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10:02 AM
> He married [...] cat.
@StackedCrooked Are flat dudes better than round dudes?
 
user1804599
@Ven tsc
 
Ven
@rightfold with outFile?
 
user1804599
We don't but we're migrating to that soon.
 
Hi all i have a c++ template question
I have a container coming from a lib and don't hv a way to change it... I make a class T whose constructor call requires a const into argument... when i use the container with this class... how do I specify this argument?

sc_signal<> is the container and usually I create objs like...

sc_signal<T> some_obj...
Now class T requires a parameter to construct its obj... where do I specify the parameter in the syntax above??
 
Ven
@rightfold do you just script() every single file? how do you package?
because microsoft recommends against outFile
 
user1804599
10:06 AM
No, <script
 
user1804599
WTF is script()
 
Ven
@rightfold sorry, I'm writing jade
so you <script> every single file compiled by TS currently?
 
user1804599
Yes.
 
user1804599
It works great.
 
Ven
10:08 AM
okay
yeah, it works in dev
 
user1804599
It works in production as well.
 
Ven
slowww
so many http requests ;(
 
user1804599
Then use cat.
 
Ven
true
 
user1804599
No, cat.
 
Ven
10:14 AM
yes
 
user1804599
finger fsck
 
Ven
wait Perl 6 doesn't have backticks anymore
my $finger but `fsck`
would've been nice :(
 
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes Nah, but as mentioned before, I got a new job in Hamburg. However, I plan to eventually (in a year or so) change back to Duesseldorf, and I wanna keep the flat during that time. I'll also be there most weekends, if able, so yeah. cc @StackedCrooked
 
user1804599
cool
 
10:18 AM
4) Everything is possible. Live Demo I think this is bad design (again, emulating Java badness). The upshot is that you can't use getSecSince and addHours unless you copy the timestamp to a MyTime first. Best to just work with the most general, least restrictive datatypes if you can. — sehe 31 mins ago
preaching it
 
Xeo
@Morwenn flat is justice
 
user1804599
flat tax is justice
 
flat tax is simple
@Telkitty +1 insightful
Not bad for a change
 
10:37 AM
What's the meaning of vector<int>::iterator v = vec.begin(); I know :: is the scope resolution operator, but what does this syntax mean?
 
Ven
there are thousands of questions (anwered) about this on the internet (and stackoverflow). Please do some googling before asking here :).
(and maybe learn C++ through some authoritative resource, like a book or something, if you havn't)
 
ok thanks
 
@Telkitty Looks tasty :D
 
Ven
you do too
cough
hi people
 
Eh, why isn't there an easy O(1) algorithm for ctz? :(
@Ven But too spicy. It makes you cough :p
 
Ven
10:40 AM
As spicy as a white girl's latte.
or some other random internet joke about basic white girls.
 
With a cheap ctz I should be able to somewhat improve my Gray code adition algorithm.
 
There's some builtins for that shit.
That (mostly) should compile down to a sane instruction.
 
Yeah. I wonder how it performs. But I'm not at home so I can't test it :/
There's an algorithm using a de Bruijn sequence and a multiplication, but to be honest I just don't get how it works.
 
Why are you even doing Gray code addition? :D
 
10:46 AM
@Griwes Why not?
 
me wearing SE shirt @ Uluru/Ayers rocks
 
lol
 
@Telkitty The landscape is gorgeous :o
 
Hmm, looks like I have a skeleton for file-based operations for my build system thingy.
 
Ven
@Telkitty that t-shirt is amazing :o
 
10:46 AM
Let's make a "I'm dumping two weeks of work here" commit so it's safe. :D
 
@Morwenn It is ...
 
Ven
@Telkitty where's that btw?
 
3 mins ago, by Telkitty
me wearing SE shirt @ Uluru/Ayers rocks
 
Ven
I have no idea where Uluru is
 
10:50 AM
red sand ...
 
Ven
how hot is that sand?
 
Uluru (English pronunciation: /ˌuːləˈruː/), also known as Ayers Rock (/ˌɛərz ˈrɒk/) and officially gazetted as Uluru / Ayers Rock, is a large sandstone rock formation in the southern part of the Northern Territory in central Australia. It lies 335 km (208 mi) south west of the nearest large town, Alice Springs, 450 km (280 mi) by road. Kata Tjuta and Uluru are the two major features of the Uluṟu-Kata Tjuṯa National Park. Uluru is sacred to the Anangu, the Aboriginal people of the area. The area around the formation is home to an abundance of springs, waterholes, rock caves, and ancient paintings...
 
Ven
yeah, I googled, thanks :)
 
@Ven hot, but not very hot because it's winter there ...
even then, it's about 30 degrees around noon
 
user1804599
Starlite is a material claimed to be able to withstand and insulate from extreme heat. It was invented by amateur chemist Maurice Ward (1933–2011) during the 1970s and 1980s, and received much publicity in 1993 thanks to coverage on the science and technology show Tomorrow's World. The name Starlite was coined by Ward's granddaughter Kimberly. Despite interest from NASA and other major technological companies, Ward never revealed the composition of Starlite, which is still unknown. Ward once mentioned that his close family knows the fabrication process, but after his death neither his wife nor...
 
user1804599
10:54 AM
lol
 
Ven
nice job
 
11:06 AM
Woohoo. I love when people are up front about their bias. So we can exchange arguments and learn!
The "?!?" is exactly justified there. I think you should update your intuition to modern C++ a bit. Inheritance is overrated. Free functions are part of a class interface and can extend it too: The Interface Principle - by Herb Sutter — sehe 49 secs ago
@StackedCrooked You really should get funded. Somehow.
Weer een druppel op de gloeiende plaat :)
 
@rightfold Same story with that guy who was apparently able to turn bodies into stone. He tried to protect the process and destroyed his notes. We still don't know how the guy did that.
 
11:21 AM
@Morwenn I.e. probably didn't.
 
Or it wasn't magic (extreme pressure can do that, right. For some definition of "stone"?)
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Well, we still have perfect stone body parts from his experiments, but I can't find the name of the guy.
 
erm. That's intriguing, but hardly evidence. How did anyone reach the conclusion it was probable that the body part was actually petrified from organic material, instead of cast from a mold or sculpted?
I mean, Christians would say "but we still have the Bible". "We still have a Pope"
 
Found him: Girolamo Segato.
You can find images of what we still have on the internet.
 
Okay. The article seems to suggest he devised some kind of chemical treatment for mummified material
 
11:27 AM
There are more complete articles all round; the Wikipedia article is really terse :/
He also built a stone table with petrified brain tumors and stuff apparently. Crazy guy.
 
@sehe That sounds unlikely.
 
Anyway, time to go. See you later :)
 
Well. That may be true, but I haven't thought of an explanation that would be instantly more plausible to my ear.
If you mean he will probably not have discovered it as-if a chemical process, fine. But I'd consider a Neanderthaler throwing something down a sulfuric lake to dissolve it just as much a "chemical process" as a chemist that designed this process and collected the acids for the purpose.
 
Natural petrification works by slowly filling or replacing organic matter, not by any chemical process.
 
I'm not actually aware of what specific type of petrification is observed in the remaining specimens.
The article doesn't talk about it or link to it, AFAICT
 
11:34 AM
It is unlikely that he devised such a chemical process at the time of his life since chemical synthesis was in its infancy (Lavoisier's "Traité Élémentaire de Chimie" was only published in 1789)
@Morwenn I can't find anything that actually describes the remaining samples :/
Found some pictures here bizzarrobazar.com/2009/09/13/musei-anatomici-italiani-firenze, but all four have wildly different appearances. Either he devised four(!) different processes, or (at least) three of them are fakes.
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes That's my point. He might have stumbled on something that he didn't have to understand but happened to do something
@R.MartinhoFernandes Or he didn't devise any process, but had a fluke and tried to reproduce it a number of times
 
11:51 AM
Found a description.
It says that there are three different procedures: two of them use known methods and are not impressive (vascular injection and moulding). The last ones are the "petrified" ones.
There's also this:
> I
even entered into some preliminaries of a negotiation with
the design of obtaining him for my own purposes, but I
found him sadly involved in debt, and that his demands
were too exorbitant to be complied with.
 
Mark Zuckerberg invest 1 billion dollars into Kanye West ideas
:P
 
Ven
old
 
i know but it matches the description so well
 
12:08 PM
This gem happened
Gimme all your stars, thanks
 
Ven
and yu're trying to collect the stars
 
gimme all
can't get enough of internet points
 
Ven
hype
 
at least they are not uni points
those are even uselesser
 
@Shoe Bartek shitting on universities got old a long time ago. No stars for you.
 
12:16 PM
> How can I be a faster programmer? #Disclaimer: I am not a professional programmer nor will this method suit everyone.
Wow, that's exactly what we need. Faster programmers
 
Ven
oh hey @Columbo
 
Get faster. Get foolish.
 
Only valid answer.
 
12:57 PM
I love how GCC has a builtin « for fuck's sake ».
 
@Borgleader depends on the coffee
@Morwenn reference?
 
@NaCl It's "find first set"
 
lol
 
1:24 PM
@Columbo Yes we do. We need people who don't mindlessly live their lives as entertainment junkies :)
People who - like Da Vinci - care about making something. Discovering something. Not wasting brains.
 
I'd argue that we don't
 
We're sad auto-zombies. Eating our own brains by not making an effort :)
 
I know of no zombie around me
What do you mean?
 
Ven
1:41 PM
"the old times were better" is what he's saying
 
back in the old times, you were young
 
@sehe What does that have to do with speed
@sehe Yes, and we have those, so the rest can be entertainment junkies. Which is 99% of all people existing.
 
2:05 PM
@Columbo I think @sehe might have a point:
 
Ven
2:19 PM
Nice one, typescript. It won't report if you have an non-existing file under files
great shit
and then it won't include one of my non-namespaces files. Ok.
 
@Columbo what does speed mean to you, i.r.t. humans? You think a fast coder is a coder on jet plane?
Let's bring coders in orbit. Everything is nice at 10km/s
 
actually, all we need is to change the frame of reference
INSTANT SPEED IMPROVEMENT FOR EVERYONE
 
2:43 PM
Warp dive
 
What we need is ludicrous speed.
 
I'm in favour
 
3:04 PM
@EtiennedeMartel tesla reference?
 
@ScarletAmaranth Quick google search suggest Space Balls?
 
@Borgleader search more
 
Ell
@ScarletAmaranth how is thesis going?
 
@Ell I have to go over my presentation tomorrow and that's about it; then friday is defense
 
We need slower programmers
That think just a little bit before acting
Or maybe not
Dunno
 
3:09 PM
the ones that think faster, yes
 
Anybody here is passionate about men casual shirts?
 
not me
 
Can anybody here recommend some €20-50 nice shirt set?
Like if you search on reddit all you read about is this UNIQLO thingy which looks nice
But I'm also looking for shorts and stuff and I don't like anything else from them other than classic fit shirts
 
@Borgleader Yes.
 
Roman armies used to carry a bunch of "sacred chickens" with them so they could decide when it was an auspicious time for battle.
 
3:18 PM
@Shoe Did you ever think about my question? The hint I was trying to give was this: there are different kinds of speed. Just saying.
 
Gotcha
 
@ScarletAmaranth Why? I was right :P
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Can I hope that you're not recommending this as a way of choosing shirts to wear? :-)
 
Nah, just putting it out there.
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Oh, and grapes come in bunches. Chickens come in flocks (or cages, or usually nice little foam trays covered with transparent wrap).
 
3:34 PM
@JerryCoffin Yesterday's random trivia I posted was that boars come in singulars
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes If only I were awake, I'm pretty sure I could take that as an attack: claiming that I'm singularly boorish.
 
user1804599
@Ven PEBKAC
 
@JerryCoffin That's actually how the chicken I'm gonna eat tonight came into my house.
(shrink wrapped in a tray)
The wonders of modern technology.
 
@EtiennedeMartel And not even the wings have any feathers! Truly amazing.
 
3:54 PM
We really are living in fantastic times.
 
@EtiennedeMartel ...though the chicken might view it as less fantastic (at least if chickens had the intellectual capacity to understand "fantasy" at all).
 
@JerryCoffin It's probably too busy raping and murdering other chickens.
 
Ell
4:11 PM
Chickens don't rape each other :P
 
@Ell I challenge you to find a chicken with the mental capacity to give informed consent to having sex.
 
Ell
I think for a chicken not running away is consent
 
@Ell Sounds like an argument of a patriarchal rape apologist. :-)
 
Ell
Haha
What is consent anyway :3
Its complicated that's what it is
 
@Ell Obviously much too complicated for a chicken (or other livestock, obviously) to understand. Ergo, all chicken sex is rape. That's why I eat meat: to prevent rape. Vegans are selfish and arrogant, refusing to help solve the massive, worldwide, animal rape crisis.
 
Ell
4:21 PM
That paragraph almost made me angry for a second
 
@Ell It does have just about the right mix of the logical and the ridiculous that I'll bet if I tried I could get onto public radio, and have at least a few newscasters nodding and agreeing (and probably a fair number of listeners as well).
 
@sehe You think a coder that produces crap quickly is useful? Glad I'm not working with you...
In fact, speed in coding is mostly a bad criterion, which is why I sarcastically quoted that article's title in the first place.
 
4:38 PM
I want to go on record as saying that I am almost never a fast coder. In fact, I tend to eat (or at least snack) way too much while I'm coding.
 
@Columbo you're the one who put the word crap in there
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes No, I'm the one who did not assume that the word was "not crap"
coding fast != coding fast and qualitatively
 
No, no one assumed that either.
 
What are you on about?
 
Nothing. You're the one trying to force a false dichotomy.
 
4:41 PM
Coding faster obviously implies less attention to quality
 
Or just being more productive.
 
They weren't talking "guy coding quickly" vs "guy not being as productive as the first guy"
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Which would that be, and why is it false?
 
Disregard for quality is one way to become faster, but trying to pose it as the only way to do so goes against empirical evidence.
9
@Columbo that coding faster must imply either good or bad quality
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes That's not what I said.
More quantity is mostly correlated with less quality when it comes to code. Mostly.
 
4:45 PM
See, faster doesn't just mean more quantity.
 
If your point was that you are a fast yet brilliant coder, kudos.
Most people are not.
 
It might mean spending less time on repetitive tasks, and less error-prone styles.
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Ah, so we're suddenly talking more efficient coder? That's another thing, though!
 
or having more experience and going for the right choices faster
 
Ugh, special pleading.
 
4:47 PM
@AndyProwl ... = efficient?
 
I don't understand the question
honestly I think I understand both sides and both sides understand each other, but this is the lounge, where mutual understanding is not cool
 
@AndyProwl How is having more experience and going for right choices faster not what the first disjunction already included?
 
I don't understand this question either
 
So your point is merely that you have a narrow view on how people use words.
Not related to programming.
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes My point is that fast coding does not necessarily produce qualitative output quicker, but in many cases less qualitative output.
 
4:49 PM
I'm saying faster does not imply lower quality although it can imply lower quality, and unless we clarify what "faster" really means we are just taking one interpretation and defending it for the sake of arguing
 
What's complicated about that
@AndyProwl What was "or having more..." meant to clarify
 
Your "in many cases" underlies the biased assumption I highlighted at first.
 
@Columbo It meant to say that "faster" does not imply "worse quality"
 
user1804599
JS makes me feel like a way more competent programmer than I truly am
 
user1804599
@Ven
 
4:51 PM
Of course it doesn't. No one ever said that.
 
you can become faster by acquiring more experience and immediately making the right choices thanks to that experience, rather than doing the wrong ones and then having to backtrack
that kind of "faster" doesn't hurt quality
so it really all boils down to what "faster" means
 
@AndyProwl Right, I agree. I thought faster literally means producing more LOCs.
 
And speed is a good criterion.
 
Let's take a developer A, clone him, name the clone B, and improve B's typing speed
 
@Columbo With that assumption your point of view is of course understandable. But that's an assumption
 
4:52 PM
You could say that B is a faster coder because he can type faster
 
others have made a different assumption
 
It's a strawman to take it as the only one.
 
or rather, have made no assumption
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes What for?
 
Spending less time debugging shitty code does give you more time to write more LOCs.
@Columbo productivity.
 
4:54 PM
I'd rather type twice as slow but produce twice as well designed code that contains less bugs.
 
The original quote didn't say "become a faster typist".
 
user1804599
USS Hilarity (AM-241) was an Admirable-class minesweeper built for the United States Navy during World War II. She was awarded two battle stars for service in the Pacific during World War II. She was decommissioned in 1946 and placed in the Atlantic Reserve Fleet. While she remained in reserve, Hilarity was reclassified as MSF-241 in February 1955 but never reactivated. In October 1962, she was sold to the Mexican Navy and renamed ARM DM-02. She was stricken in 1986 and scrapped in August 1988. == U.S. Navy career == Hilarity was launched 30 July 1944 by Winslow Marine Railway & Shipbuilding Co...
 
user1804599
Who named this it's hilarious.
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Then why did it not say "become a better programmer"? "Become a more productive programmer?"
 
Does using tools like clang-format to save time on code formatting count as "faster programmer"? (just poking my head in, didn't thoroughly read the whole deal)
 
4:57 PM
@Columbo dunno. Giving the benefit of the doubt I'd guess maybe because they didn't expect their audience to be assuming programming is all writing code.
 
Fair enough.
 
You can become faster by learning better debugging techniques or even just switching tools.
 
I just have this picture in my head of thousands of monkeys typing C++ until it compiles and therefore produce the next Windows version
This is why I'm afraid of equating speed with a strict improvment
@R.MartinhoFernandes Right, and that's a positive way of getting fast. I'm not sure the negative ones are as prevailing as I thought, though....
 
-2
Q: Is Windows's CRITICAL_SECTION prevent other thread to be executed

AminosI want to check if it's really the case : when a particular thread is inside a critical section, the others threads of the program are prevented from execution ?

Why read the doc when you can just ask on SO =/
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes I've never gained a lot by getting better at debugging. I have (I think) gained a lot by getting better at avoiding debugging.
 
5:06 PM
@Borgleader closevoted
 
@JerryCoffin What if your job is to find bugs in code that you haven't (necessarily) written? Or are such jobs nonexistent?
 
left my cooker on all day while I was at work
 
@Columbo There are definitely jobs maintaining existing code. I just happen to be lucky enough that my job isn't like that.
 
@JerryCoffin Good, good. Wait, are you even a programmer?
 
@Puppy Ouch. Hopefully it didn't start a fire or anything like that?
 
5:09 PM
no
luckily
the knobs have a circular dial for heat, and I turned it one to the left
I just turned the wrong one.
so instead of turning the one that was on from max to off, I turned another one from off to just barely above off.
 
@Columbo My job title is something like senior software engineer, if I recall correctly. But yes, I do actually write code at least once in a while...
@Puppy Oops. Well, at least no major harm was done (though it may hurt a little when the utility bill comes, assuming it's not included in your rent).
 
yeah
I figure I lost about £10 at most which is not too bad considering it could have set the place on fire
 
@Puppy Yeah, that's a pretty minor loss compare to what it could have been.
 
also it was pretty hot in here when I got back naturally
 
@Puppy So you accelerated heat death of the universe. Thanks a lot asshole.
 
5:18 PM
not sure if I have done really
 
I think I've found the best question on any SE site:
-6
Q: Does Sun speaks Om?

Parth TrivediIn india on whatsapp people forwards a pic that shows that Nasa says Sun has a voice and it is ancient om. Is it true or just fake cheating idea of Indian people?

 
@StackedCrooked Hmm...somewhere in there there's an argument in favor of global warming to keep the earth livable for a few extra nanoseconds as the sun progresses toward a brown dwarf (or whatever it ends up as).
 
@JerryCoffin nanoseconds? Would be impressive
 
@Columbo Of course, we do have to ignore the minor detail of the sun turning into a red giant first, and in the process probably swallowing the earth (so to speak), but other than that it's a perfectly reasonable argument.
 
Brown dwarf. Somehow that sounds racist.
 
5:23 PM
@StackedCrooked Somehow I doubt that "dim dwarf" would be much better (and no, changing to "dim little person" probably wouldn't help either).
 
The sun isn't saying "Om" any more than a car driving into a wall is saying "crash". But NASA did produce a sound recording of the sun, of sorts, which is slowed down and re-tuned so we can hear it. Found a pretty good explanation here: quora.com/… or hoaxorfact.com/Science/… as this is not astronomy, I'm voting down your question. — userLTK 6 hours ago
> The sun isn't saying "Om" any more than a car driving into a wall is saying "crash".
+1
2
Q: Cat and cat piped together

J. DoeLet's consider: cat | cat Which one read from stdin terminal and which one write to stdout terminal and why? And especially, how does it works: cat < uns2.txt > ss2.txt | sort I cannot understand what is more important: > vs |

 
5:44 PM
@Telkitty nice shirt!
 
6:05 PM
#define ForAll(m) for(int ndx = 0; ndx < int(m); ndx++) ewww
 
@Borgleader I think you'll like that one too :p
 
@Morwenn oh ffs wat D:
ewwww
 
Yes xD
 
shouldiblamecaching.com <-- Wasnt there something similar for volatile or was that just a running gag in the lounge?
 
6:36 PM
@milleniumbug thx
 
Xeo
@EtiennedeMartel And that got... 8million or what on KickStarter?
 
@Xeo 3, I think. But then Comcept got other money elsewhere.
The whole thing reeks of mismanagement.
They ran out of time, money, and/or talent and then they had to hack together quick.
It shouldn't take three fucking years for a team of "industry veterans" to ship a simple 2D shooter that Capcom routinely outputted on a yearly basis 20 years ago.
 
@EtiennedeMartel Yknow what else is being built by industry veterans? Star Citizen
 
6:55 PM
which is totally not gonna crash and burn
 
@Borgleader You know what else is? Our game‌​.
 
Wow, Jekyll's C++11 syntax highlighting sucks.
 
@Xeo That game is like free advertising for a lot of stores in Akihabara. Several of the plot-central key events require you to buy stuff/interact with specific stores by name. I wonder if they got paid to do that.
 
7:12 PM
@Columbo Did I say anything remotely in that direction?
What do you think I mean with my questions? (Aside from the fact that you prefer to troll me badly instead of thinking of an answer)
 
@EtiennedeMartel 3 million for that?
Sounds excessive
Though I'm not an industry veteran so I don't know
Maybe you need something like 2.5 millions to pay project managers or something
That sounds about right
 
@Shoe I'd ballpark that even such a small project would cost more than that.
If you pay your devs on average 50k a year, and you have 20 of them, that's 1M$ a year in salary alone.
And there's all the other expenses. The game is developed in Tokyo and Osaka, where the cost of living is obscene, so of course that adds up.
 
@codinghorror Screw that site, man. You should just create your own site where everyone can see the answers.
8
 
You need 20 dev and 1 year for such a game?
I would argue you need more 3d designers than developers
And perhaps just 3-4 veteran developers
@sehe He he
 
7:45 PM
Yay, highlight.js saves the day.
 
8:02 PM
That moment when your custom container does perform well anywhere but not on std::sort
 
I just wrote a blog article to tell that I never understood why two simple algorithms worked but it doesn't matter anyway. Brilliant.
@NaCl Inefficient random access?
 
The opposite
 
Access random inefficient?
 
Random inefficient access?
 
Efficient deterministic access?
 
Every time I read "random access" I imagine some gnome throwing a dice to determine which cell to access.
 
user3790646
8:28 PM
I'm unable to cast a base class object to a derived class object .__.'
 
user3790646
I'm a shame to society
 
"object"?
 
user3790646
Huh, variable
 
user3790646
pointer
 
dynamic_cast
 
user3790646
8:30 PM
dynamic_cast crashes the program
 
user3790646
then I set a virtual function
 
You mean it returns a null pointer and you don't check for it.
 
what the fuck are you doing
 
user3790646
But then boost serialization gets mad at me
 
For dynamic_cast to work, you need at least one virtual function in the base class.
 
user3790646
8:31 PM
Yes, I did that
 
If you're damn fucking sure of the derived type, you can use a static_cast.
That solves the virtual issue, but then if you do a mistake you get undefined behavior and hard-to-find bugs.
 
user3790646
The pointer gets corrupt, and then the cout complains a string printed from the object's string variable is over 65535 *
 
user3790646
I'm probably doing some mistake ._.'
 
@AndreyErick It probably has reason to
 
user3790646
@sehe Hey. It's probably because I cannot serialize it
 
user3790646
8:34 PM
I tried setting BOOST_CLASS_EXPORT
 
user3790646
But no luck
 
o.O You don't depend on luck
 
@AndreyErick Nah, I think the language is broken, your code is almost surely perfect
 
user3790646
Does anyone know how to set Boost to serialize abstract classes?
 
user3790646
I enabled it, but still I get unregistered class - derived class not registered or exported
 

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