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Ell
Ell
13:00
Do I need to set up header paths for hello world? ie to find iostream?
Xeo
Xeo
;_;
@Ell yep.
you can easily find the G++ command to tell you the paths on SO
Xeo
Xeo
just compile with -v
they're listed in the output, in search order IIRC
user1804599
13:06
the ugliest dog ever?
that would be you
user1804599
That’s what it says, yes.
@StackedCrooked Not really. I can't see anything.
many lines end with "No such file or directory"
it's like portscanning my machine
sure, but it's not really useful data because GCC can be built to search many different sets of paths.
and you don't know what paths it would search if it didn't already find some
13:15
I suppose. I just like to observe the system in action.
personally I'd much rather have a system whose behaviour I can reasonably determine
occasionally that's nice too
user1804599
dude …
kinda essential when you want to build another system that can interact with it
Key path seem to be
/usr/include/c++/{version}
/usr/lib/gcc/x86_64-linux-gnu/{version}
# e.g.
/usr/include/c++/4.8/type_traits
/usr/include/c++/4.9/type_traits
/usr/include/c++/4.7/type_traits
13:21
it's either coliru, TC or my own install that has them in /usr/local
gcc-4.9 is in /usr/local (installed manually)
gcc-4.8 is in /usr (installed by package manager)
user1804599
dat pun
It's both good and horrible.
user1804599
Octopuns is a gold mine.
13:47
Those are great!
Like reddit without the boring stuff.
user1804599
hmm
what delimiter shall I use for member variable/base class initializer lists?
user1804599
§
well I was thinking of either colon in front, or semicolon or comma at the end
might go with colon in front
user1804599
14:04
How about :=?
already used.
I have expr := expr as the initializer itself.
the problem with the old identifier(expr) syntax I re-used from C++ is that if a base class is something like vector(int), you can't express that as an identifier.
then again, when I'm seeing expr := expr, then I guess that doesn't intuitively permit more than one parameter.
guess I could use expr := { exprs } for that.
gave one of my chooks away today to a friend ... with approximate 10kg feed
poor thing will be all by himself now
but at least he might get to live until old
14:24
huh, maybe I never handled multi-parameter constructor initializing.
Xeo
Xeo
haha
yeah, I'm looking at this code, and I'm like, "I never call this function with more than one parameter..."
seems like I only permitted identifier(expr) and identifier().
user1804599
TIL in Python 2 you can use <> instead of !=, lol.
hmm, VS has an annoying bug where it randomly changes the keyboard layout to US.
Xeo
Xeo
wat
that sounds like PEBKAC, rather
14:35
maybe you hit ctrl+shift ?
Xeo
Xeo
alt+capslock or alt+shift, can't remember the default
it also has an annoying bug where sometimes if you step through the code, the debug window will have the list of variables but no text only the icon indicating that theres an entry in the list. and if you try to add a variable in the watch window it tells you its undefined when clearly it isnt.
considering that the key combo for vertical selection is alt+shift, then hitting something like alt+capslock sounds like a pretty reasonable mistake to make.
@Borgleader Oh, VS has many annoying bugs.
It's not VS. The Windows global shortcut for keyboard layout switching defaults to "Alt + Left Shift".
Just that.
Half a shortcut.
I thought it was ctrl+shift?
14:40
The worst is that it is silent. It should popup some balloon in the tray or something to let you know you just switched layout.
Xeo
Xeo
I just disable that vOv
But I'm in permanent Japanese IME mode anyways right now
with ctrl-shift-space to turn IME on/off, and UK layout underneath
user1804599
@Xeo Oh god pomf.se.
@Vector: Sure it does, and here's a live example to prove it. You're quoting from the definition of result_type, but that is not the return type of std::bind. From the same reference page that you cite: "A function object of unspecified type T, for which std::is_bind_expression<T>::value == true, and which can be stored in std::function." — Lightness Races in Orbit 1 min ago
Maximum ownage feels great when you've just got out of bed.
@Xeo What the bloody fuck O.o
--ultimate-cringe
Xeo
Xeo
> Pomf.se - Kawaii File Hosting
lol'd
user1804599
@Xeo I love the jump at 0:09.
@Xeo Loving the random explosion at the end.
@R.MartinhoFernandes That's exactly the shortcut for vertical selection in VS
FFS; boss broke the build again. Always just at the weekend.
your boss works on Saturday?
14:55
cron job maybe
but why do you have to fix the thing that your boss has broken?
@Puppy No. He fucks off at 5pm dead on a Friday, leaving his broken work failing over the ensuing two days.
@chmod711telkitty I don't. It's just annoying because I want to get a bunch of stuff done this weekend and there's this stain in the repository now.
do you have to fix it before Monday?
It's the principle if nothing else.
@Puppy No
I guess then I don't see how it impacts you differently to breaking the build at 5pm on a Tuesday and having to fix it on Wednesday.
However we do have a release scheduled for Monday and this sort of negligence pisses me off.
14:58
ah.
that being the key point I feel :P
Like, why am I the only one who bothers to check the nightly results?
#1 rule, don't check code into the repository until it's tested working properly or use another branch
He gets paid to run the team and do that kind of stuff, watching over our QA. But I have to do it instead.
Xeo
Xeo
Never check in on Friday afternoon
basic rule of working as a programmer
It's a really stupid typo as well
14:59
never check in right before leaving (on any day of the week)
rofl ... maybe your boss did not expect anyone to work on a weekend either
are you stealing the code before leaving?
@chmod711telkitty He knows full well that there will be people working at the weekend (as surely as he knows he will never be one of them). And it still wouldn't matter even if there weren't: don't break the build like a pussy. At least check your work email when you get up on Saturday, if you did a big commit on Friday, just to see that everything's okay. It takes thirty seconds.
@chmod711telkitty lol
branch and merge after testing
so your stupid commits don't affect anyone else
of course
I just like to give a thorough impression of the sort of lazy crap I have to put up with, even from those who should theoretically be better and more proactive at it all than me.
that's like to claim that kings and queens should be working their asses off all day, but we know they don't
your pet kitties and doggies don't work their asses off either
welcome to the realisation of the real world
Xeo
Xeo
15:13
@LightnessRacesinOrbit He seems pretty proactive on the "lazy crap" front!
@Xeo true ;p
@chmod711telkitty Not a realisation just a continued frustration
Anyway I'm feeling a bit anxious today. It's summery and the longest day of the year and I know I'll be doing very little with it, which puts me in a mood to do very little with it. -.-
"You get Hoynes"
On a programming level, how are the edges and vertexes of a 3D model 'targeted' when a transform, move, or sheer is applied to them?
what do you mean by targeted?
they are vectors multiplied by matrices
also ^ this
15:19
@Crow do some math on paper too, from time to time
Well like. Say you have a 3D model. You want to move individual parts of it (like the fingers of the hand), how do you get and select the faces, edges, or vertices you want to apply this transformation/sheer/whatever to?
No idea what you're asking. "Get" and "select"? You need to provide context to give meaning to these words.
like a selectionbox?
^ what Lightness said
map "left hand" to a set of vertices...?
15:21
If you're asking how a transformation is selectively applied to one "group" of faces/edges or vertices only, then the hint is in the question. The modeller needs to define within the model that a certain collection of edges are part of a single entity.
Certainly your program will not magically detect a hand for you.
^ also all transformation info is stored in the model already if the animation was done in the software that exported it
so, does the model itself become a data structure, like a three dimensional graph?
It could do, sure.
whatever you use to load that model also loads up the animation info
A tree, I'd imagine, showing where the "hinges" are.
Go take a look at some existing code, or read a book because this is fairly basic I'd imagine.
15:22
you could always look at the blender source code :P
so really it just says: at keyframe 1, vertex A, B, and E are at this position. At keyframe 2, those same vertexes are now at this position... and that's it? Maybe I just overcomplicated it
@Crow no idea if that is the case with all formats but yes
vertex A, B and E; really? heard of C yet?
that's the essence
why would it be more complicated?
computers just chew zeroes and ones, they're simple as fuck
15:25
I guess I was considering technology which is much more complicated, like getting into bones and stuff like that. Got ahead of the book hah
user1804599
> There is no API in Java to obtain the names of the named capturing groups. I think this is a missing feature.
user1804599
Fuck you Java.
why are you using java?
user1804599
I’m not using Java. I’m not a fucking moron.
user1804599
I’m using Clojure.
15:27
@Crow Bones are different, theyre not part of the mesh, basically you tell which vertices are effected by each bone and by how much and then you move the bones and the movement of the bones is applies to the vertices. theyre 2 separate things.
@Crow Skeletal animation and keyframe animation are two different things, really.
so it doesn't really get exported out, it's just a tool during development of the animation?
they could be
afaik games use skeletons to animate their characters but theyre still separate
you could use the same skeleton on different humanoid meshes
Unity uses its own skeleton-like approach that gets generated on existing models
Mecanim basically works with a generated skeleton to perform complex animations
man I need some books on this stuff, complicated...
can one of you guys please invent a silent vacuum machine?
15:41
its called a swiffer :P
15:55
@Crow iirc there are brands that specialize in noise reduction
it's never completely silent though
Sean Parent end up defining smart pointers "as good as global variables" He doesn't know what he's talking about. — Lightness Races in Orbit 6 secs ago
I sure got a few smart pointers from his talk.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit He didnt say that about smart pointers he said that about shared_ptr specifically iirc
Good eve
can i ask a question here or should i rather open a new so question?
16:02
ask on so
i have something like this
Ell
Ell
lol
51 secs ago, by Puppy
ask on so
@CatPlusPlus Just gonna point out that since you're playing the game illegally, so having their anti-cheat software make playing it hard is probably intended behaviour.
if only there was a page dedicated to asking questions
16:04
template< typename T> class vector3_tpl;
typedef vec3 vector3_tpl< float >;

how do i forward declare something now with vec3?
well i messed up the typedef lol
if only you'd just asked for the right place to dump it...
@Puppy he's playing it legally though
BF3 was given for free by EA
s/Bros/Bin/
Oh, we're doing piracy again? Awesome.
Twats.
16:10
Why pirate a game when you can just buy it for 2$ during steam sales =/
seriously
@AlexM. I merely guessed from his contextual complaining of having previously tried it.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit He made a strong point for value semantics and later remarked that a shared pointer to an immutable (const) object has value semantics.
And people then start interpreting that as shared_ptr is OK after all.
Sigh..
@StackedCrooked Doesnt he say (non-const) shared_ptr is like a global variable at some point?
Yep.
He said that.
i guess people have shit memory then =/
16:15
But in the end isn't everything in RAM gobal variable? :)
j/k
user1804599
Motherfuck shit API not offering a function to get a list of named groups. T_T
@Borgleader Or they selectively listen and hear what they want to hear.
@StackedCrooked hmm quite possible
@rightfold this is your API, right?
user1804599
16:17
No, Matcher API from Java.
user1804599
I wrote a function that returns an object so that you can do (:my-named-group (re-named-groups matcher)).
It would be fun to write some Clojure again.
But technically it might be possible in Clojure? (Since you can traverse the object hierarchy... Maybe?)
posted on June 21, 2014 by Scott Meyers

It seems that every place I go these days, people are pointing a camera at me and pressing Record. As a result, there are five new videos available at my Online Videos page: On May 22, I gave a keynote address at the D Conference on "The Last Thing D Needs." This was a talk about inconsistency issues in C++ and how they make it more complicated to explain the language (and also to understand it

user1804599
@StackedCrooked namedGroups is a private method on Pattern.
user1804599
You can use reflection API to invoke it but that’s a terrible and unstable bad hack.
16:20
@Feeds That reminds I still need to finish reviewing EMC++.
@R.MartinhoFernandes He sent you a copy?
@rightfold Can't you make it public at runtime? :D
@rightfold Java is a terrible and unstable bad hack.
user1804599
2 mins ago, by rightfold
You can use reflection API to invoke it but that’s a terrible and unstable bad hack.
16:21
@Borgleader Yeah.
@rightfold It's legal.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Damn, you important now =/
user1804599
No.
Ell
Ell
@R.MartinhoFernandes That's pretty cool
@rightfold Oh, but the class design probably assumed that nobody would ever gain access to the privates. Yeah, that would break the invariants and shit.
user1804599
16:23
Matcher is such a terrible API.
user1804599
It’s a fucking state machine that doesn’t have to be a state machine.
@rightfold Not even close.
Sorry to interrupt, but i still need help
is there a way to forward declare a typedef without knowing the original aliased type?
Java is like the cumulation of everything that went wrong from the 90s to the late 2000s.
Java has value. Symbolic value, that is.
@Serthy I'm not sorry to inform you that we don't appear to care.
16:25
But at least they didn't allow this monstrous multiple inheritance.. ;)
24
Q: Forward declarations of unnamed struct

spraffBounty question: So, these two Foos aren't the same thing. Fine. The second form is given in a library. How do I forward-declare it given that I can't change it? I always thought C and C++ allowed repeated declarations provided that there were no repeated definitions. Then I came across this p...

I have a colleague that still sticks to typedef enum { ... } name; (And of course the enumerators are full capital letters with plenty of double underscores.)
I should be more assertive.
And hit him.
@StackedCrooked Assertive yes. Hitting... no well yes, probably that too. :-)
I have no words.
:P
enum class problem solved
16:28
@Puppy Yeah, I'm now using that as an excuse to rename some of his older stuff.
Xeo
Xeo
Enum classes solve the problem of stupid coworkers? Man, if only I had known sooner.
4
I wish the guy was scoped and unused.
Ok. That's a little harsh.
At least he provided the build system for us.
Automake.
Aarg.
And now he started adding throw() to all destructors.
How do I convince him to stop doing that.
Jul 26 '12 at 21:30, by R. Martinho Fernandes
@Insilico There are few problems that can't be solved by finding the right people and shooting them.
Never mind. I'll stop this rant here :)
@StackedCrooked i thought throwing in a destructor was really bad, like... if it happens a second time while stack unrolling the first it just kills the app?
16:31
I believe you have already found the right people.
@Borgleader Yes: throw during stack unwinding triggers std::terminate.
The throw() qualifier means that it may terminate sooner.
But I suspect that he believes that throw() makes the code magically faster.
Violating throw() calls std::unexpected.
Xeo
Xeo
Tell him throw() is deprecated
and that dtors are automatically noexcept
Thanks. I'll keep that in mind.
The thing that bothers me is that this guy is acting bossy towards me.
Telling me how to do things.
Xeo
Xeo
Is he your boss?
No? Tell him to work on his own problems.
16:34
No. But I had to help him in a project that he had been working on.
@StackedCrooked It does. terminate saves you from executing all those destructors to unwind the stack...
At least my boss is reasonable.
@JerryCoffin :D
2 mins ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
Violating throw() calls std::unexpected.
I wonder if the dragon book has anything on parsing operators with precedence (and handling parentheses)
> Here are some commands that you might find usefull (can be found in the .h files also):

INIT_8BIT_1_LINE_5b7 [...]
Sounds very useful.
16:35
@R.MartinhoFernandes Unexpected is not overriden in our code.
@StackedCrooked If it did, it wouldn't have been so useless.
Even more useful would be actual documentation.
@Borgleader Doing so is trivial. Parsing is the least of the problems of anyone implementing a non-trivial language.
@Borgleader Probably not, since nobody has ever designed a language with precedence or parentheses.
Xeo
Xeo
@StackedCrooked Violating noexcept std::aborts immediately, IIRC
16:36
@R.MartinhoFernandes why, it's entirely self-documenting .. :)
Xeo
Xeo
Right
Does abort mean that the kernel kicks the program out?
@Puppy Well my current attempt doesn't work yet =/
@Puppy He's been sprinkling throw() in a lot of places recently.
Xeo
Xeo
16:38
Time to go shopping for some food other than instant noodles
@StackedCrooked Tell him he's weaking your code
Since that replaces the default noexcept(true) on dtors
@JerryCoffin Silly of me to think that a book about compilers would limit itself to the compiler implementation and not its use to implement a language
OK. I shall forward the message.
Xeo
Xeo
And that has tons of other implications
@StackedCrooked abort means Catholics won't come to the funeral after the program dies.
@JerryCoffin Hm. Not sure if that is a good or a bad thing.
Xeo
Xeo
16:39
I think it even prevents moves on resize in containers, even if the move ctors are noexcept
@JerryCoffin lol I'm slow
@Borgleader Whoosh!
@Borgleader Ah, Spirit. I'd skip it and just use Bison if you want to shit out a parser quickly.
Xeo
Xeo
I'd skip C++ and just go to Haskell if you want a decent parser. /teehee
@Puppy I tried Bison, the code is so ugly :(
16:40
Parsec FTW
there are existing LR grammars for C that you can strip the rest out of.
@Borgleader True. That's also true of Spirit. If you want a relatively nice parser, AFAIK the only way to go is to hand-write it.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I can't haskell :(
the tradeoff of using a parser generator is that the output is shit.
the gain is speed.
if you don't need speed or you really care about the code quality, then a generator is the wrong choice.
who doesn't need speed?
16:43
idk, i find spirit code relatively legible, compile times are a problem though, they seem to grow exponentially
I recognize the letters.
Just for what it's worth, the original author of Bison pretty much advises against using it. According to him, he didn't really know what he was doing when he wrote Bison. When he'd figured out what he was doing, he wrote what should have been Bison 1.0, but named it byacc. Bison continues to be distributed almost exclusively because he released it under GPL, whereas byacc is released under a (much too free to qualify as "Free") BSD-ish license.
Xeo
Xeo
@Borgleader Easy fix: Learn Haskell! :P
@Borgleader It's legible, but you can't make it work.
@Xeo You say that like I haven't tried already =/
16:44
@JerryCoffin AFAIK it's been maintained at least somewhat-well over the years.
I can reverse a list in Haskell.
And a few more things.
@Borgleader Just write it by hand. It's simple to create a recursive descent parser that can parse C expression grammar or something approximating it.
@Puppy It has been maintained to some degree, but was such a bad start that little short of throwing it away and starting over stands much chance of producing a usable result.
@JerryCoffin I don't really see what was unusable about it. The code it generated worked, and I didn't encounter any bugs. The only thing that I really would have changed about it if I could is the parser's raw interface, but it wasn't unfixable and there were directives for changing the raw interface anyway.
@JerryCoffin Not sure if I understand correctly.. Byacc is BSD, which is a less restrictive license than GPL, and this causes it to be less distributed?
16:48
@StackedCrooked Those copyleft nuts hate anything that won't force other people to give up their rights.
@StackedCrooked Remember how RMS thinks its a tragedy that clang isnt released under GPL?
@StackedCrooked Yes. The FSF (and such) considers it too permissive for them to consider it "Free" software, so they push Bison.
That's just evil.
personally, I don't understand
if you're not gonna make any money from your project, you may as well maximize it's usefulness.
2
Btw, did you heard the news that the Pope excommunicated the Italian mafia?
16:50
as if I'd read any piece of news involving a random old pompous windbag
Ell
Ell
Random? :P
but the mafia
His name is Francis. This already makes him superior imo.
@Puppy I suppose I'm biased by my age. One of the biggest problems is that the parsers it produces use a lot more memory than really necessary. Admittedly, not really such a big factor any more, but I decided to quit using Bison when it still was.
@Ell He has no more bearing on the life of anybody who doesn't choose to waste their time on him than anybody else.
@StackedCrooked They must be wiping their tears with 100 euro bills right now
16:54
@Puppy I'm reasonably certain for most of them it's more like: "If you're not going to pay me money, you need to at least feed my ego."
sure, but I don't see how less people using your program results in more ego.
maybe I'm just not that kind of guy.
@Borgleader Yeah, shops don't accept high-value bills anyway.
@Puppy Hey! You read my posts:)
@StackedCrooked Government officials do though
@MartinJames You are substantially less random than the Pope.
16:55
@Borgleader They are used to taking shit :P
Not ours, they're used to taking brown envelopes with money in them =/
@Puppy Not after 2200, these days. My random walk is pretty devastating. Two hours of free beeer tonight - I fear the worst:(
then don't go
It's Saturday. What could go wrong?
16:56
all I'm saying is, I lost like 90 pounds when I was sick.
You didn't spend much money then.
and I didn't achieve that by going down the pub for a bunch of free beer
@Puppy did you gain any since you started the drugs?
@Puppy I have to. I'm on the rota.
@Borgleader Yes. Far too much.
16:58
Does this medication become less effective over time?
@Puppy But with the FSF around to push its version of reality, the restrictive license doesn't reduce usage. I think some of it is basically religious: the old nonsense about serving a higher purpose than yourself (all the while secretly thinking almost entirely about yourself).
They kind of sound like the Sith, or maybe I've been playing The Old Republic too much lately
@StackedCrooked Not as far as I'm aware.
Ok then.

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