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00:00
and thats why we have namespaces
food::soup
lollllllll
food::soup::gumbo
@A.H. yeah - much, much better than Python::soup.
@MartinJames Python::beautiful_soup
i::am::a::llama :3
For my questions on SO, if i choose someone as the accepted answer will the other people feel Sad ?
no. the only time anyone cares is if you're a dick about it
00:03
@AmberRoxanna people feel sad when you answer your own question from other answers and accept that
specifically if you take their work and do something douchy with it
at least I get sad
@A.H. i had a guy take my answer; and then respond to it and then respond to his question with my answer and accept his own answer
that is douchey defined
@AmberRoxanna no
00:04
@AmberRoxanna If you don't choose an accepted answer, everyone feels sad. So you're better off picking one :P
I only get sad if I rep capped
@Borgleader unless you 1) have no answers
or 2) none of them are helpful
Ell
Ell
Has anyone here used opencv before?
oh God
@Ell yes
i've used a lot of things
Ell
Ell
00:05
@EiyrioüvonKauyf Can you possibly help?
like std::poop
you're not going to turn out to be from south-east asia and an undergraduate student, are you?
because you're early, that shit starts in like, October.
@DeadMG huh?
@DeadMG are you talking about @Ell?
@AmberRoxanna Probably, at least once in a while, but that's life. Oh, unless I've answered it, in which case you must accept my answer!
00:06
@DeadMG lol one was here yesterday btw
lol my previous boss when he was a phd student got a bunch of requests from chinese students to come and join his lab
he wasn't even a professor lol
@A.H. There's some Indian university where the first-years have to do a thing with OpenCV. The lecturer, I guess, links this place as a place to get help, so every year you get a swarm of Indian undergraduates who couldn't phrase a question to save their lives who want help with OpenCV.
... oh god
i'm indian; i have no problem with them
but i really truly dislike the students that come and can't do anything for themselves
regardless of race
I don't have a problem with Indian people at all.
I believe that the university in question happens to be located there.
00:09
inb4 bartek makes this racist
yup yup
wouldn't surprise me.
i have a problem with any student that refuses to read compiler output
i at least tried with my first language and LOGO
er, they don't usually attempt to compile anything.
it's been a while since I've seen one, actually, maybe that guy changed his course
but they were exceptionally bad questions.
:| fuck i've like taken over this thing - adios. i don't like seeing my name this often
@EiyrioüvonKauyf The main problem I have is with colleges that teach 'coding' first and then, much later, debugging :((
00:10
if you would please run the program then you can know that. — Sireiz 38 secs ago
what an arse
@Borgleader I'll have a bit of that..
that question got a +1
someone is being very liberal with his upvotes
Wow, he did the only thing worse than void main. main by itself.
@Borgleader well then tell him if that would yield the correct format then why is he on SO ?
@Rapptz isn't default int?
Pretty sure it's never been standard C++.
00:14
It got closed before I got my vote in, again:(
@A.H. NO.
hmm guess thats for C
Ell
Ell
Nope
default-int was one of the first things cut from C++, and it's not in C99 either.
Not there either.
I don't even know if it's in C89
apparently it was cut in C99
Ell
Ell
Meh. I'm trying to get two frames from a webcam, subtract them and then show that image
But I get a blank image from subtracting them. Which means apparently the images are the same
Or it means you fucked up :P
most likely fuck up
Ell
Ell
00:19
yeah, or that :P
can anyone see anything instantly wrong with this? gist.github.com/elliotpotts/6207509
it's <30 LOC
How would we know?
I don't use OpenCV so I guess I'd be guessing.
I guess it works great
@Ell Are you sure you're capturing 2 different frames and not the same frame twice?
Thank you! I didn't realize the . To was extraneous. That helps a lot. — Troy Shamos 27 mins ago
That weird moment when Jeffrey is right.
Evening guys
Ell
Ell
@Borgleader Well that's what I think I'm doing
@Rapptz guessing would even help
I tried capturing until there was a new frame
I'll try again :3
00:26
First guess is that the 3 namedWindows have 1 as a parameter.
Looks like a magic number, don't know what it does
Ell
Ell
well, it's flags
Shame on you.
Ell
Ell
Indeed.
flags – Flags of the window. Currently the only supported flag is CV_WINDOW_AUTOSIZE . If this is set, the window size is automatically adjusted to fit the displayed image (see imshow ), and the user can not change the window size manually.
Ell
Ell
I took it from example code. Apparently windows only have 1 possible flag
00:27
@Ell send me the two images
lol
or just post em here
I'm assuming the flag is an enum or a define, you should use those and not the numerical values
it would make it a lot clearer that it's actually a flag
opencv docs look nice
Ell
Ell
I knooow. I've changed it now
it's just effort for 1 in the morning xD
I think my problem is the identical frame thing
I'm not sure though.
@Rapptz they also have an SO-like opencv question site
OpenCV is pretty neat. I tried using it once, to make a bot that would fish for me in World of Warcraft xD I figured if I can train it to find the stupid fishing bob all id have to do is make it click when the sound goes off
Didn't manage to train it will enough though. Would have required compiling a huge database of images
What is OpenCV?
00:30
Image processing.
@Pawnguy7 dude seriously
lmgtfy.com/?q=opencv
Pawnguy doesn't google anything
you'll get used to it
@Pawnguy7 ahem
I don't know why I cannot break that habit.
I thought Sphinx didn't work for C++
00:31
yeah it does
afaik
30
Q: Has anyone used Sphinx to document a C++ project?

NickSphinx is a new documentation tool for Python. It looks very nice. What I'm wondering is: How suitable this is for documenting a C++ project? Are there any tools for converting existing documentation (e.g. doxygen) to Sphinx format? Are there online/downloadable examples of C++ projects that us...

no one google's here
T____T
@EiyrioüvonKauyf So.. it doesn't? Okay then.
You would think I would start doing that when people keep telling me too, but it just doesn't stick.
Autoextraction is meh anyway.
@EiyrioüvonKauyf I did - it was boring.
IME automatically generated documentation can rarely tell you much of use.
00:34
writing it by hand sucks so bad
Inorite
@DeadMG no but extracting comments out is nice
I wish there was a better way.
@CatPlusPlus, the project page looks amazing :)
me on google
since no one else does it here
00:35
I wonder if it has something to do with being lonely.
Next time you have a question; open a tab and type your question.
@Rapptz Make an AI that can infer a code's intent by using the names of functions/classes/variables and the structure of it. It should be a fun 2 week project ;)
@CatPlusPlus, maybe more padding between the title, description and buttons would be preferable. And maybe a lighter color for the top so that the :hover thingy is more highlighted.
Premade theme.
00:37
@Borgleader six to eight weeks
Next time I ask a question here, (of the factual sort/help, not other stuff), tell me to google it, and don't tell me what it is.
@Pawnguy7 Got it :P
@JerryCoffin Add real life and you get six to eight years.
@Borgleader define 'code's intent'
all code's intent is to manipulate shit
you know
I really need to figure out why Wide won't link on Unix.
@EiyrioüvonKauyf Hey Feeds, stahp
lol; have any of you used ed
@chris Sorry -- it's an old SO meme. When programmers are asked how long something will take, most will estimate nearly every job at six to eight weeks, no matter how large or small it is.
@JerryCoffin Well you're not giving yourself enough time :p
00:44
Overestimation? I wouldn't think that would be common.
@EiyrioüvonKauyf Of course; everybody has. ed is the standard editor.
Night
night
Ell
Ell
gah. I opened ed and don't know how to get out xD
00:46
0
Q: Re-Post: Got a logical error in this program

Sireizthis program take inputs for an array having two rows and 5 columns and then add the corresponding elements in each row such as [0][1] + [1][1] and then save the result in another array with five elements. I am facing a logical error in the function filewrite() but i cant figure it out, it all se...

It seems they were too lazy to follow anyone's advice, so they just reposted it.
@Borgleader Oh, dang, I didn't see your comment.
Ell
Ell
> possible duplicate
thats funny xD
@Ell Eh, well, I flagged it as exact.
Now where are those last 195 points I need to delete things
@StackedCrooked is you here?
hmm maybe not, i thought he was referring to the parameter
Ell
Ell
ahh
my upper back hurts
that's odd
00:53
@Ell If you'd followed my link, you'd know it's (not) the eat flaming death command. Actually, the commands are fairly vi-like, so q to quit.
Would anybody like to help me contemplate a design?
Ell
Ell
I tried :q, ^X, ^C but not q for some reason >.<
@chris it cost him half his rep but he got his answer... i guess he can delete them now and get his rep back
oh actually he cant delete the new one because it has an upvoted answer... we should post one on the old question too xD
evil laugh
Be polite, otherwise SO might lose a ~valuable contributor~ here
Ell
Ell
@Pawnguy7 I will :)
00:58
@CatPlusPlus I think that's the funniest thing you said all day
Seriously, though. It would have taken so much less time and less frustration if they just made a minimal sample.
Haha. There is a Wikipedia article on how to remove Internet Explorer. Sort of.
And actually added the friggin output format he was expecting vs what he was actually getting
@Ell Ok. So I twas trying out my first networking project. Anyway, I wanted to learn the answer to the question... what to send? I wasn't sure. Then it occurred to me, I could use the first byte as a packet id of sorts, and thus reliable parse the packet because I would know its contents.
And run the thing under a debugger, FFS.
01:02
Debugging is a skill that sadly a lot of people seem to neglect
Ell
Ell
@Pawnguy7 Yeah sending an id would work
an int to describe what type of packet
it depends what the project is doing
@Pawnguy7 What, add/remove features?
'Can't be bothered to debug myself - I'll get some other stupid fucker to do it for me' is getting worse on SO.
@chris It is some detail on the... specialness of it, sort of. I am guessing it would make most sense if you look at it.
@MartinJames We should make a meta post about that. Before you had "too narrow" which meant the answer would only help OP which in this case applied.
but that close reason is gone now
01:06
@Ell Yes. I think I could also enumerate the ids. So that part, so far, so good. I got a base class which contains said id, the data itself, and some basic functions (get id, get data, get data size).
I got a bit lost after that, though. I am using SFML for this, but it shouldn't really matter. Anyway, I wanted to build on top of it the sockets, so I can do a send()/receive() the packets, sort of.
Does this still make sense?
Ell
Ell
Yeah :)
Oh, also, the getData prepends the id.
Ell
Ell
What is the aim of this project?
Chat? Game?
Um. Simple client/server chat. For learning.
Ell
Ell
Right, so just think of the different types of messages you could have
01:10
Yep. I should be able to do that. Anyway, for sending, I can just send the bytes, using the data/datasize. Simple enough. But I am a bit stuck on receiving.
Ell
Ell
what bit in particular?
what you need to do is read an int and compare against the packet type
then once you know that, read as many bytes as that particular packet type needs
Namely, I want to be able to figure out what kind it is, and get that packet type from it. But I wasn't sure of a clean way to do that.
And yes, I would need to do that.
Oh, I forgot a part.
I had a virtual member function, fromString. In this way, I could make packets construct themselves from sent data - the argument would be the data, minus the id.
Ell
Ell
well if you give each type a number
Is the concept of fromString sound?
no.
if you can send several kinds of packet, and each one is a unique structure then you need boost::variant<type1, type2, type3> decode(socket s);.
simply return the variant
Have a suggestion that doesn't involve boost?
sure
re-write the part of boost that solves the problem, namely, variant.
I don't think parsing the data and reconstructing it would be overly difficult.
simple fact is, the guys who authored that shit spent way more time thinking about the best design than you will
and have actual experience using the outcome.
Ell
Ell
01:21
What is wrong with returning a base class with a packet type?
hmmm
unnecessary virtual functions? check
common interface when there's actually no implication at all that they have any interface in common? check.
unnecessary heap allocation? check.
Vtables are on the heap?
Ell
Ell
well, you'd have to return a packet type along with the variant, surely?
no, but you ain't gonna return a pointer to a stack-allocated derived class, since it's gonna be out of scope.
@Ell Nope. Why would you do that? The whole point of variant is that it keeps track of which type is stored within.
Oh. I was just thinking of doing that. That will not work. Hrm.
Ell
Ell
01:23
Right. Of course
Although, if things go as planned, the packets will be managed depending on where they are.
the simple fact is, if you're decoding packets from a stream and you want to return one of a number of types, then the variant guys already solved this problem in basically the most optimum way possible.
Perhaps there can be a... packet cache, of sorts.
so either you man up and use boost::variant, or you reinvent boost::variant but shittier.
The motive behind the project was to learn, though.
01:26
well, you'd sure learn a hell of a lot if you were to reinvent boost::variant
I mean, why not reinvent your own CPU and OS whilst you're at it? You'd certainly learn massive amounts about those things.
the simple fact is, you have to decide what you want to learn.
This is really simple, though.
and if "The implementation of boost::variant" is not on that list
then use boost::variant's implementation.
From someone who implemented boost::variant as a learning experience, don't.
Shit's harder than it sounds.
a lot harder
there's some NASTY exception safety issues in there.
I cannot say very well not knowing exactly what it does, but from my perspective it is overkill. Perhaps I mistated what I am trying to solve?
01:28
boost::variant is not overkill
I don't think it's overkill.
@Pawnguy7 You want to return a "packet", where that packet might be represented by a number of different C++ types. Variant was intended to solve that exact problem practically word for word. It's not overkill at all. You simply don't understand how complex a problem that is to solve to a high quality.
In said scenario, are the possible types all subtypes of a base type?
not necessarily.
whether or not the possible types share a base type turns out to be more or less irrelevant for this problem.
In this situation, they are. For example, let's say the base is Packet. Imagine we make a subclass, Login. Then another subclass, Message. That is the situation, I'd say.
Ell
Ell
01:33
@Pawnguy7 well, you have to think - why are they subclasses?
@DeadMG Good idea. I haven't done a new CPU in quite a while. Hmm...I was just talking the other day about how an implementation of the old Inmos Transputer on an FPGA would be cool. Wouldn't be new, exactly, but still definitely a fun project.
Ell
Ell
What interface do they have in common besides coming from the network?
@Pawnguy7 Well, for one, what I'm really seeing is that I can't possibly imagine what useful operation you can perform on a Login command the same as a Message command.
but for two, when you get down to how this stuff's lifetime is stored, the base class is irrelevant, really.
Ell
Ell
@DeadMG Unless he gives them a () operator to apply to the chat server state or something?
I don't know how it would work, I was just trying to come up with examples of different ones. I haven't really considered what I need yet. Maybe a heartbeat.
01:35
Looking at things, next year will be the Transputer's 30th anniversary too. Might be good timing...
0
Q: How can I ensure no code uses an API?

Billy ONealI want to ban use of iostreams in a code base I have (for various reasons). Is there a way I can inspect symbol files or force the compiler to emit an error when that API is used?

@Ell It would seem I defined that as this.
Although now that I think about it, that append function was a really stupid idea.
I should get rid of it.
@Rapptz I was about to comment "Ctrl-Shift-F #include <iostream>" but that's only in VS =/
@Borgleader and a lot of other editors.
Guy works at Microsoft anyway
You can assume he uses it.
Oh never mind, wtf is a Microsoft Software Engineer
Ell
Ell
@Pawnguy7 and besides getting a different, more specific packet, what use is this class? Just think about it - you will only use this base class to get other packet types
So a variant would be more appropriate
01:39
Does a class have to be nested in another for it to be private in c++?
For the most part, that is true, but I also don't need to repeat stuff. I think.
@JohnMerlino I think an anonymous namspace might be used, not certain
I came across this
10
Q: C++ classes (public, private, and protected)

Med-SWEngHow can classes in C++ be declated public, private, or protected?

How small of a scope are you trying to achieve? Will just one class use it?
@JohnMerlino Too much Java or C#, it seems.
@Pawnguy7 So there are basically no useful common functions. (Also, fromString? Seriously? That shit is a constructor but you did it wrong.).
01:48
I wanted it as a constructor.
But I didn't know how to force it.
you don't force it.
at all.
@DeadMG tbh named constructors aren't very surprising.
@Rapptz There's a big difference between a factory function and a constructor that works on an already existing object.
Smells like two-stage init.
yeap.
01:50
@Rapptz yo you can find #include<iostream> in the exe file if you look at the hex iirc
How would I go about my socket idea if there isn't a base class?
but worse, because it's virtual and you wouldn't even want it in the derived classes.
@Pawnguy7 1. Create a class to represent each kind of message that doesn't suck independently. 2. Return variant of these types (since variant does not require any inheritance link). 3. Use variant.
Ell
Ell
I ought to sleep
night all
Assuming I were to do that, how would you implement sending the packet?
simply create an overload of, say, send(stream, packet) for each packet type.
01:54
Isn't that a reason to use polymorphism and a base class? To not have to make a bunch of overloads like that?
er, no.
nop
you have to implement all the same logic to convert from your desired serialized format to the useful C++ format.
it's just that instead of doing it in an overload here, you've done it intrusively in the class's implementation.
and then made a massive abstraction-violating public function for it.
polymorphism can only reduce the number of overloads and stuff when the different packet types actually share a useful interface.
Abstraction violating?
but since each packet carries completely independent data...
even then, you could get the same effect with a template.
01:56
@ScottW With that problem? Not very well, but I decided to move on and just not care since it would be pointless to waste time on all that.
@Pawnguy7 If you have a Login message, then that class should only ever know about logging shit in.
you're violating shit up the wazoo if the Login message also deals with writing shit to network streams and packets and shit.
Ell
Ell
Damn. I forgot if the cleaner has a key or not
And I have no idea what time shes coming :o
I feel like I learn design much worse than everybody else.
I cant design things for shit either xD
design sucks
01:59
@Pawnguy7 Took me a while to get it too.
Ell
Ell
You don't
Designing is difficult
good design is all about reduction.
I just don't like to use a design when I don't understand it. It is like magical code copy/pasted off the internet, from my perspective.
@Borgleader Your new avatar keeps making me think about kbok.
it bugs me
Ell
Ell
Some people just dive straight into code without thinking about design at all

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