@Reno How is divorce rate necessarily related to cheating? Are you using a very very broad definition of cheating? (Anyone who has had more that 1 (sexual) relation ever?)
The functional reason is, of course, that you are explicitely transferring ownership of the pointed-to object and you need to make it explicit that you are aware of it, and not just happily accrueing bugs on behalf of broken library design :)
@sehe well, consider windows api function to parse command line. you get a lot of tiny pointers into one big string that needs custom deallocation. std::shared_ptr is completely unable to handle that, it's lobotomized.
for another example, consider creating a higher level string instance from a literal. no deallocation needed. for that case, std::shared_ptr does a completely unwarranted very inefficient dynamic allocation. it's braindead.
@sehe who's responsible for keeping the the shared_ptr? that's shared_ptr's responsibliity. but shared_ptr is unable to handle that. shared_ptr is lobotomized.
@Cheersandhth.-Alf You're trying to focus on that obvious logic, as if it were a given fact. I don't see the fact yet. I'm naturally curious to where you found it/how it arises. That's not argumentative, that's interest
@rubenvb hm, that's lying. one of my two examples so far is a winapi function. you're dumb trying to lie to me to convince me that i've said somethjing different than i have. it's sort of beyond dumb, now that i think of it'
@Cheersandhth.-Alf I might one day, but it'll probably be way past the point where I could have used the knowledge. Anyways, if you're not interested in actually discussing your knowledge with the room, why mention it?
You're just holding a carrot and then saying: hah - you can't have it huh? Now, find yourself some carrots
i gave you two examples of what you asked for. you refuse to check them out. you refuse to even think about them. you're argumentative. with me! that's dumb.
@rubenvb a function needs no smart pointers, that's right. pretty dumb to fail to think of an application of the funciton where smart pointers would be nice. they can, of course, be replaced with inefficient copying, which is what is done in practice, with the current lack of library support.
Is the weak_ptr automatically notified in some way when the resource it's referring to is destroyed? (Other than having to check if the weak_ptr is referring to nullptr)
@RadekSlupik Well, that's the usual issue. It is tricky to get node deletion right, but not impossible (See Scott Meyer). Bigger cycles: the same story as with garbage collection, you'd need to use weak_ptrs or detect cycles. This, however, is clearly not the 'lobotomy' that Alf is reffering to
I am the developer of some family tree software (written in C++ and Qt). I had no problems until one of my customers mailed me a bug report. The problem is that he has two children with his own daughter, and, as a result, he can't use my software because of errors.
Those errors are the result of...
@Cheersandhth.-Alf But I say: only pass it around when you need to transfer ownership. No need to increment and decrement the internal count for no reason at all.
@RadekSlupik Well, did you try using c++ in a kernel? Kind of hard to pull it off without any library dependencies. It can be done, yeah.. But 'exception safety' is out of the question (because, exceptions are out the question, really)
@CatPlusPlus oh he's very very wrong, not to say wrongheaded. shared_ptr is a building block. for example, with g++ you're doing this (except for naming and implementation details) every time you pass a std::string.
I think reference_wrapper basically made it easier to emulate '(re-)assignable' refs. That implies you can likely have unitialized refs... but I'm not sure that's an advertised feature
@CatPlusPlus but it is. the only reason for the g++ COW is performance: avoiding the copying. that said, with a good allocator copying strings is statistically faster for "normal" string lengths, but there's no convenient implementation of that around.
@Cheersandhth.-Alf Irrelevant. Within that string implementation, they do want to transfer or share ownership. So, it still stands. At the same time, that's an implementation detail for users of the string class, which is why you don't think of it as transferring or sharing ownership (because... you don't)
A friend of mine made a joke kernel which displays a BDoD on boot up. This is in his source code:
vga_puts("A problem has been detected and Windows has been shut down to prevent damage to your computer.\n\n");
vga_puts("The problem seems to be caused by the following file: JAVA.SYS\n\n");
vga_puts("JAVA_IS_ON_A_COMPUTER_WHEREAS_JAVA_SUCKS_DONKEY_BALLS\n\n");
@sehe yeah, but what you're saying is self-contradictory literally true nonsense. it is nonsense in the context of the threads you're pointing me to. you're taking MY position, and present it as if it were an argument against what i said. that's stupid
@sehe oh yes it is. generally no function wants ownership of a string. it's immaterial and irrelevant whether ownership is involved at the implementation level.
@Cheersandhth.-Alf Huh. I'm saying there is really no need to take a shared_ptr unless you want (shared) ownership. You said, literally: "oh he's very very wrong, not to say wrongheaded". I don't see how I'm agreeing then
@rubenvb You go girl. That'll help. I second the motion, but I don't think it will work.
@rubenvb it's a bit of lie to imply that i've said that you or sehe are dumb. i have correctly characterized direct failure to grasp simple logic, as dumb. it's just that, dumb.
@Cheersandhth.-Alf I'm at a loss. "At the implementation level" (of what?) Obviously, that depends solely on what is being implemented. But, I'm getting tired of this.
@sehe we were talking about the example of strd::string in g++. which uses COW. that is, it uses reference counting. internally. at the implementation level.
@Cheersandhth.-Alf I'm sure you are on to something, and perhaps someday I'll figure out what it was. I'll think of this and think to myself: oh, I see! That's what it was about then.
@CatPlusPlus mostly it's not. it's the other way. @ruben maintained that you only pass a shared_ptr to a function when that function wants ownership, and he maintained that as an argument that shared_ptr's limitations don't matter for that. but shared_ptr is often used to implement other things. then the limitations do matter, in that context. and in particular for the example that i gave originally.
@sehe that's a dumb argument. you followed the discussion all the way down into that example. when you just stated that you lost the thread of it, i gave it to you.
@Ell I'm disciplined enough to track my own -Wall messages. I just prefer to pick my own priorities, instead having the compiler decide I need to fix this first
@rubenvb I don't. I like being productive. I do zillions of adhoc tests and I cannot see the benefit in fixing everything upfront while still (re)factoring it. I'll fix all warnings before I commit to the (central) repo
But last week I had the fortune of doing some... ANSI C. And it needed to be portable across gcc and MSVC. So -pedantic and -Werror came in handy for me.
@Ell slowly :) I'm trying to decide how to handle command generation. I want a general way to do it for compile+link languages, so I'd only have to write the logic once.
@rubenvb if you didn't mention it previously here, it might be worth searching back in this lounge's history about a week. I remember someone mentioning the same problem (the robot?)