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10:00 AM
$i = 0;
for (;;) {
    $i++;
    echo "<input type="text" name="row[]"><br />";
    if ($i >= 15) break;
}
 
I still cannot figure out whether Q is a good guy or a villain.
 
@BartekBanachewicz So, you didn't actually read it :)
 
@sehe Read what? It was more to Mysticial... I'm confus
 
"Somebody better find the god damned web guy's email address and get him to change the year on the copyright notice, because lord knows the we'll be fucked if someone copies and pastes this shit onto another fucking website even though they're going to anyways if they feel like it, and like this is in any way legally actionable if they do."
 
that is the point - see http://chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/8051335#8051335
So, you go and tell me it's a repost, and then it turns out you don't even recognize it.
Hrmmm
 
10:05 AM
@sehe Oh found it. Duh, come on, it was the last one of useless links :)
 
@BartekBanachewicz You post it here. You have the responsibility to check what you are posting :)
 
@sehe I am totally tone deaf too :<
Time to head for the bus (finally)
 
@BartekBanachewicz That's quite redundant
 
Is there an expression that is more natural for CommonType<T, U, V> between true ? a : true ? b : c and true ? true ? a : b : c?
 
Brain Tilt. Your compiler would ask you politely to add some parens there
 
10:09 AM
I think I've written more expressions in the shape of the former than the latter but that may just be an accident.
 
@LucDanton You mean decltype(insert messy ternaries here)?
 
@LucDanton My brain hurts! :P
 
@sehe I would think either of those are non-ambiguous.
 
@LucDanton So expressive of intent. :P
 
@sehe More typical scenario is return statement of a constexpr function. I would use CommonType in the return type.
 
10:11 AM
@LucDanton What a mess. What is a,b,c? What do you mean "more natural for X"? What do you mean, "between" Y and Z? :) Oh, and the 'question mark' is totally not ambiguous there.
@LucDanton So would I. What's the alternative. I'm getting the feeling you're trying to tell me you have other options and they involve hacky ternaries, but... the connection is eluding me.
 
@sehe So not so much the compiler but the reader which (reasonably) doesn't want to hurt his or her eyes peering at the screen trying to guess from the case alone what is code and what isn't? Sorry, let me fix.
(true ? a : true ? b : c) vs (true ? true ? a : b : c)
 
@LucDanton That's just the parens. What are 'a','b', and 'c'...?
 
user142019
Objective-C++ y u no raw string literals.
 
Anyways, I'd prefer (true ? true ? a : b : c) (yes: with the parens)
 
Let's start from the beginning -- do you know std::common_type?
 
10:14 AM
It makes it more apparent you're (I think?!?) not interested in actually expression logic/control flow
@LucDanton Yes. (also, I thought you'd never say that)
 
user142019
Oh I have an old version of clang.
 
@Zoidberg I heard of Object-C and C++, but when was Objective-C++ born?
 
CommonType<T, U, V> right now is decltype( true ? true ? std::declval<T>() : std::declval<U>() : std::declval<V>() ). I'm wondering if one nesting would be 'more natural' than the other.
 
@LucDanton Maybe just normal if statements would be better?
 
So it doesn't really matter what a, b, c are. Do you find one alternative more pleasing, natural, frequent in your experience?
It's about the shape.
@GamesBrainiac That doesn't make sense.
 
10:17 AM
@LucDanton Okay. So I "inuited" the relation right. Well my preference stands
 
@sehe Agreed.
 
@GamesBrainiac What's 'abnormal' about conditional operators anyway?
 
@LucDanton the other ((true ? a : true ? b : c)) makes you think more (unnecessarily). It may evoke a 'feeling' of conditional as if it mattered. I might even prefer (0?0? a:b:c)
 
@LucDanton Never mind, I'm to inexperienced to judge anyways. I just find terneries within ternaries a bit of a problem, thats all.
 
@GamesBrainiac It's meta programming. That wasn't overly clear, but he made it plenty clear in the message directly above yours :)
 
10:19 AM
@Mysticial It's 4 ref now apparently
 
@sehe I'll be googling meta programming! :P
 
Do you think a CommonType<T, U, V> that e.g. would complain about different nestings of the cond op yielding different types would be reasonable? Or if it shouldn't complain, should it try to 'rescue' a result from those?
 
@LucDanton By the way, I appreciate your "long version", but a simple "yes" to my first query would have been more than enough :)
 
@DomagojPandža Psst, you alive?
 
@sehe I didn't understand it. Couldn't see where decltype fit in.
 
10:22 AM
You specified it in your [very own expansion](http://chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/8051736#8051736). Exactly that :)
Anyhoops
 
Whatever happened to the flagger, I'm 2 hours late
 
@sehe Mh. What's an expression to you?
 
@LucDanton a ternary is an expression by definition
 
And where do I put decltype in there?
 
Gawd. So much confusion. Look here:
7 mins ago, by Luc Danton
CommonType<T, U, V> right now is decltype( true ? true ? std::declval<T>() : std::declval<U>() : std::declval<V>() ). I'm wondering if one nesting would be 'more natural' than the other.
^ right where you wrote it too
 
10:24 AM
Those are types.
 
guys, what the hell does new Thing[12,34]() do (besides allocate 12 Things)? is the second argument implicitly converted to void* or const std::nothrow_t&?
 
Nope. std::declval<T>() isn't a type. It's an expression in unevaluated context (? naming?)
 
decltype(/* whatever */) is a type.
 
@LucDanton Yeah. So? You didn't ask about that. Neither did I. It's all been clear since this. Why do we keep discussing it :)
 
I still think my original question stands. I could have asked 'what type is more natural between decltype(...) and decltype(...)' but that seems silly.
 
10:25 AM
or is the first argument just ignored thanks to , and I get 34 Things?
 
@LucDanton (Not to me. Because, the english sentence around that left enough room for me to doubt what you meant. )
 
@sehe : I was looking through this : stackoverflow.com/questions/5079325/…
 
And so I never meant decltype, and so I would have never said 'yes' to your first query.
 
Xeo
@melak47 It actually allocates 34 Things.
 
But, I wanted to know what is the main purpose of #include <cstddef>?
 
10:27 AM
@Xeo yeah, I noticed
so, just comma operator
 
Property<Matrix> ViewMatrix;
It has nice implications for syntax, but eh.
 
@LucDanton Anyways, I don't really have an opinion on handling 'inconsistencies' or 'ambiguous result types' if it depended on the ordering. Other than, maybe, if it matters, don't use CommonType<>
But I'm happy to report i'm never in a situation where (I detect) it matters
 
Xeo
@GamesBrainiac std::size_t etc
 
@GamesBrainiac You should rarely have to include it tbh.
 
Xeo
@Rapptz Really? I include it all the time for std::size_t.
 
10:28 AM
@Xeo Same.
 
@LucDanton Wokay. getting confused again now. You did insert decltype at exactly the point I expected you to, in your own explanation. Mmm.
 
@Rapptz My point exactly, but my professor said to include it. I dunno why.
 
Including any other header gives me size_t.
o.o
 
Xeo
The standard doesn't guarantee that. :3
 
The standard also doesn't guarantee that I'll have Modules before I get frustrated enough to write my own language.
 
10:29 AM
@sehe I really mind 'kinds' between expressions, types (also statements since those were mentioned).
 
@Xeo Likewise, you can include any header with a container to get std::pair, does the standard guarantee that?
 
@Rapptz I know, right? I mean I've always used std::size_t without any problems.
As long as I include iostream
 
The standard requires void* operator new(std::size_t) in the global scope of every program.
 
Xeo
@Rapptz No, why would it? If you want std::pair, #include <utility>.
 
However, it does not require that to bring std::size_t into scope. Compilers magically don't bring it in to scope.
 
10:31 AM
@LucDanton Okay. I might be a tad rusty on whether ??a:b:c is an expression when a/b/c are declval<>() "expressions" (?) but that seems less than relevant here. On valueing exact semantics: that was precisely the bit that was missing in your original question: I couldn't "gues" what kind a,b,c were
 
@Xeo Have you tried it in practice? Include anything and you'll get it.
 
Compilers should be applying that magic elsewhere too :(
 
Also the same thing for std::begin and std::end, that's in <iterator>
 
@sehe Subexpressions of a conditional op expression :( Dumb placeholders.
 
Xeo
@Rapptz So what? That's the same discussion as with people who think "UB is fine, it works on my machine!"
 
10:32 AM
@R.MartinhoFernandes But ~implementation time~
 
@Xeo I'm asking for a citation. :P
 
@BoltClock woah...
 
@Rapptz Please don't.
Please.
 
Well I just did.
 
@LucDanton I'm learning I might have more of a autism tick than I usually register. Sorry. I think
 
10:33 AM
I don't care if I'm wrong (I likely am) I just want to see it.
At least just for size_t, can't say I care about anything else.
 
Also, I wanted to ask, what is the mail difference between nullptr and declaring a pointer, and declaring it NULL ?
 
@GamesBrainiac Implicit conversions and type deduction. See meta-programming again
 
NULL is really just an abused integer.
 
I rarely include <iterator>. If include <map> then I don't include <utility> to get pair.
 
@sehe Don't beat yourselves over this. I'm able to go back and fro between expressions and types largely due to metaprogramming I guess.
 
10:34 AM
Hm.
 
Type/value mismatch etc.
 
@sehe So, say you want to mark the end of a linked list, which one would you use, a nullptr or NULL ?
 
@GamesBrainiac Don't use NULL.
 
If I need fast, one-by-one, iterative access to a list that could be 100 or 200 items long, I should choose...
std::list ?
 
@LucDanton Because its just an abused integer?
 
10:36 AM
I don't think I'll be doing any sorts on it, and removal is... .. well, I don't think I'll be doing removal either.
 
3 hours ago, by Mysticial
user image
 
Probably just at-the-end insertion...
 
Mods can't see flags that have been cleared?
 
I don't think we can
 
Xeo
@Rapptz Why should there be any part in the standard that says "You do not get std::pair when including any of the following headers..."?
 
10:36 AM
Anyway here I found it for you.
> However, referring to std or std::size_t is ill-formed unless the name has been declared by including the appropriate header
 
Zoidberg has a 4-star Flag.
 
user142019
My Wide editor offers completions! :D
 
Xeo
The standard only says "You do get std::pair if you include <utility>".
 
@ThePhD vector...
 
@GamesBrainiac Whatever it saves you from, it's not worth it considering the drawbacks it brings. It's true it improves intent, hence why we have nullptr at all.
 
10:37 AM
Welp, looks like vector is the go-to yet again.
Weeee, vector~
 
@BoltClock That should probably be a .
 
user142019
 
@Xeo I didn't say excluding, I meant including. Like including a specific header would give you access to something that might be in another header.
 
@Xeo Because that would be awesome.
 
@Zoidberg I don't see the Wide in it.
 
user142019
10:39 AM
That's because I didn't write valid Wide code. :P
 
Xeo
@Rapptz The only time that is done in the standard is wrt <initializer_list>. If you include any container header, it's as if you also included that. IIRC.
 
... What does Wide code look like?
 
@Mysticial Ignorance is bliss.
 
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah... making the standard a blacklist instead of a whitelist would be totally awesome.
 
user142019
Main() {
    cpp("<iostream>").std.cout << "Hello, world!\n";
}
 
10:40 AM
o_O
How. Interesting.
 
@Zoidberg Wait, there's such a thing?
 
user142019
@R.MartinhoFernandes see sample.
 
@GamesBrainiac Use nullptr or a sentinel value.
 
user142019
Puppy claims it compiles. Or compiled. Or something like that.
 
user142019
@GamesBrainiac nullptr.
 
10:41 AM
@Zoidberg See sarcasm.
 
user142019
Or even better, boost::optional.
 
GUYS. Announcement. I'm going to vouch to be productive this afternoon. If you catch me chatting here, send me to the exit. Thanks.
 
Xeo
@Xeo: T arr[N] does allocate memory, maybe not in the dynamic heap but elsewhere... So does std::array. However a non-empty initializer_list cannot be constructed by the user so it obviously cannot allocate memory. — rodrigo 23 secs ago
 
Anyway the cppreference page says the same thing but I don't know where they got it from (I searched). std::begin/end. Doesn't say it for std::pair though.
 
Laterz
 
user142019
 
Xeo
I have a feeling I'm going to be very frustrated with certain kinds of users on SO by the end of the day.
Which is why I'll just not respond to that comment. Fuck it.
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Hey, after some consideration I've decided that I won't go further with ranges. I'm really starting to suspect that an Andrei-style rework is more interesting than going further the Boost.Range route. And if it's possible to bridge the two (how the hell do I write a cheap random-access iterator for a random-access range?), I don't think I want to be the one to do it.
 
I want to make a certificate library so that I can define types like certificate<signed> and certificate<unsigned>.
 
Xeo
lol
 
@LucDanton haha, the bridge I wrote is merely for ranged-for.
 
user142019
10:43 AM
@StackedCrooked lol
 
Xeo
> main.cpp:4:12: error: unused variable 'x' [-Werror=unused-variable]
@StackedCrooked Waaaat. :(
 
@Xeo You can edit the compiler flags yourself now.
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes That way lies 'I don't want to write sort algorithms'.
 
apparently my code doesn't do what I thought it should do
 
10:44 AM
It's a textbox.
 
user142019
@DeadMG in theory it's possible to debug programs written in Wide using GDB or LLDB, right?
 
Xeo
@Rapptz Sure, but it being the default is kinda meh.
 
I don't mind it. I hate warnings anyway and fix them.
 
Btw the discussion in that range reflector thing helped a lot in cementing my opinion. I'm really glad Andrei is there.
 
except unused-variable, I ignore that one.
 
10:48 AM
@Xeo You suck.
 
Xeo
Whatever. Back to beating Perforce...
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Any idea what you're going to do for your range needs?
 
Did I mention it's sunny and I love everyone?
 
Are you high?
@LucDanton Nope.
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes No, I am in the bad mood, so I'm sharing
 
10:52 AM
-2
Q: Can not find the "fiostream.h" file

user2118186I'm learning C++ now. Here is my question: #include <fiostream.h> No matter I used: #include <fiostream> #include "fiostream" #include "fiostream.h" I can not find this "fiostream.h" file anywhere. Where I can find the "fiostream.h" file? Does the "iostream.h" include the "...

 
@Zoidberg WIde is based on LLVM, so LLDB would be fine.
dunno what GDB's requirements are to run
 
user142019
Great.
 
Btw when you said you wanted a convenient way to write new ranges, where would you rank D-style ranges in C++ (so I guess, rtl) there?
 
user142019
Because LLDB is usable in library form, don't know about GDB.
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes lol
 
10:54 AM
@sehe @Jerry is on my side here, IIRC :P
 
Googled it.. "Did you mean: iostream"
 
fuck this shit
 
@TonyTheLion :)
 
it doesn't work and I hate it
 
rainbows
 
user142019
10:55 AM
Fix it!
 
mood fixer :)
 
@LucDanton I haven't tried any of my ogonek ranges with those, but I think crap like this github.com/rmartinho/ogonek/blob/master/include/ogonek/… would be easier.
 
user142019
> Skills & Requirements
 
So that makes the scale easy [coroutines ... D-ranges ................................... Riemann hypothesis ............... Boost.Range] I suppose.
 
user142019
10:58 AM
> C++ is your native language
 
user142019
lol
 
@LucDanton lol
@Zoidberg Well, there are native Esperanto and native Klingon speakers.
 
user1357851
 
Should CommonType<> be anything in particular? Right now it's a soft error. What about things like make_array and 0-1-infinity though?
 
@EtiennedeMartel How is rendering done in BlackButterfly? Is it mostly deferred or something else?
 
11:01 AM
@R.MartinhoFernandes from what I've heard, klingon experiment didn't work well
 
@LucDanton I don't think you can support it since C++ does not have a top type.
@BartekBanachewicz What went wrong?
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes The kid started to use english and forgot klingon quite fast
 
I agree. Keeping it a soft error still allows for writing a nullary overload for those cases where it makes sense. The reverse is more painful though.
My empty_type is already enough of a hack (for invoke and related).
 
Esperanto even has slang.
 
user142019
Careers y u find Java jobs when I search for C++.
 
11:10 AM
> However, I understand the C/C++ basics and the OOP.
lol
 
user142019
lol
 
user142019
> the OOP
 
user142019
C++ supports OOP, Java supports POO.
 
-1
Q: Characters Matrix

Moldovan RazvanWhat is that a characters matrix? Can you give me a code for such a matrix? void citire_linii_si_coloane_pentru_o_matrice() { int A[10][10], line, column, i, j; cout<<"Number of lines: "; cin>>linie; cout<<"Number of columns: "; cin>>coloana; if((l...

Couldn't be more blatant "plz gimme the codez"
 
11:18 AM
huh
 
user142019
> a code
 
OP is a faggot
 
I'm in /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu and there's no libstdc++ in there
 
user142019
I can give you a code. It's called the code of conduct. — Zoidberg 10 secs ago
 
@DeadMG Maybe on /usr/lib64 or something?
 
user142019
11:20 AM
 
found it
and also libsupc++
 
user142019
libsupc++ is for RTTI and stack unwinding IIRC.
 
yeah
how do you specify a cmake variable on the CLI?
 
@Zoidberg lol
 
ugh IT ticket systems y u no readable
 
user142019
11:22 AM
> IT
 
user142019
IT sucks.
 
because (IT && ticketsystem) == false;
 
btw Zoidberg
I have some bugfixes for Wide on my machine
tell me if you are desperate for them and I will boot back into Windows and push them
 
user142019
Cool.
 
"It works on my machine" -lol
 
user142019
11:23 AM
I'm not desperate for them.
 
@Zoidberg well their job is to allow me do mine
 
does anybody here know PERL... I head some PERL PR and tbh I have hard time believing it so I wanted to ask members of Nihilistic Anonymous. :D
 
user142019
The only thing that doesn't work now is string literal syntax highlighting but that's not really important right now.
 
user142019
Nobody uses this editor anyway.
 
user142019
I added code completion btw, based on identifiers present in the file, and keywords.
 
11:24 AM
lol really
 
Xeo
And it's not like anybody will ever use it anyways, since it won't be finished.
 
You guys are downers
 
user142019
:P
 
Brotsort()
 
Xeo
11:25 AM
Yay for glorious bread!
 
user142019
Oh lol.
 
so no Perl ppl here... :( Damian Conway said in Perl you spend 10x less time to write smthing thatn in C++ so I wanted to see is he exaggerating a lot or a bit. :D
 
user142019
Backspace removes four characters at all times.
 
user142019
Instead of only four spaces.
 
AL DIE BRÖTCHEN!!
 
11:26 AM
@Zoidberg make n backspaces remove fibb(n)
 
user142019
Oh I know why.
 
@Zoidberg Because you suck.
 
user142019
It removes four characters if the line starts with four spaces. :v
 
two zoidbergs is making me confused.
 
@TheForestAndtheTrees Im the one with Qs that nobody answers
 
11:28 AM
The other is the one with projects that never finish.
 
Conclusion: they each suck in their own ways
moving on...
 
Hey... they get their cancelation token set to true
be nice
 
I am nice
 
Im Zoidberg from universe 1, he is the Zoidberg from universe A
 
lol
0
Q: function pointer to point function of another class

cybercopTo make things more easy I'll write the current code I have. First I have a class called Page which is derived from abstract class called IPage which looks like class IPage { public: virtual int FillDbgPage(char*, unsigned int, char*, char*, char*, char*)=0; }; then there is page class class ...

oh gawd
too long
 
user142019
11:30 AM
No indentation = downvote into oblivion.
 
Oh FFS, I reboot all my boxes 'cos duplicate posts, then there are duplicate Zoidbergs.
 
Xeo
Y u all look at unfiltered crap. :|
 
user142019
I'm doing it wrong.
 
user142019
Backspace is all bugged now. xD
 
user142019
Fixed. That was easy.
 
11:34 AM
@Xeo is there a filter?
 
user142019
Now auto-indent after {\n.
 
Xeo
@BartekBanachewicz Just add another tag.
 
@Zoidberg why dont we join forces and redefine lame toolchain for C++ ? in the spirit of STL-dont drop information :D
 
Mmh as it turns out I use some kind of convention in my code regarding perfect-forwarding and type traits that I don't really know how to go about explaining it. For instance what do you expect the return type of ValueType<Optional> get(Optional&& op); to be if you do optional<int> op; get(op);?
 
11:36 AM
It's int& :(
 
I expect ValueType to be a value.
More or less.
It's complicated :(
 
That is exactly that feel!
 
Xeo
@LucDanton From the code, I'd expect int, yeah. but intuitively, I think I'd rather expect int&&.
 
@Xeo Ewwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww
You suck.
 
Xeo
Pah
 
11:37 AM
@Xeo Uh.
 
int&& is just broken.
 
Xeo
Why? Convince me!
 
user142019
Awesome.
 
user142019
Dedent when typing }. :3
 
I wanted to write something against the suggested fix to std::common_type, I'm not sure how to go about introducing actual examples from my code.
 
11:37 AM
@Xeo It turns get into a move?
 
@Xeo auto&& oops = get(make_optional(42));
 
user142019
This is fun.
 
Oh great
 
@Xeo These days it's crap all over :/
 
My ticket was ok, and TIL my LAN socket is broken :/
Well, it actually only means no phone, since I have neat access to wireless :P
 
11:40 AM
@R.MartinhoFernandes I'm fairly sure I've missed some great Q&A. But I just can't bear watching the tags more regularly, too much noise.
 
is image upload on SO broken ?
i am not able to upload picture in a question
 
Xeo
Any reason you're specifically asking us that question?
 
after pressing ok nothing happen (not image added in question)
where should i go ?
 
hmm
try different browser first
 
I didn't know you could upload images.
 
11:41 AM
@Xeo I should have convinced you for some time by now.
 
i tried both FF and chrome
 
@tigrou imageshack :D
 
latest version (no problem so far )
 
@tigrou use ASCII art instead
 
you guys are funny
 
Xeo
11:42 AM
@LucDanton Did we already discuss this topic? If yes, I might seriously start getting as senile as the lobster.
 
Oh not at all, it was a remainder that I answered you. I thought it was a good example :p
 
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes A move on the contained type, yes. I don't quite see why get should be doing the move implicitly for me, although I do see the problem with dangling stuff.... hm. Kinda complicated.
 
@tigrou upload to imgur.com and then post link in chat
 
Xeo
@LucDanton Oh, that. I was writing my response just now. :P
 
I'm fairly sure I never have T&& as a return type or compute an rvalue reference.
 
11:45 AM
@LucDanton Pretty much any interesting tag is getting flooded with the same old lazy crap :/
 
The 'Image' icon on SO answers used to work OK, not tried it recently...
 
is full of "how to change Unicode characters to normal characters?" (WTF?) and PHP noobs.
 
Xeo
@LucDanton But shouldn't the decision lie with the client on what to do with an rvalue?
 
Oh wait, the latter is more complicated. Something like TupleElement<0, std::tuple<int>&&> should in fact be int&&. So I guess the rule is 'given template argument T, never use T&& in return types/meta-computation'.
@Xeo What client?
 
Xeo
Wait, I think I completely misunderstood the code earlier.
Nvm whatever I said.
 
user142019
11:48 AM
Highlighting matching braces. \o/
 
Xeo
So, yeah, let's rewind... int& it should intuitively be for get(lvalue_optional).
 
Keep in mind this is about metacomputations like ValueType<Optional>, not things like get.
 
Xeo
Hm. I think the name ValueType might be a bit misleading here.
 
yay, I fixed a CMakeLists file
 
I don't think you're wrong. But changing the name doesn't help: I could have made TupleElement<0, Tuple> first(Tuple&&); the example.
 
11:53 AM
Impressive.
 
apparently it made a bunch of makefiles... what am I to do with them?
I tried make Makefile but it complained :(
 
uh, I think it's just gone to make GCC.
 
Okay, I think I've got a start to express what I'm doing here: I'm repurposing type meta-computations and making them double as generic programming queries, by loosely following what decltype with regards to mapping value-category to reference types.
So if Foo<NonRefT> computes something, Foo<RefT> computes 'what if I had an lvalue with type T and what should be computed for that value category'.
 
@DeadMG Should take a while.
 
Xeo
11:57 AM
@LucDanton Welp, WithRefQualificationOf<Tuple&&, TupleElement<0, Tuple>> first(Tuple&&)?
 
yrah..
 
And this has worked so far because the result Foo<NonRefT> tends to overlap with 'what if I had an rvalue?'. This is bad I think.
 
Xeo
Did you supply any -jN to make?
 
no
 
user142019
Typing {\n now automatically inserts }.
 
11:58 AM
lol
 
Xeo
@DeadMG Do you want it to finish anytime soon and have RAM to spare?
 
did you code complete the C++ includes as well?
 
@Zoidberg and {\n} makes a mess, right?
 
Xeo
@Zoidberg Ew, I hate that.
 
@Xeo It's 20% done, and not particularly.
 
user142019
11:59 AM
@DeadMG completion only completes identifiers present in the edited file and return.
 
user142019
There is no semantical analysis done.
 
@Xeo Not Tuple&&, Tuple (remember the rule? I apply it here as well!). And cv quals as well.
 
@Zoidberg That's kinda suck, since Wide is like C#- you can implicitly use identifiers from other files.
 

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