to return false C++

user3576250I am making a program for my C++ course to validate the date using different functions but mostly boolean. My problem is that it won't give false when it is. I have tried it using the else command instead of leaving the return false; without the else but it didn't seem to change anything. Here is...

> I am making a program for my C++ course to validate the date using different functions but mostly boolean.
what is this i dont even
yay got one on Vlad
15:33
I don't get your comment.
the fact that it's a reference to a pointer is irrelevant.
his demonstrated code is, of course, bad because the reference refers to the constructor argument
yeah I misunderstood him :(
next time, gadget
Ah, my inbox isn't as beaten up as much as I thought it would.
I was half-expecting to get a 100 comments.
user3010322
You need a better diagram.
user3010322
Or a flashy picture.
your face is a better diagram.
15:37
Your mom is a better diagram.
your dad is a better diagram.
your sister is a better digraph
trigraph really
The robot is a better lambda.
user1804599
I wonder why my ear always gets itchy after I drink orange juice.

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