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15:00
@JerryCoffin learning* but why do you say that.
@JesseTylerThompsonUmoette First, because it's vague and ambiguous (e.g., IMO, "Malware" includes essentially everything from Symantec, Kaspersky, etc.) Second, because most of it isn't very interesting, so there's not much to learn from it anyway.
@JerryCoffin as in learning to developing viruses? Not defending against them
Ok fuck it. Time to stop avoiding writing that optional<T&> thingy :(
Xeo
Xeo
lol
I wonder if I can make it work simply by tuning StorageFor and not touching my current implementation of optional.
15:10
@JesseTylerThompsonUmoette Either way, most existing malware is boring and stupid -- when you look at it internally, quite a bit appears to have been intended as some sort of a "agent", but has enough bugs that it's destructive instead of useful. Defending against viruses is mostly writing a big list of signatures -- boring. Writing them is basically admitting that you're incapable of writing anything useful. Seems to me only a worthless loser would really even consider either one.
5
grr
I want to say 2^n and put it in code tags
but it looks like 2 xor n
im at the point where id really like to start developing a real game but I don't have any artwork. With that being said im just looking for something to do relating to programming in the meantime :P
Am I right on saying that a FIFO stack is an oxymoron?
Isn't a stack LIFO by definition?
@JesseTylerThompsonUmoette So develop the game without (decent) art work. If you do a decent game, adding better artwork is fairly straightforward.
15:13
@JesseTylerThompsonUmoette First of all - if you're developing a game, first come up with an idea for a game. I fail to do so, continuously.
@Jeffrey You can say FIFO queue instead.
I can overload void f(foo&) and void f(foo const&), can't I?
that should be possible
@R.MartinhoFernandes Of course.
type_traits relies on this
GCC is being unhelpful with the error messages.
15:14
@milleniumbug i have a really good idea for a game :)
@Magtheridon96 It does?
JBL
JBL
0
Q: QT 5 64-bit for Windows and VS2010

Mr.C64Trying to download QT 5 for Windows from this web page, I noted that the 64-bit version is available only for VS2012, not for VS2010. It seems that they use VS2010 for 32-bit, and VS2012 for 64-bit. Does anyone know the reason for that? Are there important blocking bugs in VS2010 64-bit C++ ...

Well, I think
@milleniumbug Yeah obviously. I just read "FIFO stack" on a book and I was discussing it with a friend. He says that a stack can be FIFO, I say that the definition of a stack is LIFO. Who's right?
JBL
JBL
He has no idea what he's going into. Poor lad.
user142019
15:15
Man.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I mean, I know you can create two templates, one having a const arg and the second one a non-const arg
user142019
Arithmetic in LESS is so nice.
user142019
CSS y u no arithmetic.
LESS is pretty neat
(we're talking about the same template here)
15:16
@Jeffrey Well, I think you're right ;)
user142019
top: @slider-height / 2 - @slider-button-height / 2;
user142019
This is heaven.
@rightfold My pants would like a word with you
@Jeffrey A stack is LIFO. Now, move on to something worth discussing, not just vocabulary lessons.
Ell
Ell
15:18
Hmm. I don't know who is with jerry in that photo. Should I?
@rightfold Isnt there also a thing to define colors like var blue = #0000FF and then reference that everywhere so you can change it in only one place. and i think you can do arithmetic on colors too?
@Jeffrey My understanding is that you can have both LIFO queue and FIFO queue, but stack is LIFO.
user142019
@Borgleader @slider-height is a variable here.
user142019
@link-color: #2184fe;
@dark-link-color: darken(@link-color, 20%);
Either say LIFO/FIFO or stack/queue.
15:19
26 mins ago, by Mysticial
This is me and Jerry. The iphone sucks in low lighting. But since Jerry will be around for another week or so, we'll try to get a better picture over the weekend.
3
@rightfold Isn't that CSS3 only?
@CatPlusPlus That works better - and shorter... and clearer....
user142019
@Jeffrey That's LESS, not CSS.
That's not CSS at all.
user142019
CSS4 will have arithmetic, IIRC.
user142019
15:20
And fucking parent selectors which I'm already craving for years.
> error: ‘wheels::optional<T>::optional(T&&) [with T = std::pair<...>&]’ cannot be overloaded
WTF is wrong.
user142019
@Jeffrey CSS3 has no arithmetic.
Yeah sorry I meant arithmetic. But you answered anyway.
user142019
You have to do it yourself, which sucks.
user142019
Especially when you want to change one thing.
15:21
    optional(T const& t);
    optional(T&& t);
CSS browser support also sucks most of the time.
user142019
I tested my website in IE and it was completely fucked up.
user142019
Added Modernizr and it looked great. (Y)
@rightfold fuck ie
if i made a website, id make it work on FF and chrome and not care about anything else
user142019
Still no border radius though.
user142019
15:24
@Borgleader but your client will care about something else.
@rightfold meh, still web dev
@Borgleader I would explicitly block IE users with something like "Come on man! IE? Are you kidding me?"
user142019
@Jeffrey but slightly less terrible!
@rightfold Oh its for a client, fyl
whats so bad about ie? IVE NEVER HAD A PROBLEM WITH IT. e.e
15:24
@Mysticial I'll do more than hit on that, mmm~
Jerry does look super young though.
user142019
@Borgleader well, not this one.
@Jeffrey friend of mine made a website and when any page is loaded with IE it basically says "go get one of the following browsers: ff, chrome, opera"
@JesseTylerThompsonUmoette try supporting other browsers
user142019
IE is the cancer of the web.
@JesseTylerThompsonUmoette It always wanted to have its own fucking rules for everything instead of standardize itself with the W3C.
15:25
@Borgleader That reflection system looked... interesting, I suppose. I've got a bit of a different idea on how I'd like to go about it, though. :P
@JesseTylerThompsonUmoette There are entire sites dedicated to this subject.
@Borgleader Moar people show do that. Like Google or Facebook.
The ain't going to do that though
Are there going to be static constructors in C++14/17?
i use firefox. im just saying i personally never had an issue with it
@ThePhD Nope. Simulate them by yourself.
15:26
=[[[[[[[[[
user142019
Imagine Google and Facebook and all their competitors suddenly don't support IE anymore.
IE is a pain in the ass for webdevelopers because it's a piece of shit that's still widely used.
@JesseTylerThompsonUmoette It's mostly a problem for programmers, not for clients
user142019
The world would be saved.
They will never go to war with Microsoft. Not Facebook for sure.
15:27
@ThePhD That was more me dicking around with templates to figure out how to get information I needed. That is in no way final design
You can't win a war against Microsoft.
@JesseTylerThompsonUmoette Google could.
user142019
Chrome is doing quite well.
user142019
@JesseTylerThompsonUmoette ps4 just did
user142019
15:28
Blue is IE, green is Chrome.
@ThePhD The heck is that?
@ThePhD Introducing some static initialization order would be more useful than static constructors.
I mean in general. They have a monopoly on their OS. at least 75% of computer users use Windows :P
inb4 United states sucks at picking browser
@JesseTylerThompsonUmoette Operating systems are moot. Now you're chatting with your browser and probably not using chat program.
user142019
15:29
Interesting how Africans mostly use Firefox.
@rightfold That's not very representative of "doing well". China is blue... I.e. stats fail.
@ThePhD If you need static constructors, you should fix your code first.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I thought I read somewhere about static constructors, or things that are only run once for a certain class, might be in the works.
Maybe I'm just tripping out from std::proposals
Don't be like Jimmy, use Google Chrome
@DeadMG Wide compiles, but I can't run anything worth a damn on it.
15:30
or firefox .___.
or just make your own browser. lol
@JesseTylerThompsonUmoette Yeah, look at the mobile OS share instead
And I'd say we have more phones than computers
@JesseTylerThompsonUmoette No, we don't need of another browser.
@Jeffrey If all browsers followed standards, this problem would be moot.
what's IE's reason for not following standards?
No good reasons
@JesseTylerThompsonUmoette Microsoft is lazy.
15:33
@JesseTylerThompsonUmoette It's boring.
Only advantage for IE is that it uses low amounts of RAM (relatively speaking of course)
but this isn't 1990
In either case, I think serialization/deserialization and reflection info would be better achieved by making a separate Data Declaration Language that looks almost like C++, but is only for declaring structs and their members (which emits C++ source code to be used with the proper things in place).
But, that's an overkill solution I suppose. Still need to manually write the reflection machinery in C++.
@JesseTylerThompsonUmoette Something like: other standards sucks, our standard don't.
In fact it's the exact opposite
@ThePhD Yeah, that's what I told him as well. Code gen.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Maybe we could write our own C++-like DDL. <3
15:34
Going for another weekend of adventure tomorrow, going deep into the mountains & will be roasting some chicken & veges on camp fire after a 4-5 hours hike! ... off now - need to be up in 4 hours and a bit
Would you like to write it together?~~~
@Telkitty猫咪咪 Mmm, you like going deep don't you?~~~
@ThePhD Why not?
@Telkitty猫咪咪 Well, try not to hurt yourself this time. Have fun!
@ThePhD oh yes: marshmallow woman vs the wild :x (p.s. wild wins)
15:35
@ShuklaSannidhya Nope, free on null pointer is noop.
@DeadMG I don't know; I can't read your code. ._.
@ShuklaSannidhya could be implementation dependent
but generally, it's a no-op
@Telkitty猫咪咪 Where's your faith in yourself?
15:35
@ThePhD Clang plugin.
@ThePhD well, if you run in debug mode then it should give you an error or exception that would, at least for me, reveal the problem
@R.MartinhoFernandes Clang Plugin?
@Magtheridon96 Standard requires that it's a NOP.
@milleniumbug "noop"?
i wish i could find my headphones so i could get started :/
15:36
@JerryCoffin ah, didn't know that
@ShuklaSannidhya No operation.
@ThePhD The compiler is the most qualified entity to generate type descriptors.
Ell
Ell
@ThePhD this is what google protobuf does
If you haven't been told :P
Whoa... I've never heard that term before. :O
@Ell I know it does. But if I remember correctly there's things protobuf also doesn't quite do.
15:37
@ThePhD sports and outdoor exercise = bruises. I am fine with that :) Have a good weekend. I'll be back! :D
Ell
Ell
oh right. What are those?
@Telkitty猫咪咪 Okay. Good luck!
Protobuf is not a general purpose reflection tool. It's a serialisation tool.
@Ell I dont' quite remember. I had a list of all the goodies I would need.
user142019
@JesseTylerThompsonUmoette incompetency.
15:38
@R.MartinhoFernandes Oh, so build Clang, use it's type information and dump it out to actual reflection information?
Ell
Ell
I didn't know ThePhD was putting serialization and reflection together
cerealization
user142019
ThePhD is putting serialization, reflection and UB together.
I wanted to write codegen layer for C++.
15:38
@Ell We were talking about reflection from the beginning. (de)serialization is a part of that
But! Serialisation is by far the most common use case for reflection so that makes protobufs good enough.
I am inclined to claim there aren't many other justifiable uses, though.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Script language binding generation, and I might be inclined to claim other kinds of bindings like to database or UI (although I don't usually work in those sectors)
@CatPlusPlus Let's do it together. <33
Ell
Ell
uh oh xD
15:40
I'll just use C# and not C++ instead.
;~;
y u crsh mah dremz.
e~e
That's what cats are for
@ThePhD Srsly, where does Wide crash/debugbreak/throw exception?
15:42
@R.MartinhoFernandes reflection produces: Runtime binding of information, intelligent serialization, and helps with things like RPC transport. There's other things too but I have to go find my list of all the shiny goodies I would like to have.
@rightfold Oversimplified, at best (and IMO, mostly just plain wrong). MS is in a fairly difficult position. If they could just ignore existing web pages and concentrate exclusively on standards, I'm pretty sure they have sufficient competence to conform very well. The problem is they need to maintain compatibility with billions of existing web pages too, and makes their job much more difficult.
@ThePhD The last is serialisation (and in fact, one of the original use cases for protobufs).
Reflection is useful for declarative attributes.
@CatPlusPlus Sharp Cat, sharp. :)
15:45
@JerryCoffin can't the same statement apply to FF/Chrome/Opera?
I dont think they care as much about non-conforming web pages
Oh wait, not that kind of arrow.
10k+ :(
@Borgleader Meh, it's garbage anyway.
> I am trying to create an arrow class using the FLTK graphics library. The arrow is to look somewhat like this: ------->, only without the spaces. (...)
15:49
Brilliant.
Ell
Ell
c++ has attributes now doesn't it?
@Ell [[ attributes ]] yes
Different kind of thing.
@Aboutblank Yes, but only to a much more limited degree. There aren't nearly as many enterprise (and such) apps written to them, for one thing.
Ell
Ell
@R.MartinhoFernandes because you can't reflect on them?
15:50
@Aboutblank No. They had much higher standard compliance to begin with, and also don't have the problem of crappy Intranet apps written decades ago specifically for them.
@Ell Nothing prevents a compiler from providing that, btw.
Ell
Ell
@R.MartinhoFernandes Right. But it's not in the standard
@Ell There are two standard attributes now, so for now it's useless for that.
Opera is switching to Webkit anyway.
And Chrome is switching to their own WebKit fork (Blink).
15:54
What do CS people have against spoons
Wait, Opera uses Blink too?
Well, well.
Ell
Ell
I thought webkit was a google thing?
@CatPlusPlus This is only place that the switch from Netscape to FireFox ended up working out really well -- it looked like a huge mistake for a while, losing all their market share to do a complete rewrite. It let them, however, start over without worrying about compatibility with existing pages and/or their own previous code.
Ell
Ell
Why fork your own library?
@Ell It started with Safari.
15:56
@Ell It's open source. I think it originated from Apple though (or maybe it's Apple's usual: "It's ours -- we stole it first!")
Webkit is a fork of KHTML.
Lots of features in WebKit aren't used by Chrome. So they decided to fork so that they can remove all the stuff they don' tneed.
So it actually started with KDE.
Trip down memory lane there.
@JerryCoffin Totally "It's ours -- we stole it first!"
15:58
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah, even as I was typing "originated from Apple", I was thinking something like: "What are the real chances of that?"
I just wrote T const* const*. It feels weird.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Looks constipated.
this just in from the asylum: moving is an implementation detail compared to copying.
because nobody, ever, used unique_ptr.
2
@Dead btw, MSDN is wrong.
16:01
It's Microsoft, what do you expect
@R.MartinhoFernandes Fair enough. That doesn't change my core point, though- for a move-only type, T pop() makes a lot more sense than what's currently on offer. Even for a type that's just benefitting from moves, like std::string, it would be useful.
0
Q: Inbetweening a rotation

RaptorDotCppI have an image (let's say it's a simple rectangle) positioned on the left of my screen, which I can move up and down. When moving it upwards, I use some simple trigonometry to rotate it so that the rectangle "points" towards the upper right corner of the screen. When moving downwards, it points ...

return **static_cast<T const* const*>(static_cast<void const*>(&storage));
Feels so wrong.
16:05
optional<T&> spec?
why not just store a T* directly?
@DeadMG That's what I do.
16:06
@DeadMG This isn't really about move per se. It's really about nothrow -- we'd like to have a T pop() if T has a nothrow copy ctor as well (though, admittedly, it doesn't make as much difference in this case).
@R.MartinhoFernandes Then what's with the casts?
@DeadMG Hmm, for starters, I forgot T* can be uninitalised.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Also, you could just initialize to nullptr and not have to have a separate present bool.
But more importantly, I'll stop being silly and just inherit storage_for<T&> from storage_for<T*>.
@DeadMG I'm specializing storage_for, not optional (smaller interface). Hopefully optional will work as is without change.
But yeah, that's a potential optimisation I might do later.
@JerryCoffin I think that move does play a role, because if I say auto val = stack.top(); stack.pop(); then between the first and second statements, the stack's top element still has useful state, so if for some reason someone else inspected it, it would be valid. OTOH, if I did auto val = std::move(stack.top());, the stack's top element now has no useful state between now and pop().
16:09
@Borgleader Looks nice and similar to what I was thinking up. I'll tinker with it at work while I marvel at how terrible UE4 engineers are. ;D
@R.MartinhoFernandes I'm looking at it, and unless I forgot some of these rules, then no. Unless your optional has been refactored after I took it from you.
@DeadMG Yes, that's why I was saying it doesn't make as much difference when you just have a nothrow copy ctor. Nonetheless, the current interface is (at best) a pointless complication when/if you're dealing with a type that has a nothrow copy ctor.
@DeadMG Sorry, what are you looking at?
@DeadMG (std::move is redundant there; potentially confusing for the optimiser)
@R.MartinhoFernandes top() returns a T& (unless MSDN is wrong again).
@DeadMG Ah, yeah, I refactored it.
@DeadMG Oh. Goddamn one letter difference. Don't mind me.
16:11
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah, I stole your optional from you a little while back.
oh yeah
did you remember to include rvalue-qualifiers for operator*()?
I only started working on 4.8 recently.
k
oh yeah, I forgot that you're on GCC whereas I'm on Clang
anyways, just don't forget about it, I depend on that somewhere
I wonder if std::optional got it right?
nope
Function ref-qualifiers seems to be another feature everyone forgets about, like noexcept.
What are some fun ways to learn more advanced networking concepts/ Practice the others?
@DeadMG Ugh, does that mean four overloads?
16:17
@R.MartinhoFernandes Three, I think- lvalue, const lvalue, rvalue.
f() const& can be called on const rvalues?
(Yeah, I know, fuck 'em; just curious)
> error: no matching function for call to ‘wheels::meta::storage_for<std::pair<...>&>::type::construct(std::pair<...>)’
@JesseTylerThompsonUmoette Write some code that uses them? What "advanced networking concepts" did you have in mind (mostly a network is about copying data from one place to another -- I'm not sure I've seen anything I'd honestly think of as advanced about it)?
Fuck, gonna have to specialize optional anyway.
Or template that ctor...
template <typename U = T, sfinae>
optional(NotDeducible<T>&&);
// should do fine
dunno, but I wouldn't want different behaviour for const rvalue and const lvalue.
I think you can differentiate for non-const and then not differentiate for const
at least, I have that.
but fuck const rvalues anyway
Is @Rapptz here?
16:24
No, wait.
> Your comment that seduction guide encourage "misogynistic" behavior is also incredibly offensive and sexist. How about you treat things equally between the sexes rather than immediately use terminology and words that place men in the immediate spot of wrongdoing? Kickstart, you're disgusting and I'm done with you.
Spot a redditor.
IT'S FRIDAY!
If I sfinae that it will pick up the const& overload and still bind a temporary along.
template <typename U = T> optional(T&&); should do then. Gets picked over const& for temps, and causes error, but only when instantiated.
ARATGGH No.
Not gonna work at all. Fuck.
optional(optional&&) still breaks.
Moving an optional<T&> should degenerate to copy, not failure.
Giving up. Time to specialize optional<T&> :(
C++ is bad for you ;_;
I'm too sexy for C++.
6
16:29
@Rapptz Nevermind. I was looking for the screenshot program you linked me a while back. I found it.
are you referring to my six pack? Sorry, it doesn't exist
Look at that six-argument function template.
And of course browser addons don't work because they blocked the .dll from running.
@CatPlusPlus Looking at ThePhD code?
Oh, it's a joke
16:32
Yes.
@Mysticial lol did you notice the white thing in the middle of the road in your picture?
@Raindrop It's just a car?
NO ITS ALIENS
well, it's summer, don't blame 'em
@CatPlusPlus Everone knows aliens don't exist. It's a ghost.
16:35
an alien gotta do what an alien gotta do
0
Q: Is there a way to compare two different runs of a C/C++ program?

higgs241So I'm working on debugging this program that I inherited from this PhD student who's about to graduate, or whatever happens after a student finishes their thesis. Anyway, it's now my responsibility to debug it. The program basically takes in a couple of text files and processes them. The problem...

Sigh, sounds like a great Ph.D.
wikipedia?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Sounds like about the usual to me.
user1182183
a friend of mine wants me to install a good antivirus on his laptop because he is a total pc noob,.. which one do you guys recommend? I use no antivirus myself..
16:44
@R.MartinhoFernandes I have proof that aliens exist. My mother in law visited from the Philippines, and her visa said she was a legal alien.
@R.MartinhoFernandes That's pertty slick.
I never would've imagined to do it that way.
The machinery underlying that, that is.
I wonder how supported call_once is...
it's Standard.
So is regex, but...
@DeadMG ...which generally means "nowhere close to universally supported."
@GamErix mse
16:50
Doesn't quite work as static ctors in say, Java or C#.
@R.MartinhoFernandes It seems to get the job done, though that solution requires some inheritance magic.
Shrug. Ah well, it's C++. Best I can get. :D
@ThePhD Just regular CRTP.
Yeah, but I meant if I wanted it on other classes I'd have to put static_ctor in the inheritance tree and stuff.
frankly, if you have the need for static ctors, then your program is bad and wrong
16:55
based on the intro, seem like a handy read
@ThePhD If you put it at the base, it only runs for the base.
But as the puppy said, C++ has much better solutions.

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