the fact that iterators suck and non-polymorphic lambdas are gimped are problems for everyone trying to use the Standard library in all it's functionality
special-casing a solution for for_each is just trying to band-aid the most glaring problem
the proper fix would have been to introduce ranges and keep polymorphic lambdas, so you could do std::for_each(c, [&](auto&& var) { ... });
not to mention not having to do all the ADL cockery that makes range-based for "work"
@DeadMG Why is it a bad thing? ADL is the bee’s knees as far as I’m concerned. Oh sure, it’s hell to implement correctly but once there it’s pretty nifty for users
@IntermediateHacker GC is less useful than people assume. One of the biggest hurdles in large .NET projects is … resource management.
GCs can take care of one type of resources only: memory. Managing unmanaged resources in .NET is a major cause of headaches and weird design decisions.
And having pointers isn’t the problem either. They are simply much too prominent. For instance, it makes no sense for a language to offer dedicated syntax for pointers. Why have int*? ptr<int> would be completely sufficient (and would discourage rampant usage).
I am wondering about function argument lookup. I have this code ideone.com/WQkd3 Why is the non const version of the template get_ref preferred? Does the function overload work from the inner most to the outer most or the other way around?
@KonradRudolph So, you'd swap out the T* compiler intrinsic function for, like, __getaddress(obj) compiler intrinsic function?
not really seeing the point
@JonPurdy Nothing, really. All I'm saying is that there's no way to implement ptr<T> or ref<T> as part of the library, making the difference rather pointless.
Might not be what you are talking about but I have a question regarding a get_ref<> function to a boost::shared_ptr. Look at my question and code above. Disclaimer: Might not be what you are talking about
@DeadMG The point is that having dedicated syntax for it is a waste of compiler builder resources, bloats the language and incites users (not only inexperienced onces) to overuse the feature
@KonradRudolph …no. A pointer type is a fundamental aspect of the language that cannot be emulated. A vector can be (read: is) implemented in terms of those core features.
@KonradRudolph No, you can't. What happens in assignment? You can't assign references. You can't keep a container reference in your iterator, because then it cannot be assigned to, which breaks the iterator requirements.
@thecoshman I had cream tea on Monday, with a pretty decent Darjeeling, some nice scones, clotted cream, and a nice selection of jams and marmalade. Yum. I liked that a lot.
@KonradRudolph It’s in vbrun.dll (or whatever it was called). It’s not “just a library function” because it’s a direct hook to the language runtime environment.
@JonPurdy Yes, I’m aware of that. But that doesn’t matter to the user’s perspective. VB is (in DeadMG’s words) “lying to me” because it presents it not as an intrinsic, but just any old library function
@KonradRudolph Because we should totally require that people read the documentation, instead of making it obvious that it has special semantics just by looking at it?
@EtiennedeMartel FTR, I also think that both of those situations are broken.
@DeadMG If you want to mess with the internals? Yes, absolutely, read the docu. If you want to use it? Then where is the issue? Again, I don’t see it and you refuse to tell me. What “special semantics” does ptr have?
@DeadMG Two objections: (1) as if UB has ever deterred C++. (2) It’s a standard library type. The same claim is true for all other standard library types: touch it, and all bets are off
@DeadMG Yes. But the answer is not to “make all STL types syntax intrinsics to prevent them from being abused” … it’s to rigorously address UB where possible
ptr would still be a pretty fundamental type that not many people would touch … and maybe that fewer people would use. So if anything I foresee less problems
@EtiennedeMartel Well, gee, maybe because there are no sane semantics for a pointer other than the ones which currently exist, I don't even know why you'd want to or what you'd change them to
but when somebody goes ptr[index], then they'd better damn well know what indexing does if they want to avoid UB, hmm?
@KonradRudolph Everybody will still use it exactly the same as they did before- when they need it. Which is frequently.
@KonradRudolph Then what the fuck was the point? All you've achieved is a different syntax which implies things about what you're using that are not true.
you're not gonna achieve anything. People use pointers because they need them. Incentives have nothing to do with it.
Here's my maybe "monad" that I use quite often in my C++ projects (disclaimer: see the comments below). It's insofar more like the Haskell Maybe than your implementation as it only holds an object in the just case (points mobj on it), not wasting space if it's nothing. This also allows it to use ...
When I ping using cmd, there are many lines for example:
Reply from 209.85.175.138: bytes=32 time=34ms TTL=53
I want to read the time. How to read it or write the information from ping to a file?
@thecoshman Aren’t the Irish in general more Catholic than the pope? Unless they’re not, in which they are as fundamentalist as Born-Again Christians from Carolina.
See, I was right, Henry Higgins (couldn't find my own My Fair Ladyreference on the interwebs)
@RMartinhoFernandes Oh they are. You must be confusing the surrogates they serve at McD, BK, KFC and such - that's not french fries. That's 'mill' (?) stamped into french-frie shapes
@thecoshman @thecoshman @thecoshman @thecoshman @thecoshman by typing. Usually using an USB attached HID device with standard internal 102-key layout. Why?
@RMartinhoFernandes He should have asked: "without ever having used google" :)