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12:00 AM
@DeadMG: does the preprocessor of MSVC use the GPU? Kudos++!!!
 
lol
 
@sehe That would be interesting.
 
I once theorized that such a thing could work
 
@DeadMG I suppose it could using something like CUDA
 
yeah
 
12:03 AM
CUDA allows you to write programs in C/C++ for the GPU
 
after all, lexing is a fairly simple map in most cases
 
So I see no reason why some kind of compiler couldn't be written for a GPU
 
eh
the other operations are more complex
and lexing in Unicode wouldn't work on a GPU, it's too sequential
here
the preprocessed TU
about the first 95% is just Standard headers
 
Yeah...
No point trying to do that on a GPU.....
 
you might be able to lex ASCII files on a GPU, if you moved some work to the parser
 
12:08 AM
@DeadMG, @IDWMaster: I was joking
 
on the other hand
I guess that if you had a big codebase of thousands of files, say
that should be enough to GPU-parallelize lexing a single file at a time
 
Back to complex, high-performance serialization logic!
Bye
 
bye
 
@DeadMG It does compile right out of the box (no linking of course). Can you confirm that the problem is in the compilation of that translation unit?
Hey, it's no longer official that java code sucks!
 
yes, that's the one being processed when the error occurs
yeah, pins expire
 
12:14 AM
My MSVC++ 2010 on XP 64 is quite alright with it.
I haven't even seen the heavy peak in memory usage which I was half-expecting. I think the majority of template-induced ICE's are related to resource exhaustion
 
eh
it's been compiling the expression template fine for quite a few iterations now
the new problem is when I attempt to allocate a string from the memory arena
VS barfs when trying to decide the alignment of a Unicode::String
 
Dammit. Release mode you said?
 
yes
 
Compiling again :)
Yup. There she is:
If you like you could report that as a bug right now.
 
bwahahaha
yeah, and get it fixed for VS12, if it even gets reviewed before then?
 
12:19 AM
@DeadMG That is not an STL interface...
 
@curiousguy Really, I hadn't noticed /sarcasm
 
@DeadMG: I didn't want to suggest that helps you.
 
@DeadMG It's one of those pre-STL string interface I believe.
 
Microsoft don't fix the bugs I did report
so I'm not going to waste my time reporting them anymore
@curiousguy No, I hand-rolled it yesterday.
the Standard string is great if you want to push bits around, and if you want to do shit with Unicode, you'll need a lot more
also, I wish I could show you the final decorated type of the lexer
it's hilarious
but for some reason, it's stopped warning me about it
1> Derived=Wide::FSM::Or<Wide::FSM::Or<Wide::FSM::Or<Wide::FSM::Or<Wide::FSM::Or<Wide::FSM::Action<Wide::FSM::Or<Wide::FSM::Or<Wide::FSM::Or<Wide::FSM::Or<Wide::FSM::Or<Wide::FSM::Or<Wide::FSM::EqualityRule<wchar_t>,Wide::FSM::EqualityRule<wchar_t>>,Wide::FSM::Action<Wide::FSM::EqualityRule<wchar_t>,Wide::Lexer::`anonymous-namespace'::<lambda49>>>,Wide::FSM::EqualityRule<wchar_t>>,Wide::FSM::EqualityRule<wchar_t>>,Wide::FSM::And<Wide::FSM::And<Wide::FSM::And<Wide::FSM::And<Wide::FSM::EqualityRule<wchar_t>,Wide::FSM::EqualityRule<wchar_t>>,Wide::FSM::ZeroOrMore<Wide::FSM::And<Wi
 
@DeadMG string is just a stupid buffer
@DeadMG you left out a >
 
12:24 AM
no, I didn't
something I can unfortunately guarantee
 
Xeo
55 lambdas? Nice
 
one for every operator/etc
I have 90 tokens, and 35 are reserved words, apparently
so all the rest are lambdas setting the token type
oh cockles, the compiler in that TU won't accept any use of the memory arena parameter
it's not like I need that shit to function or anyshit like that shit
or just any use of it, at all
strange because I didn't change any of the memory arena code
now every type is aligned to 16 bytes :P
also this is kind of strange
debug mode, 7 seconds, release mode, 0.06 seconds
I know that it's supposed to be faster in release, but over a hundred times?
oh well
at least it's really fast
night eveyrbody
 
Xeo
It can be up to a thousand times, debug asserts in the STL are no joke
 
12:40 AM
@DeadMG: it seems to be a problem with the cyclic dependencies between Arena and MemoryBuffer, if you ask me
I mean, that the compiler has a problem with that :)
@Xeo: my guess in this case, the compiler generated code for lambdas is costing a lot in debug mode?
 
Xeo
@sehe Huh? No, I don't think so. Lambdas don't get debugged and are the same in Debug and Release
The only thing that slows down debug so extremely besides missing optimizations are the iterator checks in the STL
 
Absolutely not. Lambdas are generated function objects (of compiler defined type) and can be inlined in release mode, just like your handwritten function objects.
But, that means, as well, in debug mode they don't get inlined for exactly the same reason. And the compiler will not elide constructors/destructors in debug mode, likely
Anyways, let's not get sidetracked. Running a profiler is cheap. Compiling shit is the challenge here
 
Does C++ have identifier length limit?
 
An identifier is an arbitrarily long sequence of letters and digits. Each universal-character-name in an
identifier shall designate a character whose encoding in ISO 10646 falls into one of the ranges specified
in E.1. The initial element shall not be a universal-character-name designating a character whose encoding
falls into one of the ranges specified in E.2. Upper- and lower-case letters are different. All characters are
significant.20
 
What's the reason for this? Namespaces?
 
12:50 AM
@Pubby in short, no
 
Xeo
@sehe I specifically said "besides missing optimizations", and I see inlining as one.
@Pubby C++ Spec no, C++ implementations yes.
 
@Xeo: I specifically mean that there is no reason to assume that that overhead is negligable. I didn't say debug iterators aren't performance killers :)
night!
 
sbi
1:15 AM
Are you on that list?
 
1:47 AM
fuckshitfuck.. I spend time writing a very elaborate answer and what happens? OP FAGGOTÄRY.
 
Xeo
@refp Deleted? :D
 
@Xeo That has happend in the past, that sucks more..
 
Xeo
Question changed completely?
 
though nhaa, he/she accepted the other not very elaborate answer and I got a "thank you for the clarification", not even a freakin' vote
 
Xeo
Also, recruiting close voters: stackoverflow.com/questions/8621678/…
lol
 
1:51 AM
OP obviously wasn't able to understand shit, so I thought "well, I got nothing better to do, lets explain it all"
it didn't pay off
0
A: Current Entry from Array in Javascript

refpHow do I fetch the data from MySQL? mysql_query returns a handle to be used to actually fetch the result (kind of like a file handle when reading files). You should use mysql_fetch_array which will give you a row from the result set, or false when you have reached the end. Remember that the re...

 
Xeo
13
A: What is "rvalue reference for *this"?

XeoFirst, "ref-qualifiers for *this" is a just a "marketing statement". The type of *this never changes, see the bottom of this post. It's way easier to understand it with this wording though. Next, the following code chooses the function to be called based on the ref-qualifier of the "implicit obj...

I overdid it with the edit. :(
 
I often overdo it.. wanna be my overdo buddy?
 
Xeo
heh
 
well you got the accepted answer and a few votes at least
 
Xeo
That was before my overblown edit though
 
1:57 AM
@Xeo I'll see if I can find any post that should be the definition of overdoing it
usually I get mad and delete the post though
 
Xeo
xD
 
I hate when I spend A LOT of time quoting a standard though, trying to format the output.. and then when I'm done the OP has accepted an answer kind of like: "yeah, that's possible - do it"
 
Xeo
Heh, I can understand that
Anyways, since it's christmas eve later today (3am here), I'll hit the sack. G'night
 
g'night (it's 3 AM here as well, just got home)
 
 
1 hour later…
3:03 AM
@sehe "And the compiler will not elide constructors/destructors in debug mode, likely" I hope it elides at much as possible.
 
3:13 AM
Bleh, meta is an entirely unpleasant experience
 
3:24 AM
@curiousguy GCC seems to always elide the constructors, with or without optimizations enabled.
I think that if I were a compiler writer, I would also choose to always elide them. This way the behavior of the program will remain consistent for different optimization levels.
 
 
1 hour later…
user406009
4:25 AM
What's the difference between:

template<class T>
class god
{
public:
god(){}
};

and

template<class T>
class god
{
public:
god<T>(){}
};
 
user406009
0
Q: Weird template constructor syntax

Ethan SteinbergWhat is the difference between template <class T> class why { public: why() {} }; and template <class T> class why { public: why<T>() {} }; They both seem to work the same and compile.

 
4:45 AM
@IntermediateHacker No more gameboy?
 
nope.
<-- this person is not a gameboy
 
5:16 AM
Wonder if anyone here has read "Starting Out With C++ Early Objects 7th Edition"
"covers objects and classes early after functions and before arrays and pointer"
Some may disagree, but why cover classes before arrays and pointers?
 
Xeo
@Pubby Because the latter are pretty hard to grasp correctly
Start out with classes, cover the stdlib a bit, go to templates, cover the rest of the stdlib, and then you can go to (C style) arrays and pointers.
Oh, and don't forget to cover Boost
 
Wouldn't you rather figure that out in the beginning?
I can imagine students learning silly OOP philosophies, not understanding pointers, then dropping C++ to go to Java
 
Xeo
To productively use C++, you don't have to use pointers or raw arrays. Just use string, vector, shared_-/unique_ptr, aka everything the stdlib gives you. Even std::array!
If they feel they're better off with Java, well, tough.
 
Well of course, but you should completely understand pointers and arrays if you intend to be a C++ programmer
 
Xeo
Yes, but those are advanced parts
 
5:25 AM
Which are?
 
Xeo
C style arrays and pointers, with all their dark corners
 
And templates aren't?
 
Xeo
If you start with pointers, you'll get where many C++ coders today are if they aren't kind of awesome (I am, I started with a C book and look where I'm now. :D), you'll be lost in the jungle of dark corners.
They're way easier to grok.
Indirection in itself can be a showstopper for a coming C++ coder
It takes quite some effort to wrap your head around that when you first encounter it.
Even more so with multiple indirection, aka multidimensional dynamic, C style arrays
Best leave the pointers and delete for later
 
? C arrays don't use multiple indirection
 
user406009
Function pointers and multidimensional arrays are the stupidest parts of the C language.
 
user406009
5:28 AM
By far.
 
C has an api?
 
Xeo
@Pubby int** arr2d = new int*[10]; for(...) arr2d[i] = new int(5);
 
Yeah, but that's different from actual arrays
 
Xeo
Also, C arrays decay at the drop of a hat, and are very often passed like that in books
If you cover templates first, your students / readers won't be surprised when you say something like the following:
template<unsigned N>
void foo(int (&arr)[N]){
  // ...
}
Dynamic arrays should be generally avoided anyways. We have std::vector for that.
 
Sounds extremely hard to teach templates before anything else
 
user406009
5:31 AM
Covering class's first is stupid though.
I still think it is best to cover structs as just a way to combine data before introducing all that OOP junk.
 
Xeo
oO
structs and classes are the same in C++, except the access rules
Go reread a good book. :P
 
POD structs
 
user406009
Fine, cover POD's first.
 
user406009
I usually try to keep my structs POD's anyways.
 
Xeo
For what do you need them? If you want to operate on it, put it in a class and add the operations as functions.
 
5:32 AM
I think it's very helpful to know that method calls are just functions that have pointer as first argument
 
Xeo
Ohh, so you want to start with C-style OOP?
 
Just very briefly
 
Xeo
void foo_do_something(foo* self, ...);
 
long enough to learn how it works, not enough to form bad habits
 
user406009
Yes, as C-style OOP allows you to understand member pointers much better.
 
Xeo
5:33 AM
By introducing it early enough you can be pretty sure that you will form bad habits
@EthanSteinberg And those should come after C style arrays and pointers
Then you can "go back" and teach C-style OOP
 
If you introduce templates first then you're going to end up with more unholy template mess
 
Xeo
Introduce it at the right time.
 
@Pubby It is really difficult to explain C arrays. You have to explain that an array can only be accessed with a pointer, but that "array" is not a synonym for "pointer".
 
hm, SO should write some books
 
user457812
That'd be the most schizophrenic book ever.
 
user406009
5:35 AM
Well this was one attempt to write a "book" in SO.
 
user406009
It's way too disjointed and random.
 
Any good to read? I need to learn more git
 
user406009
Not really a book, but an application of git.
 
Xeo
 
5:37 AM
So much to read, so little time
 
Xeo
I'd probably start with Hello World, explaining that (iostream etc), then fundamental types, functions, basic examples with those, touching some stdlib stuff like string, array and vector, classes, shared_ptr and unique_ptr, introduce templates, take a look at the STL part of the stdlib, then at the iostream hierarchy (file handling)
then look at pointers (remind of iterators from vector), go on with some more templates, then manual memory management (aka delete), threading and concurrency, and I'm probably forgetting some very important topic right now. Oh yeah, and Boost libraries as an augmentation to the stdlib.
(damn message was too long)
Cool, another anonymous downvote
0
A: does it make sense to inherit privately from an abstract (pure virtual) class?

XeoEh? No, that makes absolutely no sense, since the reason you provide an interface is that you want other to use your class through that interface. How would that work if they don't know you implement it? #include <vector> class Fooable{ public: virtual void foo() = 0; }; class DoesFoo ...

 
the thing preventing me from learning C++ for several years was std::cout
 
Xeo
Why? Shifting syntax?
 
Yeah, didn't have a book, just stared at the example
looked up << and didn'\t understand how bitshifting had anything to do with it
 
Xeo
Yeah, it's slightly bad of a choice
 
5:46 AM
printf makes a better hello world example.
 
Xeo
Not really, printf is C, and C is bad
std::cout just is the standard way of writing to the console
 
C is only bad in C++ code
 
Xeo
@Pubby Oh, and for what was that introduction? A C++ book.
;)
 
Hehe
 
Xeo
Still, operator<< really is a strange choice.
Maybe operator() would've been a better one. std::cout("hi")(var)(foo + "_bar")(3.14f);
Oh, no, wait
It would not
 
5:49 AM
?
 
Xeo
operator() can only be implemented as a member function
 
oh yeah
 
Xeo
Still, they could've just used string access shims for conversion...
Though, without variadic templates that would be pretty laborious
But with, it's awesome
 
"So a "I'm a user who's never been on the site more than a day and I have all these ideas how you're all doing it wrong" type of thing?"
 
Xeo
Huh?
 
5:52 AM
venting anger. Mods are really bothering me
 
Xeo
heh
 
@Pubby No. In order to show printf, you have to explain the % syntax. With cout << "" you don't need to explain manipulators.
@Xeo << has low priority
 
Xeo
// inside std::basic_ostream
template<class... Args>
basic_ostream& operator()(Args... args){
  push_to_streambuf(to_string(args)...);
  return *this;
}
And now everyone just has to overload to_string for their class.
 
Hm, not sure if that's much of an improvement really
 
Xeo
@curiousguy Not really that low
@Pubby std::cout(hi, "blah", var, 3.14f); vs std::cout << hi << "blah" << var << 3.14f;
 
5:56 AM
@Xeo you can still write things like cout << x*y
 
Xeo
Also, no precedence problems
 
user406009
Still prefer format strings(printf or boost::format) way over iostreams.
 
Xeo
@curiousguy It's higher than all conditional, bitwise and assignment operators
Really, the best choice might just have been operator, lowest precedence.
 
@Xeo this is a worse abuse of overloading than operator<<
 
user406009
Tends to be easier to understand how printf("col: %d, row: %d\n",row,col) will look rather than the obtuse std::cout<<"col: "<<row<<", row: "<<col<<'\n'
 
Xeo
5:58 AM
@curiousguy It was a joke. :P
 
@EthanSteinberg format string is nicer sometimes "%d.%d.%d.%d" vs << ip[1] << '.' << ip[2] ...
 
Xeo
@EthanSteinberg The really bad thing about the streaming syntax is format setters like std::setprecision.
 
But not always. Some printf statements are awful.
 
printf is way better for formatting
 
Xeo
@curiousguy Especially for input
 
6:00 AM
And then I have to count the printf arguments and the %@ ... I don't like counting.
 
Wonder how easy it would be to make cout take a format string
 
user406009
@Pubby Already done, look at boost::format.
 
of course boost has it :P
 
Xeo
@Pubby std::cout << (boost::format("%d") % 5);
:P
 
@Pubby I can't remember the printf syntax.
 
Xeo
6:01 AM
Boost.Format is slow as hell though
 
iostreams are slow
 
and to have to specify the types is distracting.
 
user406009
Boost::format does not force you to specify types. Same idea as format strings though.
 
@Pubby That is not related with the op<<.
 
user406009
std::cout << (boost::format("%1%") % 42);
 
6:02 AM
There are probably many reasons why iostream is slow.
 
Xeo
scanf("%d.%d.%d.%d", &ip[0], &ip[1], &ip[2], &ip[3]); vs char d; std::cin >> ip[0] >> d >> ip[1] >> d >> ip[2] >> d >> ip[3]; ;
@EthanSteinberg Positional format needs %N%
 
One reason is that it tends to end up as a layer above stdio.
 
Xeo
I really don't get why, that makes it fucking ugly
 
user406009
Well reading input sucks either way. Eventually you have to either have a large mess or use boost::spirit.
 
Xeo
@curiousguy One reason is that it has many calls to operator<< instead of a single call. Also, virtual dispatch. Also, locking on every call to operator<<. And that still doesn't make it threadsafe.
 
6:04 AM
@Xeo How are many calls a problem?
 
Xeo
C style IO is inherently threadsafe
@curiousguy lock on every call.
 
Which implementation locks on op<<?
 
Xeo
Uhm, every?
 
lock on op<< is crazy.
 
Xeo
It has to write to a buffer
 
6:05 AM
This is the wrong unit.
 
Xeo
Yeah, but without that, it would be even less threadsafe than it already is
 
I don't get it.
 
user406009
Why don't they just do a thread-local buffer, and sync the buffer when it is full?
 
Which buffer is it?
 
Xeo
@EthanSteinberg Because the C++ standard (and as such the standard library) had no notion of threads until some month ago with C++11
@curiousguy Well, it's not really operator<<, but rather the streambuf that locks while writing to the buffer.
Which is done on every operator<< call though.
 
6:07 AM
@Xeo People have been writing MT code in C++ before C++11.
 
Xeo
@curiousguy There, better?
 
@Xeo I see - so the streambuf is expected to be shared?
People have been using pthread and other libraries to write MT code for years.
Just because the standard said nothing about thread doesn't mean thread didn't existed.
 
user406009
And, __thread for thread-local storage has been available in gcc for a while now.
 
Compilers have officially supported threads for years.
 
Xeo
@curiousguy Yes, but it is the reason why <iostream> had no TLS
 
6:11 AM
So the problem is that cout is global?
MT program shouldn't try to use these global objects without external locking.
 
Xeo
I just traced a bit in MSVC's implementation
::operator<< -> streambuf::sputn -> xsputn -> overflow -> ::fputc -> _lock_file.
 
Thread safety [iostreams.threadsafety] Concurrent access to a stream object (27.8, 27.9), stream buffer object (27.6), or C Library stream (27.9.2) by multiple threads may result in a data race (1.10) unless otherwise specified (27.4).
[iostream.objects.overview] Concurrent access to a synchronized (27.5.3.4) standard iostream object’s formatted and unformatted input (27.7.2.1) and output (27.7.3.1) functions or a standard C stream by multiple threads shall not result in a data race (1.10).
 
Xeo
C++11 ?
 
27.5.3.4 ios_base static members [ios.members.static] bool sync_with_stdio(bool sync = true); Otherwise, called with a false argument, it allows the standard streams to operate independently of the standard C streams.
 
Xeo
That has nothing to do with MT
 
6:17 AM
@Xeo Hug?
I have proved the contrary!
 
user406009
0
Q: Dividing a float by 10

Shane HsuI am developing a pretty simple algorithm for mathematics use under C++. And I have a floating point variable named "step", each time I finish a while loop, I need step to be divided by 10. So my code is kind of like this, float step = 1; while ( ... ){ //the codes step /= 1; } I...

 
user406009
Yet another "Why don't floats work like integers?" question.
 
user406009
There are way too many of these.
 
Since cout performance is an issue, have you tried sync_with_stdio(false)
 
Xeo
@curiousguy You know, you're really irritating. You're always just saying "Nonsense." and "Hug?" and rambling pretty much nonsense anyways. Before I get a mental crack up here, I rather put you on ignore. A nice day to you.
 
6:20 AM
@Xeo You are irritating.
You are not listenning.
You are wasting my time.
You are uninteresting.
 
awesome. Ive finally set up my phone to run so chat!
 
@Xeo Anyway, this is the first thing to do for iostream performance: turn off sync_with_stdio.
Even in non threaded code.
@Xeo The locking occurs in stdio, not in streambuf. QED
@Xeo Nonsense.
 
back on my pc again. damn symbian phone was too slow.
@curiousguy lol, u've been put on ignore
^^^ lol...
 
Xeo
6:42 AM
Oh, he's gone.
Did he atleast retort with any "Nonsense"?
 
Xeo
heh
 
@IntermediateHacker So, what does it mean?
@Xeo Very mature.
 
Wikipedia made their worst mistake when the left aligned the pictures of famous contributors.
 
Xeo
Yep
 
6:53 AM
lol. :D
I like ignoring curious people.
 
Als
Hola folks! need a lil advice
 
okay. what's the problem?
 
Xeo
@Als Don't write Java.
5
 
Als
hehe
 
lol. that deserves a star.
 
Xeo
6:56 AM
So, what is your real problem?
 
@IntermediateHacker Fascinating.
 
Als
What is a good way to access a remote MS Access database through an MFC application. I understand there are multiple ways, ODA,DAO,ODBC,OLEDB
 
<--- this person is bamboozled. He knows nothing about MS Access.
@curiousguy Interesting.
 
Xeo
@Als I got a feeling not very many people in here will be able to help with that. :/
 
Well according to random.org:

1. OLEDB
2. ODA
3. DAO
4. ODBC
 
6:58 AM
lol. random.org
 
Als
@Pubby: Yes
1 min ago, by Als
What is a good way to access a remote MS Access database through an MFC application. I understand there are multiple ways, ODA,DAO,ODBC,OLEDB
 
@IntermediateHacker I prefer it for being fair and non-biased.
 
Als
I figured ODBC is quite easy to use to access a local DB but I am not sure how to do it for an remote DB.
 
Als
As you already must have guessed I have never used it, never worked on visual C++ before actually, but need to do this so the basic doubt.
 
7:00 AM
You should probably just ask it as a SO question
 
Als
@Xeo: Yup, looked like that but I thought I will ask anyways
@Pubby: I believe this is pretty much basic actually so wanted to do my part of analysis before I do ask a q on SO.
 
Xeo
@Als Well, did you actually search on SO? :P
 
Als
@Xeo: Kindof, the pearls of wisdom i showered about different methodologies came about after the search :P
 
Xeo
heh
 
Als
@Xeo: Actually, i kinda figured I would go with ODBC and I quite understand how to do it for a local MS access DB I don't know how to do it for a remote DB.
Damn looks like time to pick up a Visual C++ book!
 
7:10 AM
Not just pick it up, visually pick it up
 
Xeo
Y'know, like, visualize it.
 
7:47 AM
I hate how google+ links are below every google link
I also hate how hitting down doesn't allow blue arrow selection any more
 
 
1 hour later…
9:09 AM
Is anyone home?
I want to talk, but no one's home and it is suck
 
1
Q: Dividing a float by 10

Shane HsuI am developing a pretty simple algorithm for mathematics use under C++. And I have a floating point variable named "step", each time I finish a while loop, I need step to be divided by 10. So my code is kind of like this, float step = 1; while ( ... ){ //the codes step /= 10; } ...

> In my stupid simple logic, that ends of well. step will be divided by 10, from 1 to 0.1, from 0.1 to 0.01. But it didn't, instead something like 0.100000000001 appears. And I was like "What The Hell"
lol, some people :)
 
9:25 AM
Browsing some SE sites, is it wrong of me to observe that the Qs on scifi.SE are very similar to the Qs on {any religion}.SE ? #fanfic
2
 
Xeo
@FredOverflow some?! :(
@RMartinhoFernandes That's awesome.
 
0
Q: Multiple instances of singleton across shared libraries on Linux

BourneLiMy question, as the title mentioned, is obvious, and I describe the scenario in details. There is a class named singleton implemented by singleton pattern as following, in file singleton.h: /* * singleton.h * * Created on: 2011-12-24 * Author: bourneli */ #ifndef SINGLETON_H_ #define...

lol, "multiple instances of singleton"
 
I am reading about Scala, and frankly it looks likea pretty awesome language to me. Is it worth learning?
 
@RMartinhoFernandes Well, the fact that he observes multiple instances is his problem.
Besides the obvious problem that he uses a singleton in the first place, of course :)
 
is anyone here experienced in Scala?
 

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