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12:23 AM
Why this std::string test() { return 'test'; } gives me a compiler error.
error: invalid conversion from 'int' to 'const char*'
 
@OmeidHerat String literals in C++ use double quotes.
Single quotes are for characters, which can be implicitly converted to int, and I guess that's why your compiler went haywire with that error.
 
Cheeeeeers!
 
12:36 AM
I wonder, in Windows, is it guaranteed that static_cast<void*>( static_cast<IUnknown*>( pDumbo ) ) is the same as static_cast<void*>( pDumbo ), when Dumbo is derived from IUnknown?
I found myself implementing a silly class VoidPtr just to "carry" void* safely up to C-style call interface
 
@AlfPSteinbach Don't think so. Consider multiple inheritance.
Casting to IUnknown* could yield an address different from the original.
 
1:04 AM
Hi
C++ class was a blast today.
@sbi Actually, I'd like to improve my German.
 
1:16 AM
what happ in class?
 
2:10 AM
@NicholeGrace Well, I did well. See, I'm an experienced dev, but that is a core for my major.
 
@RMartinhoFernandes Actually multicharacter literals have type int in C++. Contrast with C where all character literals have type int.
 
Oh, I remember this!
Aug 4 at 16:18, by Luc Danton
@CodeMonkey "An ordinary character literal that contains more than one c-char is a multicharacter literal. A multicharacter literal has type int and implementation-defined value."
 
It's relief waking up in the middle of the night and finding you here :)
 
Stupid silly thing.
 
@NicholeGrace which class ?
 
2:17 AM
@LucDanton I'm going to sleep very soon (in fact, I shouldn't still be here; don't tell anyone).
 
Well you tend to say things like 'I should be sleeping' but usually stick around for a while. No pressure though.
 
Yeah, that's a bad habit of mine.
 
2:43 AM
This is weird. I just "learned" a vim command from reading an old comment of mine.
 
lol
Odd, GCC can deduce both pack given e.g. template<typename... Args, typename... Rest> void foo(void (*p)(Args...), Rest&&...); but I'm not quite sure that's mandated.
> For a function parameter pack that does not occur at the end of the parameter-declaration-list, the type of the parameter pack is a non-deduced context.
I don't know iff this apply to Args given that it appears in a function pointer type; have to find the meaning pf 'function parameter pack'.
Just great, this seems to appear in several places yet I can't find a definition.
> A declarator-id or abstract-declarator containing an ellipsis shall only be used in a parameter-declaration. Such a parameter-declaration is a parameter pack (14.5.3). When it is part of a parameter-declaration-clause, the parameter pack is a function parameter pack (14.5.3).
Silly PDF and silly PDF search.
I don't understand shit :(
Oh wait, non-normative note. I'm going to ignore it because it's convenient.
 
3:05 AM
lol
 
> [ Note: Otherwise, the parameter-declaration is part of a template-parameter-list and the parameter pack is a template parameter pack; see 14.1. — end note ]
Note in question.
I have to find where in the grammar declarator-id/abstract declarator are defined to know if void (*p)(Args...) is a function parameter pack.
If it's not, then the note is wrong...
 
I find the Index of grammar productions at the end very useful in this cases.
 
Still can't make head or tails of this: does the ellipsis alone make a function parameter pack, or must it be in the appropriate form (e.g. T...).
Well too bad, I'm making a simple answer.
 
3:33 AM
hey guys
thanks!
 
 
2 hours later…
6:02 AM
Woot, my C++11 preprocessor is feature-complete! UCNs/UTF-8, user-defined literals, _Pragma(), variadic macros, raw strings, and all the old stuff mandated by the standard except constant expression evaluation for #if.
Total length: 1983 lines. Where should I host the code? Looking at Google Code…
 
 
2 hours later…
7:51 AM
<type_traits> provides both std::is_member_object_pointer and std::is_member_function_pointer.
Do I combine them both into a is_member_pointer trait or do I call it is_pointer_to_member?
The first option is consistent but somewhat misleading (p in struct { int* p; }; is a member pointer...).
Or is that a pointer member? Well, the ambiguity is here and that's the problem.
Silly English language.
 
Yeah, the problem is clearly with English ;v)
 
Going with pointer_to_member, the standard names are somewhat silly in the first place.
 
See std::is_member_pointer, it's on the next page of the Standard, under composite type categories.
 
How silly of me
 
Als
yeay I got H264 video streaming to work!
 
7:58 AM
I went straight to the partitioning of types.
 
@Als kewl! how much of it did you write?
 
Silly GCC reports a const violation instead of SFINAE-ing out. Tisk tisk.
 
@LucDanton SFINAE is always tricky, always compiler-dependent. As I c it, use boost::enable_if and not much more! :-)
 
@AlfPSteinbach To make things funner I'm using GCC snapshots that regularly break my unit tests.
Latest snapshot loops over a void foo(stuff...) -> decltype( foo(peel stuff...) ); instead of terminating by eliminating 'wrong' instantiations.
 
how long does it take you to recompile GCC?
 
8:12 AM
@AlfPSteinbach That was during writing a decltype-enabled type trait. There's no substitution available I'm afraid.
@Potatoswatter Used to take two hours top on my desktop.
But I've gotten lazy and rely on the packages of the unstable release of Debian.
(Part of the reason that I'm lazy is that mainstream 4.7 is proving to be harder and harder to trip up.)
 
I haven't updated in months…
 
Well, what ya gonna do when it don't build :)
 
well, it's not like bringing in code that already worked on another compiler :vP
 
Well when you get some hits of 4.6 you can't go back to 4.5. Then again from 4.6.1 to 4.7. I'm addicted @_@ now.
 
fo sho. Puts new meaning into the word "mainline"
 
8:16 AM
i.e. in some sense those versions are different compilers.
 
inject me with some template aliases, please
 
Anyway, now that I have a is_invokable trait, do I need an invoke template or what?
 
Als
@Potatoswatter: Oh the streaming, decoding ..almost touched all
 
0
Q: c++0x: Variadic Template technique

towiI am preparing myself for the defintion of user-defined literals with a Variadic Template template<...> unsigned operator "" _binary(); unsigned thirteen = 1101_binary; GCC 4.7.0 does not support operator "" yet, but I can simulate this with a simple function until then. Alas, my recur...

this is for smart people to answer, I haven't a clue
 
8:18 AM
@LucDanton What's the point of is_invokable if you don't know what arguments it takes? std::result_of is defined only if you do know the arguments…
 
Not all traits are unary: template<typename T, typename Sig> struct is_invokable; (illustration only)
Also I get tons of hard errors when std::result_of fails.
Plus, pointers to members.
 
yikes.
 
8:33 AM
@TonyTheTiger Meh, beyond the syntax it's not that interesting.
Anyway
@TonyTheTiger Did you remember our interesting discussion regarding is_invokable yesterday?
 
Hi everyone
what is the best way to do something like this:
#include <iostream>
#include <string>


void Bootstrip,Loader;

void Loader() {
    std::cout << "test";
    Bootstrip();
}

void Bootstrip() {

    std::string AskforLoader;
    std::cout << "Do you want to call the loader ? type Yes or anything else for no.";
    std::cin >> AskforLoader;
    if(AskforLoader == "Yes"){
        Loader();
    }
    else {
        return 0;
    }

}

int main(int argc, char** argv) {

    Bootstrip();

    return 0;
}
 
'Something like this' being handling input?
 
nope
that gives me an error.
I am not using any namespace
 
What's the error message? Have you tried understanding it?
 
so I can't call Bootstrip(); from Loader()
 
8:37 AM
First, you have return 0; in void Bootstrip()
 
Yes, I have written that :)
 
Also, void Bootstrip,Loader; is incorrect
 
@kbok so this means that I have to use int BootStrip() not void ?
 
@OmeidHerat It depends on what you're trying to do exactly. Why are you returning 0 in the first place?
 
No, if you want to forward-declare a function it looks more like void Bootstrip();
 
8:39 AM
@LucDanton I think that is a case of .
would that be fine if I return nothing ?
 
Also if Bootstrip actually returns a void then you shouldn't return 0.
 
just like return; ?
 
Because 0 is a number, not a void.
@OmeidHerat Yes
 
If this is bootstrapping something, how is std::cout already working?
 
@OmeidHerat That's the usual way to return from a void function.
 
8:41 AM
@Potatoswatter its the bootstrap of my application. not necessarily an OS or VM.
@LucDanton Cool ! so I changed that.
but still I get error: variable or field 'Bootstrip' declared void
 
Also, the return statement is not mandatory in a function returning void, so you could just cut it out.
 
Check that line.
 
void Bootstrip();
void Loader();

void Loader() {
    std::cout << "test";
    Bootstrip();
}
 
Cool ! void Bootstrip(),Loader(); did the trick !
 
@OmeidHerat That's very poor style. Don't do that.
Get a tutorial book.
 
8:44 AM
@OmeidHerat It does, but I don't think it's a good habit to take. Each function forward-declaration should be on its own line.
 
@Potatoswatter what is specifically wrong with the style ?
 
typedef void oddly_corecursive_function();
oddly_corecursive_function Bootstrip, Loader;
 
the design pattern ? code indent ? or the idea of forward-declaration ?
 
@OmeidHerat It separates the return type from the function name.
 
To gauge the type of Loader, one has to peek at the start of the line before the previous declaration and also right after the identifier.
Similarly int i, *p; is C-like and not that idiomatic in C++ (will depend on the codebase though).
 
8:46 AM
Unless you're declaring closely related local variables, most any kind of declaration should only declare one name.
 
that doesn't sounds right to me, I might be wrong though .
why do I need to define something like that ?
 
e.g. double x, y;
 
doesn't it make the code harder to read ?
 
@OmeidHerat Now I'm totally confused.
Your code was hard to read. Do things the idiomatic way. Like kbok's example, not like mine. My example was a joke. (But it is syntactically correct.)
 
Oooh, 5,666 rep. 1k more to go!
 
8:49 AM
morning :)
 
Morning
And @potato has 25555.
 
Yeah, I'm happy with that number. Sorry Luc, I upvoted you :vP
 
I'll aim for 2011 :)
 
@Potatoswatter Does that mean I should upvote you >:)
 
Nah, the only answer I've just posted wasn't very good. Not bad enough to be deleted, but whatever. If you want to be sadistic.
 
8:54 AM
@Potatoswatter Make sense void a(); void b() is much readable then void a(),b(); but still I like to know what is better about typedef void voidfunc(); voidfunc a,b;?
 
@LucDanton Yes I remember our discussion
 
@Potatoswatter Well, it's a quadratic algorithm. But it's clear and fast to write. I'm torn.
 
@OmeidHerat THAT WAS A JOKE!!!!
 
ahahah priceless :)
 
alright, easy man! I thought it serious :D
 
8:56 AM
@TonyTheTiger Here'‌​s what is_invokable looks like now when I use it.
Why the fuck do I get an '​' in my previous message :|
 
@LucDanton oh cool :)
 
@TonyTheTiger I had a neat insight while designing this, I may reuse some technique for some older code.
So that's how I got my understanding of templates: having fun with them.
 
Yeah, I do that too. I wish I had some more time to mess with templates shenanigans like @litb does.
 
@LucDanton Cool! :)
 
Can anyone recommend some compact C++ ebook, that is has good example and the examples are not doing it the wrong way ?
 
9:02 AM
No, sorry. Actually I don't know any good C++ material on the internet.
 
I tend to Not Read Programming Books, but here's this.
 
Cheers
@Potatoswatter then how do you learn :?
 
He was born with the Knowledge.
 
@OmeidHerat By doing. I started when i was 13, now I'm 26. So that's half my life.
 
I did that with PHP, VB and Assembly (there is not much though) but I am regretting it now :|
 
9:05 AM
* started C++. I started programming when I was 7.
Hmm, there's a geometric progression there. Time to switch to a new primary language.
 
It's hard to leave C++ out though.
 
I am with kbok
what other system languages are available out there ?
 
There's still go
but I don't really believe in it.
 
I can't believe the amount of effort they put into that.
 
She is young give her sometime to shine ;)
but definitely that is not something to consider switching from C/C++ or even Java.
 
9:16 AM
ugh Java
 
</fanboism>
there is a 95% chance that the car you drive runs by java.
 
Hey, bitbucket separates the languages in two categories : "Popular" and "Others" (read: Unpopular).
 
oh god, did I just find a Java fanboy in the C++ room??? WHAT??????
 
I don't drive a car, problem solved.
 
Java is not the best thing for Desktop Applications but sure it has its own place that works as perfectly as nothing else.
 
9:17 AM
Java sucks, 'nuff said!
 
Yeah, in the past.
 
Is "write once run everywhere" really a necessity for car systems?
 
Well that is trolling.
I would love to hear why ? and reasonable answers.
 
This is the C++ room. What did you expect ? :)
 
I'd imagine a car company would use the same computing platform for all their electronic control systems
 
9:18 AM
no, Java fanboism in the C++ room is trolling :P
 
Your preference is really important for you but doesn't change anything out there, but your choice.
lolz
 
@OmeidHerat As to what is the justification for this, it has already been discussed again and again.
This is just an issue of POV really.
 
Yup that is what I am saying :)
 
@OmeidHerat Most criticism is against Java-the-language, not Java-the-platform though.
So I'm not sure how the car thing is relevant?
 
@Insilico no the win of Java in Embed systems are that it runs over a VM and you can create a prefect ASIC that runs just above prefect and fast.
 
9:23 AM
@OmeidHerat What do you mean? No cars run by Java.
Some cars may run Java somewhere, but they don't run by Java.
 
You can do that for C as well for sure, but costly.
I am assuming that you are trolling :) but if not, Compiler is not the only thing in Development.
@RMartinhoFernandes A high number of Engine Controls that make car go runs by java.
 
Does std::is_const & Co work for function types?
 
@Luc Why don't you try it out?
 
@Insilico How do I know if the result is mandated by the Standard or not?
 
-1
A: Portable Directory/File watch library in C / C++

Tony The TigerI suggest looking into Boost::Filesystem.

 
9:28 AM
What's the point if it compiles now and breaks next snapshot?
 
@LucDanton Think not.
 
ok I got downvoted on my answer, why?
is Boost::Filesystem not something that can be used for that?
 
> D1 ( parameter-declaration-clause ) cv-qualifier-seq _opt
This is (part of) a function declaration.
 
@Luc Can't hurt to experiment. :-)
 
std::is_const<T>::value is true if "T is const-qualified".
 
9:30 AM
@Insilico It's completely useless, you mean. I don't need something that compiles now, I need semantics.
 
> The presence of a const specifier in a decl-specifier-seq declares an object of const-qualified object type;
 
Let me see if n3242 has anything to say about it
 
There is no decl-specifier-seq in the function declaration production.
 
> Each type which is a cv-unqualified complete or incomplete object type or is void (3.9) has three corresponding cv-qualified versions of its type: a const-qualified version, a volatile-qualified version, and a const-volatile-qualified version.
This is 3.9.3 which is referred to in the specs for std::is_const.
object type; so no functions
 
That works too.
Way less roundabout.
 
9:32 AM
@RMartinhoFernandes I think your findings indicate that one cannot declare a const function :)
 
Yes, that's more like it.
 
So what do I name a trait for peeling/inspecting the qualifiers of a member function signature?
 
@TonyTheTiger I don't think so. Basically when you want to watch a filesystem you have to run a daemon or use the OS API. boost::filesystem only provides r/w access AFAIR
 
Maybe I could expand my with_cv_of trait.
 
@kbok oh I see, deleted my answer now
 
9:34 AM
Also relevant:
> The effect of a cv-qualifier-seq in a function declarator is not the same as adding cv-qualification on top of the function type. In the latter case, the cv-qualifiers are ignored. [ Note: a function type that has a cv-qualifier-seq is not a cv-qualified type; there are no cv-qualified function types. —end note ]
 
I think it's better that way.
is_qualified_const?
 
Damn, the standard continually refers to "function type whose declarator includes a cv-qualifier-seq".
No nice name.
 
Well there's a section/whatever on qualifiers around the section for classes, isn't there?
 
I'm looking at §8.3.5.
 
Doesn't seem there is...
 
9:38 AM
30
A: int vs const int&

6502In C++ it's very common what I consider an anti-pattern that uses const T& like a smart way of just saying T when dealing with parameters. However a value and a reference (no matter if const or not) are two completely different things and always and blindly using references instead of values ...

 
> A cv-qualified member function can be called on an object-expression (5.2.5) only if the object-expression is as cv-qualified or less-cv-qualified than the member function.
 
The bit about std::vector::push_back in the comments (The "users must know it." part) is wrong isn't it?
There is nothing mandating that the parameter cannot be a reference to an element of the vector, so a conforming implementation should just work.
Am I missing something?
 
The argument is valid if you use the example of implementing the library instead.
 
What do you mean?
 
I don't feel like wading through the container requirements right now to check the particular example though :)
 
9:42 AM
If I am implementing push_back I need to take care about it?
(There's no Requires paragraph on push_back.)
 
Mmmh actually std::move_if_noexcept takes care of that I think?
Nevermind that's unrelated.
@RMartinhoFernandes I can't remember.
 
The standard doesn't contradict, and I bet all implementations work! push_back gives the strong exception guarantee, meaning it won't destroy the original object until the pushed object is copied/moved.
...
Oh wait, wrong container.
It's list::push_back that gives this :(
 
I think std::vector is basic?
Anyway, not the same guarantee, but same results.
It's possibly 'strong if move is noexcept'.
 
> In const T& the word const expresses a property of the reference, not of the referenced object
refs can't be changed anyways, what's the point of a const ref?
 
@TonyTheTiger You can't change the object through the reference.
 
9:50 AM
@RMartinhoFernandes so why does he say then that it's a property of the reference and not the object?
I'm confused
 
int foo(int& ref, int const& cref) { ++ref; return cref; }
int i = 42; int j = foo(i, i);
j is 43, not 42 as would have happened with pass-by-value.
 
but ++cref would have been invalid?
 
Yes.
 
because cref is a const ref
 
What's important to remember is that foo cannot rely on cref being constant for the whole body of the function.
 
9:52 AM
ohh
why not?
 
In this case, because we accept a reference to the same type, except not const.
You have to do this on a case-by-case basis.
That is to say, alias analysis.
If you're wondering, you can reasonably assume that for T foo(T const& t) { t.blah(); quux(t); return t; }, t will be the 'same' on exit as it was on entry.
i.e. code that does manage to modify t is not worth worrying about, burden is on the caller.
 
Bar concurrency.
 
@RMartinhoFernandes That's not reasonable unless T has special guarantees.
Fuck, looks like I'm out of the zone for this morning. Can't think of anything related to my cv-qualified member functions.
 
The MSVC implementation of push_back has a special code path to deal with v.push_back(v[i]).
 
hello all
 
9:58 AM
I'm still unsure about what "If an exception is thrown by the move constructor of a non-CopyInsertable T, the effects are unspecified." implies, though.
 
weak exception guarantee?
Well not exactly.
 
can we talk about thread?
 
Weak exception guarantee until the implementation says something.
 
sbi
@Heet Welcome to this chat room. On the panel to the right you will find a link to our newbie hints. You might want to read them.
 
But there won't (necessarily) be an exception in the v.push_back(v[i]) case.
 
10:00 AM
@RMartinhoFernandes Oh yeah, an implementation can eat the exception and die :(
 
@sbi thanks
 
Is there something like 'throws nothing or whatever the move constructor throws'?
 
@LucDanton There's no Throws.
And the issue at hand is not the copy/move ctor throwing, is v[i] being destroyed before being pushed to the back of the vector.
 
wut
 
I expected that to be guaranteed not to happen, but I'm having trouble finding (or perhaps understanding) those guarantees.
 
10:02 AM
@RMartinhoFernandes Yes, but if it was required to not swallow the move constructor exception then the weak guarantee would have come for free.
 
sbi
@FredOverflow: We might want to update stacksbi.wordpress.com/2011/05/31/…. There's been a new videos from C++ & Beyond released just yesterday, and IIRC there were others released before this one. Would you mind putting together a list?
 
@RMartinhoFernandes I'm going on a limb but I'm going to assume that the members of e.g. std::vector are not allowed to swallow exceptions.
Case in point: when the allocation fails. That's not special-cased, is it?
'no-effects' can't possibly mean 'no exception is raised', something must escape.
In otherwords, if copy construction fails, 'no effects' except that the exception escapes. That's the strong guarantee.
Since however for the move constructor it's unspecified, it's at least the weak guarantee and an implementation may offer better.
My interpretation may be a bit overoptimistic though...
 
> data is also initialized in cunstroctor
cunstructor eh?
lulz
 
@LucDanton Yeah. But the weak guarantee does not let me infer that the old vector data will not be destroyed prior to the move/copy.
:(
 
@RMartinhoFernandes Oh yeah, I was trying to establish what guarantees were there, not to save your puny element.
 
10:10 AM
0
Q: Does QVector::replace() create a deep copy?

Hasan Yavuz ÖZDERYAI have a memory leak in my application which I have been writing with Qt (C++) . And I suspect problem is with that line. for(int i=0; i<DATA_LENGTH;i++){ cdata1->replace(i,data->at(i)); } cdata1 is a QVector, data is a QList . The reason I'm using replace(), I have con...

I don't see a leak here
he's copying doubles from a list to a vector, don't see how that could cause a leak
 
@LucDanton Elements are people too!
 
hi
 
10:27 AM
hai
 
template <typename T>
class Creator {
friend void feed(Creator<T>*){ // every T generates a different
… // function ::feed()
}
};
Creator<void> one; // generates ::feed(Creator<void>*)
Creator<double> two; // generates ::feed(Creator<double>*)
so to have a friend function definition in the template, to make sure we create a different definition with each instantiation, we provide our class as a parameter to the friend function, but what if we want no args in our function?
we should then not put the definition in the class template or what?
 
No argument is needed.
just friend + the definition, whatever it is, works.
 
Or so I think... you may have a point actually.
Oh, looks like an error indeed.
 
10:37 AM
@TonyTheTiger Why would you want different definitions of a no args function?
 
@RMartinhoFernandes afaik this function takes an arg friend void feed(Creator<T>*)
 
@TonyTheTiger Yes, that is the best option.
 
Blog fail :vD . OK all, click on this: potswa.blogspot.com/2011/09/… - I promise Rick Astley is not involved.
 
without the arg it doesn't compile as you can see here
 
Because it violates ODR.
Each template instantiation generates the same definition again.
 
10:43 AM
yea
 
@Potatoswatter just reading what you write on blog, seems like nice work :-)
 
Thanks :) now that I'm finished it's starting to feel like I wasted my time, lol
 
@Potatoswatter who is RA?
 
Nobody link anything!
 
10:44 AM
Oh, you know, Rick Rolling
Never gonna give you up, never gonna let you down…
 
1406
A: What is the best comment in source code you have ever encountered?

Jens RolandI am particularly guilty of this, embedding non-constructive comments, code poetry and little jokes into most of my projects (although I usually have enough sense to remove anything directly offensive before releasing the code). Here's one I'm particulary fond of, placed far, far down a poorly-de...

 
Now I don't get why this doesn't compile?
there is clearly a member named bar() in my class
 
@TonyTheTiger Friend functions are free functions.
 
@RMartinhoFernandes so it can never be defined inside the class?
 
@RMartinhoFernandes how did that get back? it was deleted last i saw?
 
10:46 AM
It can.
 
@TonyTheTiger It can be defined inside the class, but it is not a member function.
In fact, that's the whole point. You wouldn't need to friend member functions.
 
@RMartinhoFernandes ah, interesting, I learned something :)
so can you now access Foos private members in the friend function bar ?
 
@TonyTheTiger idiomatic usage is to implement swap (and maybe some operators IDK)
 
@RMartinhoFernandes I still saw you.
 
10:48 AM
@AlfPSteinbach oh yea, I've seen that with operators yes
 
Hello monsieurs
I had created a graph library month ago , dfs , bfs , dijkstra , prim etc
 
@MrAnubis 'Messieurs'
 
now when i see my own code i think that how did I do it
happens with every one?
@LucDanton i think your spelling is wrong
 
Do you.
 
@MrAnubis I'm not a native French speaker but I believe it's correct.
I also seem to recall Luc is a Francophone, so he should know.
(; pl. ; 1512, from Middle French mon sieur, literally "my lord") is an honorific title that used to refer to or address the eldest living brother of the king in the French royal court. It is also a customary French title of respect and term of address for a French-speaking man, corresponding to such English titles as Mr. or sir. History Under the Ancien Régime, the court title of Monsieur referred to the next living brother of the King of France. Hercule François, Duke of Anjou and Alençon (1555 – 1584), was the first notable royalty to assume the title without the use of an ad...
 
10:57 AM
Well, an argument from authority is not that useful. On the other hand, messieurs appears in English text sometimes.
 
Great. Well done, chat. The oneboxing removed exactly the portion I wanted ("Messieurs", right after "pl."). WTF?
 
@RMartinhoFernandes a little question : I had created a graph library month ago , dfs , bfs , dijkstra , prim etc and now when i see my own code i think that how did I do it
 
@RMartinhoFernandes Encoding fail? I assume the IPA portion is utf8.
 
@LucDanton It's not IPA, it's latin.
 
@RMartinhoFernandes Before that (but I don't know if that was ever one-boxed, I didn't look).
 
10:59 AM
Well, the "pl." part (which comes after the IPA and before "Messieurs") survived. Stupid chat.
 
@RMartinhoFernandes : does this happens with you too sometimes?
 

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