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00:04
lol, xbox one so low.
@Rapptz Hmm?
poll on /v/
Hello everyone
@Rapptz That's not all that's low:) My interwebs so slow tonite that 30+s for rendering. Not got any BitTorrent downloads or other such stuff. Will call ISP tomorow if no improvement.
@Rapptz How surprising.
00:10
Is Cat working on the Lounge<Chat> alone?
"It's better to be drunk than stupid; it doesn't last as long"
@EtiennedeMartel lol
@Jeffrey He's project manager or something
Ell
Ell
Who does c# dev in here?
00:11
@Borgleader it doesn't exclude that other might help too :P
@Borgleader: Qui rogat, non errat — Frodo 10 hours ago
Why would someone post a comment in latin -.-;
> If a secretary has a sexual encounter with a high-ranking boss/staff member in the office - is it polite to use ’まいります’ upon reaching orgasm?
lol
@Rapptz translation?
@Jeffrey I came.
00:12
at that point i don't think anyone cares
Ell
Ell
@EtiennedeMartel ahh cool - are you busy or could you give me a hand with a problem I'm having with assembly reference conflicts?
Feel free to tell me to go to Stack Overflow :3
@Ell Remove the conflicting reference.
Next.
Ell
Ell
Well. I'm trying to build monodevelop. I have two different version of glib-sharp installed, and it's telling me to "supply runtime policy". I'm not entirely sure how to do that
Yeey, my friends left me at the bar. Night wouldn't be complete without depression fuel.
@EtiennedeMartel Can oral sex cause linker errors?
Ell
Ell
00:14
I read on msdn I have to edit some .config file, but there are lots of those, and I was thinking if there is some to set in the gac which assembly is chosen
I really want to hangout with you guys IRL. I know you probably don't want the same, but I could just sit apart and drink my beer.
@Ell Oh, Mono. Erm, I'm sorry, I only deal with .NET.
(Also, VS2012 is very cheap when downloaded illegally)
Ell
Ell
Does it run on linux when downloaded illegally? :3
Not worth the torrent
wait til RC for 2013
@CatPlusPlus I would join you :3
Ell
Ell
00:16
I always just used express version
So what do you think about JUMBOTRON on loungcpp.githu
@CatPlusPlus ?
click the link
what link?
I'm kinda drukn so I probably won't be able to produce content for the page
The pinned link duh
00:17
gotcha.
That sure looks cool.
@CatPlusPlus You're so weak.
I'm drunk and emotionally hurt fuck you
Drunk of what?
Ell
Ell
Isn't Mono .NET anyway o.O now I'm confused
@CatPlusPlus maybe we can go on mumble and talk it out? <3
00:18
@CatPlusPlus emotionally hurt? Look, I would love to break legs for you, but Poland isn't exactly next door.
@Ell .NET is a Microsoft trademark.
Ell
Ell
Oh right
yes that would make me feel better
Well, feel better I guess. Page looks nice. Good job.
Did you make that Python script yourself?
Ell
Ell
oh damn. my webcam doesnt have a microphone
@Ell Hmm, a webcam isn't supposed to have that
00:22
@Rapptz Yup. It's not very robust or complicated.
Cool.
I thought about using Jekyll but eh.
@Jeffrey Most of the 'eyeball' ones do.
Your organisation page doesn't have anything on it.
There's basic info
00:28
Despite you adding the <h1 id="join"> for some reason.
I have a box full of legacy hardware, including cheapo webcams. They all have shit resolution and a mike.
Recache maybe or soemthig
Yeah cache issue. Weird.
00:40
This jinja2 thing is cool.
I must have reached a new level of boredom to browse this stuff.
Ell
Ell
00:57
I'm still trying to fix this
I'm slowly sobering up.
I haven't felt that shitty in a long time.
Being half-drunk is a great time to write contribution guidelines
@CatPlusPlus :[
Ell
Ell
Hi tony :)
@Rapptz Jinja2 is pretty cool
01:08
Yeah. Maybe I'll use it instead of Jekyll, iunno.
Hi
Wassup?
Hoy.
Boredom.
I've been driving around London for the last 3 days
Everythnig sucks
@TonyTheLion house hunting?
01:13
What should be in the guidelines, anyway
Coding style?
@Telkitty猫咪咪 Basicallly, yea
also seeing friends
I should go to bed
I have to get up at a reasonable time tomo
0
A: Changing undefined values of an array

isaach1000The value for an undefined integer is 0.

ahahaha
No.
^ how does he have rep
Does "NULL" work in C#? Not "null",I mean.
FUCK YOU CLANG
God this shouldn't be THIS FUCKING HARD
01:26
I really wonder when you would ever have a mix of undefined and set values in an array anyway.
Who the FUCK sets up their shit in their RIDICULOUS UNBELIVEABLE MANNER?
just steal Wide's code.
Ell
Ell
why do I have to keep scaring myself!
I have cuts on my knees which I have no idea of the source
and I tried to unicycle and cut my finger :(
gah.
@DeadMG I'm trying. I can't find exactly what I'm looking for. ._.
Right now looking in ClangTU::Impl
@ThePhD Yeah, that's got the meat in it- almost all the work occurs in the initializer list of the constructor of that class, and then a little more in the body.
01:32
I don't need half of this stuff, though
@ThePhD You really do. Unless you want to go back to the much-buggier CompilerInvocation.
I'm not doing codegen. I just need to parse the AST after parsing the target stream.
oh, then you can cut that part.
@TonyTheLion Or, yes (if it's a global).
or static I think.
01:35
@Rapptz Yes.
If you want to get technical: anything with static or thread storage duration, IIRC.
@Rapptz Basically the same thing from this perspective.
@DeadMG I suppose
01:49
@JerryCoffin Hi :)
@Borgleader Hello.
Ell
Ell
Would it be correct to say information is only ever lost and not gained in abstractions?
Well, net loss
Time to make meself some lemon iced tea :3
@Ell The purpose of an abstraction is to lose information.
02:06
Yeah, but I'm starting to wonder if they're dead enough. The more I learn about the concepts proposal, the more I feel it was just misguided. Too big and too ambitious, sure, but also compromising a lot of valuable aspects of the C++ language, possibly making generic code harder to write. So if and when Concepts get resurrected, I'm hoping they'll take a big step back and really reconsider what they're trying to achieve. And @Ben, I think they've said they're aiming for a 5-year'ish schedule going forward, so you might get new features in less than a decade. ;) — jalf Jan 10 '11 at 23:53
TIL jalf doesn't (didn't?) like concepts.
02:25
return (MyObject *)calloc(1, sizeof(this)); in a static member function... -.-;
Where did you find that?
0
Q: sizeof C++ class from static member function

user2303828I am attempting to write a piece of C++ code that allocates an instance of a class from within a static class member, while having it aware of the size of any inherited subclasses .h file class MyObject { int toastNumber; static MyObject *allocate(); } class MySubclass : public MyObject...

^ there
Hello all.
Hi Mark
02:27
sigh Been very busy lately. I expect me to be busier in the following days.
I am confused what their end goal was.
@Pawnguy7 With concepts? (That's what I can deduce from the transcript)
The worst part of this it's the fact that he's using calloc and doing all this gymnastics with memory management when he hardly knows what he's doing.
From the less severe issues we can find: sizeof(this) --> sizeof(*this)
Hah omg i hadn't noticed that
that is a subtle bug imo, nasty subtle bug
Lounge<Chat> in Pivotal fail. :(
02:39
The C++ way would be to not use new at all. — Rapptz 5 secs ago
Or at least, use RAII when doing so.
0
A: sizeof C++ class from static member function

Karthik TIf you insist on doing it like this, you should use templates, like below. template <class SubClass> static SubClass* allocate(); template <class SubClass> SubClass *MyObject::allocate() { return (SubClass *)calloc(1, sizeof(SubClass)); // error here //or return new SubClass(); // this...

a template that uses calloc
someone upvoted it :(
he took the OPs code and made it more complicated for no reason
It's probably what he wanted to do
02:42
Who cares if it's what he wanted to do, it's a shit solution =/
I might break my rep divisible by 5 to downvote this answer
I don't understand what the OP is trying to achieve.
I want cake :|
@Borgleader Oh I get it.
OP confused static and virtual.
Why not just do new TypeOfClass; without the function at all?
who cares, OP's retarded
02:46
That reminds me.
@Rapptz He accepted the new MyObject; answer
inb4 slicing i guess
I'm 99% sure he wanted virtual and not static
I have seen something.... sort of like this. Rather than constructing colors directly, you would use a static function - fromRGB, I think. What possible benefits might this approach offer?
@Borgleader I think not. though the solution's wrong.
@Rapptz That's actually a better solution than what the other dude posted. No need for template
02:49
The accepted answer only allocates an object of the base class's type, which is not what the OP wants.
@Pawnguy7 Named construction. That's a semi-common pattern.
@MarkGarcia That's the slicing problem
sortof
@Borgleader No. Another problem is if you receive the result using what the OP does MySubclass *instance = MySubclass::allocate();, a compile error would occur.
Hi
I got a lot of 10 intel PCs. What Linux distro should I install on them?
The OP wants a base class static function to allocate derived classes, something which, as I said, the accepted solution doesn't solve.
02:52
Something you just can't do.
@Moshe Eh? "a lot of 10 intel PCs"? :)
Which brings me back to "Why not just new TypeOfSubclass"?
this seems like an XY problem
Your code works and seems to be subclass-aware. Thankyou. If I may also ask, is there a way to subclass *i = subclass::allocate() without casting to subclass? As ::allocate returns a MyObject. — KaelanDuck 8 mins ago
sigh
subclass-aware
@MarkGarcia I use a MacBook for my day to day. It's a mostly Dells, P4 and a Core 2 Duo.
:| what even
02:53
@Moshe Sorry. Don't know much linux.
I'm on windows so... no linux for me either
@Moshe it doesn't matter
Linux distros are done with something in mind
you don't seem to have a preference so it doesn't matter
Well, I do have some preferences. :-)
Are there any distros done with coding in mind?
Coduntu
3
Also, I used to like Ubuntu, but I want to avoid it.
02:55
@StackedCrooked I smiled. :)
And chuckled a bit.
@StackedCrooked :-)
I do a bit linux, for my website and the latest app
@Moshe lol build a custom ArchLinux then ;D
Why do people use online interactive courses anyway? They are boring as fuck!
or CentOS minimal
because they like structure
@Jeffrey ^
02:58
my stomach feels so wrong
What Linux you should build on it depends on what you want to do with it
@Telkitty猫咪咪 Your new avatar really makes you look like the archenemy of the mods. :)
@EiyrioüvonKauyf structure?
structured learning
and they don't know what a book is
^
most likely
02:59
though I admit I would like something like learnstreet for theoretical physics
I need problems to do :| and i can't make my own
@MarkGarcia thought I already am :p ... not I am particularly powerful but there really isn't anyone else to take the job >_<
@EiyrioüvonKauyf stay away from learnstreet. That question I linked is the result of a bug (as explained in the answer below)
lol
i mean for a theoretical subject
@EiyrioüvonKauyf did you just downvote me?
like you can't learn calculus without doing problems
@Jeffrey where? i don't see a question to downvote
03:01
Nothing
lol just look at my profile it shows my downvotes
It was @DeadMG
@Borgleader CRTP might help.
Seriously? Did you even bother reading the question @DeadMG?
@MarkGarcia What would the mods do without me? They have no elite trolls to oppress! Think about how boring their days must be :p I am doing all these for the greater good!
03:03
@DeadMG > I know that you need to set up a method with def transfer!(amount, other_account)
what dumb kind of question is that? I obviously did read the question.
there's a big difference between "I know I need to set it up" and "I know what the body should be".
The exercise had a bug, that's why he didn't pass
He explained that he doesn't know what to do else
@Telkitty猫咪咪 Might be a good thing to send your CV to stackexchange. :)
the question does not indicate that he attempted any implementation of transfer
and that he failed to pass.
> I've been stuck on this Learnstreet lesson for a day now
03:04
it only indicates that he does not know what he is supposed to do except that part.
@Jeffrey Which completely does not contradict what I've just said.
Because there's nothing else to do except that part
well, fine, great, whatever, I don't care.
all I'm saying is, there is absolutely no evidence that the questioner attempted, let alone succeeded, in providing an implementation of transfer.
and since the exercise is clearly intended to implement it
Ok. -.-
not to mention that you could provide all the relevant stuff about the exercise bug in your answer without showing the implementation of transfer.
@EiyrioüvonKauyf Different people have different learning styles. Such is life. I virtually never do exercises from books exactly as they specify -- I get about half done, and think "but this could be so much cooler if...", and write what I want to. Of course, I usually find I was supposed to do that three chapters later, but such is life. That's me though -- one of my best friends and I worked through a book together years ago, and he followed the exercises in the book much more closely.
03:08
If I use std::unique_ptr::get I make it clear intention wise that I'm not going to fuck with it right? (i.e. mess with its ownership)
@DeadMG Demonstrating that, removing the bug (and adding the method transfer!), the exercise flow continues, implicates showing the final code.
there's no need for a literal screenshot
even if you did, you could I dunno, Photoshop it out.
what the shit is LearnStreet
@Rapptz I think it does signal that you know that the pointer is owned by the unique_ptr. Whether the people you pass that pointer to know that is another question.
@Rapptz The important thing is lifetime management, of which you can only do two things: move ownership or destroy.
03:10
@Rapptz what the street is LearnShit
FTFY
LearnSkeet
@DeadMG Also he obviously intended that he is stuck after adding the transfer! method and he doesn't know what to do after because the code doesn't "pass". And you perfectly know it. If you want to keep arguing that I gave him the fish instead of teaching him how to fish, go ahead. But we both know I'm right.
@Jeffrey I see. So your argument basically boils down to, "It's obvious and you know it".
in other words, a non-argument.
@MarkGarcia yeah now to think about it - you can have professional gamers, why can't you have professional trolls?
because I certainly don't know any such thing.
03:13
Because the latter takes no skill
and if I did, I would not have downvoted you.
@Telkitty猫咪咪 I've never seen competitive trolling, trolling tournaments, or troll sponsors.
also wat Rapptz said
damn I see a niche market!
@JerryCoffin how do you learn abstract algebra without doing exercises o_O?
@DeadMG Seriously. Ok. Either you got it and you don't want to admit it or you don't get it. Both ways I don't care. It's just an answer and a downvote. And I've spent way too much on it already. Thanks for your explanation anyway.
03:16
@EiyrioüvonKauyf Who says I've learned abstract algebra at all?
@Rapptz actually I have a half written blog about this ...
As an elite troll, you have to be creative. An insult is best serviced if it is subtle, original and entertaining for all others to read. You can build your audience this way. Then you have to draw your audience closer before you turn them into one of your many many victims.
Elite trolls are intelligent, both with logic and with emotions. (s)he must be able to win a conversation using reasons most of the times but choose not to because a) that would be too easy b) it would be more fun and arose more responses when you attack someone and evoke their emotions (pissed off people reply more,
whoa, that's new. Not a literal because of non-trivial destructor
@Rapptz ?
Error I just got.
First time I've seen it.
error: the type 'const foo<bar_t>' of constexpr variable 'foobar' is not literal
note: 'foo<bar_t>' is not literal because:
note: 'foo<bar_t>' has a non-trivial destructor
03:28
Oh. In templates.
fool<bartek> snickers
Don't know how to fix.
but it sure is bugging me
@Borgleader o_O?
0
Q: Bounded Type Parameters in C++, any reason for the lack of it?

Karthik TJava and I guess C#(and others) support Bounded Type Parameters which lets us restrict what types may be used in template classes/functions. I am curious if there is a reason, official or otherwise, for not adding native support for bounded types to C++? Anything to do with how templates are cu...

Yes? Seems like a reasonable ish question (i just skimmed it though so maybe i missed something)
03:33
I don't post questions here just to poke fun at it.
Since when? :P :P :P
Forever.
That question's been answered in the comments too.
Are concepts getting in for sure?
no.
not sure or surely not?
is there a high chance of them getting in?
03:46
@Rapptz no.
@Rapptz you mean concepts lite?
@DeadMG why
@StackedCrooked No I mean Concepts
@Rapptz Well, they had to kick static_if, and for good reasons.
Have concepts lite been rejected?
@StackedCrooked Well, it wasn't entirely finished, so it can't be rejected yet.
but honestly, a lot of people aren't happy with it because it's plain not very far removed from the SFINAE you can do now.
@DeadMG They removed static_if and polymorphic lambdas (originally) because of concepts.
no
they removed static_if because it's a bad feature.
it was part of Concepts Lite, as that paper came to Bristol.
but it was kicked because a lot of people accurately pointed out how badly it sucks.
If it was part of Concepts Lite then why would Bjarne object to it? Whose interest lies in the full fledged concepts currently?
@Rapptz I don't have the paper reference right now, but the long and short is that static_if breaks virtually all mechanical and human comprehension of code.
I'm not really for static_if because there are multitudes of different and better solutions for it. I was just under the impression that one of the main reasons it got rejected was because it didn't play well with concepts.
03:52
I mean, it was removed because a lot of people thought the idea was good, but it turns out that actually, it has some very horrific side effects that make it a highly undesirable feature, so it was removed.
@Rapptz Almost everybody wants a full-fledged concepts when it's ready. One of the key points about concepts lite is that they must be sure that anything they do will be (at least very close to) a subset of the full concepts. That's one of the big problems with static_if -- it's pretty clear that a complete concepts won't be much like it.
@Rapptz Nope. That's just polymorphic lambdas (and they realized that it would have been fine, anyway).
static_if would and should have been rejected regardless of concepts.
Let me find the paper.
incidentally
@DeadMG Probably -- certainly for concepts to be useful, they need to be quite a bit different from it anyway.
03:55
the fact that the Committee recognized the flaws in static_if and the D people didn't says something about the lack of quality in the D language design process.
I'm 99% sure the title of the paper is called "Reconsidering static_if"
yet google cannot find it
Close enough.
I broke my bed.
stupid manufacturers obviously only tested it with people who weigh 150 pounds
lol the proposal is from the D people
04:02
ah well
it's 5am
time to try to sleep again
@DeadMG G'night...or Good morning, I guess.
@Rapptz I think it's primarily from Andrei Alexandrescu. After a lot of thought, I've concluded that Andrei is basically a tactician. He may be the most brilliant code tactician alive today, but he's still a tactician -- and what's needed for a language feature like this is a strategist. I think he's starting to do a little more thinking in the large and in the long term, but (at least to me) it looks like it's basically foreign to him.
This, I would posit, is why on one hand Modern C++ Design is seen as a brilliant work, but long term use of its accompanying Loki library (for one example) has been nearly nonexistent. People (including me) read and admire his brilliant tactics -- but those don't automatically translate into a brilliant strategy, which is more what's needed from something like a library.
04:37
I'm a code kamikazi because it always blows up in my face :P
05:04
@Borgleader To qualify as a Kamikaze, that has to be planned/intentional.
what's the difference between kamikaze & terrorists?
@Telkitty猫咪咪 Kamikaze attacks were on military targets during (what was by then) a declared war. Although not as well defined, terrorist attacks are often on civilian targets and rarely involve a formal declaration of war. If you wanted to make a case for terrorism, the attack on Pearl Harbor was on military targets, but without a declaration of war.
From the viewpoint of the people being attacked, the primary difference between a normal (e.g., bomb or torpedo) attack and a Kamikaze was that Kamikazes were much harder to shoot down because they could dodge where a normal bomb dropped quite predictably. IOW, they were (literally) the first smart bombs.
05:19
:|
uhhh
kamikaze's didn't necessarily dodge
but yeah yeah xD
@JerryCoffin Well the part about writing the code is intentional, does that count? xD
@Borgleader The explosion has to be pre-planned for it to qualify, I think.
Ok then, I revise my statement to "I'm a programming public danger"
wtf is exception_ptr
why does this exist
@Rapptz Transporting/propagating exceptions between threads.
Pretty useful in what I'm doing right now.
05:30
@MarkGarcia thanks
It's like a bomb from one thread and you'll make it blow on another. I like to think of it in this way.
Man C++11 is big.
I mean I knew it was big, but I'm still finding things I didn't know existed.
If you read through the Boost docs, you'll find many C++11 references/features. I also find it a very good learning resource.
Though it is mainly useful and targeted for multi-threaded programs, std::exception_ptr can also be single-threaded ones, though I do not know of any, at least useful, circumstances.
@Rapptz Good Morning
@Rapptz I do the same, nearly every time I look.
05:36
Hi.
Damn, my stomach hurts.
The curse has been passed on me.
:(
Chapter 20 of the standard, has grown particularly quickly.
@JerryCoffin can only say the people in those "smart bombs" aren't very smart
@Telkitty猫咪咪 Insanity and stupidity are orthogonal.
05:39
@Rapptz Good point.
I wonder how much part on that are on the addition of move constructor/assignment overloads.
Ever since @Mysticial joined YouTube, they've received some spiffy changes.
@Rapptz lol
First the red loading bar on top of the page and now the play button in the title of the tab?!
???????
I put effort into a long enough question
And SO wants to complain I'm a robot.
Go bother the real robot.
Maybe it was something to do with the fact that I left it open, half-done, while I spent hours at a bbq.
05:52
Wow. It's really long.
@MarkGarcia Most of mine are probably longer than they have to be.
I mean, the disadvantages bit isn't necessary, but it does show why I want to get rid of them. I also could have toned down what I've tried, though if it's on the right path and helps someone to realize something, that's even better.
std::exception has a const char* constructor right?
@Rapptz I believe so.
Yes. Better use std::runtime_error. :)
Maybe since C++11. That's the case for std::runtime_error.
05:58
lol. I usually interchange "error" with "exception".
@chris and all the others
but you can't be too sure..
@Rapptz Heh, of course.

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