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21:01
@classdaknok_t because it doesn't adapt to human predisposition any more than it adapts to screen width. Optimal pagewidth for reading has to do with eye movement. See Knuth
Zoom out. xD
ZTFO :)
Zet the fuck out?
LLVM codebase y u no consistent!
Sigh. Your associative engine is really broken today. Später?
Zoom The Fuck Out, obviously
some of LLVM is horrible
21:04
@JohannesSchaublitb really, sometimes they use pointers, sometimes references, sometimes they use a pointer argument and in the function body the first thing they do is assert the pointer != nullptr. WTF?!
sometimes they use exceptions and say "we don't use exceptions except in tablegen"
oO
@classdaknok_t perhaps they want to modify the pointer? Set it to nullptr, even?
If you have void foo(Bar* b) { assert(b); /* more code */ } just pass a fucking reference and not a pointer..
@classdaknokt +1
@classdaknokt not always good
21:05
@JohannesSchaublitb What, overload resolution?
coding guidelines may for example require that identity classes are passed by pointer
and only value classes are passed by reference
except for special cases
Aha Non tech reasons.
IMO asserting pointers is silly
@JohannesSchaublitb Then write new coding guidelines.
21:06
@SethCarnegie deservedly.
@JohannesSchaublitb why?
because it's bloat
"i will protect my code from the evil doing of my colleague"
@JohannesSchaublitb Can be useful in detecting problems early.
libclang, lib* is not just for colleagues
@JohannesSchaublitb yeah but instead of a compile-time error you get a runtime error and the program quits.
if it's 0 it will crash itself already
no need for asserts
21:08
@JohannesSchaublitb But you want to prevent nasal demons!
You just (a) don't know when/whether it's gonna crash
Markdown fail.
(b) might need to prevent side effects (e.g. for atomic updates: don't have a sideeffect, and then crash)
double dereference
@sehe Technically true. But it's pretty safe on real platforms to assume that reading 0 will produce a nice simple crash.
21:09
having it crash and you not knowing where will increase your knowledge of the codebase because you need longer to find the problem
@JohannesSchaublitb And waste a bunch of your time and piss you off. Not worth it.
@DeadMG Reading it. But you can compare it and branch on the result of the comparison. You can serialize it and send it to another server, which subsequently chokes and dies deserializing it. Etc. I think asserts can make life a lot easier.
@JohannesSchaublitb What the fuck?
no. not waste.
Haha, someone revenge-downvoted me because I said python shouldn't have syn-sig whitespace in some random question
21:10
you will make fewer errors in the future because you will understand the system better than before
Sure, blasting your leg away might give you some insight about what your leg's internals look like, but hell, there are more productive ways to spend your time.
@JohannesSchaublitb My point about fail-early to prevent partial sideeffects stands
@JohannesSchaublitb I have no need to understand LLVM's internals.
you don't know whether it is more likely that the input pointer is 0 or whether the input pointer is a dangling one
only the caller knows. so he should put the assert before the call
@JohannesSchaublitb DRY says put it at the call site.
21:12
@JohannesSchaublitb This is a really rotten argument for stupid errors like passing a nullptr where such is not accepted. You should get an assert, or get the documentation. Nothing more, nothing less.
You don't need to know anything about the underlying code, and understanding it, is never going to help you avoid passing nullptr to another function that doesn't accept it.
@JohannesSchaublitb Now there is a good point. Dangling pointers are equally bad
guys, keep it low. i'm still a green grasshopper in coding!
Yummy, grasshoppers.
yeah yeah. very zen
Oh wait never mind, it wasn't a constructor.
to be fair, in my code i'm sometimes using ctor init lists and sometimes the body
sbi
sbi
21:16
Doh. I have plowed my way through some 40 files. Now off to the other dozens of instances...
i shall put myself in the corner
2
I only set in the body if I want to do checks before setting anything, obviously.
and when the init var depends on another var of the class
it is wise to not do that in the init list xD
Why not? Is the order unspecified?
no but it's dangerous to try to memorize the order
21:18
OK.
Now that you mention it
@JohannesSchaublitb In the order of declaration.
is it left to right ^^ ?
what the puppy said
@JohannesSchaublitb Not really. It is easy to forget about it. The actual order is easy enough. And just enable -Wall like any good chap
That -Wall doesn't enable all warnings bugs me.
21:20
@DeadMG which is equivalent to try to memorize the order of declaration
I'm surprised it even enables any warning bugs
@sehe the "actual order is easy enough". what does that mean?
you order the members alphabetically?
You can just look at the declaration. And use -Wall
Can't you just read it
It's not really memorising if you can just read it
21:21
and -Werror :) (I don't)
My favourite warning is signed to unsigned mismatch in for (int i = 0, ... ).
Meh -Werror is just annoying.
@JohannesSchaublitb Unless you're constructing all of them with respect to each other, you only need to memorize the relative order of a couple variables, which... you can just look at.
What's that flag for one of Herb Sutter's books
Isn't it for Meyer's ?
21:22
@sbi Keep steady! And, a hint of advice, group your edits into microcommits that are easy to review. You'll loose track if you postpone the diff review to the end (diff blindness or something like that happens, in my experience)
Help me please ! Someone stole all my pointers !
I hope I'm not vexing again, since I remember you use SVN...
@ereOn Blame the GC ...
@ereOn That's a good thing. Now use references.
@ereOn Don't worry, @stdDave has billions to spare
But I loved my pointers :( I bet the thief will delete them now :(
You dynamically allocate pointers?
Then it's your deserved punishment.
sbi
sbi
@sehe I can't do anything but commit this as one big blob. Remember, it's all one massive change, and it won't compile unless I change it all. I will, however, not commit all the other changes I have made. Those go into a separate checkin.
I statically allocate them.
@classdaknok_t hehe.
21:24
I've spent a few weeks programming in the most pure c++ i could possible achieve and now that i had to do something in C, i was like: How the firetruck could i have ever put up with this malloc and nonsense ...
@ereOn deleteing memory with automatic or static storage duration is UB.
that way char* ptr = static new(malloc) char[3];
DVCS, microbranch and microcommits FTW...
Seriously, I wouldn't consider working any other way anymore
what's "static new" ?
@JohannesSchaublitb nothing, afaik.
21:25
Ah, it was -Weffc++
I'm just putting keywords next to each other.
Hate that flag
Don't pay too much attention.
@SethCarnegie THat's Meyer's isn't it :) ?
@SethCarnegie effing c++!
21:26
static new(malloc)? WTF?
You can do new decltype(malloc), maybe, at most. I guess not, but I'm not sure.
g++ -Weffc++ -Wall -pedantic -Werror -WTF
We need that too
@ScarletAmaranth is it? I don't know.
@classdaknokt: It's a concept I invented: you can statically allocate a new malloc
what wat
@ereOn of type char[3], right?
21:27
And this kids is what happens when you experiment with mushrooms ...
@classdaknokt: You realize I'm trolling you, right ?
"new (malloc) int" is valid too
@ereOn : You realize I'm trolling you, right ?
@JohannesSchaublitb allocate an int at the address of malloc
sbi
sbi
21:27
@sehe As always, I have two checked out working copies of this project, prj_x, and prj_x_clean. I mainly work in prj_x, but if I happen to run into some other change I want to make first, I'll make that in prj_x_clean first and check it in from there. Then I update prj_x and merge the changes. It makes no sense to branch these off, because they are only a few hours' work.
@JohannesSchaublitb UB, right? :P
@SethCarnegie you could define "R operator new(size_t, void*(*)(size_t));"
But yeah valid.
not valid without that overload
standard placement new wont accept function pointers
@ScottW: Why are you so mean ?
21:28
ah too bad
My programming language: "Whenever a character is encountered in the source code, the behavior is implementation-defined."
you can say
template<typename ...T> void *operator new(size_t, T...);
lol
Is there any use left for function pointers in cpp11 ?
Can operator new take more than two arguments?
void operator new?
What's the point?
21:29
@SethCarnegie of course it can
Never knew that
@classdaknokt oops :)
new (a, b, c) T
@classdaknokt it's to create memory leaks
@JohannesSchaublitb ah cool
@JohannesSchaublitb Oh lol I thought you were serious. Didn't know it was a mistake.
@sbi I disagree. I'm not branching a branch, I'm on a 'pseudo' branch, simply because I don't need to push to a central repo immediately. Besides...
... the argument they are only a few hours' work defeats itself: the problem with large refactorings is that you need to be mindful in the review. In my experience, the sheer number of lines changed makes it 'large'. It is irrelevant whether the changes happened in an hour or a week.
21:30
@classdaknokt xD
sbi
sbi
@sehe You do have a point there.
@SethCarnegie there was an ambiguity in c++03
@Joh What were the possibilities it could have been in 03
struct A { template<typename T> void operator delete(size_t, T); };
i believe the problematic case was that
or something like that. don't remember anymore
What does __include_macros do in clang?
21:32
@joh I don't get it
@SethCarnegie i don't get it either
i'm sorry xD shouldn't have brought it up lol
Well at least now I know it only works in 11
it works well in c++03 too
@sbi: Simply put: I need to keep the work on a 'human' scale. I have learned that you don't always know when the next interruption hits. I have developed the habit of not reviewing and microcommitting midway, often, so the 'stack' of pending 'changes performed' never grows over my head (I can go home and continue tomorrow and don't risk forgetting stuff).
21:33
but I don't know whether you can say void *operator new(size_t, ...);
but I can't imagine why it wouldn't
Ah I see
@sbi There's only so much that can fit in your head at one time, and once you're knocked out of the zone, it's gone.
(last plink, promise)
then you could use va_args in operator new xD
I'm going to implement a GC in C++.
I'm bored.
Isn't that planned for the next C++ standard ?
21:34
@ereOn Clang C++ status says it won't be implemented in clang.
Xeo
Xeo
Why not?
@JohannesSchaublitb lol that would suck
Xeo
Xeo
Sometimes, a GC is perfectly fine
@ereOn nope. recommendations have been proposed, but they're not mandatory. IIRC
It's only like, a partial GC or something
21:35
i use ref counting in my scripting runtime
@Xeo +1. Say it out loud, brother :)
Xeo
Xeo
Opt-in GC
Like D's?
works well but sucks xD
> Minimal support for garbage collection and reachability-based leak detection | N2670 | N/A
21:35
@SethCarnegie I think, D's is opt-out?
Xeo
Xeo
@SethCarnegie D's is "Opt-out" in quotation marks
Ah
@Xeo why in quotation marks
Also Boehm expressed his wish to incorporate stm into C++ during the GoingNative event.
Xeo
Xeo
Because apparently some stuff in the stdlib and language (arrays, I think) don't quite work anymore
That's a problem
Xeo
Xeo
21:36
As they rely on the GC
I may be misinformed, though
Last time I looked, D seemed like a confused language
@JohannesSchaublitb why...
Also
> a template using declaration! hardcore! – lurscher yesterday
Scheisse. Oneboxing deleted comments doesn't work
Xeo
Xeo
@JohannesSchaublitb Wait, I thought argument deduction was possible with alias templates. Or am I misremembering something?
lurscher isn't hardcore or he'd call it template aliases IMO
@Xeo you are missing something
@JohannesSchaublitb Spam?
21:40
@classdaknok_t selfinflicted
see how many times i copy pasted xD
Oh lol xD
That ehm… sucks.
Xeo
Xeo
@JohannesSchaublitb Hm.
@Xeo it's std::conditional<...>::type.
that's a nondeduced context
Xeo
Xeo
Oops
21:41
@JohannesSchaublitb We can't know. Could be 15. Could be 3 + 5 :)
Xeo
Xeo
Fail on my side, didn't look at the rhs of the alias template
Xeo
Xeo
Nevermind then :D
Accu conference was already held right?
Xeo
Xeo
@DeadMG Wait, so if I don't get drunk from drinking, does that mean I'm also acting stupid when I'm sober? :(
21:45
The assumption is wrong. You'll get drunk.
"If i don't get drunk from drinking" is like saying that you wouldn't get dead from dying ...
I think it is making a premise, not an assumption
Is it defined behavior to write: std::copy(&a, &a + 1, some_output_iterator) where a is a int ?
(I mainly ask because of the &a + 1 thing.)
@ereOn yes that's legal
Robot could drink but they will not get drunk if they don't have that feature
Xeo
Xeo
21:49
@ereOn IIRC pointer to single elements act as if the single element was a size-1 array, so it should.
Also, drinking* is always going to lead to the assumption of alcohol in your blood
(* alcoholic beverages)
Okay thanks.
@ereOn but you could just do instead *some_output_iterator++ = a instead :)
@SethCarnegie: Sure but that's not the real code. I just used std::copy because I knew you guys would know its prototype
@ereOn writing it is always defined behaviour. Implementation defined, if you insist.
I bet you really wanted to know what happens when you feed it to a compiler
21:50
And the function I use is similar in that, hence the choice of std::copy for my question.
@sehe: Yep.
@sehe
Replace "men" with "C++ programmers"
Well then, depends on what kind of a compiler. A Haskell compiler won't grok it. And it depends on the encoding you specify the compiler input in (e.g. gcc doesn't grok EBCDIC).
But I'm digressing
@SethCarnegie Priceless advice.
whops
Xeo
Xeo
@sehe And neither VC++ nor GCC nor Clang grok bmp :(
Sry, i typed se + tab and it auto-chose you, sehe :)
21:53
I need to apply this patch file within MSYS but I'm not quite sure how to do it.
I tried patch < thepatchfile.patch but that didn't work.
@Xeo I learned that on SO
...I get an error "can't find file to patch at input line 3".
@GeorgeEdison Try patch -p0, -p1, -p2 (basically tell it what level of subdirectories you are in)
Ah, I never tried -p0, only -p1.
That worked. Thanks.
Yay!
21:56
Now to rebuild everything...
Wee, my BF compiler can eliminate no-ops.
Does anyone know if the HFONT you send to a window in the WM_SETFONT message needs to live as long as the window, or does the window get it's own version
@CatPlusPlus Gz? :P
@SethCarnegie Docs FTW
Xeo
Xeo
Oh shoot
21:57
And now I'm not sure if I should eliminate empty loops.
Regardless, I'm willing to bet that you need to keep the font around
Xeo
Xeo
I think I just fucked up my Titan Quest save...
@sehe docs don't specify
MSoft documentation is horrible when it comes to that
@SethCarnegie The other docs :)
Which is what
Alf P. Steinbach?
Xeo
Xeo
21:58
@sehe SO?
@SethCarnegie All Windows handles are reference counted.
@CatPlusPlus sweet, that simplifies things a lot
It will live as long as the window.
Whether you delete your own or not.
@CatPlusPlus so DestroyObject does not actually destroy the object
it just decrements the ref count?

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