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17:00
I use struct{}_ = expression; for that.
From time to time, I see it is argued that programs written in assembly tend to work faster than programs written in higher level languages. Is that still valid today, or it was so in early days of compilers?
The compiler comes back with "cannot convert from <your type here> to anonymous struct".
e.g. Can I top a compiler?
Probably. Can you top it in the same time it takes me to write it in a high level language and the compiler to optimize it? No.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Thanks It worked
17:02
Anyone know why a ReadFile on a pipe I created that wasn't written to or has nothing to be read can segfault the program?
Assembly is used only for very, very specific things.
Don't even consider it.
@yasar11732 It depends. If you're good at assembly language and only have to deal with a small amount, then yes, you can beat a compiler pretty dependably. For large amounts of code, it gets much harder, and people who aren't good at it will lose even on small amounts of code.
Better a program that runs in an hour and costs 1k than program that runs in 10 seconds and costs 100k.
(I've got very funny quota query at work recently, so I'm in a business mode.)
`error C2681: 'gcl::Paragraph *const ' : invalid expression type for dynamic_cast `

How can this be invalid ? I used it here
`dynamic_cast<const gcl::AbstractComponent*>(*(_children.begin()))->begin()`
@CatPlusPlus Even though in reality it will be more like "1k$ program runs in 20s, 100k$ runs in 10s"
17:07
It was literally "like X, only better".
@R.MartinhoFernandes That depends on what you're doing. I think I can get away with claiming to be at least average at writing C++, but there are still a few things I can do faster and easier in assembly language (despite being quite out of practice with it).
Where X is popular app on the target market.
user784668
@kbok And $0 runs in 21s.
@CatPlusPlus You mean "mood", right? Robots have modes, but AFAIK meatbags have moods.
$0 program doesn't run, because nobody wrote it. :haw:
17:07
@JerryCoffin Whole programs?
@Fanael How do you make a $0 program ? You hire a hobo ?
@JerryCoffin You know, average at C++ is quite low. :P :(
@R.MartinhoFernandes I'm a modal cat.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Whole programs only in rare cases, but even for that, yes in at least a few cases.
@CatPlusPlus Ah, I see, vim is seeping.
17:09
Well, all cats are modal. You can't dismiss them without giving attention.
user784668
@kbok You use a program made by somebody else.
I'm a stopdown.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I did say "at least". My point is that this isn't a case of somebody who's really good at assembly language and clueless about everything else saying that all that other stuff just sucks.
17:14
Oooh, OutOfMemoryError. Lovely.
sbi
sbi
@R.MartinhoFernandes Poor robot. I hope you have some memory set aside to let the GC run?
@sbi Lol.
operator new
sbi
sbi
@StackedCrooked At least he was able to still utter a diagnostic here.
@sbi Followed by "Lovely". Seems like UB to me.
sbi
sbi
@StackedCrooked Might be an easter egg by his programmers.
17:26
Maybe it's a company policy to make error messages sound cheerful.
Is T *const and const T * different ?
Yes.
First is const pointer, the second is pointer to const.
...
@NeelBasu Different. T const * and const T * are the same -- but the * is kind of a "fence" -- the stuff before it applies to what's pointed at. The stuff after it applies to the pointer itself.
@sbi That was the GC refusing to allocate >1GiB (The code was supposed to ask for 24 bytes, but there was a bug)
17:32
@CatPlusPlus Then does GCC treats them in same way ?
because Mine isgetting compiled in gcc but not in MSVC
They're not the same.
sbi
sbi
@R.MartinhoFernandes Oh, there's a GCC port to your hardware?
There's GCC port to every hardware.
not any embedded hardware
@NeelBasu They're not the same, but without knowing the context, it's impossible to say which compiler is doing what/which is right or wrong.
17:33
I am on My PC
I'm on your PC, too.
@NeelBasu I'm on a chair. Seems a lot more comfortable.
I'm on a boat.
@JerryCoffin butthats not my chair
Well, I'm not, but that felt appropriate somehow.
17:34
@R.MartinhoFernandes on an up boat? :P
@R.MartinhoFernandes My chair is better than yours
@NeelBasu No, but there are other chairs in the world.
sbi
sbi
@JerryCoffin That depends. For example, when you're living in an igloo, sitting on the PC might be more comfortable. (Especially so when you're torturing the hardware.)
@JerryCoffin Where is world ?
17:36
@NeelBasu About on AU from the sun, as usual.
@sbi Yes, under other circumstances, the computer might be more comfortable, but under my current circumstances, the chair does seem more comfortable.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Careful -- in Russia, posting a link like that could send you to prison for a few years! (and you're only a thousand miles a away or so...)
yay I figured it out. I'm Awesome.
@JerryCoffin wut?
@JerryCoffin Why?
Obviously because the black man has dreadlocks and speaks in a computerized voice.
17:52
I'm on a boat is one of the worst songs I've ever heard!
@R.MartinhoFernandes I doubt the actions of the Russian government can be explained.
@David Look, it's a virgin -- on the Internet but never been Rickrolled! Amazing!
@JerryCoffin lol
:(
user784668
18:05
Whoa, I just made something that may have some usefulness.
user784668
Yeah, that's what I think, too.
Why the restrictions? How about just having a single function name?
@Fanael Hmmm...at first glance, this seems a lot like Boost Format.
18:12
Slow day.
user784668
@JerryCoffin I know that Boost.Format exists. But this one is much simpler.
@Fanael and probably less flexible and buggy :P
user784668
@ecatmur What restrictions? These about format_? Well, I don't think dangling references are fun.
@Fanael Simpler internally, or simpler to use?
user784668
Is the ping sound so fucking loud for you guys, too?
18:15
LOL
@Fanael I can barely hear it -- but I don't have the headphones on right now...
@Fanael I switched that off a long time ago
user784668
@JerryCoffin Internally? Sure. To use? Maybe, I don't know.
user784668
@ecatmur But yeah, a single function name is probably a good idea.
Is it just me, or are real-time vote updates not working?
18:17
it's you :P
And why do all the good questions always show up on days where I'm already repcapped... grr...
@Mysticial I think it's vote updates in general. Right now, all the first page and half the second show no votes or answers.
@JerryCoffin I mean the vote counts. I just made a major edit to this answer and I didn't realize that it immediately got 2 upvotes. I'm capped, so there's no rep increase. But the vote count didn't increase until I refreshed.
@TonyTheLion Quite imature.
18:20
posted on August 21, 2012 by Herb Sutter

The first panel from C++ and Beyond 2012 is now available on Channel 9: On Static If, C++11 in 2012, Modern Libraries, and Metaprogramming Andrei Alexandrescu, Scott Meyers, Herb Sutter Channel 9 was invited to this year’s C++ and Beyond to film some sessions (that will appear on C9 over the coming months!)… At the [...]

@EtiennedeMartel oh :(
there is anyone who knows how to proper setup Eclipse c++ using Pleora SDK (ebus)
thx
@TonyTheLion I did not say it was unfunny.
Okay... nevermid. The vote-updates are working. (it just increased to 3) I guess a burst of multiple edits in a short amount of time can mess it up.
@EtiennedeMartel Oh, well I posted it because I thought it was funny. I don't care how immature it may be.
18:24
@Ricardo_arg yeah, so what?
right mumblers, I'm on and this time I'm not going to go watch a movie and forget
Ah, so that's what was wrong.
user784668
The main reason I wrote that is because I don't like that Boost.Format uses operator%.
It somewhat makes sense.
The previous person at this computer had gone in and put a pitch shift on the equalizer. Thought my headphones were broken.
18:29
who of you guys here uses codeblocks, by any chance?
user784668
And because I could. Well, this is probably the real main reason.
Found out what was up with those "memory segments"!
They apparently are similar to the old 16-bit segment system
For string conversions; why not just use ATL?
Isn't MultiByteToWideChar a bit old-fashioned?
@IDWMaster it's built into windows and doesn't need moar libraries
@rubenvb remind me what this does?
@MooingDuck Ahhh.
oh wait, nm.
A README.md could be an idea though.
18:42
that is cheap
Personally I'd still use ATL, but I guess it's just a matter of preference.
Hi everyone.
@ecatmur it executes a command in a string, captures its output to stdout and stderr, and returns the process's exit code.
@IDWMaster I just write a 4 line std::string to std::wstring conversion function around the windows things in some header or other
that much was obvious
from looking at the Unix implementation, that is
Just saying that github.com/rubenvb/Ambrosia should have a README.md
18:44
@rubenvb does it allow replacing the streams? If I want stderr in a std::stringstream for instance?
@ecatmur I didn't implement the Unix one.
@MooingDuck it puts the output in std::strings. It uses pipes, I don't think there's a more direct way to get it into a stringstream than through a string.
Has anyone here attempted to cross-compile an application that uses autotools?
@rubenvb I think I'd prefer a stream, to handle cases where the output is large
I've run into a rather... unusual... problem.
@rubenvb That's not lazy!
18:45
@TonyTheLion A Jedi's gotta do what a Jedi's gotta do!
Tomorrow I’m going to buy a new computer.
@MooingDuck How would a stringstream help? The content is stored somewhere...
or do you mean moving the ReadFile into the extraction operation of the stream?
You need to write a streambuf that does the ReadFile bits.
@R.MartinhoFernandes hehe, I had a streak of non-laziness.
Or Boost.Iostreams.
18:48
int execute_command(const string &command,
std::ostream& string_cout,
std::ostream& string_cerr) //can be file or stringstream or W/E
@MooingDuck That's not lazy either. He's forced to write to them, so if the output is large, he's screwed either way.
@MooingDuck well, compiler output is limited in size, so I don't really care for the extreme case.
To make it lazy you need to return input streams.
@rubenvb fair enough. I would also have... YOU HAVE A BUSY LOOP
I would have read from the pipes and into the output streams during the loop to avoid forcing the OS to buffer all the output in the pipe.
@MooingDuck what loop?
you mean the GetExitCodeProcess loop?
18:52
@rubenvb yes
I put that in cause I was getting STILL_ACTIVE (but the right stderr output was already in the pipe).
what type is error?
@MooingDuck it's my general exception class.
Maybe I'll make a Win32Error someday and learn how to use FormatError or whatever.
But that's a big maybe.
C++11 has a system_error or something already
std::system_error <system_error> from operating system or other C API
well... meh. I'll look into it. Not really keen on stdexcept.
18:56
@rubenvb Make it generic, writing the output to an iterator. If the user wants a string, they use std::back_inserter(some_string). If they want a stream, they pass std::ostream_iterator<char>(some_stream), if they want a vector<char>...well, you get the point.
Sup guys.
@EtiennedeMartel lol
Does emplace_back have any advantage over push_back when using a std::vector<std::shared_ptr<T>>? E.g vec.emplace_back(std::make_shared<T>()) vs vec.push_back(std::make_shared<T>())?
19:00
Possibly.
@JerryCoffin I could. But I really fail to see the point in complicating what I have now :)
@StackedCrooked they're the same
No. It's the same.
emplace_back invokes copy constructor I assume.
19:01
@JerryCoffin even better, I like that
Copy constructor of shared_ptr<T> I mean.
@StackedCrooked no
Ah, move.
@rubenvb Oddly, I find that it can actually make things simpler in a lot of cases.
19:01
But isn't that an implicit move due to temporary being passed?
@JerryCoffin I'll see how my function fits the Unix version of the implementation. Maybe it's not too hard.
now let me be happy that code works :)
Widget window;
Label & hello = Label::Create(window, "Hello!");
Label & goodbye = window.create<Label>("Goodbye!");
@rubenvb shouldn't have put it here then :D
Can I cast a Derived* const to Base* const ?
19:05
@MooingDuck yeah, well, I appreciate the comments. They're all helpful.
@StackedCrooked Why forbid the creation of lone labels?
@NeelBasu yes
@StackedCrooked I like what Qt does. No Create.
@StackedCrooked I prefer the second, though you can make both work.
@MooingDuck Lemme try in VC
19:06
@StackedCrooked Second one looks nice
@R.MartinhoFernandes Labels that are direct child of the desktop window?
@StackedCrooked Is that for Kyrostat?
I prefer window.add(Label("Hello!")).
Didn't Kyrostat die
@Rapptz It will always live on, in our hearts.
19:07
@EtiennedeMartel I toyed with similar ideas in Kyrostat. But that was some time ago and this is unrelated.
@R.MartinhoFernandes But since the window stores it's children as a vector<std::shared_ptr<Widget>> the child widgets should be dynamically allocated. Or would you use copy construction? (Or move?)
@StackedCrooked Oh.
@EtiennedeMartel Well, the reason that I'm now toying with this probably has its origin in Kyrostat :P
Label::Create(window, "Hello!");
    // -1: requires writing a factory function.
    // +1: Intellisense friendly
-1 reads poorly
19:10
@R.MartinhoFernandes Really?
window.create<Label>(...) is less confusing, I think.
lol
templates
Label & goodbye = window.create<Label>("Goodbye!");
    // +1 No need to write additional factory function.
    // +1 Intuitive.
    // -1 Intellisense-unfriendly.
Is there some middle ground to be found here?
Perhaps I should ask on SO.
Fuck Intellisense
problem solved
19:12
Fuck Intelligence
Wait, I mean..
Intellisense is nice.
I like Intellisense :(
It's one of the things I miss from VS
Perfect forwarding can lead to non-obvious compiler errors. Esp if the constructor has overloads.
Go Adobe and use value semantics.
Label goodbye(window, "Goodbye!");
The label registers itself as a child element (of the window) in its constructor?
sbi
sbi
@StackedCrooked Yep: wholetomato.com
19:16
I would be impressed it it can tackle forwarding arguments.
@sbi Aka fuck IntelliSense.
VS2012's intellisense is pretty decent from what I've seen
Then again I've never used Visual Assist so I wouldn't know the difference in the first place
// Qt style, ugh
new Label("Goodbye", window);
I tried to condense perfect-forwarding construction into a few rules of thumb but so far it's been inconclusive. Well, I do have interesting conclusions, but no good rules.
Btw, did you write that "Say no to std::function arguments" thing?
sbi
sbi
19:18
@R.MartinhoFernandes IIRC, VAX can use results from IntelliSense, where they exist. Where not, VAX is usually better than nothing. I have no idea how VAX fares with perfectly forwarding function templates, though. But there is a free trial, after all.
@R.MartinhoFernandes No.
sbi
sbi
@Rapptz Over the years, I have pointed developers in several companies at the trial version of Visual Assist. I'd say that, on average, 70% of them where camping outside their manager's door after the end of the trial period, pressing management into buying it for them.
So if you see zero chance your company would buy VAX for you, and if you don't want to pay for it yourself, do not try it.
@Rapptz VS2012's Intellisense is almost (but not quite) as good as Intellisense in VS 5 with VA-X.
I don't use Visual Studio anymore. Compile times are too slow for me for some reason.
Wow, it's been a while since I wrote a foreach loop without a body.
19:23
@R.MartinhoFernandes What is that?
@StackedCrooked A post someone desperately needs to write.
sbi
sbi
@Rapptz Slow compile-times in VS? Take what I said about VAX, and (do not) look at IncrediBuild. Incredibly(!) great build tool, but not exactly free.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Does it mean to avoid passing std::function objects as arguments. Or to avoid defining std::function that require arguments. Or to avoid using placeholder arguments when binding a function.
@StackedCrooked Avoid this void f(std::function<int()>).
@R.MartinhoFernandes why?
19:26
I sometimes do that, by const-ref.
void setCallback(const std::function<void()>&);
@MooingDuck Doesn't play nice with stuffs :)
Yeah, I know.
I demand proof!
I'm not writing that thing right now.
@R.MartinhoFernandes other than the fact it copies, I don't see a problem
Ugh. I need design help. This thing is icky.
19:28
// @R.MartinhoFernandes you surely meant to promote this style
struct Button {
    struct Controller { virtual void onClick(Button&) const = 0; };
    Button(const Controller *);
};
@LucDanton exactly what Qt does.
@StackedCrooked No. Templates :)
sbi
sbi
BTW, @R.Martinho, from a PS1 script I need to call svn propset svn:externals $newExternals $path. But $newExternals can be a multi-line thingy, so I will have to pass it as a file to svn. (I do rightly assume that the PS command interpreter cannot handle a multi-line string as a cmdlet arg?) So I just use, what? $temp?, to write the variable to a file, use that, and then delete the file?
@StackedCrooked what's wrong with Qt style?
Xeo
Xeo
0
Q: what is the use of getter and setter method?

Jatin Can anyone tell me what is the use of getter/setter method? In one of the interview someone asked me to write a simple class...so, I wrote the class as shown below: class X { int i; public: void set(int ii){ i = ii;} int get(){ return i;} }; Now, The question g...

19:29
@rubenvb It's cumbersome IMO.
Xeo
Xeo
@sbi time for your quasi-classes link again
sbi
sbi
@Xeo Why don't you?
Xeo
Xeo
I don't have it handy, and you always seem to :P
@Xeo And that is why I always use properties in C#. No need to fuck around with that thing.
@sbi AFAIK it passes the argument nicely.
19:31
@Xeo Stepanov mentions that he think's getters and setters are silly and prefers to make the variables just public instead.
Xeo
Xeo
@EtiennedeMartel Properties are just a bundle of getters and setters
@StackedCrooked See the quasi classes link @sbi is hopefully going to post sometime soon :)
@StackedCrooked how so?
@Xeo If you have automatic properties in the language, it's a bit silly to expose fields directly.
@Xeo Still much less verbose, and more natural to use.
sbi
sbi
@Xeo It's a dupe and about to be closed. I did add the link to the duplicated question, though.
See here, why getters and setters are bad. — sbi 43 secs ago
If you upvote that comment, it becomes visible.
19:32
@Xeo Also, you can easily expose the getter and not the setter.
Xeo
Xeo
There, opened it and now it's in my browser history, easily accessible
@R.MartinhoFernandes Sure, can do the same thing with just implementing getters :P
@Xeo But you don't have to implement anything.
Xeo
Xeo
hm, right
sbi
sbi
@Xeo I never have it handy, I always ask google for "quasi classes" (no quotes) in order to get the link.
public int Size { get; private set; } Done.
19:33
hello my friends
Xeo
Xeo
right right
sbi
sbi
@StackedCrooked Linky?
How is everybody doing?
sbi
sbi
My comment needs one more upvote in order to become visible by default.
upvoted you
sbi
sbi
@Rapptz Thanks. It's now visible by default.
However, in that question the getter/setter advocates have won by a very wide margin. (Top answer is pro getters/setters at >90.) I see no chance that we could change that.
I don't see it
sbi
sbi
@StackedCrooked Thanks!
Can someone think of a better solution to my problem? ideone.com/Mmbfw
He did word it a little differently. He probably didn't mean to promote just making members public.
@sbi Search for "getters".
19:38
Am I fucking invisible today?
A yes well suffice.
@Chimera See what?
No Chimera
> It is written in a clear object-oriented style with getters and setters. The proponents of this style say that the advantage of having such functions is that it allows programmers later on to change the implementation. What they forget to mention is that sometimes it is awfully good to expose the implementation.
@R.MartinhoFernandes sbi's comment
19:39
I don't see it
139
Q: Why use getters and setters?

Dean JWhat's the advantage of using getters and setters - that only get and set - instead of simply using public fields for those variables? If getters and setters are ever doing more than just the simple get/set, I can figure this one out very quickly, but I'm not 100% clear on how: public String fo...

@R.MartinhoFernandes could have validate return the validated string back
sbi
sbi
@StackedCrooked I was just about to bark at you for throwing me a >200 page document... :-/
Xeo
Xeo
@Collin this
@Collin And do what?
19:40
thanks... I see it.
and just call storage(validate(first), validate(last))
@sbi Open it with Google Chrome. It renders PDFs nicely :)
Has anyone been using the new review system?
Xeo
Xeo
@Collin : storage(validate(first, last))
I was taught getter/setters are a good thing. Guess I will have to read why they aren't.
sbi
sbi
19:40
@StackedCrooked For reasons you might be able to infer, I prefer Acrobat Pro. :)
@R.MartinhoFernandes your validate is extremely unsafe.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Function that validates and returns a string.
@Xeo Oh, yeah, read it a bit wrong
Getters and setters put you in a stateful way of thinking.
@rubenvb Why? Also, it's not really representative.
19:41
I was always taught Getters/Setters were good but I never actually enjoyed writing them. I felt like they ruined the point of making the properties private in the first place.
@sbi So, you are using the Pitstop plugin? :D
sbi
sbi
@StackedCrooked Nope.
@LucDanton Oh, duh.
Xeo
Xeo
@StackedCrooked depends on how those getters/setters are implemented :) You could think of vector::size() and vector::resize() as a getter/setter pair
@sbi Just kidding.
19:43
Ah, now I see why I had this design...
The validate function was quite different before.
And I changed the validate function exactly so I could get rid of this base crap. I should have taken notes.
@Xeo Yeah. size/resize is 1000x nicer than clunky getSize and setSize though :P
Btw, Stepanov also mentions that he's a non-believer in functional programming.
sbi
sbi
@StackedCrooked Yeah, I knew.
-1, because getters and setters buy you next to nothing over public data ("It is hard for me to imagine an evolution of a system that would let you keep the interface of get and set, but be able to change the implementation." Alexander Stepanov) and promote a style that leads to "quasi classes" (Conrad Weisert), which are an abomination onto OO. — sbi 22 secs ago
@StackedCrooked Huh? He created the STL, and through that introduced FP into C++! ISTR him being accused of dissing OO, but FP?
He's getting old. Memory isn't that good any more.
@sbi I mean the immutability aspect.
I should see if I can find the source.
IIRC he's worried that 'FP' might turn into a buzzword, and that he's not a stickler to any one style.
19:48
@StackedCrooked But mutants are abominations!
sbi
sbi
This I like:
12
A: Why use getters and setters?

Moshe LeviWell, It seems like the right place to quote an amusing post titled "Slutty Types" from Davy Brion's blog. Slutty Types are types which: give you access to their privates without too many difficulties don’t really care about your intentions, or if they do, aren’t very clear on tha...

> We believed Backus's idea that we should liberate programming from the von Neumann style, and we didn't want to have side effects. That limited our ability to handle very many algorithms that require the notion of state and side effects.
sbi
sbi
@StackedCrooked From 1995! I think that's the very paper over which he was accused to diss OO!
@sbi He does. But he was more bold in this interview. (I don't know the date of this one, but I suspect the late ninenties when Java was becoming a hype.)
sbi
sbi
@R.MartinhoFernandes That's a paper from 1995, young man tin comrade. At that time you likely were still too young to even know what "FP" stood for.
19:51
"Filho da puta", aka "son of a bitch". I knew that at age eight.
In 1995 I was 15 and played Myst.
sbi
sbi
@StackedCrooked Ah, the STLport interview! Yeah, that's from the 90s, too (although I think later than 95, BICBW), and now ISTR that this got the discussions rolling.
@R.MartinhoFernandes: you've path like : 2012/08/15/rule-of-zero.html
so how did you create that?
did you create the date-path manually? or they're created automatically?
Just put files in a folder named _posts with the right pattern and it does the rest automatically.
sbi
sbi
19:54
> I tend to lose interest after the problem is solved - if I know the solution, why bother making it known to the rest of the world. — Stepanov
@R.MartinhoFernandes: ohh.. so what does xx means? not published?
@Nawaz Yeah, I use that to prevent it from publishing while I'm still working on the posts.
@R.MartinhoFernandes well, I guess it's not more unsafe than taking a pair of iterators.
ohh..
sbi
sbi
> I have yet to see an interesting piece of code that comes from these OO people. [...] I find OOP technically unsound. It attempts to decompose the world in terms of interfaces that vary on a single type. To deal with the real problems you need multisorted algebras - families of interfaces that span multiple types. I find OOP philosophically unsound [...] — saying that everything is an object is saying nothing at all. — Stepanov

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