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00:05
Permission? That makes very little sense. Since the env/user/groups are identical? You might sytem("/usr/bin/id") to find out whether the output is the same as from your shell. Otherwise, check that the mountpoints are using the same namespace (harder to do, but you can e.g. check permissions from boost::filesystem::status(fake_path) etc.
Amazing how these things can be elusive. And in the end probably turns out to be trivial.
@Mikhail Godspeed :)
 
8 hours later…
07:40
@sehe Haha, that's for sure
I wish I could get rid of Valgrind (because it's killing my CI times), but it occasionally finds errors that are overlooked by sanitizers
maybe that's something that can be done like weekly or so, if nightly is too much
certainly seems a bit much for per commit/PR CI
I don't push commits every day :p
My RNG-powered tests have found a bunch of small issues over time
They make the coverage very inconsistent though haha
 
3 hours later…
10:21
Fuzzing all the way.
10:42
@Morwenn Stop writing bugs :P
 
2 hours later…
12:40
@StackedCrooked I wrote them a long time ago D:
I don't write bugs anymore, I swear
nwp
nwp
Rip. Another one lost to botany.
2
Hey, at least I will have potatoes in a few months
13:04
Talking about botany ...
Meh vege & chicken farm with not enough vege for myself and my 4 chickens.
Did I say 4 chickens? I meant 3, the one in the picture is not a chicken yet, only a older chick if you know what I mean ...
Also airbnb hosting is exhausting, even though the minimum length of stay is 3 days and I offer heavy discount for longer stays. Luckily, I only need to manage 1 property on airbnb. It literally takes about 5-6 hours to get a 3 bedroom house ready for new guests. But since I am a cheap, average of $150 extra a day is worth it :x
13:22
That a cute chick
@Morwenn If life serves you lemons you make an omelette.
@TelKitty How did you get that cute chick in (the garden) bed so fast?
Jokes aside. How long does it take a chick to turn from a chick into a chicken?
If you can run to your food, maybe you can grow a little more solid :x
@CupOfJava About 6 months, could be slightly shorter or 1-3 months longer, depends on the breed.
My chick kept on getting bullied by her 3 aunties.
aw
What are you growing? it looks like potatoes in the back left.
13:29
When sorting accommodation for the night on the farm (their temporary home), 3 aunties getting a shared cage, she gets a smaller, separate cage so she doesn't get pecked to death.
@CupOfJava Sweet potatoes at the back, lettuce and some red stemmed vege, maybe some broccoli and potato.
That's my parents vege patches actually, I only do the occasional watering.
Here's what I tried and doesn't work due to internal instantiation errors: coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/581d484870f2ba64 if someone can make it work from there, I'd be much obliged. — sehe 19 secs ago
Anyone else here better in their SFINAE reasoning? I usually "get out of the woods" but somehow I think there's something that's just blocking this from working.
13:52
v0v
14:21
^o^
@sehe What's boost::setS ?
Oh, apparently it's part of boost::graph.
@sehe I think you’re on point, and the only real way to be sure would be to peek under the hood
14:39
@StackedCrooked Yup, container selector
@LucDanton I was hoping someone like you would look at the compiler message on Coliru and see it right away. I hate how I always stay fuzzy on precisely what goes in SFINAE land.
I'm just not cut out to be a C++ programmer. Ironically, this might be a strength but who am I :)
 
3 hours later…
17:24
I'm making algorithms faster by making them do less work and it's beautiful :'(
18:04
Actually it doesn't work and I finally understand why and it's truly a great sadness
18:33
big sad
yeah xD
I thought I still had a nice refactoring opportunity in the area, but I was once again wrong
However I just realized that I used std::move and std::forward too liberally and at least I've got potential issues to fix there
But that conclusion is a bit sad
In the end I understood why I was wrong, closed an old issue as [wontfix], improved my benchmarks and fixed small potential bugs
So it's still a win, but a sad one :(
18:49
How does one use std::forward too liberally though?
Call it twice on the same function parameter accidentally x)
And I was calling std::move on other parameters that were actually forwarding references
19:15
How could you? :(
@LucDanton Hah. Found a good use for Vim's g?? command (the very bottom).
@Morwenn It's entirely too sasy. And with async operations it's entirely too easy to get ordering issues like async_operation(std::bind(bind_executor(_ex, std::move(*this), x, y, z))
@StackedCrooked Easily
I used forward pretty liberally the other day though: look ma generating proxy delegation functions with macros like it's 2021
Sorry for tiny url, markdown doesn't do the text anchors well
Apparently I skipped the one line of comment I stripped just for the answer exposition. Makes sense, @sehe
Self ping was fixed?
 
2 hours later…
21:26
Anybody remember if you have a boost::container::small_vector<int,5> a; when you expand past the threshold, a.resize(100000)and go back down to a.resize(1) will a[0] be on the stack or the heap?
22:02
@sehe Ooof, apparently move 16 you're +1 according to the computer. gg, unlucky blunder :(
22:18
@ScarletAmaranth Yeah. We both p[layed well according to the analysis. I guess that's the idea of correspondence. Rematch? Or too slow?
@Mikhail I don't think it's specified, as with std::vector. However if you shrunk-to-fit then it should be back on the stack
that's the hope but who knows, I wonder what happens to std::string when its shrunk
@sehe Can rematch. At some point the computer really wanted to continue your attack with Rc1 IIRC, was an interesting idea. e5 was dodgy tactically.
@Mikhail what is the relation? Are you thinking of abusing the SSO of it?
@ScarletAmaranth I have such a hard time getting that kind of analysis :) Is really good for me then.
I can't for the life of me remember whether I had white or black :)
I mean, there are big and small strings, some of them are on the stack and some of them point to the heap... As we know strings can also be resized. I wonder if shrinking a string will convert between the two kinds, of if you become a big string, there is no way of going back.
https://duckduckgo.com/?sites=cppreference.com&q=shrink_to_fit&ia=web
However, SSO is unspecified.
22:23
From this position and henceforth, like 3 moves, the computer just wants to go Rc1.
Even amid all the exchanges in the middle, he's like, let's take a break and play Rc1.
@Mikhail I see this nice facility in small_vector:
   #ifndef BOOST_CONTAINER_DOXYGEN_INVOKED
   /*
   //!An advanced function that offers in-place expansion shrink to fit and new allocation
   //!capabilities. Memory allocated with this function can only be deallocated with deallocate()
   //!or deallocate_many().
   //!This function is available only with Version == 2
   pointer allocation_command(allocation_type command,
                         size_type limit_size,
                         size_type &prefer_in_recvd_out_size,
                         pointer &reuse)
@ScarletAmaranth Yeah. I would probably never play that. I'm not feeling that plan.
Sent a new invite. I managed to find the most complicated route ever. Also, it's rating me at ~300 or something. That's... pretty funny. I'm not that good, but I'm not <400 :)
I probably don't play enough --online--
Oh well. Murkdown
23:25
Spoilers: I'll play C4 next in reply to juuuuuuuuuust about anything you play ^^.
@ScarletAmaranth Explosive!
Ah. That's Queen's Gambit right. I only have one coping strat: decline. I think I had a game recently where the analysis said I went into "exchange variation" or "standard defense". That sounded so boring that I knew it was the right choice for me :)

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