@Xeo Dunno, it's static, so maybe the rules about "zero-initialization happening before any other initialization" should apply, but I'm not a language lawyer.
@BartekBanachewicz That's usually (at least in English) referred to as "perfect information". In this case, you really want to use the accepted terminology, because there is also (for only one example) "Complete information", which sounds similar, but actually means something quite different.
> This means that, as so few people use Boo, and the resources required to support it in the docs are not negligible, we’ve decided to drop support for Boo documentation for the Unity 5.0 release and use our resources in a more constructive way.
oh.
that's sad.
@JerryCoffin oh okay I didn't actually know the term, thanks.
@JerryCoffin complete information would mean you can infer everything, but it's not shown directly?
hmm
> knowledge about other market participants or players is available to all participants.
@BartekBanachewicz At least if memory serves (it's been a while since I read about game theory) it means you know the basic rules that apply to everybody, but don't necessarily see all their moves. IIRC, it's typically used to model things like stock markets, where you kind of classify people into groups, and postulate a set of rules that will be followed by each group--but you only see "moves" (buys or sells in the market) as an aggregate, so you can only infer which group did a particular buy or sell.
but I guess making the default seed non-deterministic is the most sane behaviour, since if you really care about a particular seed to reproduce results you wouldn't be using the default seed
@BartekBanachewicz Well, you might for this particular term anyway. But of course there will always be a time you talk/think about a subject in which you don't know the accepted terms--or I certainly hope you do anyway. Any time you deal with something new (to you), there's a pretty good chance you'll use the "wrong" terminology. The only alternative to that (that I see) is to looking at or thinking about new things, which sounds incredibly boring.
@sehe the article mentions that "the languages that already heavily optimize will find new life". I personally think that, for example, C's features for single-core optimizations are vastly inferior to other languages builtin concurrency primitives (especially with pure FP), so it wouldn't necessarily be the case. What's your view on that?
@LucDanton and is a deterministically-seeded RANDOM number generator really the default behaviour you want? IMO the default behaviour really should be random, and if you care about reproducable results you should manually seed with a deterministic seed
@JerryCoffin Well in this case, as you said, the difference is pretty substantial. Had I used "complete", it might have misguided people. Incidentally that's why I think it's better to use broader, more colloquial terms if you don't know the proper terminology.
@nightcracker To conform with the requirements, every default-constructed generator must have the same initial state. Table See table 117: "E() Creates an engine with the same initial state as all other default-constructed engines of type E."
so the real issue is that if you always pass directly, then they can't be exported without preventing some of the binary abstractions I wanted to implement, if you always pass indirectly then you pay a performance price even on internal functions for exporting them (unless you inline or something), and if you do each when appropriate then the function types aren't compatible anymore.
> a->b is, originally, a shorthand notation for (*a).b. However, -> is the only of the member access operators that can be overloaded, so if a is an object of a class that overloads operator-> (such types are usually called smart pointers), then the meaning is whatever the class designer implemented.
@sbi I think I'd remove the parenthetical, and add a separate sentence, something to the effect that: "Two common examples of such classes are iterators and smart pointers."
@sbi You can leave it as a parenthetical if you prefer, but should make it clear that you're giving a couple of the most common examples, not an exhaustive list.
@sbi I've seen in Clang that their type system is implemented by a small QualType struct, that holds local qualifiers like const/volatile, and operator-> is overloaded to provide access to the underlying type, e.g. int/whatever.
so you could simply say "Every use case where you want to wrap any kind of alias at all, ever, for any reason".
@Mgetz Yes, that's a very nice library. I think that I would want to decide that it's been fully explored before deciding that it's insufficient.
@Puppy So this is one example. Look at the claws of your left paw, puppy. So many are still missing for me to take your claim serious that there are "many use cases for overloading -> that aren't smart pointers or iterators".
@sbi Better, though I find "common such types" fairly clumsy. I'd probably use the (admittedly verbose): "two common examples of such types are..." Oh, and in this case it should really be "and", not "or".
@BartekBanachewicz I know what you mean. I feel it's largely the same deal though. The same vectorization options are available after transforming to IR or assembly code. It's just a lot harder on the compiler to distill the opportunities. I agree that purer languages afford this much more reliably. But: "There Is No Silver Bullet"
@sbi OK, well, let me spell it out for you a little more clearly. "It wraps a pointer, but it also manages lifetime.". "It wraps a pointer, but it also allows iteration". "It wraps a pointer, but it also adds a couple local data members". The "but it also" part really isn't important. You can invent whatever you want for it to also do. Do you want to count every difference instance of "also" as a separate use case? They're all the same use case. "It's a pointer but also something else".
When the contrapositive of a self referencing sentence like this one does NOT contain a negative it can be simplified to a non-paradoxical truth value.
@Xeo That now makes as many examples as I had, which is the amount the puppy dismissed as "just a few among the many others". May I quote Joschka Fischer? "I am not convinced."
@nightcracker ...and even if it does contain a negative, it can sometimes be so simplified: "When the contrapositive of a self referencing sentence like this one contains only positives, it can be simplified to a non-paradoxical truth value" (though I suppose some might consider "only" a negative).
@Puppy See, now you have gone and generalized what classes do which overload operator->. Of course, there is other uses than pointers and iterators, I never denied this. But I still maintain that the most common types used by programmers which have to look at the answer will be smart pointers and iterators, and that your claim ("they are just a few, there's many others") is just hot air. That you were only able to come up with one example, and that not even from the std lib, supports this.
@PolymorphicPotato Why young man, I don't see no reason for grinning when I say goodbye. You ought to be politely greeting then. Shakes head. Youth today...