Why does humanism go hand-in-hand with racist and sexist movements? Shouldn't it oppose these? https://twitter.com/americnhumanist/status/733018944282501120
But not being able to partially specialize, say, a member function template of a class template on the arguments of the enclosing class template is silly.
also a common pixel representation can be useful later on if I decide to have an internal common image representation, or maybe cached thumbnails and syncImageChange that tracks when the source image is changed.. since boost::gil in general is used for image processing purposes
@BartekBanachewicz it's not a format, it's just a common representation, since the library basically does not have one .. it process images based on dynamic list of channels
@BartekBanachewicz in boost::gil there are like 999 classes you've to read combined based on image type deduction through template tricks which I do not understand, in this it's going to be just 1 struct that contain supported pixel data
I want C++ to become as complicated as possible, that means accepting every featureful paper (concepts, modules, operator., reflections, futures/other async stuff, contracts), but only after I changed $work.
Oh, I didn't actually look at your application :| I just assumed you wanted to do what you asked for and no standard algorithm existed (because, you know, why ask :)) — sehe2 mins ago
When you absent-mindedly ace the answer by not reading the question at all
@borgleader Basically any time we have multi-step rules for lookup, we end up with complex systems like ADL (argument-dependent lookup, aka koenig lookup)
I find that UFCS in D is much less of a problem, because you know which modules you imported (and in my case, I either list functions I import, or name the import)
Basically all it says is to respond to a message rather than a user, click on the arrow at the right of the message you want to respond to, this inserts :<messageid>
@blelbach At the very right of every message (except yours), there's a "reply" arrow. Messages posted this way have 1.) highlighting to see the context 2.) a "reply to" arrow at their very left
@blelbach Ok so, the problem is it complexifies compilation, but it wouldnt screw up anything language wise? Or does ADL get worse if we add operator. because i was under the impression it would fall in the same path as operator->
@Borgleader If we get operator., we introduce a new, complex lookup system similar in nature to ADL. Implementing that system will presumably be tricky, and we currently have 0% experience doing so.
@blelbach I wonder how I missed the standing document on submitting papers before - all I could find was the thing from Alisdair about library papers, though the isocpp.org FAQ also doesn't link to this thing...
I'm judging! :D Calling X.f() -> check X for .f() methods -> if that fails, form an overload resolution set from all the methods of A and B -> check the new set for .f() methods
@Ven Ok so basically the reason operator. is more complicated than operator-> is someone decided to change the rules and allow it to be overloaded on return type otherwise it would have been fine?
@blelbach TBF, it's not the hardest thing to do. having a special path that tracks dot-coercions only allows if you have operator., and that shouldn't happen very often
What I mean is: it should be easy not to pessimize