« first day (2120 days earlier)      last day (2814 days later) » 

12:04 AM
 
holy shit
two different people bluntly informing him volatile had nothing to do with threads and he didn't fact-check he argued?
 
yep
 
1:06 AM
I just got this email:
> Dear Prof. Dr. Yee
I am a BS student.
I have studied your nice paper ``The Decimal Expansion of pi Is Not Statistically Random"
I would be grateful if you could please send me 10 trillion decimal digits of pi used in your paper.

Best regards,
(name)
Problems:
1. I'm not a professor.
2. I'm not a doctor.
3. I'm not the author of that paper. It cites me, but I'm not associated with it.
4. How the hell am I gonna send 10 terabytes of data? There's a fucking entry in my FAQ explaining this.
ahahahaha
 
Just give them the program
Also that paper feels juvenile
 
@Mysticial He's indeed a bullshit student
 
I wonder how you arbitrary choose a grouping unit for the generating function, for example base 10 instead of something else.
 
@Mikhail When I heard about that paper, the first thought I had was, "Did I fuck up the program?" Last time I checked it was all good, but I've refactored the final digit converter step a number of times. So if it was wrong in a way that biased the digits away from random, that might do it.
 
seriously, just link him the program and let him figure out how to generate the digits. Or if you happen to have a few weeks, bill him hourly for the time it takes to copy the data to a set of new hdds he has to pay for as well
 
1:10 AM
But after brute-force testing the conversion code it looked fine. And a cross-check of the program with other programs was also fine.
The computation itself is verified mathematically. But the final conversion of the digits from base 10^19 to ascii text is not verified.
 
Oh! And don't forget to charge shipping and handling ^^
What was the reason for choosing 10^19?
 
Largest power of 10 that fits into a 64-bit integer.
That's the native output format of the program after converting the digits from base 2^64 to 10^19.
 
Ah, so it ensures that the number fits the data
 
But one more step is needed to convert from 10^19 to ascii text. Technically that can be easily done with std::stringstream. But that's far too slow for that many digits.
 
I would imagine!
 
1:16 AM
So I have some hilariously optimized version, which does some very sketchy stuff with floating-point. I never formally proved the correctness of that method. Instead I brute-forced it for all inputs.
 
I would imagine! Enter: mys::stringstream
 
The algorithm splits the 19 digit number into 10 and 9 digit numbers. That part is proved mathematically. Then I brute-force test the 10 billion combinations for the 10 digit part.
But the whole thing relies on some sketchy floating-point which could go bad with different fast-math optimizations.
(which I disable btw)
 
Ah, so then if every 10 digit part is valid, you can assume to some degree that the 9 digit parts in between are also valid
 
firefox freezes on my mac a lot nowadays
 
1:20 AM
btw, you wouldn't happen to know if there's an easy way to track down cmake compiler flags? I've got an autogenerated cmake project and it's compiling with -j 0, which means...
it doesn't
 
nope
 
@StackedCrooked Adorable
 
Your converter has nice comments
 
I can't tell if you really meant that or if you're being sarcastic.
 
@Mysticial what is some of the most important computing advice you know to make us better programmers?
 
1:30 AM
@iliketocode Watch Anime.
 
@Mystical i'm watching this now- youtube.com/watch?v=ydP12T9ypuY
 
@Mysticial I mean it.
 
It basically does 16 std::stringstream calls at the same time. That's what happened during the 3 months I was unemployed.
 
Sorry, I was delving into makefiles trying to find which one had the brilliant idea to try compiling my code with 0 cores
 
1:35 AM
What does that even do?
It just hangs forever?
 
Haha, it would, but thankfully the compiler is telling me that it's a stupid idea and I should rtfm (and refuses to compile until I stop being stupid). but it isn't me who should rtfm.
 
File a bug on the compiler to tell the right person instead of you.
 
I'll have to send a bug report to cmake. The autogenerator for codelite projects is what seems to be making the mistake and other people have mentioned it, and that's it's solvable, but unfortunately not how
 
@Mysticial 1. Download some RAM. 2. Load it into that RAM. 3. Email him the RAM. Some people are so smart they just miss the obvious, I guess.
 
user559633
just put it on a 10TB thumb drive.
 
1:45 AM
Well, I'm not sure I trust these 2TB thumb drives. Only $5 fresh from china
 
user559633
That totally works and just doesn't represent itself falsely as 2TB, I'm sure.
 
Sounds about right. Paid for by the government and filled with malware.
 
user559633
Oh man, if that's the case, I'd love to get one and connect it to a honeypot, but I suspect it's way more f-ing boring in reality
 
It'll delete all your files except the ones that incriminate you, which remain on the flash drive for the NSA. It also contains a gps tracker and a brain hacker to control you
 
user559633
i think the brain hacker would be deeply disappointed
 
1:49 AM
@Aaron3468 i am wearing a tinfoil hat, no problems here
 
Wonderful! Now we can begin our ritual to summon RAM from the heavens
 
user559633
it would find a good taco recipe, some shitty interpreted language idiom memorization, about half the lyrics to toto's africa, and not much else worth the effort
 
@ anyone in this room, what is the most important / critical skill needed to be a good programmer?
 
user559633
ability to read documentation and sludge through garbage implementations without getting shitty towards others about it
 
Watch Anime
 
user559633
1:54 AM
decent pre-registration slot on a liver transplant list
 
sry but i don't think anime is going to help
@tristan i don't drink
 
Being able to code yourself out of a wet paper bag
 
Imo, questions like that don't matter; a programmer programs. Part of that is coming to terms with your masochistic tendencies
 
user559633
how are you taking anything i'm saying seriously
 
user559633
oh sorry, i'm probably over kicking my coverage as this isn't the python room
 
1:56 AM
Speaking of masochistic tendencies, after banging my head against the keyboard until it bled, I realized that this led to my finding the setting I need to change to make my code compile ^_^
 
Programming is all about imagination. If can imagine it, you can do it. There are no limits. Such as when Luvia pushes Miyu out of the helicopter so she can learn to fly.
 
Except that I need to change it for ~15 different projects in the workspace. And I haven't even begun with my code. These are just the dependencies I'm compiling
 
user559633
 
@iliketocode git gud. That, and being able to problem solve, because you WILL run into errors and exceptions
 
@Mysticial some of my top thoughts would be "ability to think unconventionally, outside of the box" and "ability (and love) of learning things"
 
1:59 AM
@Mysticial I just finished Fate/Stay Night and I watched Fate/Zero. What next?
 
That, and like every rated E for everyone game, and basic reading abilities
 
@Aaron3468 Watch Fate Kaleid. Same characters, different setting.
Change of tone to something more comedic and light-hearted. But a very good transition.
It's on it's fucking 4th season now. That's how popular it is.
 
user559633
The cover of that looks like the most anime that has ever anime'd
 
You will get my Luvia/Miyu/helicopter reference in episode 4 of the 1st season.
 
i don't know how to anime
 
user559633
2:02 AM
I think if my girlfriend walked in and saw my google image search, I'd have to commit to it and tell her that we're an anime family now.
 
> pushes Miyu out of the helicopter so she can learn to fly
What is this, Touhou with vehicles?
 
has anyone ever played Armored Core?
 
user559633
i was killed repeatedly by someone that knew how the game works, if that's what you're asking
 
@Darkrifts It's a Mahou Shoujo - but with a more male-oriented target audience.
 
@tristan Fate/Zero and Fate/Stay Night are two of the more polished anime because most of the story was written in novels and visual novels beforehand
 
2:03 AM
lol
 
@Mysticial No idea what you just said. All I know about Japanese junk is they did Nintendo and Touhou is some kind of japanese bullet hell game :P
 
and Nintendo made the Zelda series. Nuff said
 
user559633
zelda is the name of the green sword guy, right?
 
NOOOO that's link
 
@Mysticial Luvia was an interesting character in the Unlimited Codes game :D
 
2:05 AM
zelda is the princess.
 
Zelda's the troll
 
user559633
there's a princess in zelda?
 
^^ This is why Miyu can't fly. It's because she doesn't believe she can fly.
 
user559633
haha sorry. legend of zelda was maybe the 5th game i ever obsessively played as a child.
 
user559633
2:07 AM
@Mysticial flying a helicopter isn't about believing in yourself.
 
there was a guy that literally jumped out of a plane without a parachute a few weeks ago, and landed in a net. I saw the video on reddit
 
user559633
ostensibly, you just have to believe in yourself.
 
I'd like to see him try that on Mars
 
@HWalters if we could just simply get him to mars, that would be a big step for humanity
 
2:16 AM
I though that wouldof ben a huge fall
 
@FélixGagnon-Grenier yeah, good for him he didn't miss. the net really was a sort of small too considering how fast he was going... I am going to sit safely behind my computer now and not jump out of any airplanes
 
Yay, the code has begun compiling after 5 minutes of opening each project and removing the bad flag to compile with zero cores. A thing of beauty.
While I wait for it to compile on this arm processor, I'll contemplate my sin of not having a cross-compiler on my desktop and watch Fate/Khaleid
 
@iliketocode I share that viewpoint very much. But still... must be exhilerating.!
 
He did have 3 spotters ready to intervene if he drifted too far. It was only really the last few 1000 feet that he was falling without a parachute
 
What was that thing going out of their foot?
almost seems like a reactor-ish boot or something
 
2:26 AM
Turbulence
 
..... I don't buy that. Only the three spotters, only their left foot, very much constant trail of smoke.... you know :p
 
Oh, maybe they had tiny boosters to help them get to him faster. Looks like the jet stream was appearing on both feet for the middle spotter
 
nice..... "hey I'm in free fall, let's have some boosters in case I need to go faster down!"
 
Those people are professionally trained skydivers serving in a supervisory role... "I'm a SCUBA diver and I should pack a 5 minute oxygen tank so I don't sink"
 
dude you sure do hate fun
:D
 
2:32 AM
Sorry, I'm not one to enjoy poking fun at good decisions by professionals .-.
 
2:55 AM
user image
3
 
3:06 AM
If you love wild cats this is a good read
 
Haha, cool! I liked it :3
Kaleid really is Fate with mahou shoujo. I did not expect that /cc @Mysticial
 
3:24 AM
hehe
 
3:51 AM
> Elementary student finds a floral printed letter in her locker. "This must be a love letter!!" >"Come to the courtyard at midnight or I'll kill come pick you up"
lol
 
where?
 
Episode 2, about 8 minutes in
 
oh
ahahaha
 
4:05 AM
@Mysticial Flying is easy. You just have to throw yourself at the ground...and miss.
 
 
Finally got the occupational certificate for the new house I have built
 
@JerryCoffin now you've got me eying my copy of the trilogy again >_>
 
@Telkitty That's good news. It's finished now?
 
yes, completely
about to upload a video
of the whole construction process
 
 
1 hour later…
5:43 AM
What... episode 6 is a huge deus ex machina if you have no clue about the universes >.> /cc @Mysticial
 
@Aaron3468 Oh, wow you're that far already.
 
5:58 AM
@Telkitty Very impressive! How's the move-in?
 
rented out
 
Haha, like a pro. Well done
@Mysticial Yeah, I tend to marathon things when I have my days off and I'm waiting for compilation/download/updates
 
@Telkitty Is there no isolation in the floor? I am assuming temperatures never go bellow 0 C?
 
ever snows in Sydney
 
I was wondering whereabouts. Looked like an arid environment like Arizona ^^;
 
Xeo
6:16 AM
@Aaron3468 of what?
 
@Xeo Fate Kaleid
 
Xeo
ah
 
He asked for a recommendation after finish FSN and Fate Zero.
 
Xeo
I really want to like it, but from what I've seen, the amount of fan service is just too overwhelming.
 
So Fate Kaleid was the most obvious followup.
@Xeo I didn't see much fan service in it.
 
Xeo
6:26 AM
whut.
Did you only watch the first season?
 
I've see all that have aired so far.
 
Xeo
Ehhhh
 
I'm watching season 4 as it aires right now.
 
@Aaron3468 I know you had solved the problem already, but I use cmake -LAH to display all CMake variables
Very handy
 
Ell
Damn
I forgot the code into my building
3
 
6:54 AM
TIL Ell not only needs to recompile the kernel, but also he needs to program the building he lives in
 
7:20 AM
your face
 
8:14 AM
@Morwenn see, my thing is no longer empty. :P
 
8:39 AM
:o
 
And it even does something!
 
In Berlin, it seems impossible to find eggs that were not purposedly grown inefficiently.
 
Not pure enough then.
 
nwp
@R.MartinhoFernandes what kind of eggs are you talking about?
 
@Morwenn It deals with files!
 
8:55 AM
@Griwes That was the joke :(
 
I know :(
 
@nwp Surprisingly, I'm just asking for normal eggs.
 
nwp
I thought normal eggs are grown by a hen in a day. I didn't know there are alternatives.
 
@nwp Eggs from hens grown in a purposedly inefficient manner.
Which are hens fed with feed grown in a purposedly inefficient manner.
I'm glad that they label their inefficient products with big flashy signs, but I'm not happy I can't find any without the damn BIO thing all over.
 
nwp
So it is about what you feed the hens?
 
9:03 AM
That's just the most obvious case of express inefficiency.
They refuse to use "synthetic" nitrogen (i.e. extracted directly from air through fractional distillation, not really synthesised) as fertilizer, and as a result obtain lower yields.
 
nwp
I wouldn't care about how they make the eggs, I just buy the cheapest they have because I cannot tell the difference anyways.
 
Berlin is full of fucking hipsters, so now every supermarket caters to them with this bullshit, to the point that I can no longer find regular eggs without going far.
@nwp (Oh, growing them inefficient is a surefire way to make them more expensive)
 
nwp
Also every super market from any of the chains should have non-bio eggs.
 
@nwp They're getting harder and harder to find. Not the first time I can't find them at the Kaufland next to my place.
 
user1804599
noo
 
user1804599
9:12 AM
% tar czf matpic.tar.bz2 materials/*
zsh: argument list too long: tar
 
user1804599
;_;
 
user1804599
tar -cz -f matpic.tar.bz2 -T <(ls materials | sed 's#^#materials/#') :3
 
user1804599
oops ENOSPC
 
user1804599
6.6 GB of GIFs disguised as JPEGs
 
user1804599
9:22 AM
Maybe I should convert them to actual JPEGs and they'll be smaller in file size.
 
nwp
Or try .png with max compression rate to preserve quality.
 
nwp
9:39 AM
also why tell me that prefixes and suffixes are supported but not how -.-
 
shnek_case
 
@nwp because Bjarne_case is completely retarded?
Literally no-one (except Bjarne) uses it.
 
nwp
I use it and my colleagues and convincing them to use clang-tidy when it can't even represent that is gonna suck.
 
Thank you.
Writing English while saying something in Polish doesn't seem to work.
 
Morning
I'm trying to find the day for a given date. Easy when using <ctime>, tm struct and mktime(). Now I got into nasty problems when I try dates from before 1970. After googling a lot, I could only find a Boost solution. Isn't there a "native" solution to handle dates before epoch?
 
9:52 AM
There isn't a native solution for dates at all, since <ctime> is not really a native C++ header, just a C header <time.h> wrapped in namespace std {}.
 
oh, good point
 
There's this, but I suppose it's still faaaaar away.
 
The best solution is probably Howard Hinnant's library.
 
Hmmm I see...
I'm trying to include Boost library in Clion but it's kind of a pain to setup with cmake or maybe I'm just a noob
 
@Morwenn I still have reviewing that on my backlog.
 
nwp
9:56 AM
there doesn't seem to be any documentation how to write a proper .clang-tidy file beyond the example that llvm uses
 
@Morwenn nice!
 
@Morwenn how did I forget that I actually saw that, and how did I end up with just remembering there was a paper
 
NodaTime handles months more properly than that.
Maybe I should contribute :D
Why do I get so attracted to the thorniest bullshit like text and dates :<
 
Ugh, yeah. Handling months is always a pain anyway :/
 
9:59 AM
Not with NodaTime!
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah right, you must be an M or something.
 
@Morwenn Wazzat?
 
As opposed to an S.
 
?
Oh.
In NodaTime, it's easy to get behaviour like 28 May + 1 month = 28 Jun.
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes makes twelve kind of senses
 
10:01 AM
With Howard's current definition of month, it seems that you would get 27 Jun.
@LucDanton I can't parse that
Oh.
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Because there is fame to be gained if you solve it right? :)
 
@wilx But it's only this stuff in particular.
Also, I already helped solve this before :D nodatime.org
The important design decision we made in NodaTime was to make explicit two the largely incompatible notions of a "time span".
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Not for C++. :)
 
There's Period and Duration. Period.FromMonths(1) gives you the human notion of "month" (i.e. 28th of Xember + 1 month = 28th X+1ember for all Xs). There is no Duration.FromMonths, so you're forced to do something like Duration.FromDays(30) or similar.
(No, I don't remember what happens if you add 1 month to 30th of January)
 
10:27 AM
> This video contains content from Vin Di Bona Productions, who has blocked it in your country on copyright grounds.
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes I do like this one:
using years = std::chrono::duration
    <int, std::ratio_multiply<std::ratio<146097, 400>, days::period>>;
At least that works out pretty well on average, for large periods
 
nwp
> error: unknown argument: '-header-filter=.*' [clang-diagnostic-error]
Suprressed 1581 warnings (1581 in non-user code).
Use -header-filter=.* to display errors form all non-system headers.
 
So are we alive?
Or is Cinch going to keep checking in when no one is there?
 
10:45 AM
@sehe Actually, it fails more for large periods :/
 
More than what (small periods, presumably)?
 
5 August 2016 + 90 years = ?
 
That will give you 6 August 2106.
 
> im so confused... where the hell do you even start hacking or programming? do you have to buy C# or download it somewhere?
 
10:47 AM
Argh.
I'm bad at this.
It will be off by one.
 
Also
Who's been working on the C++ docs?
And what sort of background knowledge is expected for the "Introduction to C++" page?
 
@sehe Anyway, the months thing works on average just as well.
The problem is that that's not what humans want.
If you're doing some kind of work that needs exact time spans, you won't use months to describe them. More likely you will use days (though the largest unit that cannot represent different time span quantities is the second).
If you're not, you will want 28 May + 1 month to be 28 Jun, not 27 Jun, and the same goes for years.
You want 28 Jan 2016 + 1 year to be 28 Jan 2017, not 27 Jan 2017.
 
nwp
30 Jan + 1 month = ?
 
Basically the problem is that this notion of month = year/12 is not useful.
 
10:55 AM
Ok, slightly before 9pm, going to drive 600+ km to the start of the hike tonight, l8RZzz
 
45 mins ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
(No, I don't remember what happens if you add 1 month to 30th of January)
 
is anybody familiar with the c++17 variant?
i am trying to find out if there is an empty state available in the standard without luck
 
nwp
@nwp they also have aNy_CasE, it just isn't written in the documentation. I bet they also have Snake_case or Bjarne_case, it is just called something else. I'm starting to wonder if I'm just wasting my time on this -.-
 
something like variant<int, string, none>
is there a std::experimental::none or similar? It is just an empty struct, but thought that might be part of the proposal :/
 
std::monostate?
@gnzlbg it is
 
11:02 AM
I thought that was for variants of non-default constructible types
@LucDanton thanks, i'll check that out
 
that’s not contradictory
 
Unit type intended for use as a well-behaved empty alternative in std::variant.
yep, seems to be what i want
thanks!
 
Hi Guys
Need help
Working on upgrade of VS2003 C++ to VS2008.
 
i actually saw it and read the brief description and thought it wasn't what i wanted, first line of the longer description in cppreference had it though
 
Stuck with an error: Error 849 error LNK2001: unresolved external symbol "public: static wchar_t const * const xercesc_2_8::XMLUni::fgDOMWRTEntities" (?fgDOMWRTEntities@XMLUni@xercesc_2_8@@2QB_WB) xmlfileiolib.lib
 
11:05 AM
@MayankGarg oh nice, finally moving from paleontology to archeology?
 
Thanks @Griwes.
other error looks like: Error 856 error LNK2019: unresolved external symbol "public: static bool __cdecl xercesc_2_8::XMLString::transcode(char const * const,wchar_t * const,unsigned int,class xercesc_2_8::MemoryManager * const)" (?transcode@XMLString@xercesc_2_8@@SA_NQBDQA_WIQAVMemoryManager@2@@Z) referenced in function "public: void * __thiscall DomParser::CreateDomDoc(char const *,int)" (?CreateDomDoc@DomParser@@QAEPAXPBDH@Z) xmlfileiolib.lib
 
Happy to help with an insightful comment any time.
@MayankGarg Oh look, I don't care even harder with each longer error message you post!
Slow down, I might turn into stone from not caring too hard for my own good!
 
670
Q: What is an undefined reference/unresolved external symbol error and how do I fix it?

Luchian GrigoreWhat are undefined reference/unresolved external symbol errors? What are common causes and how to fix/prevent them? Feel free to edit/add your own.

 
@R Martinho Fernandes: Tried almost all option of that post.
 
@MayankGarg There are no other options.
 
11:10 AM
Am I plonked?
 
Unresolved externals have pretty straightforward causes.
@VermillionAzure "Introduction to C++" doesn't sound like the kind of page that should be on docs.
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes Well it's on there.
And I'm not the one who put it there.
 
Docs sucks because no one really cares about the stated goals of Docs. But rep.
@VermillionAzure Won't change my opinion, though.
 
okay, Let me go through again.
Thanks
 
11:16 AM
What happens with shared_ptr<T>(static_cast<T*>(nullptr))?
 
yeah std::shared_ptr<T> has an extra state that std::unique_ptr doesn’t have (off the top of my head)
that’s what you were thinking of, right?
 
static_cast<T*>(nullptr) is convertible to T*. Let's assume T is a complete type for this exercise. delete static_cast<T*>(nullptr) is well formed and has well defined behavior and doesn't throw exceptions.
All Requires are met.
But the postcondition of use_count() = 1 looks wrong to me.
 
Xeo
You have a shared empty pointer, then :P
 
do you remember the aliasing constructors for shared pointers?
 
Xeo
> template <class D> shared_ptr(nullptr_t p, D d);
there's also that
 
11:19 AM
you can have std::shared_ptr<T> q(p, nullptr);, too
 
@LucDanton But there there is something being owned :/
It irks me a lot that shared_ptr<T>(static_cast<T*>(nullptr)) is not the same as shared_ptr<T>(nullptr).
 
I guess? it’s more or less the same state though
 
@LucDanton Yes, but adding a static cast changes nothing in that case.
std::shared_ptr<T> q(p, nullptr) is equivalent to std::shared_ptr<T> q(p, static_cast<T*>(nullptr)).
 
of course, but the obvious problem here are the std::nullptr_t constructors
(joking aside, which topic are you more interested in: sane API design, or the semantics and valid states of shared pointers?)
 
@LucDanton The former.
Is that a tacit agreement that this design is not sane?
 
11:22 AM
Nearly all effect should have a If p == nullptr, equivalent to shared_ptr().
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes yes, I took the state for granted since it kinda arises naturally from the aliasing constructors—the inconsistency between std::nullptr_t here and there though is genuinely bad
@R.MartinhoFernandes does it make you feel better if you think of .use_count() as reflecting internals, e.g. the count of the bookkeeping being kept alive, rather than being precisely about the pointees? it notably differs with operator bool here
 
@LucDanton I agree that use_count is an internals thing (it's hard to find legitimate uses for it) but I wouldn't say the same about unique, though.
checks if unique reflects this inconsistency as well
It's in terms of use_count, so it does.
 
I’ve never thought of unique as anything but a shortcut, what do you have in mind here?
 
This came up from a side-remark at work.
We were discussing something else, and someone's example code had a // BTW is this equivalent ... comment.
Also, p.reset(nullptr) doesn't compile.
Ewww, this nullptr thing is full of inconsistencies.
 
alternative API design: to make the unconditional post-condition work, obviously the constructor should take a non-null thing. iow, it should be explicit shared_ptr(T& arg);!
 
11:32 AM
The original remark was actually about reset; I only dug into the ctors because reset is defined in terms of them.
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes I’m genuinely sceptical regarding the quality of the generic code in the Library these days :/ tbf it’s fucking hard to keep track of the pitfalls, workarounds and other quirks
 
it needs a redesign
 
I actually tend to shy away from writing too many constructors since it entails a lot of work to maintain parity with assignment, including the smart assignments, too (i.e. assign, reset, emplace and what have you)
and I don’t mind writing just the one converting constructor leaving conversion + move assignment to take care of x = a
 
@LucDanton which if inlined and optimized should be as good as the custom converting assignment
 
that’s neither here nor there
 
11:41 AM
Checking boost::shared_ptr now.
> Requirements: Y must be a complete type. The expression delete[] p, when T is an array type, or delete p, when T is not an array type, must be well-formed, must not invoke undefined behavior (...)
Emphasis mine.
K, boost shares this inconsistency.
 
Can somebody check my basic trees page?
 
@R.MartinhoFernandes seeing as it predates nullptr, maybe it simply followed the fold
 

« first day (2120 days earlier)      last day (2814 days later) »