@ratchetfreak Partly. Also partly because Qt is just plain ancient, and quite a few decisions have never been revisited even though they make a lot less sense now than they did decades ago when they were made (e.g., at that time, using COW to save memory was extremely common simply because memory was so much more expensive, and most people had relatively little of it).
COW can be a viable or even great strategy if you have a dedicated type for a specific purpose that COW makes sense for
the problem comes when you try to take something that's generic in essence that can be used in very varying ways, especially if those ways can include write-heavy, and then try to slap COW on it.
for instance having an Image class might not be a bad place to put COW directly, if you design the interface appropriately, since you know in advance that it's mostly useful for storing very large images and most image algorithms don't involve just changing a single pixel
if you are trying to use a COW image, you would provide a function which takes a function that accepts the underlying pointer, then produces a new image object based on the result of that transformation (on a copied buffer)
Yeah, I think we all agree. Its cow on default, especially when moving between threads or on assignment operations, but critical sections are operating directly on the underlying pointer...
@ratchetfreak Best to forget about that case as it's imposisble to prove in concurrent code and just introduces random edge cases even in the best case.
@Mikhail No, that's not how it's done right at all.
in that case fuck COW in the face; just use a plain std::vector, use a shared_ptr if you want to share it, job done.
the whole point of having an immutable COW object is that it handles concurrency nicely without a significant performance cost (and introduces potential optimisation opportunities like incredibly cheap equality checks)
if you don't need that you don't need COW.
and if you ever mutate any thing in that buffer, you've fucked yourself and defeated the point and negated all the potential benefits
@Puppy Not really true at all. As I already alluded to above, one fairly common use of COW is simply to reduce storage requirements. Another possibility that can be interesting is an immutable buffer, and writes are just stored as deltas to the original. Assuming a lot of data and small changes, this can be quite useful as well.
I wonder what Qt6 will be like... and if they'll not use moc and use the c++ stl for containers
prolly not because they'd have to rewrite everything
I still think their direct/queued/auto signals model is great. Forces you to think about your multithreaded-ness just enough but doesn't let you ignore it outright
Have you guys ever really wanted to inherit from std::vector or similar just to have functions that operator on a vector that contains specialized objects? Is the unified call syntax going to fix that?
@Mikhail You can inherit from std::vector just fine. The Tour has an example with it. I have never needed that though. I have no clue what unified call syntax has to do with that.
It feels dirty. Idk, I have maybe 5 functions that perform specific operations on std::vector<MyObject>, that are called from multiple places. I think with the unified call syntax I could write my_vector.one_of_those_functions() without them being members of std::vector, or maybe I don't understand.
like x.f(y) resolve to f(x, y) so that I don't have to f as a member of x's class
You could, but I don't understand why you can't just call one_of_those_functions(my_vector). If it is super important you can use inheritance to make my_vector.one_of_those_functions() compile.
Maybe you can concentrate the boiler plate in a custom iterator with value type std::tuple_element<N, std::tuple> so that other algorithms don't need to worry about tuples.
A few notes to complete what @vnp already said:
When you open several namespaces at once and close them at once, you better indent only once since the double indentation won't add to clarity but will produce "longer" lines. A future revision of the standard may introduce nested namespaces defin...
@Morwenn-spotting while researching some C++ stuff
@BartekBanachewicz isn't it basically like bash (with extra things) right out of the box... iow, if you are happy using bash, jumping to zsh should be seamless?
I came across a user profile which has some rudeness in his title.
Here's a screenshot:
Is this kind of title allowed here in SO? (or in all SE sites?). Isn't that against the be nice policy?
What's the best way to deal with this? Ignore it or should I flag one of his posts for a moderato...
Hi Everyone. We caught a bug report for Fedora 28, PPC64-le. Also see github.com/weidai11/cryptopp/issues/588. I have two questions... (1) is Fedora 28 is considered stable; (2) what version of GCC ships with Fedora 28?
@BartekBanachewicz OK, I actually stripped a bunch of stuff that's not important and ended up with something with so few of the features I implemented for work I can't imagine them complaining, so I just pushed it.
@AF_cpp talk is cheap. And as in this case, often merely confusing. Your prose wastes a lot more mental bandwidth than a MCVE of 40 lines would. — sehe51 secs ago
@Puppy maybe he never intended them for a single mobo when he bought them, and now he's sad that it didn't happen in the mean time
@Puppy two different machines. I decided to swap the memory between them because the aesthetics didn't work out in one of them. (The set on the right lights up.)
Yeah. Well. That might be a little early then :) Plenty of games to go around
I'm not sure. I think summer 3 years back. So they were... 7/8
But they're completely hooked. For completely different reasons. The youngest is the hacker and doesn't live if there's no redstone involved. The oldest goes for the "real story play" - they often complement eachothers world really nicely