@gnzlbg I mean at the meeting. There was a discussion between CWG and EWG about what should actually happen in this case, but I don't remember the exact conclusion.
@ratchetfreak For sanity you need something that has a dependent type to hold onto in the condition, because the underlying mechanism generally implements this using the mechanisms of generic lambdas.
Though often some people (...BS...) misrepresent technical opposition as political one.
(So while operator. was withdrawn because Core found problems, the rejection of default comparison operators will surely be called a political action.)
I won't say who said this, because I believe that'd be out of line for me, but there was a sentence similar to "I voted against this, because I dislike the general disrespect of Bjarne's opinion in this group" uttered in Oulu.
Which is batshit insane.
No technical arguments, just "start listening to Bjarne or else".
> Matthias reported that when he did a quick check in a large codebase he determined that this proposal would require writing more code than today, because the defaults would not work and extra code would have to be written to prevent them causing problems.
(This is from Oulu minutes.)
> Stroustrup responded that there was an opt-in proposal, and a promise to extend the syntax to do some form of that. Van Eerd requested clarification and Stroustrup said to prevent the defaults you must delete or define your own. He imagined opt-in working by letting you request only less-than or only equality, which would prevent both defaults being generated. Van Eerd replied that that isn't what most people mean by opt-in.
> Snyder said this isn't even an opt-out proposal, because there's no way to request the C++14 behaviour. Deleting the operator is not the same as there being none, w.r.t bases that are comparable. Feature has been redesigned two meetings in a row. Had stronger consensus for the simpler Rapperswil opt-in proposal with =default, which the author decided not to proceed with.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Something about adding functions that were never there without the = default? For ctors the argument could be made that they would normally be there, barring certain conditions that cause them to vanish.
> X: Scream if you think this shouldn't undeniably be strictly opt-in. *squawks* X: Those of you who screamed have been banned from committee meetings for life.
@R.MartinhoFernandes The web site is "professional", even if some of the users aren't. Exactly what it means for a web site to be professional is a different question--seems to me that it's pretty close to meaningless.
@EtiennedeMartel That would make them professionals, but doesn't seem (at least to me) to imply anything about the site itself, unless "professional" when applied to a site means "created by professionals" (but in that case, commercial porn sites would also undoubtedly qualify, so it would imply nothing about NSFW material being off-limits).
@Mysticial This is where having serious unit tests helps you sleep at night (which I mostly didn't do last nigh, but thankfully for different reasons).
@JerryCoffin And I have a shit-ton of them. But most of the code that uses doesn't.
Basically, I save all my large and dangerous changes for around noon. Early enough so that if I break someone, they'll yell at me before the day ends. But late enough that nobody will try to push it into production during trading hours.
@Mysticial Decades ago, lots of friends of mine used to have conspiracy theories about Microsoft dominating by being crooked. To an extent they were right, but I was convinced that a lot of it was just shooting themselves in the foot a little less than others. I think the same applies to Google to a large extent.
@JerryCoffin Another thing is that there isn't much in the way for code-reviews. There isn't enough man-power for that. lol So everyone is basically trusted to do the right thing for the stuff they own.
@Griwes I'm actually surprised that it hasn't crashed and burned. One big difference that I've noticed is that the turnover rate is much lower than at Google. I've been here for almost 5 months now. And I only know of like 2 people in my department of like 300+ that have left. At Google, people are constantly joining/leaving, transferring. Here, the "owner" of a codebase is usually the original author - who is (by far) the most suitable person to make unreviewed changes.
That's my hypothesis on how the firm can get away without unit-testing and code-reviews.
When you think about this a bit, it almost makes sense. Which do you think is more productive? - One person alone on a project for 5 years. - 10 people - two at a time, each staying for 1 year.
In terms of raw man power, the second scenario is 2x the first. But if you consider turnover overhead and fact that the guys in the 2nd scenario are not going to know the code-base...
@Mysticial In terms of actual improvement, the first may well turn out a fair amount better. In the second scenario, chances are pretty decent that a fair amount of the work done is spent on just undoing the damage they did by failing to understand the code and requirements completely. In theory, tests should eliminate that, but in fact nobody's ever doing to write tests that complete capture all the requirements on a large system. Simply can't be done in most cases.
@EtiennedeMartel I definitely agree with that. I remain convinced that code reviews are probably the single most important part of development.
@EtiennedeMartel I agree. Though part of the reason why I currently don't get code-reviewed, is probably because there's only one other person who knows enough hardware/performance to be qualified to review all my ugly lock-free data-structures. And he's a manager who doesn't have that kind of time.
We're experimenting with the thought of actually requiring 2 CRs. That's a lot of time spent CRing, but I think we wanna try it for an iteration or two
At Google, you need two "approvals". One from the owner of the repo. And one from a "language expert" for code quality. They can be the same person. If you touch multiple repos, you need approvals from an owner for each of them.
Yeah, that's the case here. There are tons of repros and are heavily access gated. They had an issue a few years back where someone tried to steal the trading algorithms. After that, everything is super-locked down.
Currently most of my code gets reviewed by the same person, since they built the system I'm extending (player / enemy skills) and nobody else really has a clue of what's going on in there.
@EtiennedeMartel I have write access to the template library and read access to much of the infrastructure code. But I have no access to the trading algorithms.
I've actually never experimentally determined the number of buses required to hit me to put me out of commission, but I suspect it's the population median
@Puppy If you take it as "the number of bus-incidents that need to happen", it can be 1 and still kill the project - if the team was on its way to a team event in that bus. :D
Don't wanna sound like a vampire here, but (as a C++ newbie, I'm not one of those one-rep users that starts with C++ - I got other programming exp too), but how would I fix this variable escaping the local scope?
I personally find test-driven development to be a bit of an extreme. You write tests, then write the code. Then find out that what your code does isn't really what you wanted to do so you throw everything out.
I'd say start writing tests when you are reasonably confident that you are past the prototyping phase for some scope.
I actually tend to write the basic structure and general cases of the thing, then write tests for those, make sure I got it right, and then use the present interface to figure out what I expect edge cases to do, and then implement the edge cases
I don't mind the plain C, but the old fashioned Windows program bring up feels like overkill for a single promp. For example you can issue an error message box without much effort...