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user1804599
22:00
that's why I use ack.
user1804599
Perl regex master race.
It's builtin. And it actually does what you said. Can you use :lolder with you Ack plugin?
user1804599
What is lolder?
user1804599
I also have a shortcut for perldo for substitution et al.
user1804599
Because fuck default s///.
22:01
@райтфолд Gosh. se verymagic or :lvimgrep /\vwow-so-perlregex/ **/somedir/**/oops.txt
@Puppy got it
@райтфолд you should really try vanilla tools someday (something tells me you're already aging to this point. Rainbo parens have been lost already)
user1804599
What do you think of s/// as a function literal?
user1804599
E.g. "abcdef" |> s/abc/def/ would result in "defdef".
22:03
by "function literal" do you mean "lambda"?
user1804599
Of course.
user1804599
Same thing.
@райтфолд Default s/// is plenty nice. What with pattern history, modifiers, specials like /\%V etc: vimdoc.sourceforge.net/htmldoc/pattern.html#/ordinary-atom
@Blob that's pretty cool.
Somehow it doesn't work on @райтфолд when I slap him with my Perls of wisdom.
Not quite the way it does with the Canadienne de Martel
user1804599
22:05
I tend to use ack from the command line.
Bye everyone! May the boost be with you.
You tend to use whatever freakish solution you've assimilated :)
Like, building garbage collectors to bide the time
user1804599
I have never implemented a compacting garbage collector before.
user1804599
And this is fun an interesting.
user1804599
Do you think sizeof(*x) should return the size of the dynamic type of *x similar to typeid(*x)?
22:09
Wow. You found a proper SO question
user1804599
No. It's too subjective.
Not if you read it the way I did
user1804599
What way did you read it?
The objective way.
> should sizeof(*x) return the size of the dynamic type of *x similar to typeid(*x)
Opinions are meh
should is subjective
22:11
it's normative. Not subjective
the decisions you base it on and the weight of the decisions are subjective
Here's a hint: the "Do you think" part was the subjective part ("you" being the subject)
wait no
s/decisions/things
Indeed no :) If the standard specifies "the implementation shall" then it (objectively) should
@райтфолд That's like saying sizeof should take into account VLAs. Of course not!
22:12
sigh... in some cases, such as this, the answer to a "should" is subjective
is that ok?
no, in this case, the answer is in the specification and it's binding
user1804599
@FredOverflow It does in C!
@райтфолд I know, but that's just silly.
user1804599
Also, I'll probably use VLAs in my VM. :P
@sehe oh, it's already decided upon?
22:13
I should hope so!
4 mins ago, by sehe
Wow. You found a proper SO question
@райтфолд Oh yeah? I'm gonna write my own vm, with black jack and hookers: MOVMWBJAH
user1804599
What's so bad about VLAs?
user3010322
Hum.
They have weird limitations, don't they? Like, can you have multidimensional VLAs?
user1804599
22:15
@FredOverflow Yeah: GCPtr localVariables[function.localVariableCount];.
@райтфолд Everything.
user1804599
@FredOverflow I don't need multidimensional VLAs.
Also, what's a good use case for a VLA? If you don't know how big the array can get, putting it on the stack is a recipe for desaster.
Puppying detected!
user3010322
@Xeo One day you mentioned having a regular object which did the unique_ptr'ing of an interface that just ended up calling the internal interface object. How often do you use that idiom in your C++?
22:16
@FredOverflow Yep. Furthermore, they can't be moved, which can actually nuke the performance harder than a dynamic allocation.
user1804599
@FredOverflow I limit stack size anyway.
@ThePhD pimpl?
user1804599
So whether I put it on the C++ stack or on a custom stack makes very little difference.
user3010322
@sehe Sort of, but the actual implementation wasn't private.
user1804599
Although it would be nice if there were a way to get a notification on stack overflow instead of just UB.
user1804599
22:17
I wonder how CPython detects this.
@ThePhD so, what was the purpose? Making the objects small/moveable?
@райтфолд I already get notifications on stack overflow
user1804599
lol
(Mysticial gets loads of them)
user3010322
That's an example.
user3010322
22:18
It's where you make the implementation virtual, but rather than make that virtual implementation something others derive,
user3010322
Oh.
user3010322
Derp.
@ThePhD it's erasure then?
user3010322
Sort of.
Come on. Get to the point :)
personally I think that PIMPL is pretty terrible
user3010322
There's usually a templated function that takes a T that implements the interface, but the implementation isn't exactly derived from a base. It just stores the type T in some type-erased object that has the necessary functions.
@Puppy it's good for some things, but like everything else, the way it pans out is pretty annoying
@ThePhD so yeah, type erasure meets Policy/Strategy patterns
user3010322
Like this.
22:21
@sehe as opposed to vegetabling it
hehe too late
user3010322
Xeo recommended it to me, and I've come across a place where I either expose the virtual interface and expect people to derive from it, or I just do the Policy/Strategy bit with the type erasure internally.
user1804599
$ cat test.py
import sys
sys.setrecursionlimit(1)
$ python test.py
Exception RuntimeError: 'maximum recursion depth exceeded' in <function _remove at 0x10e947b18> ignored
Exception RuntimeError: 'maximum recursion depth exceeded' in <function _remove at 0x10e8f6050> ignored
@ThePhD yeah I do that when I find I want extensibility without exposing everything header only. But that would be rare
user3010322
I'm in that exact scenario.
user3010322
22:23
I've got implementation details that can come from either DirectWrite or Freetype, and I've hidden them in the cpp. The header files are all clean, but now I have a need in other applications to extend or tweak the original functionality without rewriting the whole thing.
I think I'd do the erasure thing on behalf of the library user. You can always "upgrade" that way, but not vice-versa
personally I prefer to just expose the interface
Ell
Ell
not always possible though right?
the user can make more informed decisions and maybe derive from it themselves depending on the situation
@Puppy Yeah. That'd be great for versioning and support (not)
user1804599
22:24
Eh.
@Puppy As a user I like open libraries indeed
user1804599
What does CLR do when you stackalloc too much?
What CLR does
stackoverflowexception most likely
Windows throws a structured exception on stack overflow which you could catch and translate.
user3010322
Right now I've just got a big virtual interface...
user3010322
22:27
But I'm wondering if there's a better design.
user3010322
The type-erased policy bits jumped out at me, but that's mostly the same thing for little benefit.
user3010322
(At least, no benefit I can see.)
user1804599
Let's see how Mono does it.
user1804599
22:29
nice
> James received an eight month sentence for wounding, affray, common assault and being in possession of a knife after being convicted in July.
@ThePhD The benefits would be that the client doesn't need to implement virtual interfaces (meaning they might offer slightly different, compatible signatures, offer completely static implementations, ...). And the library can change it's mind in the future and expose the inner gears, eliminating the virtual overhead - which wouldn't be available if the client had inflicted this on behalf of the library
One of those things is not like the other
Also lol idiot
well magistrates in England can only give people up to six months in jail
so he had to have gone to a real court to get that sentence
user1804599
> Android abort is a fluke, it doesn't abort, it triggers another segv.
user1804599
22:34
lol
> (snooker) To fortuitously pot a ball in an unintended way.
I've always considere a fluke when something good happens unintentionally
user1804599
If you have a signal handler for SIGSEGV can you acquire the address that was attempted to be accessed?
thoughts on writing a programming language in python? i'm considering considering it for a project
it has to be python ;_;
user1804599
You can't write a programming language.
Might be easier to write it in English
user1804599
22:40
You either design or implement one.
implement one
if there's reasonable LLVM bindings then there's no reason why not
Ell
Ell
or even if there's not
design in head (documentation will just screw me over c: ) and implement in python.
Don't design languages in head
Actually don't design languages at all
rightfold designed all of them already
22:42
@CatPlusPlus school project. plis.
Also Window of Opportunity one of the best SG-1 episodes
yes, yes it is.
Missing brackets in nested statements: omfg
alright
241 passes, 16 fails.
22:49
@райтфолд I want to chat on stack overflow, any idea where I can do that?
Also, how do I press the Enter key?
nice talk about stack overflow
user1804599
I know how to create a page below the call stack to which writing causes a segfault.
user1804599
But I have no idea how in the signal handler one can detect whether the segfault is due to writing to said page.
Windows has guard pages which are explicitly designed for this task.
IDK about other operating systems.
user1804599
it can do such things
user1804599
22:56
I think I'll just terminate the program on stack overflow.
user1804599
It's much safer thing to do.
user1804599
E.g. if malloc causes stack overflow you can end up with heap corruption.
strictly speaking, you can try to throw a stack overflow exception before you actually run out of stack, to leave some for cleanup or error handling
but I agree that termination is preferable.
@Puppy Well, it would be nice to be able to log the disaster in an exception handler before requesting termination.
better to use a monitor process for that
user1804599
23:01
I think OpenSSL must drop support for SSL.
@Puppy Ugh!
What the hell did they do to the Cinder website to make it (still) render like shit
user1804599
SSL is unsafe so dropping support is a security-improving breaking change which is an acceptable breaking change.
@sehe they used Cinder to render the website?
user1804599
Burn to a Cinder is a song I like to listen to.
23:03
@райтфолд wut. "SSL is unsafe"?
Xeo
Xeo
I've been productive today - a whole three commits!
If they implemented three new projects...
Xeo
Xeo
On the same project!
user1804599
@sehe POODLE
user1804599
Also SSL 2.0 is also unsafe for other vulnerabilities.
user1804599
23:06
@Xeo me too.
@райтфолд sounds like "just remove the fallback/configure it correctly in the first place
Of course, they should drop the features that shouldn't be used
> Another mitigation is to implement "anti-POODLE record splitting". It splits the records into several parts and ensures none of them can be attacked. However the problem of the splitting is that, though valid according to the specification, it may also cause compatibility issues due to problems in server-side implementations.[11] Opera 25 has implemented this mitigation in addition to TLS_FALLBACK_SCSV.[12]
Some more editing and I'll be done with this crappy java assignment
user1804599
OpenSSL should be deprecated completely.
user1804599
23:10
@DonLarynx IE
user1804599
You are dead to me.
IE still exists? Wow.
-5
Q: Just kidding, this is done

ElSnowmanI made my first program with help from people and even though it's not very good, I am proud of myself for actually doing something. Thanks people! #include <iostream> using namespace std; int main() { { cout << "what is 1 + 1? \n" << "a = 1 \n" << "b = 2 \n" << "c = 3 \n" << "...

Prrwwwwat. IE. That's pretty damning. Also, Linux in a putty terminal (?). Just get with the program (irony: it's for java programming, right?)
@DonLarynx What editor it -that-
I feel so proud of actually improving this question — sehe 8 secs ago
user3010322
Ergh.
user3010322
23:15
GetGlyph has got me stuck dead.
user1804599
@sehe Emacs.
@райтфолд o.O
@sehe You got rolled back :-(
user1804599
Emacs is awesome.
It's become even uglier. With Edit.exe inverted menu bar styles. Reminds me of mc/links/...
@FredOverflow I know
user1804599
23:16
Vim sucks.
hehe. Laaaiar
vim for the win
user1804599
vim for the whimp
user1804599
It highlights list items incorrectly.
23:17
Pfft highlighting
I think that's vim though
I recognize the crappy color scheme you posted last week
user1804599
It's great.
OMG James Gosling in 144p
Feb 7 at 21:43, by sehe
@рытфолд ugly background colors on random things
user1804599
23:18
WTH. For some reason, searching for "background" in chat search returns any posts with a in it (test chat.stackoverflow.com/…)
user1804599
I want a repeat statement.
Denied
user1804599
@sehe that's because they use inline CSS for setting the background property of tags.
user1804599
And the search engine searches HTML, not text.
23:20
Mar 20 '14 at 20:51, by FredOverflow
Who is James Gosling? you might ask...
@райтфолд f-ing hell
@райтфолд for (auto i : range(1, n)) { ... }
user1804599
@FredOverflow I prefer repeat n { ... }. :)
user1804599
Like in Game Maker.
Karel has a repeat loop :)
user1804599
Nice!
23:21
repeat (9) { moveForward(); }
user1804599
repeat Infinity { ... } for infinite loops!
I think the grammar limits it to 999 or something :)
user1804599
:(
user1804599
Karel only has Booleans right?
@FredOverflow da wat
23:22
Correct, and you can only use them in if and while statements.
user1804599
So the repeat count must be a literal.
@FredOverflow s/.*/true/ (FTFY)
user1804599
And it's the only place you can use numbers.
user1804599
So that's why the grammar sucks.
@райтфолд also correct
23:24
@DonLarynx made me smile
user1804599
user1804599
It's time to piss and sleep.
> Add vagina overview of classes
Don't fall asleep now
that would be a waste of time
def repeatStatement =
  ("repeat" ~ "(" ~> integer <~ ")") ~ block ^^ { case times ~ block => Repeat(times.toInt, block) }

def integer =
  "[1-9]\\d{0,2}".r
user1804599
lol {0,2}.
23:25
@райтфолд What's so funny about that?
user1804599
Change the base.
user1804599
So you can express larger numbers.
user1804599
@FredOverflow instead of *.
user1804599
Bye.
I deliberately don't want larger numbers. There is not a single problem that requires more than 100 repeats.
But going up to 999 was easier to define than up to 100.
23:26
@райтфолд yeah. except you can still only express the first 0..9 values per digits
@FredOverflow Is 0 not an integer?
@Rapptz hehe nice
@Rapptz not for the loop repeat (which is the only context where numbers are allowed. Don't ask me, just the messenger)
Oh that's only for the loop.
@Blob it is not
@R.MartinhoFernandes zing!
23:47
man the new fedora 21 looks nice
if only it ran games
it's so pretty tho
Ell
Ell
it runs some vOv
@AlexM. Fedora at 22 will look a bit edgy dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-2774121/…
None of those hats are fedoras.
> weapons (including swords) will not last forever and can be destroyed if used too much. You need to regularly pay a visit to a craftsman to maintain it
noo what are they doing to the witcher
having to manage that is so annoying
23:59
@Rapptz The text claims one of them was: "Giving the ensemble a rock 'n' roll edge, the pretty brunette also [wore?] a black and white scarf around her neck and topped off the look with a black fedora hat." I have to agree that the hat in the picture doesn't look much like those Google shows for "fedora" though.

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