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@sehe yeah, it's not something I'd do if I was setting up the project structure by hand ;)
but I have to say I'm surprised at how well VS handles it
I'd heard a lot of horror stories about its lack of scalability
16:13
I have a web problem I've been struggling with for too long.
There's an SSL-secured website which loads a Java applet. I want to find the URL of the applet by listening to the traffic.
I'm using Iron (Chrome), but the Java applet doesn't show up in its about:net-internals dump. Weird!
"social search"? Isn't that just another word for "we'll record everything about your search history for our own data mining purposes"?
@jalf Probably, yup. :-)
@sehe I think I'll bookmark that one... I spent far too long going back&forth on a bash question last week where sed "wasn't working" because the OP's files were UTF16 :/
Is there a way to make a browser dump the current SSL session keys so that I can decrypt the connection in Wireshark?
Oh, I think I understand: The java applet is never requested by the browser in the first place, but directly by the IcedTea plugin.
16:24
@KerrekSB I don't know about that, but if you have the server keys (e.g. it is your conn) then ssldump works pretty well.
wtf even is socials earch?
@Ninefingers I'm just the client, but surely my browser must have the session keys?
It's what google and facebook are both trying to do: take all the information about you from various social networks, and use that to provide search results targeted directly at you
your friends liked this brand of X, so if you search for X, we should suggest the same
ads are such a huge waste of bandwidth
@KerrekSB In theory, yep. I can't find anything that tells you how to extract said session keys, though :( this, the closest guide I could find uses the private key from the server as you would with ssldump.
16:31
c++11 raii: how should a dtor look like? the resource might have moved. do you add a check for that in the dtor now or is there a nicer idiom?
struct copy_part {
    copy_part(fs::path const& from, fs::path const& to);
    ~copy_part();
    copy_part(copy_part const&) = delete;
    copy_part& operator=(copy_part const&) = delete;
    copy_part(copy_part&&) = default;

private:
    std::string to;
    bool committed;
};

copy_part::~copy_part()
{
    if( ! committed )
        fs::remove(to);
}
when there's a move committed of the emptied object becomes presumably false
maybe it's wiser to reverse the semantics of the commit flag because of this
otherwise i'd need to write my own move semantics
@je4d hehe. Unicode is a magic trick. Until you grok it. And grokking it basically means: ditch your assumptions and know (a) which library to use (b) where to look for information
@sehe I find Qt's pretty good... QString won't let you convert it to a std::string without using something like "qs.toLatin1()" which makes you aware that you're dealing with encodings
@wilhelmtell The destructor should delete whatever the class currently owns.. but it's not clear from that code what the ownership model is.
For starters, the class name is a verb phrase, it should be a noun phrase if there's ownership associated with it
16:49
@je4d non-copyable, moveable. the class "owns" a path to a file. it copies one pathname, from, into another, to. if committed it does nothing at cleanup. if not committed, it reverses its action by removing the file it copied, to.
why? it's an action class, its raison d'etre is a single action.
it doesn't represent a state, but an action.
but the idea of ownership is associated with things, not actions
i ommitted the code i thought is self evident
@wilhelmtell I don't understand what you mean by "committed" in this context
prehaps you need another "file wrapper" class that embodies the concept of owning a file on disk?
it doesn't own a file
it owns an action.
the action of copying.
16:52
then you could give it a "release()" method that make it stop owning the file, which you would call on commit
you can't own an action. that's just not valid english.
if the object creates a file, and would remove the file in the destructor, then it conceptually owns that file on disk.
the ctor takes two paths it needs to perform the copy. the ctor performs the copy. the commit() means we're good, so the dtor need not do anything. if no commit() was called then the dtor undoes what the ctor did, by removing the copied file
hey how can I share a variable between more than one object ?
@je4d oy well i'm not trying to make my code feel like english
like a static integer
@Oddant pass/store a reference or a pointer to it
16:55
@je4d ok lets assume we have the naming done right.
@je4d how do you handle the case of a move?
@je4d can you share the shortest sample which presents the storing case ?
@Oddant int a; int& reference_to_a(a);
@wilhelmtell the idiom for a move constructor is to leave the source object in a valid but empty state
i have a feeling there's a way to lay things out such that i don't need to write a move ctor. that i can do with =default.
so in your case it'd leave the source object with an empty filename and marked as committed, because that's what you need to do to make it not do anything in the d'tor
but for it to be clean and understandable, you need to separate the concept of file ownership into a separate class that has RAII semantics. Then implement your copy_part stuff using that.
if i write a move ctor do i also need to write a move assi? or will operator(&&)=default be good enough when i have a proper move ctor?
fs::path is already raii'd
there's nothing more to add raii for. and there's a single resource here.
is it just the name that's a problem?
17:05
@wilhelmtell I've not used fs::path before - what does it do on destruction?
i don't know. but it's raii. boost::filesystem3::path
i'm not worried about it.
also, it's not part of the state even. the state uses a string.
huh, looks like clang actually found an error in my code that slipped past gcc. That's nice :)
private: std::string to; // this->to(to.string())
the reason why the member is a string and not fs::path is technical. boost::filesystem3::path seems to be non-moveable
@jalf can't wait to try out clang - I will make an attempt when 3.1 is released
@jalf what was it?
17:09
ok, i'll rephrase my question
does the standard guarantee that move ctors assign a default value to primitives?
as in
movector(&&rhs) : boolean() { std::swap(boolean, rhs.boolean); }
@wilhelmtell the ": boolean() " will give boolean a default value
without it it'd be undefined
but is it what happens when the movector is =default
Default implementation of the move constructor is member-wise move. Much like the default implementation of the copy constructor is member-wise copy.
Same goes for the assignment operators.
17:11
hey I need some music while coding..
any recommendations
@LucDanton does the compiler-generated move look lik that code i posted? or is boolean undefined?
user784668
@Nils It depends on what kind of music you like.
currently listening to myspace.com/emikamyspace.. but it's not something that doesn't distract
@wilhelmtell It's nothing like that.
@Fanael well for coding something that doesn't distract you too much
17:12
@wilhelmtell I expect the default doesn't affect the original, whereas yours does. So in the default it wouldn't matter what boolean was constructed as
but why not try it?
then there's a bug in gcc
i tried
user784668
@Nils It depends on what distracts you and what doesn't.
the boolean of the moved-from was true
humm rather hard to describe but generally something chilli for the background
like aaron static (google aaron static soundcloud)
@Nils I started using Dimrain47's stuff (from newgrounds) as coding music a while back
17:14
in fact, come to think of it, i think the compiler-generated move at the very least must default-construct pointers.
hi @ScottW
that's why i wonder if it does the same for all priitives.
user784668
@Nils So listen to the CPU fan.
@ScottW quite possibly.
@Fanael I have a macbook
not much to listen to
:D
@je4d ouh not my taste
user784668
17:16
@Nils Oh, my condolences.
:D
or dj peaceful is also nice
@Nils ah well, if I was telepathic I'd have suggested something else.. but I've not figured out telepathy yet.
@je4d well I could turn on my nintendo and just listen to the music..
if i write a move ctor, do i also need to write a move assi?
if so, is it good enough to have move assi =default?
@Nils if nintendo's to your taste, you could try the VVVVVV soundtrack (PPPPPP)
i've listened to that while coding a few times
user784668
17:20
@Nils What's that?
Lambda's and initializer lists!
Another one late to the party.
I just got myself a Sony Vaio Z13
I was driving all day long
@mcmuttons 2 is my favorite megaman, i used to leave the game on idle on my nes just so i could listen to the music while coding/studying
@CatPlusPlus they weren't functional yet yesterday
17:21
I am not that much of a gaming nerd :D
@wilhelmtell Unlikely. If member-wise move is not good enough for the constructor, I don't see it being good enough for the assignment operator.
So yes, write the operator if you had to implement the move constructor.
28
Q: Initialise a list to a specific length in Python

JanuszHow do I initialise a list with 10 times a default value in Python? I'm searching for a good-looking way to initialize a empty list with a specific range. So make a list that contains 10 zeros or something to be sure that my list has a specific length.

humm come on Python
@rubenvb good eye! there might just be just enough in svn now for me to switch from gcc (or at least to make an attempt)...
@kfmfe04 remember that on Windows, Clang and exceptions are still a bust
@LucDanton member-wise move is good enough, but i don't know why it doesn' twork when i don't (trivially) writei t on my own
@LucDanton i have a boolean that is set to true in the moved-from
17:24
@rubenvb - I'm on Lubuntu 8^)
I'll see if I can prod someone to fix that good in the near future.
@LucDanton that is the committed boolean
uhhh
yah sure it is
@ScottW Megaman X was better IMO.
sbi
sbi
17:35
@Nils I have the soundtrack of Gothic II on a CD. My late wife gave that to me as a birthday present back in the days because she loved it when I played the game beside her. (She'd actually ask me to go back to those woods, because the music is nicer there.) There's a lot of stuff on it I like, and my kids like it, too. My teenage daughter copied some of it to her phone to listen to.
heh
my favorite game sountrack is probably unreal
or deus ex
Total Annihilation
@rubenvb hmm... ...looks like I need Thread Local Storage in clang - do you know if there are plans to implement it? (if not, I may have to work around it somehow)
heh ta
maybe I'm getting old, but I don't think the current games by Epic are as cool as Unreal and Unreal Tournament
they're not
UT3 was terribad
17:37
Dune -- Spice Opera
Gears of War was fun, but then they just made the same game again and again in GoW2 and GoW3
they haven't really done anything new or interesting
Michiel "M.C.A." van den Bos (born 19 December 1975) is a Dutch musician who composes primarily for Epic Games, or for games based on Epic technology. He began composing on the Commodore 64 and Amiga before making the transition to composing professional soundtracks for critically acclaimed video games such as Unreal, Unreal Tournament, Deus Ex and Overlord series. He is currently composing music for Jambo Safari. According to Van den Bos' MySpace, his influences are LTJ Bukem, Catherine Wheel, Adorable, Sunny Day Real Estate, Jerry Goldsmith, The Stone Roses, Silversun Pickups, Fields, ...
Ah that explains why I like the soundtrack of unreal and deus ex
try the Supreme Commander theme
No Swiss
what?
English and German
well I don't speak it
ah nice
17:55
Hello.
@ScottW nothing up
Well, I was downloading Visual Studio and my parents told me I must stop downloading. Internet was slow as hell for them. :P
But I'm continuing the download now. Visual Studio is more important than reading the news and playing Wordfeud.
Mmm I can't browse reddit nor twitter. Timeout.
-_-
amagad so sick! :(
One hour remaining…
@ScottW but not for my brain. My brain needs rest, I can only find that on reddit.
Is it possible to build clang so it uses libc++ as the standard lib by default? Right now I have to specify ´stdlib=libc++ every time I compile something, which is kind of a pain. @rubenvb or some other clang'ey person know?
18:10
You can do $ alias clang++="clang++ -stdlib=libc++" instead of rebuilding clang.
hmm yeah, that works I guess
18:23
humm could anybody do a one-click installer for clang for windows?
18:36
can you use std::fmod(d, 1) == 0 to reliably check that d has no fractional part?
@Nils check out rubenvb's pages for clang, it's basically a one-click installer without the installer
@SethCarnegie so it's just a one-click?
@jalf it's just a folder that you extract
and everything is ready to go
@jalf also, use clang++, not clang
so you don't have to do stdlib=libc++
@SethCarnegie I do use clang++
@jalf who's clang are you using
@SethCarnegie he wants clang to use libc++ instead of libstdc++.
18:40
@daknøk ohhhh
but it defaults to using the gnu libstdc++ instead of llvm's libc++
as far as I can figure out, anyway
@jalf tell me when you find out, I need to do that too
@jalf maybe a source file modification, grep the source for libstdc++ or something :)
Initializer lists are in SVN! :D
ugh, another fun little speed bump. If I invoke clang from the dir where I just built it, it works fine. If I make install it, and then try to use that, it segfaults
@daknøk awesome
@daknøk now we just need exceptions to not terminate on windows
18:43
@SethCarnegie unhandled exceptions, you mean, or any exception?
@jalf any
GCC4.7 had that for a while.
@SethCarnegie oh, that does sound a bit awkward ;)
try it out, the instant you throw anything, the program is terminated
"try" it out.
18:45
lol
I now use Georgia for keywords and string literals instead of Menlo.
Much more readable.
Georgia is a nice font
but just use Consolas for everything
@ScottW Ba-dum-tish.
It's funny that all one-click installers take more than one click
@SethCarnegie you can control most of them using just the keyboard. zero-click installer.
18:48
true
Any thoughts on the language Clojure, I'm thinking about learning it
@SethCarnegie maybe you don't like it (unless you love parentheses (you know, those round things))))
@daknøk uh, what
@daknøk oh, I already like Lisp but it's not very practical
@SethCarnegie Clojure is a dialect of Lisp and also uses parentheses.
@daknøk I meant Common Lisp
And although I hate Java and the JVM, it's nice that it has a large standard library and stuff, unlike Scheme which people say is more an academic and teaching language
user406009
19:06
As always, Java's advantage is in the tooling and library support.
@jalf well, I only really use it on Windows... and libc++ is not ready for Windows yet, so I haven't looked for this. You can always use a simple bash alias or wrapper shell script.
@kfmfe04 I thought it was recently committed. Guess not.
@SethCarnegie although part of the reason it has a big standard library is that half of it is duplicated, because they realized that their original API was just stupidly broken, so hey, have a new I/O library! Have a new this, have a new that. Deprecate all the old stuff, but keep it around
@rubenvb is there any progress on the windows front? It's still not possible to compile a program without using half the mingw toolchain, is it?
or I guess I should ask, what is the current goal for windows support? How many of the missing pieces are being worked on
@jalf nope, that's correct for C++. Straight C shouldn't be a problem
Not a lot really. There are always too little Windows devs on everything Open Source
19:17
:)
The biggest problems IMO are exceptions. The rest can wait by a long shot. There's also some x64 codegen issues as well (just run the compiler-rt test suite with MinGW-w64 Clang)
@rubenvb nice - hope they get a patch (or some kind of implementation) up for Linux, too - I remember reading somewhere that gcc's __thread was somewhat hack-y (not quite compliant with the standard yet)...
@rubenvb: oh, just the guy I was looking for. I just installed your clang build and ran the command line "C:\MinGW\bin\clang++.exe *.cpp" (where my files are in the cwd) and I get the message "The procedure entry point _ZNSt8__detaul15_List_node_base4swapERS0_S1_ could not be located in the dynamic link library libstdc++-6.dll."
@MooingDuck you need to add C:\mingw\bin to PATH
@rubenvb I.. but... I did that... didn't I?
19:25
@MooingDuck I don't know, you said you called clang with a full path, so I assumed you didn't. Try running clang --version from the "bin" directory
`PATH=[snip];C:\MinGW\bin\;C:\
MinGW\MSYS\1.0\local\bin\;C:\MinGW\MSYS\1.0\bin\`
@MooingDuck which build was it? Then I can test myself.
i686-w64-mingw32-clang-3.1-2_rubenvb.7z, the one I linked. I get the same message when I cwd to the bin directory
@MooingDuck you did install the gcc package in the same directory didn't you?
I don't know why it never occured to me that that might be a problem. Off I go
@rubenvb and so I say unsarcastically: "Thank you captain obvious" :(
19:29
@MooingDuck Clang needs gcc to link, so the clang package is an add-on to the gcc package, which also includes the necessary headers/libs
@rubenvb I have a gcc, but an older version. Seems obvious to me now that that won't work
@MooingDuck wow, saying that unsarcastically is so waaay above my level of sarcasm it's ridiculous.
Who can outsarcasm who?
All bets are on.
why does the ming folder contain a i686-w64-mingw32 folder?
That last one I did say unsarcastically... For the record.
@MooingDuck that's where gcc searches for its headers and libs
Do not directly call the binaries in the i686.../bin directory. Do not add that to PATH (before the main bin dir at least).
Do not go into Mordor
Do not question GCC toolchain directory structure. To change it, you need to go to Mordor. See previous rule.
19:33
@rubenvb so just say it's stupid gcc design?
@MooingDuck well... yeah, it's never gonna change anyways. Everything's tuned to that :)
woo! now my MSVC10 can compile with it's defualt compiler, gcc, or clang! Neat!
@MooingDuck That is a surprising and welcome feature.
woo! And double-clicking the clang errors brings me to the correct file/line/character in the IDE! (wish gcc could do that)
@MooingDuck hmm?
19:36
I never knew it to be possible
@ScottW it's surprisingly easy actually
@MooingDuck Did the steps get posted before? Would you mind terribly to outline the config?
@rubenvb well, you can't debug with the non-vc compilers, but they'll compile
@MooingDuck is that with msbuild stuff or just an easy makefile thing?
@ScottW Is that GNUmake or BSD style?
19:39
Then it shows up as an option in the tools dropdown menu
@CaptainGiraffe tools->external tools->add->Title="gcc"->Command="C:\MinGW\bin\g++.exe"->Arguments="*.cpp"->InitialDirectory="$(ItemDir)"->UseOutputWindow='true"->OK
@rubenvb neither, it's an "external tool"
@MooingDuck aha. That completely bypasses the fucked up options system in the project configuration :P
I still don't know, is intel's C++ compiler any good compared to G++/VC++?
obviously I have more in my arguments in the arguments, but that's the minimal version
@SethCarnegie Guess it would depend on your criteria for good.
@rubenvb yeah, that got complicated too fast, I went the easy way
@SethCarnegie I should get my hands on that too while I'm at it
19:41
@CaptainGiraffe uh, standards compliant, implementing a lot of C++11, generating fast code
@SethCarnegie Quite a few SO posts links to a decently updated table for C++11 compliance.
@SethCarnegie well, it's generally reputed to generate very efficient code, at least for Intel CPUs
That's the best for the Intel stuff
and I'm guessing their performance on AMD cpus might have improved after they paid AMD a few billion to settle the lawsuit about that
19:44
@SethCarnegie I've heard that on Intel processors it frequently builds the fastest code. But don't bother running it on an AMD processor, or it's the slowest code.
@jalf lol you're probably right.
Are there any necessary Windows 7 settings I need to mess with for SSDs?
@rubenvb necessary?
Like pagefile location, caching stuff etc...?
to not wear it out too fast?
well, you don't usually want the pagefile on the SSD unless you have a large one
@rubenvb I think Windows 7+ knows about SSDs and doesn't play stupid with them anymore
19:45
I mean, fundamentally, the page file is intended for use on slow hard drives
and the space available on SSDs is limited
@DeadMG I've got 8GB of RAM now, so I don't think it'll be used regardless. I do have a 500GB HDD too (apart from my 128GB SSD) so I could move it
intel looks pretty good for C++11 compliance
@rubenvb Windows will still allocate the space.
it should work fine with default settings. Main issue is really if you can afford to take up space on it for "system" stuff like pagefile and hibernate file
This guy who sold me his laptop today got ripped off by himself
19:46
@SethCarnegie they claim to have variadic templates, I'll play with it
however, you'd only need to move it if you run out of primary space
@jalf oh, I've got space to spare, really, I'll keep everything at its defaults then. Thanks
@SethCarnegie sauce?
@rubenvb then you should be fine
Only thing that is "No" is "Rvalue references for *this"
others are either yes, or like 3 things are "partial"
19:47
unfortunately, my SSD is losing space
of course, if you have a file that gets written to constantly, you might want to put that on a different drive
Windows seems to just grow an grow and grow in size
@MooingDuck note they use MSVC's STL, so no decent tuple and shit
@DeadMG Windows 8 might have fixed that with the ARM version
and any really essential stuff should be backed up to something non-SSD as well. SSDs don't last forever, even in the best case
@jalf There are some hard drive test tools and that kind of thing which destroy SSDs.
19:48
@rubenvb can I make them use another?
@jalf what about the hibernation file? Speed above lifetime?
@rubenvb You use hibernate?
@MooingDuck Like? What others are there?
@rubenvb well, that only gets written to when your computer goes into hibernation. That's not something that happens tens of thousands of times per day, is it? ;)
@DeadMG hell yes. It was awesome on my previous laptop
19:49
so that's not going to wear out your SSD :)
I don't want to ask this on main because I'm sure if would be a duplicate, but I can't find it ... For a physics simulation I need to model a number of events in time, and "process" them in chronological order. Each event has a time stamp. When new events are generated, they will be "in the future" compared to some variable holding the current time, but they might not be the very last one in the queue of events (i.e. it must be inserted in the middle somewhere).
@jalf right. I remember this now: storagesearch.com/ssdmyths-endurance.html
What data structure is best used for this? What options do I have?
@rubenvb I must be misunderstanding something. Isn't there a way to make it use MinGW's C++ standard Library?
priority queue
19:49
@DeadMG you can symlink all the external stuff, like \program files and \users, to avoid them taking up space on the windows partition
@MooingDuck The Windows Intel compiler? I highly doubt that. It produces MSVC compatible object files
@DeadMG Sounds right to me too
@rubenvb bummer
@rubenvb From what I've seen, don't rely on your SSD lasting more than 2 years in normal usage. It might last longer, but many don't
@jalf Nah, I can take care of that myself. It's the SxS directory that holds 1million versions of old DLLs that's growing and growing
19:50
@MooingDuck you can further port libc++ to the Intel Compiler+ MSVS headers and see if it wants to cooperate
@MooingDuck I don't know why it says it supports variadic templates, it can't even compile template<typename... Args> void f() { }
Most API stuff should be more or less OK. I ran into a C++11 language feature problem in MSVC.
@SethCarnegie do you have Version 12.0 Update 6?
@rubenvb std:: stuff?
@DeadMG What's wrong with hibernate?
19:52
@MooingDuck oh, maybe not update 6, let me check
@CaptainGiraffe no, that would be a library issue (aka libc++ problem, that I could try to fix). It had trouble with decltype on dependent names and shit
@SethCarnegie that's when they say they got variadics in
@MooingDuck nope, I have 12.0.dflskdnfjaj
@rubenvb It's just unusual for it to be necessary. Most power users I know turn their computer on when they wake up, use it all day and then off when they go to bed.
@MooingDuck I hope I can update for free
19:53
@DeadMG ah yeah, that's a pain. Note that they use a lot of hard links, so it's not quite as big as it appears. But yeah, it does take up some gigs
@DeadMG that's what I do
@DeadMG On is mandatory, off is optional.
@CaptainGiraffe On is optional for me
@SethCarnegie Do you belong here? :-)
19:54
@jalf As far as I'm concerned, as long as I can't use that space again for something else, then it's that big :P
@DeadMG but closing the lid, having it physically off for travel, and on in a few seconds, with all programs still open is friggin' awesomeness
@rubenvb That's true.
@DeadMG you can. Point is that explorer will report it taking up more space than it actually uses
I didn't ask Explorer
I use a program called WinDirStat, which is pretty much exclusively for this purpose
@DeadMG well, a couple of years ago, it didn't handle hard links correctly. Don't know if they've fixed that since
most tools will make the same mistake. It's kind of tricky to correct for
19:57
yeah
Explorer says the used space on the drive, total, is 46.9GB, and WinDirStat says 50.3GB
but even assuming that whole difference comes out of Windows's share of the drive, that's still a third or more of my SSD's useful space down the pan for Windows
hmm, Intel has a page for "Non-commercial Software development" where you can use stuff for free if you aren't getting paid. Every link on said page is "for Linux".
@DeadMG hmm, then there's something else that doesn't match. If windirstat understood hardlinks, it should report lower disk usage
if it reports 4 gigs more used, then there's something else messing up your results :)
lol
19:59
but yeah, I don't doubt for a second that \Windows is big
is 25'ish gb on my machine, I think
the main thing that I hate is the lack of control

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