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00:00
@stdOrgnlDave why would people star that?
i took the hardrive out if i extract the dmg image installer tot he hd,,,, could i run setup from main hd
but i would need a parition
sbi
sbi
@CaptainGiraffe You could have seen that from my SO profile, you know.
@CaptainGiraffe 2p? wait.. that's... Is there land there?
@sbi I'm tired too
@ScottW oh right, DST. That makes it Hawaii, not the one to the west of that.
00:01
@sbi Well the 2:am here was more of the decider.
@MooingDuck generally the people here in Lounge<C++> are gullible and predictable sods, myself included
sbi
sbi
@stdOrgnlDave That top-level const has no effect (except for confusing newbies), and the whole thing will either not compile or make the stuck blow up into your face. Why should we even be required to look at that?
raise your hand if you were tempted to star that but didn't
come on, I know there's at least two of you
Hand mid-air
00:03
@sbi your SO profile indicates that it's nowhere close to 2PM near you.
@sbi I like you, but humor isn't your strong point sometime s:-(
@ScottW yeah, I was thinking it was much closer to that
sbi
sbi
@MooingDuck Damn. It's 2am. I am sorry. I am tired.
@CaptainGiraffe assuming that wasn't you who starred it, I was right
@stdOrgnlDave not me, that's abominable, and borderline immoral :P
@ScottW East Coast/NY?
00:04
@stdOrgnlDave assumptions are commonly a very strong statement
@ScottW close enough
sbi
sbi
@stdOrgnlDave I prefer humor to not to tickle my brain's disgust center.
@sbi ewwww.
BRB y'all
k, gg yall
@stdOrgnlDave now that is enough to say East Coast on the south end :/
Try older version.
do you find that "as technology evolves, it's really hard to keep up with the new things and stuff"?
@GeorgeEdison Yes.
woof woof
00:22
@CatPlusPlus What version would you suggest reverting to?
I don't remember which one worked, but gettext definitely used to build on MinGW/MSYS.
@GeorgeEdison ick, mingw? I would suggest reverting to GCC on linux
Don't forget this is Mingw-w64.
I couldn't get newest one to work either.
Same thing for the most part.
Okay, well I'll give that a try.
00:26
hey cat plus plus, quick ninja question
inferred function return types to favour value or reference?
Alright, reverting to gettext 0.17...
Value, probably.
agree
hmmm
how would this syntax work?
wait, how do you infer return type from arguments to a template? I forget :-\
template <class A, class B> auto operator<(const A& a, const B& b) -> decltype(a<b) { return a < b; }
why would you do such a thing?
a > b should pretty much always return bool.
00:39
...
roflol
core dump
C++11 support is sooo lacking :-(
refreshed it
VC10 gives a "linkage specifications nested too deeply" error
the MSDN KB only has an article for that error on Windows CE 5
can anyone try that on a more recent GCC please? like 4.7?
@JerryCoffin hey
Xeo
Xeo
00:56
template <class A, class B> auto operator<(const A& a, const B& b) -> decltype(a<b) { return a < b; }
erm.. that's recursive right there, I think
yes, it is recursively deducing its type
I think
Xeo
Xeo
Wow, my old build of Clang 3.1 SVN segfaults on this too
r152621. Let's see what the clang bot on #llvm says
wait, there's a clang bot on #llvm? like geordi?
Xeo
Xeo
yep
...freenet?
Xeo
Xeo
01:02
OFTC
Xeo
Xeo
clang-bot got r154936
and still segfaults
Now I'm trying to find someone with ToT
Where's the robot when you need him....
it's clang-bot
ahh
I have some other code that segfaults GCC if you want to try it
@stdOrgnlDave Hi. Sorry for the delay -- had to go pick up my son.
@JerryCoffin You're in the US, I take it?
01:15
Hi
Does anyone here have experience with DirectShow?
that hideously deprecated thing?
Yes. I'm trying to send a custom BYTE* to an audio output
I want to output a WMA file sent over a network
Just trying to make a network streaming program
on Windows of course
@DeadMG Could you suggest anything better?
Let me know if you find anything that isn't "hideously deprecated" and can be used to play WMA files.
Media foundation looks best (licensing issues with FFMPEG)
Thanks
01:22
@CatPlusPlus Can't play DivX/XviD video? /fail
@DeadMG Wut?
or maybe that was 2005's popular video format
ffmpeg supports XviD perfectly.
Windows Media Foundation looks a lot cleaner than DirectShow
@CatPlusPlus It's not in the list?
01:23
In fact, you'll be hard pressed to find a codec or format that's not supported by ffmpeg/libav.
What list?
Xvid is MPEG-4.
anyone got GCC 4.7 handy?
GCC is out of the question anyways
It looks like Windows Media Foundation only supports Vista or higher
01:31
aaargh
hurry up pirates, I want to watch Fringe
so I will need to debate about supporting XP customers....
Oh. Never mind --- "This function is available on the following platforms if the Windows Media Format 11 SDK redistributable components are installed:

Windows XP with Service Pack 2 (SP2) and later.
Windows XP Media Center Edition 2005 with KB900325 (Windows XP Media Center Edition 2005) and KB925766 (October 2006 Update Rollup for Windows XP Media Center Edition) installed."
um OK I was asking if anyone had GCC handy not if you were going to use GCC
*FFMPEG not GCC I meant
Whoops
@IDWMaster mpeg-4 is patent-encumbered, ain't it?
@DeadMG Cliffhanger will be devastating.
01:34
@CatPlusPlus hm?
It's a two-parter.
@stdOrgnlDave Yep. Which is why I can't use FFMPEG. I have to use a library that ships with Windows, or a Windows update
so I can't ship it with my program.
@CatPlusPlus Very true.
And then, a week later, a season-end cliffhanger, which will be even worse.
@IDWMaster I'm pretty sure no libraries ship with windows that play mpeg-4. there are codecs like divx, but they aren't free
01:35
At least season 5 was green lighted.
@IDWMaster can't your clients just pay the license for playback? it's quite cheap
@stdOrgnlDave FFMPEG says that it's GPL or LGPL, so I'm not sure where paying comes from
In silly US, you need to licence the use of MPEG-4 itself.
@DeadMG the paying goes to the organization that holds the mpeg-4 patents
oh
well that's really quite fuckin' stupid
01:38
yep
There's a company that tracks companies which claim patent rights to MPEG-4.
software patents are dumb
don't get started on x.264 your head will implode
Motorola succeeded just recently in suing Microsoft over x.264
01:38
@DeadMG WELLLLLLLL, in the case of something like x.264, it's not your average "for (i = 0; i < 50; i++)" software patent
Still stupid.
@CatPlusPlus yes, but it's actually like...100+ patents owned by different companies
wait a second, didn't the x.264 organization give free license for playback so that people could have free players?
@stdOrgnlDave No.
(in order to sell more things that use encoders)
oh, darn
well anyway Windows doesn't have built-in MPEG4 support either so you're going to have to pirate it or license it
@CatPlusPlus with that said, and there's a lot of impressive technology there - yes, it's stupid, but I think x.264 is one area where a lot of $$$ went in to something that wuldn't have happened as well otherwise, for once. (remember how long it took xvid to even compare to divx in encoder quality? what a mess)
@DeadMG (Yet another delay). Yes, I think this is the US anyway.
@stdOrgnlDave At least if memory serves, Windows (at least 7 and maybe Vista) does have MPEG-4 support -- but it uses a new API, so most existing players can't/won't use it.
01:46
CreateObjectFromByteStream!!! YES!
Incredible.
I'm implementing pbrain extensions. Brainfuck is fun.
@stdOrgnlDave Too late! But it's true: Golomb encoding can shrink brains as well as data.
aaaargh want to watch Fringe!
hurry up silly pirates
@Xeo clang-bot is back
poll: how many VM's do you use on a regular basis on your desktop? My answer: 3
@JerryCoffin it's licensed?
i.e. you don't have to pay to unlock it?
are you saying they'd actually spend $.67 in your $500 OS toward a player license? how generous of them!
02:13
@stdOrgnlDave Yes, at least AFAIK.
@CatPlusPlus as much as brain fuck may be fun I prefer pussy fuck ;-)
@stdOrgnlDave I don't think that includes everything to deal with (for one obvious example) Blu-ray discs, but I'm reasonably certain it can handle the stream decoding.
anyone have VC11?
seriously? I don't want to download&install it :-\
02:29
@stdOrgnlDave I have the beta, yes. I don't think anybody (including MS) has the final version yet.
@JerryCoffin can you run a short segment for me? see if it dumps core? it'll be good for a bug report
struct A { int a; bool operator<(const int& inty) { return a < inty; } }; template <class A, class B> auto operator<(const A& a, const B& b) -> decltype(a<b) { return a < b; } int main(void) { A a; a.a = 1; int b = 2; if (a < b) return 4; return 0; }
I can paste a better link if you want
it dumps core on clang, vc10 so far; I haven't tried it on a real gcc but it dumps ideone's core also
dumping core on one compiler isn't a surprise, but dumping on all of them? impressive
well, it's a recursive type inference
@stdOrgnlDave Dumps core on real g++ 4.7.0. Testing with VC11 now.
lol
I think that's something they should catch and warn you about instead of dumping core
it may seem like it's unlikely to happen but just wait until you're using type inference and auto all over the place
02:35
@stdOrgnlDave VC11: 1>trash.cpp(7): fatal error C1045: compiler limit : linkage specifications nested too deeply
yeah, that's what VC10 says
MSDN only has one entry for that error and it pertains to windows ce 5.0
@stdOrgnlDave I have a feeling that if compilers had emotions, they'd avoid us (and especially you) like the plague... :-)
@JerryCoffin care to run one more little experiment for me? there's only one other thing I want to see about VC11 and that's how it handles recursive templates
35+minute compile works in ~2 on GCC now
~30s in clang
@stdOrgnlDave I guess...
template <typename T> struct add_pointer { typedef T*type; }; template <int N, typename T> struct add_pointers : add_pointer<typename add_pointers<N-1, T>::type> {}; template <typename T> struct add_pointers<0, T> { typedef T type; }; template <int N, typename T> struct add_many_pointers : add_pointers<80,typename add_many_pointers<N-1, T>::type> {}; template <typename T> struct add_many_pointers<0, T> { typedef T type; }; int main() { add_many_pointers<80, int>::type p; }
02:40
@stdOrgnlDave It's trying. Is it my imagination, or is this somewhat simliar to what we were crashing compilers with a week ago or so?
Is zzyzzyxx one of us?
There's a city/town named "zzyzx".
Really? Where?
google it
We drive by it everytime we go to Vegas.
Lol, forgot about Google.
02:50
@JerryCoffin yes, if it takes more than 10 minutes feel free to kill it
@JerryCoffin sorry afk a bit
@stdOrgnlDave I thought you said MSVC10 core dumped?
@stdOrgnlDave Currently at 11+ minutes, 200+ megabytes...
I IRC-ified that code to mess with geordi's, (same code)
#define t1 template
#define t2 typename
#define t3 typedef
t1<t2 T>struct a_p {t3 T*type;};t1<int N,t2 T>struct a_ps : a_p<t2 a_ps<N-1, T>::type>{};t1<t2 T>struct a_ps<0,T>{t3 T type;};t1<int N, t2 T> struct amp : a_ps<80,t2 amp<N-1, T>::type> {};t1<t2 T>struct amp<0,T>{t3 T type;};int main() { amp<80, int>::type p; }
@DeadMG it does, it just takes 30+ minutes to do it
@stdOrgnlDave You just said that it gives a regular error.
@DeadMG where? sorry, AFK. that code takes 30+ mins to dump core on VC. you may have to bump it form 80 to 100 I forget
newest GCC and clang dump core in under 30 seconds on it now, so they're way ahead
02:53
@stdOrgnlDave Coffin said that VC11 gives an error, and you jut said that's what MSVC10 does.
in the message I referred to
@stdOrgnlDave Just did it with gcc 4.7.0 in 14.9 seconds.
Not quite sure how that happens, but gcc 4.7.0 seems to be running way fast on my machine.
> It is rumoured that while heavily intoxicated, Osbourne snorted a line of ants, in competition with Nikki Sixx of Mötley Crüe, who had set fire to himself the night before.
Ok...
@StackedCrooked Snorted... ants?
03:44
@JerryCoffin did it actually compile? if so, add some ******'s to the typedef (tons of em) and crank the template specialization # up
@stdOrgnlDave I didn't try to run the result, but it didn't show any error messages before it quit running...
@stdOrgnlDave Running with 10 levels of indirection and specialization number at 120...
@stdOrgnlDave ...and that just died a horrible death.
@JerryCoffin OK :-P thanks
04:00
24.7 seconds with one level of indirection and specialization set to 100.
now I finally watched Fringe
it's time to sleep
Leaving it at one level of indirection, but moving to 150, get's it to just under a minute.
a minute to die?
VC11?
hmph
OK, thanks, gtg, ttyl!
@stdOrgnlDave No -- g++ 4.7. It didn't die -- finished compilation.
Later.
@DeadMG Dawn: the time when men of reason go to bed.
 
2 hours later…
06:29
I just found out that Google returns zero results for "Potamelian".
07:01
@Mysticial is XS also down for you?
@bamboon ya
They can never seem to get a reliable server, lol
@Mysticial ^^
I remember that like 3-4 week outage a few years back...
Like seriously, they're based in Las Vegas where there are plenty of resources and help to get a god damn server up and running.
Yet the pirate bay can get their act together in 3 days after having their servers physically shutdown by the feds...
lol
@Mysticial I find it especially ridiculous having the fact in mind that you have to pay 1$ now to be a member
Yeah... I think they really turned away a lot of people like that. I joined well before that requirement. But apparently they couldn't figure a way to block spam... so...
lol
0
Q: I have a situation here with badges

ArunLook into the screen shot. In the info filed the number of badges shows the number 14. and in badges tab the number is 15. why? is it a bug or something?

seriously?
07:24
-3
Q: What equipment should be chosen in Ceramsite Production Line?

dsaliceWho can tell me the details of ceramsite production line, and what crusher can be used for crushing ceramsite?

please delete this question its not related to programming /tools not even related to computer science
How in the world did that person end up here? lol
clearly, everyone's asleep right now since there's still only 2 close votes on it (including mine)
@Mysticial exactly sir
Oh and yeah, if you wanna farm flags. Now's your chance. :)
do you know where to add compiler flags in code blocks? i need to add ones that are not in the prebuilt list
 
2 hours later…
09:12
@tree probably in the project settings.
09:23
have I dreamt that there was a std::rref?
A question?
a rhetorical one
You dreamt about C++? Are you sure it wasn't a nightmare then?
Will boost live besides of std library?
I mean, many of boost functionalities are now part of the new c++ standard or are planned. So what's the point of existence of the boost library. Or at least, shouldn't it discard ones that already exist in the new standard?
09:48
@jalf Do you have many cool it-companies in Copenhagen?
@MElmi people might still have a codebase written in C++03.
Why can you still get the first album by Iron Maiden if they released new albums afterwards? Same question.
@ScottW me too!
You fool. If you are hungry you must eat or else you'll die.
:p
I couldn't. :p I'm underweight.
I'm 55.
But I don't care. I eat whatever my tong (Engelse woord?) likes.
meh stupid, inconsistent English language.
If you pronounce it "tung" anyway, why not fucking spell it "tung"?
I like the Korean language.
It's funny when American people try to pronounce "rijbewijs" or "veiligheid".
"rough" => "raf"
:P
"Zandzeepsodemineraalwatersteenstralen" means GTFO. :P
10:18
Hi people of the C++
According to Het Groot Woordenboek der Nederlandse Taal.
Can somebody with the knowledge or reference tell me whether there’s some big error in my pseudocode of operator -> resolution?
1
A: recursive application of operator->

Konrad RudolphWhat Stanley meant by “recursive” is just that the operator is applied to every returned object until the returned type is a pointer. Which happens here on the first try: screen::operator -> returns a pointer. Thus this is the last call to an operator -> that the compiler attempts. It then...

-> must return a pointer AFAIK
@classdaknok_t Nope
What's the point of it if it doesn't?
Ah I see. Meh.
That's my joke. See transcript from yesterday.
No. I'm staying.
Why are your Dutch friends already awake?
It's 12:25.
I agree.
In 70 minutes is 13:37!!1
I like the page title on google.com/404
10:28
@classdaknok_t To be honest, I can’t think of many good applications. The only that I can think of now is when you implement a pointer-like object whose operator -> returns a pointer-like proxy to defer execution …
although “defer” is really the wrong word here since it’s still executed immediately, just via some other object on the way
Proxies are cool!!1
Though I'm not sure I've ever used them.
Except for those returned by std::bitset.
@KonradRudolph That's the reason. I've known this from a Meyer or Sutter article about smart pointers. I think it allows smart pointers to act as transparent proxies, even if you have something like a smart pointer to an iterator of vector<bool> or valarray slices
@classdaknok_t I've made proxies. On more than one occasion. I'm sure with C++11 half of those use cases would be obsolete
@ScottW that is no longer an entry part of the Van Dale dictionary. It didn't catch on. Nice try, Herman!
damn, I’ve forgotten my SecurID PIN and now I can’t log into the work’s VPN
@ScottW @sehe says it's removed from the dictionary.
@KonradRudolph try a brute-force attack.
essentially that’s what I’m doing – iterating through all number combinations that I can think of
10:38
@ScottW I guess so.
@KonradRudolph how many digits and in what base?
@KonradRudolph good chance you're being throttled/blocked by now
Or do you mean the pin is needed in order to activate the secureid device itself?
@classdaknok_t 4, 10 no idea. Base 36, as far as I know (alphanumeric), length – no clue
I need to vomit every time I forgot my password because the service is designed by a moron and your password needs to include a digit and a capital letter.
@KonradRudolph oh that's only 10000 possible combinations. A quick script should do it within half an hour.
Assuming you can try as many times as you want.
10:41
well, I store all my usual passwords (randomly generated) in a keychain
but the SecurID PIN isn’t a normal password
@classdaknok_t Only that SecurID requires me to enter a six-digit code manually every time
which makes brute forcing hard ;)
Ell
Ell
I don't understand keychains - do they automatically fill in passwords and stuff or are they just an encrypted file?
Oh, that sucks.
@Ell they store your passwords encrypted.
also, I think the server implements an upper limit on the number of tries, but I don’t know which this is
@Ell Depends on the program(s). On OS X, the keychain tool is tightly integrated into the system so other applications generally use it automatically
that’s really the only way that a keychain should work
everything else is an annoyance
But I feel that they defeat the purpose of a password, since on a Mac the keychain is unlocked whenever you login. You can have a separate keychain but then you need a master password for it, which isn't that a bad idea. Might try that!
@classdaknok_t The keychain is unlocked, but individual passwords aren’t necessarily
only to applications who you grant permission to read the passwords
Ell
Ell
10:44
@KonradRudolph yeah I was thinking if its not integrated and stuff, then its just going to be inconvenient
Oh didn't know that.
and as far as I know the Keychain unencrypts them individually on every read so they aren’t usually unencryped in main memory
I like how you can use a simple PCI-card to read the entire RAM.
@Ell Well, some Windows tools use virtual keystrokes to fill in forms. I’ve heard that this works quite well, actually.
I just remember my passwords.
10:46
@classdaknok_t In other words, they’re not secure
You know what really sucks? If you forget your email address or username.
Or both, even worse.
or do you have a secure, distinct (!!!) password for every service and remember all of the?
I don't care.
"correct battery horse staple" :p
I have distinct passwords for some services.
But I only use about about five services.
GitHub, SE, Heroku, Apple ID and MyOpenID (or however that is called?)
Oh yeah and DigID but I rarely use that, though I do have a very long password for it.
"zandzeepsodemineraalwatersteenstralen" is prone to dictionary attacks xD
Maximum password lengths are stupid.
But @Konrad if you store your randomly-generator passwords in your keychain, how do you know them when you are somewhere else? At a school for example.
And you want to sign in.
@classdaknok_t I don’t I’m dependent on my laptop
An I see.
10:57
@classdaknok_t That said, I’ve got the keychain backed up in an encrypted container (additional encryption) on Dropbox and I can access Dropbox using my smartphone – and I actually know my Dropbox keyword and the keychain keyword by heart
so in case of laptop failure I can retrieve the keychain
That's smart.
that’s paranoia
Does iCloud back-up your keychains?
but yes, probably still a smart move
I don’t use iCloud
so I don’t know

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