@ltjax and some cannot. I mean, sure, you can always generate a C++03 program which does the same thing, but the code would be very different, and it would not look equivalent
@ltjax I don't see that it would help, but it would work according to your spec. :-/ You have C++11 code (which C++03 code is), and you can compile it with a C++03 compiler.
@ltjax vendors are still struggling to build a compiler which generates machine code for all C++11 features. I think a compiler which generates C++03 code instead is pretty far down on their list of priorities
@ManofOneWay I suppose lambdas are rather easy to emulate in C++03 anyway. Just create function objects. Tedious, yeah, and grepping for lambdas is probably absolutely impossible, but the translation in itself should be fairly straightforward.
@sbi Sure, but my point is that as long as they're busy with the frontend, creating a new backend which generates C++03 code is probably not a top priority
@jalf I suppose no commercial vendor will actually spend time on a C++03-generating backend — no matter what their progress is in other areas. If you need something like this, clang is likely your only hope.
Maybe, @ltjax, you start all over, this time trying to tell us what problem your are trying to solve, rather than asking about the dead end you ran into when you tried to solve it?
Ah, come off, @jalf. It's a legitimate question, and many here would like to discuss the feasibility. It's just that @ltjax came across as if he (thought he) needed it for some project.
like autos and lambdas are the prominent changes that VS2010 supports, and if you were to switch a code-base to that, but later needed to go back, such a tool might be very valuable
And if you were to rely on such a tool, it would have to generate readable code, which is pretty mcuh the one thing I can guarantee that generated code is never going to be :)
C++ compilers that target C are not intended for their output to be read by humans. If you want a tool that accepts C++11 and output something not for humans, you want a C++11 compiler.
@ltjax but would you be willing to bet your product's code base on it? ;) Converting lambdas to functors is a pretty intrusive change, which would not be pretty. And as I said, getting rid of rvalue references would require a huge rewrite of pretty much everything. Which would be unreadable
@ltjax but if you want to do what you say you want to do, then you have to deal with them too. They're used a lot under the hood in the standard library, for example. And your code likely calls into the standard library, so it relies on rvalue refs
I see basically two answers to your question: Any plan or roadmap involving actually using or relying on such a tool: run away screaming. As a purely academic exercise: what you're asking is possible, and could be interesting to work on... but just not very useful in practice
@ltjax er, yes. Having to maintain code containing randomly named types is a lot worse than having to maintain code which during compilation generates randomly named types ;)
@ltjax but you'd be adding a lot of complexity to the build process, and have a very high likelihood of introducing nasty bugs. And then there are all the compiler changes which are nothing to do with C++11, but simply bug fixes and such. There is a lot of code which simply behaves differently in VC2010 than in VC2005
If you have to deliver VC2005-compatible code you're going to have to write it and maintain it in VC2005. There is no sane way around that. You'll just have to figure out an upgrade path. How and when can you migrate your customers to something newer
@ltjax but it is. :) Once again, how will you debug code which you wrote in VC10, and which works fine in VC10, but which triggers nonconformant behavior in VC8?
@ltjax and once again you are not going to get minimal changes. Most uses of auto can be trivially replaced. Lambdas can be replaced fairly automatically, but the code would look very different, and be a pain to follow. And then there are all the other changes which sneak in anyway, because they're used in the standard library, or in other third-party dependencies
At the end of the day, what would this buy you? You'd have to spend most of your time working in VC8 with the generated code, so you wouldn't get much use out of lambdas or auto anyway. So why introduce all that complexity to get them? The end result would just be that the code you have to maintain gets less readable (even if it's only a little bit less readable) than it is today, and the likelihood of encountering nasty compiler bugs would go up dramatically.
I was hoping the conversion would be relatively painless. either way, there's no way to know without a conversion tool and results or a counter-example where it just doesn't work
@jalf just use vim+make. As long as the code generation step inserts proper #file/#line directives, it should be relatively transparent working with error messages :) <choke/>
No way? Except common sense, maybe. Also, you're free to build it. I'm just not sure there is much of a market for it. On the upside: it should be a breeze to implement with a recent libclang. Just prepare for long build times and a lot of 'WTF' moments regarding build configuration changes
@ltjax Not true. Most of what we're saying is known. We can't know exactly how painful it would be, but there's no way around the simple truth that: (1) you would have to pass your code through two compilers instead of one, which means that the likelihood of encountering compiler bugs increases (if either compiler fails to handle the code, you have a problem), and the testing cycle would get longer, as you have to compile the code twice, and then debug in a different IDE than you wrote it in
Those are real, unavoidable problems which follow logically from what you want to do
@jalf Strikingly resembling my own response to that
@jalf Allthough you could use the same IDE for debugging. Just use a compiler that honours #file/#line directives for debug info (which, I think, is all of them)
@ltjax yes, but that's what I'm saying: there is a third option: get autos, lambdas and a sane build chain, and get rid of incompetent management. Find another job
@ltjax but you would be stuck without autos and lambdas in your day job, because most of your day job woudl be spent in VC8 debugging this obfuscated code :)
@ltjax No, there is nothing the tool can do about it. Because the real problem is not how it generates code for lambdas. The real problem is that while you write your code, you target one compiler, and when you run it, it goes through a 7 year old compiler which, to be honest, is buggy as shit in comparison. So the code you wrote stops working in all sorts of interesting ways, and you have to debug it
@ltjax Well apparently, abstraction is well nigh impossible. Abstraction, ok, but not if you mean modern, useful, productivity enhancing abstractions :)
not exactly. I think your company has some fundamental and crippling political problems, btu I also think you're looking for a short-sighted technical band-aid to the technical symptoms that are caused by the political problems
I think that your technical "solution" is going to cause you far more technical problems than you have today. It's a band-aid, it treats a few of the symptoms by adding enough complexity to guarantee that the underlying problems only get worse in the long term
@ltjax well, put it this way. It's like some guy took a massive shit in a public toilet and blocked it up, and then the guy after had this shits, and just had to lay it on top. And you come along and think you'll give it a quick flush, washing the decks with shit, and then think you might be able to do a rather large shit to help push the lot through
Frontotemporal dementia (FTD) is the clinical syndrome caused by degeneration of the frontal lobe of the brain. The degeneration may extend to the temporal lobe. FTD is the clinical manifestation of frontotemporal lobar degeneration, and the second most common pre-senile dementia after Alzheimer's disease.
Signs and symptoms
FTD is traditionally difficult to diagnose due to the heterogeneity of the condition. This heterogeneity means the signs and symptoms can vary dramatically between patients. Symptoms are classified into three groups which underlie the functions of the frontal and tem...
@thecoshman Some scientists suggest that Ravel composed his (repetitive) Bolero because of the same condition. He was just 'compelled' to create the same thing over and over. Somehow
@TonyTheLion Although they'd never admit it, my guess is that most of the people who'd really object to this would be women angry at being reminded that they're old enough that men don't really want to look at their butts any more.
@sbi Yes, the "won't you think of the children" argument. I think most of the time it's a cover for something entirely different. I always laugh at the parent's groups who object to specific TV shows because of all the references to sex -- and have watched them carefully enough that they can tell you the exact count.
Beldar Conehead: An owner's manual to a Ford Lincoln Mercury Sable. Highmaster: Ford Lincoln Mercury Sable? Beldar Conehead: A personal conveyance named after its inventor, an assassinated ruler, a character from Greco-Roman myth and a small furry mammal. Highmaster: Ah.
@sehe I remember some movie from the 80s(?), where the male protagonist desperately wants to bed that woman (like every other male, and finally succeeds. However this woman can only ever have/enjoy/want sex to the sounds of Ravel's Bolero. But this is the age of record players, so the guy has to jump out of bed and restart the damn records every few minutes... I am hazy on the details, and I forgot the movie's title, but I do remember that scene.
@thecoshman Oh fuck off, "pardon me French" is pretty idiomatic; even me, despite being a bloody furriner, knows that. (And, yes, I know the correct phrase would be "I know that", but you and me — sic! — know that nobody says that, maybe with the exception of the queen.)
@KonradRudolph I prefer "bovine excrements". "Horse manure" is so 1800s.
@JerryCoffin A pirate walks into a bar and orders a beer. The bartender notices he's got a large steering wheel in his pants and inquires. The pirate replies, "Aargh, it's driving me nuts."
@sbi I guess you wouldn't watching the video. :) Rather, you probably feel more confused than before.
It is a movie inspired by a famous Saturday Night Live skit about this family which played with the idea that they were illegal aliens, but like, outer space aliens
They had this strange habit of describing things thoroughly in order to convey an idea which to most people would be easy to comprehend
Say you want to iterate over a sequence [0 to n] in a random order, visiting every element exactly once. Is there any way to do this in O(1) memory, i.e. without creating an [1..n] sequence with std::iota and running it through std::random_shuffle?
Some kind of iterator spitting out the sequence...