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user3010322
19:01
> constexpr explicit operator pointer() const noexcept;
user3010322
> explicit
user3010322
BOOOO.
@Mgetz That's not true whatsoever. Where did you hear that?
Xeo
Xeo
Hm. Remember when I said I wanted to go home and work on my game? I've been here for 11h now. Fuck me.
user3010322
observer_ptr should be a 100% drop-in and interop with raw pointers exactly as promised.
user3010322
19:02
@Xeo What's been going wrong?
@ThePhD observer_ptr shouldn't exist, we have raw pointers for that purpose
The "best man" tradition comes from selecting your best man to join you on a kidnapping mission to the next village, to forcibly steal your wife from her disapproving family.
user3010322
@Mgetz Precisely why it shouldn't matter which type you pick and have non-explicit constructors and conversion operators.
user3010322
Explicitness is good everywhere, but for observer_ptr we should get wild and have it decay naturally! \o/
By 200AD the best man now remained throughout the ceremony to provide protection services in case the scorned family caught up and attacked.
19:03
@LightnessRacesinOrbit True love right there.
Xeo
Xeo
@ThePhD Nothing really, I just wanted to finish this today, before I lose my train of thought over night
I updated the nonius docs flamingdangerzone.com/nonius. Feedback welcome. I'll soon expand the "authoring benchmarks" section, though. /cc @sehe
@R.MartinhoFernandes Very good
Xeo
Xeo
At least I'm pretty much done now - one TODO left, and I can do that tomorrow
user3010322
@R.MartinhoFernandes I want to write docs that look pretty like yours. :c
Xeo
Xeo
19:04
time to go home
@R.MartinhoFernandes So good looking.
Time to play Halo
user3010322
@EtiennedeMartel It really is pretty. I want sol documents to look like that. :c
user3010322
Robot, teach us how to write docs!
user3010322
.... WAIT
user3010322
19:06
All in favor of @R.MartinhoFernandes teaching a course on writing docs at the Unconference, star this!
1. Write docs
2. Don't suck at writing docs
user3010322
But it's hard. q_q
I don't wanna rock DJ
When's it gonna stop DJ
I enjoy the neat references RMFernandes often uses just as much as the aestethics of the docs. E.g. "A nonius is a device created in 1542 by the Portuguese inventor Pedro Nunes (Petrus Nonius in Latin) that improved the accuracy of the astrolabe.". He has a whole bunch of those tidbits sprinkled along his path.
Writing good docs is a full time job.
Ell
Ell
19:20
Man. People should just drink coke zero
The zero is for the amount of flavour
Ell
Ell
you can still taste the phosphoric acid
There are better sources for that
Like car batteries
lol
bus batteries, maybe
Ell
Ell
phosphoric acid is a weak acid
19:29
you're a weak acid
Ell
Ell
I'd have it no other way :)
@R.MartinhoFernandes And that's a success? Doesn't seem so.
RFCs don't need an STD number to be widely used
Internet runs on drafts
Poorly written ones too.
Not to mention that thing about the language that was "designed" in 10 days.
Unlike your mum's, my STD number is zero.
19:36
Alright, central limit theorem, go!
What's star worthy about that? You may want to star the one above it.
Someone explain the central limit theorem to me. @BartekBanachewicz, you are allowed to be a CP for this one.
Oh wait, so E[X1 + X2 + ... + Xn] = E[X1] + E[X2] + ... + E[Xn] = nE[Xi].
And similarly for Var
Yesterday I used cppreference during a lecture, unfortunately the search function on that site leaves a lot to desire. So onto google. Search "std::pair", well the first result was the center for disease control site. Laughs were had.
Because Covar(Xi, X(i + 1)) is 0.
http://en.cppreference.com/mwiki/index.php?title=Special%3ASearch&search=pair&button=
what else do you want the search to show?
That's why you want to have a specific search shortcut for that.
@gnzlbg The cppreference:searchbox often lets me down. Maybe it's pebkac, I don't know.
19:43
@CaptainGiraffe it would be nice to know for which searches exactly it works bad, that way i can report an issue
the biggest problem with cppreference is that... it is a reference
you have to know what you are looking for
@gnzlbg The last one that let me down was for a plain search of typeid. It works for me now.
\> tab >
It's under "Custom search engines".
@CaptainGiraffe :/
@gnzlbg Are you affiliated with cppreference in any way?
@CaptainGiraffe cppreference std pair man
lern2google
if you really wanna show off, you can use site:cppreference.com, but it takes longer to write and in this case you don't need it
19:49
@CaptainGiraffe no, but whenever I had a problem there I always reported it or fixed it and everything was fine afterwards
I wonder whether anyone spoke out at the time about the choice of name for the standard namespace
@LightnessRacesinOrbit i'm guessing it was unanimous
Xeo
Xeo
hooome
from experience perhaps
user1804599
> type Hours is mod 24;
user1804599
19:51
neat
My dear Lightness. site:cppref is on their site. My problem is not my google-fu, but more likely my typing skills and situational snafu skills. I'll proudly let you know I passed all of the notpron riddle levels to about -18.
yet when attempting to look up C++ documentation in front of a room of people, you found results about ball diseases instead. Good job
Thank you! =)
user1804599
Screw Pascal. I'll learn Ada instead.
Xeo
Xeo
@CaptainGiraffe <search term> site:cppreference.com
aw damn, LRI/O was quicker
19:53
@LightnessRacesinOrbit what would you have gone with?
the rust peeps went with 'std' as well
@райтфолд Do!
Ell
Ell
I forgot what a snafu was
user1804599
19:54
situation normal; all fucked up
user1804599
SFINAE is a synonym of SNAFU when you really want static if instead.
user1804599
(D ftw.)
A single google search that displays "my balls itch" as the first result is not in any metric a blunder. In my years doing this gig I have unprompted had quite a few oral malfunctions or cerebral disconnects that puts a simple search result to shame.
@CaptainGiraffe You're not helping your case by admitting that it gets worse... ;p
19:57
@R.MartinhoFernandes nice; I use nonius only occasionally of course but I'll make sure to update it
I have this really ugly api where I want to be passed a unique_ptr<T> but I have to use a shared_ptr instead. Is there a clean way to express this that isn't just creating another function that takes <unique_ptr<T>> as a layer of indirectin
@LightnessRacesinOrbit I don't have a case here. I'm a flawed human with a long history. The logs are plenty with fuckups. Fortunately most of them are humorous.
I don't know what "humorous" means, sorry
try usa.chat.stackoverflow.com/rooms/10/loungec
19:59
@CaptainGiraffe awesome
nate kohl at google started cppreference, i think there is a cppcon talk about it
i would tell you to google it but... :D
chat: LRiO, what color is the sky? LRiO: I don't know what "color" means, sorry
Xeo
Xeo
So, it's 9pm and I should probably eat something
@Xeo you in europe too? i always pictured you american
20:00
it's 8pm and pub time
@Pris He does. He just deliberately enjoys playing hot and cold with the (alleged) sense of humour. For example, he might explain this message as an attack.
Yeah, I couldn't find the google search page, even if I googled it.
@CaptainGiraffe sometimes the forest doesn't let you see the forest
@gnzlbg I'm bust clapping with one hand.
Xeo
Xeo
20:03
@gnzlbg Yes
Why?
Was a long time since meeting such braze faced user
no reason in particular, i think up untill now i pictured everyone here except the robot american
just never gave it a thought, makes no sense
@MattMilna "... you moron ...but you better be professional ..." In which way you think insulting people here is to be considered professional by any means? — πάντα ῥεῖ 49 secs ago
Xeo
Xeo
@πάνταῥεῖ Don't reply, flag, move on
@Xeo I've flagged that of course. Moving on ...
20:07
This guy is up to something: 1, 2, 3, 4
Because a single comment/question is too mainstream.
@milleniumbug I encouraged the guy to ask a question on SO. Maybe I should apologize in advance.
@DeadMG "References and pointers are pretty much the same thing"
except when they are not
needs more reference to nullptr
How would you describe the difference between a Java reference and a c++ pointer? @gnzlbg
no difference
except...
20:10
Apart from ref counting and GC
int x = 5 means *x = 5
in java
int x is not a ref
like

`int x;`
`*x = 5;`

is equivalent to

`int x = 5;` in java
uh everything is a ref in java
:21628390
except 9 8 value types.
Java only has 8 value types.
@milleniumbug You were probably thinking of String? :)
20:12
I can't downvote your c++ statements here, but a -1 for that *int
int isn't a reference, I was saying x is a reference to 5
int x = 5; is the same in Java and C.
There are no indirections involved.
@CaptainGiraffe its more like a shared_ptr i would say
Let's say they're immutable :) Then the value/reference discussion doesn't matter.
20:14
Hm one of my external HDD's started to make a very very low noise, but hearable, like it's starting to burn / ratling or something, it's dying now, right?
it only does that when copying data
user1804599
My first Ada program! ideone.com/qKn834
+ for backups
- for replacement cost to keep the amount of backups the same :(
And last
user1804599
Most likely!
External drive is not a good place for backups
user1804599
20:15
I should write a video game in Ada.
Backups need to be kept off-site
@gnzlbg Yep, apart from reference bookkeeping for garbage collection. A shared_ is still deterministic, GC is not. That should not be part of the semantic argument. Java relabeled pointer to reference.
@milleniumbug Except you can't compare strings with ==, and they can be null.
@FredOverflow correct me if i'm wrong, but x is a pointer to 5 in java, in C it's an object that has value '5'
@CaptainGiraffe shared_ptr is about as deterministic as mark-and-sweep GC
20:15
@DonLarynx you are wrong; int is a value type in java
@CatPlusPlus yeah, please provide me with a 1Gbps fiber, then we can start talking about online backups ;)
Refcounting is also GC
@DonLarynx You are wrong. int is not a reference type. How often do we have to repeat this?
Integer, on the other hand, is a reference type.
I'm on a damn 1 mbit upload network :(
so I buy HDD's, make a few copies, done
@райтфолд Now that you're at Ada, could you choose your language of the week in alphabetical order?
user1804599
20:16
No.
@CatPlusPlus I am misinformed, and surprised. I'll read up on it before I comment any further.
@JerryCoffin Algol next?
@райтфолд Are you writing your parser in Ada now?
user1804599
I'm not writing any parsers.
@FredOverflow understood.
20:17
@ScarletAmaranth Algol 58, then 60, then 68 (with, perhaps, a detour into "Algol-W", though that gets tougher to order correctly--it predated Algol 68, but is actually a precursor to Pascal more than Algol-68).
@FredOverflow "9" would be the count of non-reference types (which would include void), but the statement was wrong anyway.
Non-concurrent GC typically runs every N allocations or maybe instructions if it's driven by a VM
@JerryCoffin then APL
That's probably even more deterministic than trying to pinpoint owners in a refcounting scheme (plus refcounting doesn't deal with reference loops)
Challenge: track object lifetimes in this thing, using shared_ptr bitbucket.org/genericcontainer/goblin-camp
(One of the bugs involved required logic being contained in dtors, which failed to run when they needed to, precisely because of shared_ptr)
user1804599
@CatPlusPlus Mine runs when the heap is full!
20:21
@CatPlusPlus A quick read of the description of shared_ptr at cppreference maintains my original thought.
So there you go I wish people stopped treating shared_ptr as some magical unicorn that's magically better than other forms of GC
@CaptainGiraffe lol
Does a stack overflow always lead to a seg fault?
user1804599
No.
@ScarletAmaranth What? No true hipster could possibly skip over Agda!
@JerryCoffin true dat (altho Idirs is better)
20:24
@райтфолд But a stack overflow leads to storage of data past the stack bound, leading to a memory access violation (seg fault).
user1804599
No.
user1804599
It can but it doesn't have to.
@ScarletAmaranth ...but that would be skipping past dozens of wonderful hipster languages (Clojure, Common Lisp, Dart, ...)
user1804599
If you allocate a stack with an accessible page directly below it you can access that page through a stack overflow just fine.
@CatPlusPlus I maintain that the shared_ptr makes the calls to destructors predictable for a particular program.
@CatPlusPlus The resource is destroyed exactly the moment when the refcount is equal to 0. That's what deterministic means.
or if your target has no MMU...
lol
And with a M&S GC resource is destroyed exactly the moment when GC runs and the refcount is equal to 0
Both are perfectly deterministic events
@CatPlusPlus No they are not.
20:26
@CaptainGiraffe And I'm telling you that it doesn't
@milleniumbug yeah. somehow that question got some refreshed attention too
From fucking experience
But yeah go on about unicorns and the description on a wiki
There are scenarios when the reader doesn't know the moment because he wrote spaghetti code, that still doesn't mean it's not deterministic.
@CatPlusPlus Do you have a reasonable example to explain?
20:27
I dare you to pinpoint the destruction moment in any non-trivial software using shared_ptr
(gods help you if you accidentally make a loop)
@райтфолд cool (but don't you mean above the page, since things go on top of the stack, not below it?)
user1804599
It depends on the platform.
@CaptainGiraffe lol
user1804599
Programs on x86-64 typically grow their stacks downwards.
Go ahead, use shared_ptr, have fun
20:29
@CatPlusPlus Oh I see your point
Computers are deterministic
@CatPlusPlus why does it exist if it shouldn't be used
And keep on repeating that 'grr GC' nonsense
While using it
@Gizmo Nobody said it shouldn't be used
user1804599
say 'Fizz' x $_ %% 3 ~ 'Buzz' x $_ %% 5 || $_ for 1 .. 100;
user1804599
Nice.
@райтфолд thnx again
20:30
@CatPlusPlus your messages imply (yeah I don't get sarcasm so sorry if I misinterpreted your messages) that shared_pointer sucks ass level 9000
No, they imply that shared_ptr shares a particular characteristic with other forms of GC, namely that destruction is no longer predictable
oki :P
The program using GC would be only non-deterministic if it threw a dice or used random behaviour outside of the computer.
@CatPlusPlus Trivially true, at least if you allow me to define "non-trivial software" as "any in which object lifetimes are difficult/impossible to determine statically", or anything similar.
user1804599
Such as threads and clocks.
20:32
so you can't statically determine it, but you can check the amount of references, and based upon that decide if it's been destroyed or not
A GC uses information such as Memory Available which depends on other processes. shared_p does not.
Refcounting is the most primitive and the worst form of GC
user1804599
@Pris :(
It has a interlocked counting overhead and can't deal with reference loops
20:33
@Pris How is one ever going to read that code ;O
user1804599
Worst GC is manual GC.
I usually split long if's over multiple lines
@milleniumbug There are plenty of sources of randomness (or sufficiently similar unpredictability, anyway) inside the computer.
And predictability with shared_ptr is just a pipe dream
Best GC is no GC.
20:34
lol
user1804599
GC is an acronym for "gorgeous convenience."
@ParkYoung-Bae so are you sticking to this as your main account?
Ell
Ell
@CaptainGiraffe why do you think that?
user1804599
No wonder you C++ scrubs don't like it.
first of all.. why are you making garbage? don't make garbage, no GC needed, problem solved
20:35
Your code is garbage
@Gizmo forget read that code, I dont even understand how someone could write it
@JerryCoffin Do you mean something like RdRand or measuring noise somehow or what?
@Ell As in not needed.
how can you keep all those conditions in mind and actually type it out? its insanity
@milleniumbug Scheduling is unpredictable
user1804599
20:36
Memory is a resource I don't want to give a shit about.
@CatPlusPlus It's still more predictable than a tracing collector. Specifically, it'll happen immediately after the last reference to it goes out of scope (even if you don't know a priori which one that is), whereas with a tracing collector it may last some arbitrary length of time after is becomes inaccessible.
I'm thinking the cat that wrote it is like a savant or osmething
user1804599
You need it for about everything.
user1804599
So if you need to clean it up manually or have to worry about lifetime you have to worry about it everywhere.
@milleniumbug You don't even need things like that. On a typical computer you have lots of things that are quite unpredictable, such as CPU scheduling and I/O latency.
user1804599
20:37
GCs solve that problem and they solve it very well.
@JerryCoffin Ehh, in practice that doesn't really make a difference
Oh god that gametick code is like my programming from 5 years ago
You can either observe destruction or not
Ell
Ell
@CaptainGiraffe How do you reduce memory fragmentation without a GC?
@JerryCoffin Ok, I get it.
20:38
@Ell don't you just allocate as much as possible upfront?
user1804599
@Ell You move objects explicitly.
anyway I've never had to deal with fragmentation myself, never was a problem
@Ell I don't have any experience with code that has memory fragmentation as an issue.
Ell
Ell
Then probably you're not qualified to talk about GCs vOv
(but nor am I. I'm playing devils advocate)
We already knew that
20:40
@CatPlusPlus When does memory fragmentatoin come into play?
user1804599
Speaking of garbage collectors.
> Unlike the stack, variables created on the heap are accessible by any function, anywhere in your program. Heap variables are essentially global in scope.
@CatPlusPlus I'm not saying it does--I am saying that the claim that reference counting is no more predictable than tracing GC is simply false. It is somewhat more predictable. Whether that degree of predictability matters to you or not is a whole separate question. In terms of predictability, it rarely does. In terms of simple overall memory usage, it's often pretty significant.
user1804599
I should make my garbage collector less like strtok.
user1804599
And more thread-safe.
20:41
Addendum: malloc() is an ugly function name.
@райтфолд I'd agree that strtok isn't a great example to follow (for much of anything).
@райтфолд just wrap all your variables in std::atomic<T>
#not
@DonLarynx I think no standard C library function has a non-ugly name.
@milleniumbug strtok() is a runner-up along with itoa(), atoi(), reminds me of an atoll. Particularly "Ape Atoll" from RuneScape
Entire libc is shit
And names are not even a significant part of why
20:43
@CatPlusPlus continue, please
Insert coin
Lots of coins
*insert coin into Cat Plus Plus*
/repeat/
Presentations in the office tomorrow
That sounds wrong, very wrong.
20:44
I gotta make something
(I'll leave it up to your imagination to see where it's inserted)
@Gizmo lol
they should have switched the '::' operator and the ':' operator in C++
@Pris totally disagree
@Pris true ? x :: y ???
20:47
> some Java developers are racist against the word "pointer".
user1804599
It should be . instead of ::.
Anyway i'm off debugging now.... my code performs suicide and murder randomly.
@DonLarynx I always refer them to NullPointerException
Need to check out how and why
@DonLarynx Would only make sense if pointers were a race. They're not. They're just part of how Java loses the race!
20:48
@milleniumbug I meant the scope resolution operator and the one you use for inheritance and constructor init lists, the ternary/conditional operator can stay ':'
@Pris The : in the ternary operator isn't the whole name. I suspect the problem is more with labels, which allow an arbitrary identifier followed by a colon, like: quit:. So, given something like quit:x(), the compiler doesn't know if it's "the x in the quit namespace", or "the label quit followed by a call to x` in the global namespace".
In Java, the stack allocates values if it's a primitive (or enum) type and it allocates addresses if it's a user-defined type (but it'll allocate the object on the heap)
Interesting mod reaction, that question is just locked now
-5
Q: An interesting query regarding arrays in c++

Matt MilnaArrays are passed by reference to a function. We can't help it. How about you create an array within a function: a. On stack b. On heap and then return it. What happens in each case, does it automatically get returned by reference as well in which case the one on stack go out of scope and ...

:21629259
> Or.... stop using raw arrays and use std::vector.
usually 99% of responses in questions tagged with array
Whats wrong with std::array?
20:53
@JerryCoffin good point
@CaptainGiraffe Nothing of course for this case.
@DonLarynx Because 95% of people asking have a problem which would not exist if they used it.
@CaptainGiraffe Exactly one thing, that it isn't an empty class for n==0. Not that that's of any importance there.
It has all the right moves too.
@DonLarynx While the volume may be greater than justified, that is the practical solution to most problems with/questions about native arrays.
20:55
@milleniumbug Your estimation of 95% is arguable though, i think it's more.
@Deduplicator It isn't? I'm fairly sure it is.
If it was, aggregate-initialization without knowing it was length 0 would be broken.
or C++ would have to allow 0-sized raw arrays.
@CaptainGiraffe I'll pretend I never said that
@Deduplicator You mean std::array<T, 0> a = {};?
@milleniumbug yes.

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