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20:01
@sbi Cute, but has little to do with reality, at least in C+. In C++, the functions should not be named "get" or "set" (or anything close). They should be named operator= (or just a ctor) and operator T:
template <class T>
class controlled {
T data;
public:
controlled(T const &i) : data(i) {}
operator T() { return data; }
};
sbi
sbi
operator T()? Boo!
@sbi: explicit operator T()?
sbi
sbi
@JerryCoffin I understood that as if he was arguing against getters/setters.
> You can't write a generic max() in Java that takes two arguments of some type and has a return value of that same type. Inheritance and interfaces don't help. And if they cannot implement max or swap or linear search, what chances do they have to implement really complex stuff? These are my litmus tests: if a language allows me to implement max and swap and linear search generically - then it has some potential. — Stepanov
@sbi Maybe -- or maybe against public data.
@R.MartinhoFernandes: there is another folder called _layouts. What is it about? where did you read them about?
20:04
@JerryCoffin oh yeah, operator= for a struct with 5 members where you need to set one. I can see how that simplifies things.
@sbi I think he was arguing for it judging from his last sentence It's just another funny way to tell you why you should use encapsulation.
@sbi Nothing wrong with it in this case. Keep in mind that we're just replacing (say) int with controlled<int>-- but it's supposed to look like int to users as if it was just an int.
controlled<int> can likely be added afterwards without breaking code.
If previously it was just int.
@rubenvb Yes, it does, and no you're probably not seeing. If you need five members, you encapsulate each of them in one of these.
@JerryCoffin why?
create a class for each and every variable?
no thanks.
@StackedCrooked Yes, that's part of the point. The only time things break is if they already depended on an implicit conversion, and the conversion back to T "uses up" the one that's allowed.
sbi
sbi
@JerryCoffin Over almost a decade, I have used implicit conversion operators very rarely. Yet every single one of them was, in time, found to be a problem (because it was kicking in unexpectedly) and had to be removed — some of them at great cost (because their use had spread over hundreds of kLoC). So I have been burned several times, and I learned my lesson. I won't touch them with a ten foot pole anymore.
@rubenvb It's a template. Where you had class X { int a, b, c; } you replace it with class X { controlled<int> a, b, c; };
@JerryCoffin I honestly see absolutely no sense in this.
20:07
@R.MartinhoFernandes: Looks like I've to install Jekyll. Is that so?
I sometimes use a Initialized<T> wrapper class if I feel too lazy to implement a default constructor that initializes my member variables. E.g. struct size { initialized<int> width, height; }; struct point { initialized<int> x, y; };
@Nawaz Only if you want to run it locally (which you may want if you want to do some experiments without putting stuff online).
@R.MartinhoFernandes: Ohh... thanks.
and how did you customize your page?
I mean, things like Flaming Dangerzone authored by R. Martinho Fernandes?
Or it is a theme?
@StackedCrooked size somevar = {};?
It's in the layouts. The layouts are the parts that are shared by several pages.
20:10
and you've written the layout yourself, by hand? or generated?
@rubenvb Relying on the user to do the right thing? No thanks :D
@Nawaz I "stole" it from somewhere. Can't really remember where.
Then I tweaked a few things.
Wordpress PHP forums.
@sbi And I've used classes like this one for over two decades, and have yet to have to remove even one, and have any other expense from it. The main thing is that you're basically creating a type that acts like a single underlying type, and to the outside world is that type -- except that you can add on whatever else you want.
@R.MartinhoFernandes: I see.. looks like I've to steal it from you, and then make few changes according to my taste. :D
sbi
sbi
20:12
@StackedCrooked I haven't written any drop-in replacements for built-ins in a long time. (The last one I remember was 1998, I think.) Maybe I'd think differently about implicit conversions if I had written such a beast. OTOH, I have written an opaque handle type which had an operator bool-like(), and this (after years!) led to a very subtle bug and was thus removed.
@JerryCoffin Also handy for debugging. If the value seems to mysteriously change you can add a breakpoint in the assignment operator. Or you can just disable assignment and let the compiler point out where assignments happen. :D
@sbi Well, I only recently learned about the pitfalls of operator bool. (By you, but you probably don't remember.)
:)
Does VS2012 support explicit operator bool already?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Does it support NotCrashingAllTheFuckingTime already?
Oooh, someone's pissed.
@EtiennedeMartel Sometimes it doesn't crash.
sbi
sbi
20:15
@JerryCoffin I once dealt with a smart pointer type that was derived from an early implementation of boost::shared_ptr. It had an operator bool(). After a few months of working with it, I created a map with such pointers in it, and, trying to find a bug in my code, I was surprised that it always only had one element, no matter how many I put in there.
It turned out they had forgotten to implement operator<() for that smart pointer, so when std::map invoked it, the pointers were converted to bool and those where compared, with the result that all non-MULL pointers compared equal. That was a very subtle thing, and it had been in their codebase for years, and cause god know what subtle bugs that nobody ever found...
@rubenvb As is (with controlled enforcing no constraints) it doesn't accomplish anything. The sense comes in when (for example) you want an integer that's always within a specified range. ideone.com/ZTLG1
@sbi At least it was fast.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Maybe it's only the XAML editor, and maybe it's intentional (after all, those Expression Blend licenses aren't gonna sell themselves), but damn, that fucker is incredibly unstable.
Oh yeah, the XAML editor is garbage.
sbi
sbi
@StackedCrooked Was it the story I just posted (again)?
20:17
@sbi Which means that the map only contained two entries at most? Or was it a multimap?
sbi
sbi
@StackedCrooked Since I didn't put any NULL pointers into the map, "it always only had one element".
@sbi A little more stern. I had just posted my attempt at a smart pointer class which has operator bool but did not implement operator< :)
@sbi So it was like a singleton?
@sbi Yes -- the problem here is that you have one type (pointer) but allow a conversion to something else entirely (bool). Here we're dealing with something that that's merely a constrained version of a type (e.g., int) that allows conversion back to only its "base" type. The conversion is never unexpected -- a pointer that can silently become a bool is surprising. An int that can silently become an int -- not so much.
sbi
sbi
@JerryCoffin "I haven't written any drop-in replacements for built-ins in a long time. Maybe I'd think differently about implicit conversions if I had written such beasts."
Is there a SE site where I can ask about credit score issues? I'm getting conflicting answers regarding whether one should leave small balances on credit cards or pay them off completely every month.
sbi
sbi
20:20
51 mins ago, by 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?
Foo<Bar<T, U>>(); // closing brackets without a space still make me nervous. PTSD?
sbi
sbi
@R.MartinhoFernandes ^
@sbi What about it?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Get this: there's a checkbox in the settings that you can check to only show the XAML editor by default (and not that ugly "designer" thing). Guess how it's implemented? When the box is checked, they simply hide the designer after loading. How is this relevant? Well, if you try to load a Ribbon control in the designer, it crashes, so when opening such file, you have to mash the Escape button to cancel the loading of the designer and skip right to the XAML.
sbi
sbi
@R.MartinhoFernandes Damn. Did I overlook you answering?
20:21
Yes.
50 mins ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
@sbi AFAIK it passes the argument nicely.
sbi
sbi
@R.MartinhoFernandes Oh, thanks! That would indeed be great!
I'll try it right away.
@sbi The fact that the type is built in is less relevant than that fact that it is (and only ever acts like) one type. Instantiate the bounded class I linked to over (say) an arbitrary precision integer type, and it's no longer a built-in type -- but continues to make perfect sense.
@EtiennedeMartel lol. I've always wanted the designer just gone, but never found that checkbox. But it doesn't really help that it still loads it.
Blend is really much better.
Have you tried kaxaml.com?
sbi
sbi
@JerryCoffin Well, that smart pointer was meant to replace a built-in pointer, and still blew it. I think this boils down to what you said: The smart pointer didn't implement operator T*(), but operator bool() — and that was wrong. (Not that operator T*() would have been much safer, but operator bool() was unsafe and did something alien.)
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah, but it's not that much more stable, and it's hard to write XAML without ReSharper's autocomplete facilities.
20:24
Oh, R# wasn't around to help with XAML when I used it.
@sbi Yes -- with a smart pointer, you probably don't want to give access to the underlying value at all. I had a little the same experience, but came to a slightly different conclusion: smart pointers are unusually difficult types to do well, and rarely provide all that much benefit either, so I almost never use them (though no, I don't use raw pointers much either).
sbi
sbi
@JerryCoffin Yeah, James Kanze argued like that the other day. I find it odd, though. When I did what I told above, I wrote a parser (for XPath), and had to allocate nodes and put them into trees. I have no idea how would have made this without pointers.
Hmm, U"\x200000" compiles but u"\x200000" doesn't. WTF.
Oh, wait, makes perfect sense.
@R.MartinhoFernandes My head is a mushroom. That does not make sense.
@sbi The one time I did any code dealing with xpath (well, really with xquery) was so long ago I can't remember. It probably did use raw pointers, but I don't remember enough about it to even guess how I'd try to do the same today.
20:37
@EtiennedeMartel The first one works fine because 0x200000 fits on a char32_t. The second one doesn't because there's no way to encode 0x200000 in UTF-16.
@EtiennedeMartel Unless memory fails me, u signifies UTF-16, so an individual value should be no more than 65535/0xffff.
@R.MartinhoFernandes those aren't valid codepoints
@JerryCoffin but a single codepoint can be up to 0x10FFFF (his value is above even that)
@JerryCoffin Nah, u"\x1F4A9" works fine (but has two code units, plus null).
@MooingDuck That's why I'm using \x instead of \U or \u (this is for a test).
@R.MartinhoFernandes Ah, didn't realize that it would convert from code points to code units (then again, have hardly used it at all yet).
my coworkers told me it'd be faster to recompile all projects than to figure out which 4ish projects need compilling and just compile those few. That was four hours ago, still compiling. It's up to project #244. I believe my coworkers were mistaken.
sbi
sbi
20:39
@JerryCoffin It's not really related to XPath. But if you write a parser, you likely will have to instantiate arbitrary single objects at arbitrary times and put them into arbitrary data structures. How would you do that if not dynamically allocating them and storing their addresses in pointers?
what the...
public: ERROR HeaderRead(const char *aFileName) {
    ERROR Error = NOT_ENOUGH_MEMORY;
    size_t FileNameLen = strlen(aFileName)+1;
    wchar_t* wFileName = new wchar_t [FileNameLen];
    if (wFileName) {
        MultiByteToWideChar(CP_UTF8, 0, aFileName, -1, wFileName, FileNameLen);
        Error = HeaderRead(wFileName);
        delete[] wFileName;
    }
    return (Error);
}
I count... many things wrong
@sbi Most parsers I've written (at least recently at all) have been for block-oriented languages. In them, a block had a container of locals (or something similar).
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yes, that makes sense. What does not is that my head is a mushroom.
lol
@MooingDuck What's that from?
@R.MartinhoFernandes my company's code :( (which is why I've never told you guys where I work)
sbi
sbi
20:44
@JerryCoffin And those weren't polymorphic?
@MooingDuck I hate it when someone puts parentheses around a return value as if return was a function.
I'm trying to figure out if a buffer overflow is possible there, but I think it always overallocates.
MultiByteToWideChar converts from UTF-8 to UTF-16?
@R.MartinhoFernandes yes. It always goes to UTF16, first parameter is source encoding.
@sbi Not that I recall, no. It might have been better if they had been, but they weren't.
20:46
Then no, you can't have a buffer overflow. It's just a massive waste.
@R.MartinhoFernandes as well as being weird and potentially leaking
Any codepoint that needs surrogates is encoded with four bytes in UTF-8, and that function allocates eight.
sbi
sbi
@MooingDuck A company I used to work for uses something like this (code slightly changed to protect the innocent, hopefully I didn't screw it):
std::vector<wchar_t> result;
const int len = MultiByteToWideChar( CP_UTF8
                                   , 0
                                   , reinterpret_cast<LPCSTR>(source.c_str())
                                   , static_cast<int>(source.size())
                                   , NULL
                                   , 0
                                   );
result.resize( static_cast<std::size_t>(len) );
const int cbytes = MultiByteToWideChar( CP_UTF8
                                      , MB_PRECOMPOSED
@MooingDuck Yeah -- normally when you call MultiBytetoWideChar, you call it once with a 0-length buffer. That'll tell you the buffer size you need. You then allocate it and call a second time to do the actual conversion.
-2
Q: The Avengers unified programming language

tuğrul büyükışıkIs there a programming language that is compatible with many languages? Wouldnt this help compatibility over many things? Example: C/C++ and Java and Fortran and DarkBasic and Assembler = Avengers Code example: MAKE OBJECT CUBE 1,100 //this is 3D-cube creation (from DarkBasic) int len=sizeof(...

WTF is this.
20:50
wtf?
@R.MartinhoFernandes I believe that's called a "troll"...
@JerryCoffin that's what my code does
@JerryCoffin ideone.com
@MooingDuck Yup -- if I'd seen your code before I posted, I wouldn't have bothered. Oops, wait. That's no your code, it's @sbi's.
@sbi weird formatting. Also isn't that a little cast-happy?
Wouldn't it help to have a vehicle that was a car, truck, bus, boat, ship, and airplane at the same time? — sbi 57 secs ago
You forgot about it being a bus stop as well.
20:53
29
Q: Is there a word to describe someone who tends to disagree with others only to upset them?

ArchWhat's the word to describe someone who acts arrogantly and always disagrees with others unreasonably in order to upset people around him/her? [I'm not looking for adjectives like unpleasant, annoying, unfriendly, rude, I'm looking for a more specific term like opinionated, didactic, loquacious,...

Anti-social behavior.
@Mysticial Asshole?
Troll?
sbi
sbi
@MooingDuck Originally, the code converts between any two encodings, figuring out the functions to call and the parameters to pass from template arguments at compile-time. That's quite complex and distracting from the point I was trying to make, so I simplified it. A few of the casts might be unnecessary now.
A stay-away-from.
20:55
@R.MartinhoFernandes I think troll is better. Asshole implies that it's always wrong to do so -- but sometimes a bit of trolling gets people to sit back and think about things they've taken for granted. Just for example, @litb does a fair amount of trolling, but he's not an asshole.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah, "asshole", "dick", and "jerk" were the first words that came to mind.
sbi
sbi
> [I'm not looking for adjectives like unpleasant, annoying, unfriendly, rude, I'm looking for a more specific term like opinionated, didactic, loquacious, gregarious ]
@sbi ah, neat
sbi
sbi
On the Internet, that's an essential part of the job description of a troll. — ЯegDwight yesterday
@JerryCoffin Hmm. Ok.
20:58
@Mysticial Usually people don't disagree with other only to upset them. The typical scenario is that the asshole simply isn't capable of even considering the notion that he might be wrong.
sbi
sbi
> I probably published 20 papers and a book. [...] The book is "The Ada Generic Library: Linear List Processing Packages", by David R. Musser and Alexander A. Stepanov [...]. It is not really worth reading. — Stepanov
@StackedCrooked I disagree, I've definitely (intentionally) been an asshole to someone before.
Being an asshole by disagreeing with the other person only to upset him? It strikes me as a little odd.
21:01
@R.MartinhoFernandes Of course, in Johannes' case, it helps a lot that he seems to be quite a bit smarter than this Tugrul guy (about whom I'd tend to agree -- asshole isn't too far off). Oh, and speaking of the ...devil...
Unless the other person acts really funny when somebody disagrees with him. In that case I'd also disagree intentionally for entertainment purposes.
@StackedCrooked I'm intentionally disagreeing with you to upset you. :)
i'm so glad you don't consider me as an asshole
Yeah, we don't. But you are.
21:03
It's a HAS-A or IS-A? Or both?
@R.MartinhoFernandes You are contradicting yourself.
i'm such a dumb boy. all i'm doing is reading the spec and citing it
I wonder if the most knowledgeable ones are also good at creating software. I mean non-trivial stuff.
@JohannesSchaub-litb Yup -- and in the process, getting people to look at things they took for granted.
Discovering new ways to get access to private variables or to apply sfinae in a way that doesn't violate the standard requires more than just memorization.
At least that's what I suspect, having not memorized the standard.
@StackedCrooked From what I've seen, some are, some aren't. The main trait I'd associate with people who write non-trivial software is being stubborn -- unwilling to quit, no matter how impossible the task seems to be.
21:08
Hello
Any opengl guys out there?
@JerryCoffin Yeah, and being mostly interested the end-result rather than the language itself.
I find myself shifting a little to the language-lawyer side of the spectrum. This chat is rubbing off on mee.
I'm not getting why this code doesn't compile (I don't really understand the compiler error):


std::string exclam = "!";
std::string message = "Hello" + " world" + exclam;
"Hello" + " world" should be "Hello" + std::string("world"); or "std::string("Hello") + " world"
could anyone enlighten me?
it says invalid operands of types 'const char [6]' and 'const char [8]' to binary 'operator+'
Well, what's not clear about that?
21:12
@FlorianMargaine you cant concatenate string literals with +
Now that's not clear for normal people.
@StackedCrooked Or "hello"_s + " world"
"Hello" " world" + exclaim;
std::string operator"" s(char const* s) { return s; }
"Hello"s + " world"s + exclam;
// :D
@ecatmur Oh yeah, I should check that out.
21:13
@FlorianMargaine "hello" is not a std::string. It's something that can be converted to a std::string. But it's real type is an array of const chars.
@StackedCrooked At least for me, the hard part is convincing myself to write something good, then move one, instead of spending forever polishing that piece.
I'm an obsessive polisher as well.
@ecatmur is _s in the standard library? :o
@MooingDuck but this works:
@RadekSlupik No. But as you note it's a one-liner.
21:14
std::string hello = "Hello";
std::string message = hello + ", world" + "!";
@FlorianMargaine addition is left-associative
The first + is applied first, yielding a new std::string.
Associativity. Image putting () around the operations.
(hello + ", world") + "!"
@FlorianMargaine hello isn't a string litteral.
21:15
Get it now?
@EtiennedeMartel but ", world" and "!" are
@StackedCrooked yeah, thanks
Lol, I just made that up. Dunno if it's right.
@StackedCrooked you are
@FlorianMargaine Yeah, but then you're concatenating a std::string with a litteral, which yields another std::string, which you're concatenating with another litteral.
@EtiennedeMartel yup I get it now, thanks
21:16
@FlorianMargaine Short answer: for + to work, at least one of the operands has to be a std::string first.
Shut up about strings everyone and come on mumble already.
:P
@MooingDuck C++ has some quirks here and there related to order to evaluation. Hence my doubts about my reasoning.
@RadekSlupik I'm at work. And even then, I would only go there if I get the chance to hear @CatPlusPlus' sexy voice.
@RadekSlupik You wanna talk so badly? :P
21:17
@StackedCrooked yes, but the arithmatic ones should be obvious :D
324>------ Build started: Project: Archive, Configuration: Debug Win32 ------
@MooingDuck Where's the rest??
@StackedCrooked you want the other 27367 lines of logs from this build?
21:20
Maybe not all of them.
(it's not done yet, I'm just bored)
The sayings of "Luchian Grigore" make no sense at all
1
Q: C++ Templates with unique static members

gexicidea template class has all static members replicated for each instanciation of it. If I want a static member that exists only once for all instanciations, what should I do? Use a normal static field outside of the class template? Would work, but seems unelegant since there is no more association to...

waaaait, unordered_map isn't in VC9 is it?
@JohannesSchaub-litb wat.
> If you want stuff shared between different classes, do it like you would usually do it. Wrap some statics in a third class and that's it.
Yeah, do it Java style! Wrap everything in a class!
sbi
sbi
21:22
> That this is deleted is very unfair. It's criticizing the dominant opinion, but that's not a bad thing, because the dominant opinion in this thread is Wrong™. Technically, this is the only sound answer. Yes, there's one sentence in there ("...is beyond the reach...") that could be considered impolite, but that's easily fixed. — sbi in a flag here
lol
@sbi trying to click the "here" link it randomly clicks on the "flag", "star" and "link with my next message" buttons since that "panel" happens to overlay the link when hovering it
sbi
sbi
@JohannesSchaub-litb Resize your browser window.
Buy a bigger gun screen.
2
@sbi lol then the link will appear at the end of line 3 instead of line 4 haha
but, actually, I have already made it fullscreen :(
sbi
sbi
I find it appalling that a mod comes in and deletes an answer because he disagrees with it for technical reasons.
21:26
What post are you guys talking about?
@sbi Well, technically, the post is a rant rather than an answer.
@R.MartinhoFernandes And turkeys.
Stuffed turkeys.
sbi
sbi
@EtiennedeMartel I disagree.
I believe Scott Meyers advocated getter methods simply because you then never need to doubt whether you need to write p.x or p.x().
Ell
Ell
That's my argument but folks seem to hate it
21:28
@StackedCrooked I disagree with the "use free functions whenever possible" philosophy
@Ell What's your argument, boy?
i take the "use free functions when you feel like it" point of view
Ell
Ell
@StackedCrooked it makes for consistency IMHO
@JohannesSchaub-litb Use free functions whenever possible is a logical consequence of keep interfaces minimal and complete. So it does make sense in my opinion.
This whole discussion exists because C++ doesn't have auto properties.
Ell
Ell
21:29
a.setSomething(30); //happens to check something
b.something = 4; //happens not to check something

a.setSomething(30);
b.setSomething(4); // Consistent!
@Ell Ah, I didn't realize that you were responding to my message :D
This doubt about the usefulness of getter methods is causing me to be a little sloppy in my code :)
@StackedCrooked my code is not a mathematical formular. it can be understood best if you love it. love to mathematically sound models can be harder than to unsound but lovely looking models
For the good of all I guess :D
AThsugakjeherklhkjtlhgwet. I have waaaaay too many templated overloads with a single argument. This is a SFINAE nightmare.
sbi
sbi
29
Q: Is there a word to describe someone who tends to disagree with others only to upset them?

ArchWhat's the word to describe someone who acts arrogantly and always disagrees with others unreasonably in order to upset people around him/her? [I'm not looking for adjectives like unpleasant, annoying, unfriendly, rude, I'm looking for a more specific term like opinionated, didactic, loquacious,...

21:31
@R.MartinhoFernandes i recommend doing away with SFINAE in favor of overloads if possible
@JohannesSchaub-litb I agree that sometimes extra methods are handy. For example a rectangle class only needs to provide location() and a size() methods. However, I like to add methods like: left(), right(), width(), height(), x(), y(), etc...
@JohannesSchaub-litb Doesn't help much. There are about 10 different overloads.
It's a mess either way.
sbi
sbi
@EtiennedeMartel With Johannes, you never know whether he means what he says. Here, I assume he doesn't.
@sbi Are you saying that @JohannesSchaub-litb is a contrarian?
@EtiennedeMartel Au contraire. Je dis que ta mere est delicieux.
sbi
sbi
Sounds Greek to me.
@sbi what did I say that you suspect was meant not serious?
My best crappy French.
@StackedCrooked "délicieuse" was the correct way
21:34
"mère" too :p
sbi
sbi
@JohannesSchaub-litb If you follow the references, you will ultimately arrive at that very posting.
I don't care about that.
but it doesn't mean anything
delicious is used as a food related adjective in french
@StackedCrooked délicieuse.
@EtiennedeMartel Indeed, she is :P
21:35
@sbi ohh i see
well it was meant serious
Ell
Ell
I got an A in french :D
my coworker prefers free functions
sbi
sbi
@JohannesSchaub-litb "...you never know..."
Ell
Ell
although I have forgotten it all now xD
21:36
but I like to keep saying "a.b" instead of sometimes "a.b" and sometimes "b(a)" just because "ah, what are the core sets of the class again? is b built upon the public interface? dammit, now I need to look at the docs again"
@Ell Félicitations!
sbi
sbi
@Ell French. (Note the capitalization. What have you got in English?)
@Ell What you only got to the first letter in the alphabet!?
Ell
Ell
I got an A in English language & literature
That's not even French!
At college English turned out the be the hardest course.
That teacher threw mountains of vocabulary at us.
21:39
i scored 100% in the english course on study :)
and in the previous schools only scored like 70%
on english at study we were allowed to write about computers because it was about technical english, so that was easy xD
100% is impressive. Usually teachers will actively search for little faults to avoid giving 100%.
hmm, I discovered my MSVC was out of date. I went to the Windows Update site, and saw that it has 26 updates for me. I doublechecked, automatic updates is still on. Any idea what could have happened?
multiple guys had 100%, so i guess that was one of the friendly guys xD
Screw it, I'm sticking to only six constructors.
Oh shit, 285 errors instead of 17.
2
21:45
How did you arrive at 6 constructors?
Are you imitating Qt?
@JohannesSchaub-litb that's why we need the extendy member thing
which I cannot recall the actual term for
Extension Methods
public:
    template <typename Range, typename ValidationCallback>
    basic_text(Range const& range, ValidationCallback&&)
    : basic_text(direct{}, EncodingForm::encode(range)) {}
 private:
    template <typename Range>
    basic_text(direct, Range const& range)
    // blah
Any idea why the first ctor is recursive?
@R.MartinhoFernandes sscce
@R.MartinhoFernandes some wierd hole in the rules for picking most specialized wrt public/private?
since the first constructor takes virtually anything?
@R.MartinhoFernandes enable_if
@R.MartinhoFernandes I see that ValidationCallback is not a std::function :)
@StackedCrooked It's a polymorphic function object, so it cannot be a std::function anyway.
21:54
Lamba catpured as template argument is inlineable as opposed to std::function?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Oh.
I always hesitate when writing "inlineable". It's such an odd spelling.
By the way, what is a polymorphic function object?
@StackedCrooked I thought a std::function could hold anything
@StackedCrooked It's easier to inline, yes.
@StackedCrooked virtual operator()(int thign) {};?
@MooingDuck With one signature.
A std::function cannot hold a boost variant static visitor, for example.
@StackedCrooked A polymorphic lambda, but without the nice syntax: struct foo { template <typename T> void f(T) {} };
I would be inclined to name that a generic function object.
21:57
Fuck it, I can't get a SSCCE.
But polymorphic, as in statically polymorphic goes.
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes What problem?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Does having overloads of operator() also make it a polymorphic functor?
His mom isn't self-contained.
21:59
@StackedCrooked he's a robot

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