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00:00
THE GOGGLES!
user3010322
As one example.
@ThePhD Yes, as expected, (data(), size()) is the vector interface used all over there.
You should disable your space
Or your cake
@CatPlusPlus or the computer
00:01
Wait, you use unique_ptr<byte[]> there too. Why is the first one even a vector?
Or the other.
Why are they different.
user3010322
Because one is read out of the file, whose size can be changed.
I see no such thing.
AFAICS data and bytes are lost after.
user3010322
> std::vector<byte, uninitialized_allocator<byte>> bytes( sz ); reader.Read( bytes.data(), sz );
user3010322
sz is not static.
00:03
@AndyProwl Because I'm lazy?
That makes no sense.
@ThePhD That's another thing. What's with "stream" and a known streamsize. This probably means your stream read has a nice DOS opportunity if you can send a bogus streamsize (of, say, a lovely 147GiB)
That's no re sizing.
user1804599
Pass bytes.size() to reader.Read, not sz. Otherwise you have dangerous code duplication.
tbh it looks like you're actually looking for std::unique_ptr<T[]>.
00:03
@JerryCoffin Ah, all right. For a moment I thought Vlad from Moscow hacked your account :P
Static or not irrelevant.
@Rapptz And seems to be vaguely aware of it too!
lol
I want Vlad From Moscow to teach me C++
user1804599
Moss cow.
@AndyProwl Actually, I kind of despise linked lists, and the pain of destroying them is one reason for that (but I've edited in a semi-cheating recursive one that at least works for short lists).
00:06
why am I still awake.
user1804599
Because you’re hungry like a Kenyan.
user3010322
@R.MartinhoFernandes Streams, when reading from file, don't return a std::vector or a T* that fits nicely in a std::unique_ptr. Reading it into a pre-allocated array is my only option.
@ThePhD Go back.
user3010322
Go back where?
You're still not making any sense.
00:08
@JerryCoffin Yep, upvoted now
Back to where I said to stop.
2
user3010322
std::unique_ptr<byte[], decltype( &free )> decoded( WebPDecodeRGBA( data.data( ), data.size(), &width, &height ), &free );
user3010322
This returns a T*
user3010322
It belongs in a std::unique_ptr with a T[] value
user3010322
stream.Read( stuff ) does not return a T*.
user1804599
00:09
std::unique_ptr<char[]> data(new char[sz]); read(data.get(), sz);
You think he'd spot it? Does it need a picture of a spoon with it? ⼔
user1804599
Het is hem ook niet met de paplepel ingegoten.
Character: ⼔ U+2F14
Name: KANGXI RADICAL SPOON
user1804599
And if that’s not what you mean, then I have only one more thing to say: .
A very very radical spoon, IYAM
00:12
uninitialised_allocator is a cheating, lying abomination that I'd dare to say has no place in any codebase.
user1804599
@sehe Wanneer ontmoeten wij?
(that was another papercut from my recent reinstall b.t.w. needed to install kcharselect just now)
user1804599
@BartekBanachewicz come to the Netherlands you fuck.
unsafe_uninitialised_allocator I'll pretend I never heard of.
@rightfold IKR
00:13
@rightfold I dunno :) Perhaps when you come visit?
But cash :/
user1804599
(“You,” not “to.”)
user1804599
@BartekBanachewicz Credit card.
@rightfold I don't own one, I like to spend money I own only.
If some cheap last minute flight appears, I can go
user1804599
00:14
I do own one. Me too.
user1804599
Cool.
@BartekBanachewicz You can use a CC to spend money you own. I do
you know it's a shame I didn't go last time
my friend who was staying there said he saved best weed he could find
We can't make decisions about you application domain. If you know the information to be redundant, then you decide whether it needs to be serialized. — sehe 4 mins ago
user3010322
If you say so.
00:15
he's visiting me now and for new year's eve too
user1804599
@sehe Wednesday. :V
@BartekBanachewicz If I do so, you'd be personally mawing my back yard for something to smoke
@rightfold Entirely possible
@sehe thing is I don't own much money :/
@sehe :F
I would really really like to meet you
Are you a girl, like Xeo?
user1804599
@BartekBanachewicz Ask Intel and tell them you’ll go to two very smart people who know a lot about computers.
00:16
@R.MartinhoFernandes is Xeo a girl and are you drunk?
user3010322
@sehe I don't need a picture of a spoon with it, I can read, thank you.
Oh god. Somehow I managed to appear human on the internet.
Where did it go wrong
@rightfold haha.
well I could take Natalia with me
@ThePhD lol. I like the radical one though
on our winter uni holidays
user1804599
00:17
Tell them you’re going to gather intel.
user3010322
@R.MartinhoFernandes That's incorrect, and while my use case here was replaceable for a unique_ptr, it's not replaceable elsewhere.
but she keeps telling me I should visit her family in UK
which I have no interest in doing ever
@ThePhD It's 100% correct.
00:17
stop talking about programming
@BartekBanachewicz you don't know her sister yet :)
> Constructs an object of type T
Nuff said.
user1804599
@BartekBanachewicz I know somebody who’s called Natalya. She’s also Polish.
user1804599
And Chinese, and Swedish. And Dutch.
@sehe well, her brother's GF is absurdly cool, so that's a reason to go
but otherwise, uh
let's not get into that
00:18
TIL "absurdly cool" is a thing
-14
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user3090559I try to make an android app that users can't unistall it, and I want to disable unistall bottum... I searched on the Internet , and I saw , when an android app installed in system/app directory , you can't unistall it ,but for doing it, you had to root your divice, but I don't want to root my de...

user3010322
@R.MartinhoFernandes I know for a fact in the places where I'm still using .resize, it doesn't cover those use cases in the slightest.
An allocator for which construct doesn't construct an object is clearly cheating and lying.
^^ uh oh...
@sehe you're getting old.
user1804599
00:19
I heard that if you take the most common first name and the most common last name, you’d get one of the least common combinations of first and last names: Mohammed Wong.
2
@BartekBanachewicz "Sigmund, you assistance is requested!"
@ThePhD I'd say those are not use cases vOv
user1804599
Although I’m not 100% sure if it’d really be Mohammed Wong.
@R.MartinhoFernandes mmm?
user3010322
@R.MartinhoFernandes That's your opinion.
user1804599
00:20
Apparently it’s from Transformers.
@sehe I think I coined "abuse cases" before.
okay, imma head downstairs
user1804599
> Dr. Mohammed Wong is a scientist with the National Association of Atmospheric Studies. Incidentally, he has a very common first name and a very common last name. Somehow, this gives him an extremely unique name.
@ThePhD I'm quite confident in it.
@R.MartinhoFernandes How is vector::resize() an abuse case? (apart from the fact you might be alluding to the need for streaming processing with a fixed buffer?)
00:21
The only situation is really interop.
@AndyProwl, did you finally got the MVC problem?
@rightfold Fire the author. "Extremely unique" is nonsense. Either its unique or it's not.
@sehe He didn't mean use cases for resize(). He meant that he uses resize in use cases for his latest abomination.
2 mins ago, by ThePhD
@R.MartinhoFernandes I know for a fact in the places where I'm still using .resize, it doesn't cover those use cases in the slightest.
@Jefffrey I stopped thinking about it when I was suggested to stop thinking about it
00:22
oh, so no final solution came up
So. What did I miss?
@AndyProwl I suggest along with stopping thinking, you send me all your money (and any more you can borrow).
user1804599
@JerryCoffin CREATE TABLE ids ( id integer NOT NULL; SOMEWHAT UNIQUE (id) );
i'm reading the transcript and you just made a big spoiler about the end
@rightfold Sounds like something MySQL would include.
00:22
4 hours ago, by Cat Plus Plus
Fuck design patterns
oh that's the end
user1804599
@JerryCoffin It’s MySQL’s UNIQUE.
Is there something with wireless LAN that makes my connection to NAS die all the time? Never happens on stationary.
@JerryCoffin Right away sir!
Ooh, two new hats
I've brought up non-initializing allocators for std::vector once to Mysticial. In this case the concern was not paying the superfluous default init, while still allowing random-access (i.e. reserve can't help).
00:24
@JohanLarsson Wireless is less dependable. Water is wet. etc.
one is a secret one, ay
user3010322
@R.MartinhoFernandes Compact storage for multiple types is not a use case I happen to sprinkle on "my latest abomination".
No idea what that is, but it doesn't sound like anything vector would be suitable for.
Or any standard container for that matter.
AFAIK they're all homogeneous.
I can see use cases for it, but they're pretty rare. You're basically talking about wrapping malloc(sizeof(T) * N)/free, with a bit of placement new if you need non-built-in T, which you shouldn't be doing this with anyway
user3010322
No, which is why a custom allocator and a variant_view cover the job.
00:27
I may think about an allocator that really transfers ownership of a pre-existing piece of memory. Allocators aren’t sexy though.
@ThePhD Sounds just like the original issue.
44 mins ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
@ThePhD "You have an uninitialised vector. You should now understand that it isn't really usable until initialised."
user1804599
> propagate_on_container_move_assignment
user1804599
I don’t like type names that are verbal.
user1804599
00:30
Why is it not a Boolean. :S
user3010322
@R.MartinhoFernandes Except the original issue had a single vector which could be changed to a simple new. In the case where the storage area needs to be resized, you can't do that kind of replacement without continually writing your own new and re-allocating and re-assigning the pointer and copying over pre-existing bits: all things std::vector takes care of for you.
@sehe that's quite an effort ... although the thin black smoke probably would give it away ...
@ThePhD vOv why is your type's copy constructor broken.
You should stop trying to justify bad code with more bad code.
@Telkitty And, I'm sure the coast guard saw the humour in it
@ThePhD Wait, I think I misunderstood.
00:31
@R.MartinhoFernandes It works for Vlad.
I guess I'll mention resize + any of several options again, just in case.
user1804599
@LightnessRacesinOrbit
this is my usual workflow
user3010322
@R.MartinhoFernandes If your vector isn't homogenous, then resize + T is not sufficient.
I wonder why.
(Once more, it sounds like your T is broken)
user1804599
00:34
@Jefffrey why virtual. :(
user3010322
T is broken because the runtime exposes more than one T through a single interface.
user3010322
See: Raw Input
@rightfold open to extensions
There we go. You said it.
T is broken.
@Jefffrey lol
00:35
We're done.
Abuse case, QED.
user1804599
@Jefffrey -1 not enough template.
user3010322
It's not an abuse case.
....
T is broken.
It is.
user3010322
T is broken because there is no T that can fit the requirements.
ho ho ho, yes, now I do an intermediate unreadable 100000-lines long template version, you are right
user3010322
If you do not define T, you are no longer broken.
user3010322
Abuse case is averted.
4 hours ago, by Cat Plus Plus
O is silly anyway
@Jefffrey I think you accidentally counted the number of lines in the compiler error output
00:36
@ThePhD What
@sehe lol
user1804599
@ThePhD then some other part elsewhere is broken.
user3010322
@R.MartinhoFernandes It's your logic, not mine.
user3010322
Defining T makes it an abuse case for vector. If you do not define T as it relates to creating a type that cannot exist without breaking the rules, then you are no longer breaking the rules.
user1804599
00:37
@Jefffrey 100000 times more efficient!
By T I nmean whatever type you want to jam into a vector.
~~~~~performance~~~~~ (inb4 cat rage)
user3010322
byte is not a broken T.
user1804599
You will feel less filthy!
Apparently your T cannot handle being constructed or copied.
@ThePhD We dealt with byte already.
user3010322
00:38
Not for the requirements of the program.
You were mentioning some sort of variant.
user1804599
Bye; sleep.
user3010322
@R.MartinhoFernandes You dealt with byte in the case where the vector need not be resized.
byezies
00:38
night
@ThePhD When it needs there's reserve and friendsw.
user3010322
Reserve and emplace_back only works for a well-defined T, which is not the case for the program.
@ThePhD Why don't you... shut up create a compelling example, and post on Stack Overflow or [CR]? (Instead of arguing about invisible use-cases)
Didn't you say T was byte?
2 mins ago, by ThePhD
byte is not a broken T.
Vector only works with well-defined types.
user3010322
00:41
reserve does not work for a C API.
(Nothing in C++ works with ill-defined types, whatever that means)
user3010322
(We're still working with a C API).
A C API that produces variant_view objects.
Right.
user3010322
No, it's a C API that's being wrapped to produced variant_view objects, who's backend is a std::vector<byte, unitialized_allocator<byte>>, which is resized according to the addition and removal of variant_view.
Woah whatever.
00:44
What's variant_view?
user3010322
@AndyProwl boost::variant, whose backing store is not its own blob of data and an index indicating which type it is.
@ThePhD Is it part of boost?
user3010322
Obviously not.
@AndyProwl Boost stuff doesn't usually break vector.
00:46
lol
user3010322
I'm rolling.
I haven't followed the discussion, I just spotted this variant_view thing and wondered if it was something I should know about, that's all.
@AndyProwl and your conclusion...
This is the Stack Overflow profile of a Victoria's Secret model: http://stackoverflow.com/users/2274694/lyndsey-scott See ya later, stereotypes
Unsurprisingly, guess who repcapped today #sexism #afterall
00:53
@GlennTeitelbaum Well, considering it's not a boost thing and it appears to be dangerous, my conclusion is that I should go to sleep
'You're totally shagged' question of the month:
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/20849954/modifying-source-file-linked-to-by-obj-files-crashes-application
@AndyProwl probably wise
@MartinJames I've seen more like that this months
@ThePhD And forgetting starting consonants
user3010322
Don't get the joke.
't' is a consonant
00:55
@sehe I can assure you the compilers are not rebelling. Yet.
user3010322
@sehe I would wish.
Seriously, you should get your sick fascination for the dark sides of C(++) treated.
This is simply abnormal and counter productive.
Why don't you spend ~10 years trying to write sound C++ code within the boundaries first, before trying advanced insane stuff? In all likelihood, you'll never be tempted anyways, since you've found that you can address all these "performance bottlenecks" in sane C++ anyways.
user3010322
I don't have a sick fascination with the dark side of C++. Not using std::unique_ptr<byte[]> was an oversight, which I've already replaced.
user3010322
I've never used cowboy cast. There are next to no unions in my code.

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