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00:00
I signed in like 4/5 weeks ago, at most.
I guess you need to sign in again :p
Now I have 4 days left ._.
@melak47 Signing in again apparently fixed it.
k I have to reinvent Boost.TypeErasure.
@MooingDuck Nope.
Intellisense uses the EDG frontend, if I recall correctly.
whereas the compiler is obviously VC
@DeadMG: That is correct.
00:13
so it's far from unthinkable that EDG and VC have different opinions.
@Telkitty猫咪咪 None of those pursuits come remotely close to surviving a pub brawl in the Shakespeare on a Saturday night. No amount of fitness, bravery, toughness, training, arctic clothing, GPS, satphones etc. will help you avoid a glassing or a pool cue to the face. Only experience, and knowledge of all the fire exits, will do :)
@MartinJames That or the common sense not to piss off a drunk guy :P
@MartinJames ...or simply enough intelligence to not go there!
Hindsight.
you guys were there when I said I was taken aback when I found out that decltype(&Function) isn't the same as decltype(Function)?
well I just found out that typedef void Foo(); is valid
00:25
speaking of 'interesting' activities, I am off to see a dentist ... sadness ...
and then you can declare a function doing Foo myFunction;
and implement it the normal way (void myFunction() { ... })
@zneak And that shows why C declaration syntax sucks.
and shows why C isn't so clear and unambiguous
well it's totally unambiguous if you ask me
maybe not straightforward, but unambiguous
@zneak Well, there is ambiguity, but not there.
Yeah, maybe wrong wording on my part - it's not very clear for humans.
For some types Type x is a declaration, and for some it's a definition.
Reminds me why argumentation of the C++ FQA guy was wrong.
That "in C function(x,y) means that x and y won't be modified"
Yeah right
00:29
that's more confusing than outright wrong
char x[50], y[50]; /* ... */ strcpy(x,y);
(although all bets are off with macros)
@milleniumbug C++FQA guy is wrong about a lot of things. It's just a bunch of hate mongering.
Is the thing where a type can be made another type using a constructor of said type (for arguments) part of the standard?
what?
00:30
what?
@Pawnguy7 You mean something like this?
like implicit constructors?
@Rapptz こんばんわ、ラプーツサマ。
class B; // assume all of these are defined
class A { A(const B& b); };
void function(A a);
B b;
function(b); // works
@ThePhD hoy
00:32
question here:
I think that is correct, yes.
test
The one in my mind was something like:
Yes, of course that's part of the standard.
#define TEST_API
00:33
@Daveel Sorry, test failed.
Anyway, passing const char * where it takes an std::string, etc.
Ok. So, such code is entirely cross-platform, and compilers ability to not use it is just an option for safety purposes?
std::string takes a const char*, yes (assuming CharT is a char)
@Pawnguy7 Implicit conversions, yes.
@Pawnguy7 I don't understand the second part of that question.
@Pawnguy7 No sane compiler has an option to disable implicit conversions.
00:35
Um.
I think somebody told me when I asked what explicit did.
A compiler must accept code taking implicit conversions as valid C++ code. Otherwise it's a bug.
It is related, right?
yes.
implicit vs explicit conversions.
both Standard.
The bad and the good conversions.
00:36
I'm never using function pointers again.
(Ugly is reinterpret_cast)
#define TEST_API
TEST_API void some_kind_of_func(int a, int b){...}

I noticed there are lots of these in projects, is there a reason other than documentation of that preprocessor empty constant? If it's for documentation then why not just use comments? And is there a standard name for it?
Also, from now on I shall always put the & sign in front of my functions when I want their pointers.
It's not for documentation.
00:37
@Daveel It's usually for compiler-specific bits like declspec or something, although in that case it's in the wrong place. Actually that's valid too
__attribute__ is fun, because it can go anywhere.
I usually see it like class STUFF_API class_name { }.
@zneak void typedef foo();
This might or might not work with function types.
It's always funny, though.
It does, but you can't string more decl-specifiers like static though :(
Imagine I have A. A has a constructor that takes a B. It also has a... cast overload? - Whatever you call it. Does the cast operator take precedence?
00:42
What has overload.
@Pawnguy7 conversion operator?
Oh, yes. That. Like, um, operator int () I think
Or, in this case, B.
@Pawnguy7 conversion operator
No, exact matches are preferred.
@Pawnguy7 neither has precedence. If it's ambiguous, that's an error.
00:43
Well, at least they should be.
foo(a, a) is not ambiguous, though.
@CatPlusPlus fair enough
@Pawnguy7 A conversion operator and a constructor always go in opposite directions. If A has a constructor, that always starts with something, and creates an A. If A has a conversion operator, that always starts with an A and creates something else. The only ambiguity is if A has a conversion operator to create a B, and B also has a constructor to create a B from an A.
Ah. You have said operator on the object being converted, don't you?
00:54
@Pawnguy7 Yes.
You can probably tell, I have never used them.
@Pawnguy7 I, on the other hand, have -- quite a bit. It's my contrary nature at work: many people condemn all implicit conversions as evil, so I create safe implicit conversions every chance I get... :-)
Sigh.
I am still trying to write this. I don't know how you do it so fast.
I seem to have a circular dependency now.
Here is what I was trying to demonstrate. I think.
@Pawnguy7 huh, didn't expect that result (fixed) (cc@CatPlusPlus)
So the conversion operator takes precedence?
01:07
B -> B -> A -> A involves a better conversion sequence of some sort than B -> B const& -> A -> A.
(where each arrow is 'some sort' of conversion sequence or whatnot.)
Try passing in a const B.
(Make sure to mark the conversion operator const though!)
Does a reference bypass needing to know the specifics of a type (say, memory to allocate) like pointers do?
@Pawnguy7 Yes, pretty much the same as a pointer in that respect.
Ah. That is good to know.
references are basically identical to pointers in every respect, except implicit de-referencing
and that in some cases there may not even be a pointer at all?
01:19
not really.
those conceptual differences do make it easier to optimize out the pointer in question.
but that's about it.
I think the way some tutorial explained it once was, a reference is sort of like a const pointer (that is, where it cannot change what it points to, not the one that thinks what it is pointing to is const), that was implicitly referenced.
I was once corrected on an answer for saying references were essentially constant pointers
all that logic is optimization only.
@DeadMG Not really. For an obvious counterpoint, consider a function template that takes a reference to an array as a parameter.
@JerryCoffin You can take a pointer to an array. Array types aren't really special in this regard.
01:21
@DeadMG You, it can receive a pointer, but it doesn't have the same effect. Array types are special because an array passed as a parameter normally decays to a pointer -- but a reference to the array does not.
well, sure, but if you had a pointer to an array as a parameter, it would not decay at all.
What do you mean by "decay"?
Convert to a pointer to its first element.
Isn't int[] somehow equal to int*?
No. It decays to it.
01:25
er, that question's answer is very complicated.
@Rapptz Except as a function parameter, in which case they are equal.
@Rapptz when does it decay?
Decay just means implicitly convert to a pointer (to its first element).
So it decays anytime you require such a conversion.
void foo(int*); int x[5]; foo(x); /* x "decays" */
So it decays always without syntax errors?
Except for multidimensional arrays I guess, right?
yeah, multidimensional is a bitch
Well there's always std::array for that
:P
01:29
better to always use std::array.
I only ever use C-style arrays in throwaway code.
@DeadMG Your code doesn't work either. I hate you. =[
I don't even use c-style arrays in throwaway code, i default to vector
er, the one is a dynamically sized array, and the other is a static.
@ThePhD It most assuredly does work here. Show me the code you wrote based on it.
@Borgleader if you statically know the size, you should use std::array
It's more performant in some cases
"memory-allocation"-performant I mean
performance isn't as important as correctness
3
01:31
yup
Is everything static - things like string literals, but also static class members - initialized at the very start of the program?
@Pawnguy7 static class members and string literals are quite different
@Jeffrey It's throwaway code, so vector it is :P that being said i rarely do know the size
@Pawnguy7 Nope. String literals don't need initializing, and function local members are initialized as-needed.
01:33
@DeadMG It fails with some bogus casting issue again inside clang::ParseAST
Like, the allocation. Anyway, the idea behind this was if one should ever potentially... delay things, somehow. For example, if it actually created a noticable startup difference, if one could show the user some sort of UI.
@ThePhD Your TargetInfo code is wrong. I have a special helper for that, you should look into it.
That one?
'Cause that's what I was going off of.
hmm
lol, I never learned what #pragma means
01:36
ok
be more specific about funky casting error.
which line and what's the error
@ThePhD -1 whats the exact error message :P
wait.
did you create an intrusive ref count pointer to a stack-allocated variable?
Assertion failed: isa<X>(Val) && "cast_or_null<Ty>() argument of incompatible type!", file llvm\include\llvm/Support/Casting.h, line 248
@DeadMG Uh. Yes?
@ThePhD Which line of your source code is the error from.
It hasn't gone out of scope yet
01:40
I should throw my prejudices away and learn some C#. Shouldn't I?
diagnosticsengine.getClient( )->BeginSourceFile( languageoptions, &preprocessor );
clang::ParseAST( sema );
^ That one
Between the BeginSourceFile and EndSourceFile
@Jeffrey Yes.
@Jeffrey I'm learning C# myself.
With Jon Skeet's book :)
C#'s ezmode.
@Borgleader oh, there's a skeet's book?
01:42
@Jeffrey C# in depth
Oh God. Do I have to use Visual Studio for that?
You're trolling right?
nope :(
C# was made by Microsoft...
Then again I guess with Mono and all you could get away with not using VS...
A proprietary language doesn't usually mean you can only use a proprietary IDE to work with it
Does it?
01:44
@ThePhD Well, start by fixing your options. My options class has several members as a refcountptr that yours does not. That shit isn't because I want to share them.
@Borgleader Mono looks good
:)
C# isn't proprietary to Microsoft.
Oh, I don't know why I thought so :/
well, it started out proprietary like Java
but they made good on their promise to Standardise it.
I think it's C# 2.0 which is an ECMA spec, just as non-proprietary as JS.
@DeadMG Has the standard ever actually caught up with what they sell though?
01:48
@JerryCoffin I don't know.
Yes, C# is an ECMA standard.
but
I'm pretty sure that Mono is equal to, if not ahead of, VS in terms of C#.
@DeadMG Correct
IIRC they even implemented async before MS shipped it.
Mono ain't an IDE.
01:49
true
but you gotta have all you need for an IDE to make a compiler.
I thought Mono was behind
Mono implements most of .NET 4.5.
difficult to conceive of a language you could compile, but couldn't make an IDE for.
because of proprietary components they are not allowed to implement?
I don't think licensing concerns are a thing anymore.
01:50
that would probably be Microsoft-specific libraries, not the C# language.
Also, MonoDevelop is the Mono IDE
And last time I used it, it was pretty much horrible.
Lower than CodeBlocks, really.
MS released patent promises that explicitly granted Mono permission to implement stuff, AFAIR.
That said, most of WCF and entire WPF is missing from Mono, mostly because there's no demand from Mono community.
And implementers.
GTK+ and all.
welp, I'm going to bed.
WPF is what I mostly use C# for these days
01:51
tell me if fixing the options thing fixes the problem
Patent concerns were a thing in 2.0, when they said they can't implement WinForms.
(And WinForms are in Mono for a while now, so)
Well, what do you know, C# is an ISO standard, too.
(And CLI, too)
Silly me was using a Sigil to mine stuff when I had a Venture... (2 guns instead of one + mining bonuses, bigger hold)
Mining is horrible.
I only do that when I'm doing other stuff at the same time
(Though I hear gravimetric sites in nullsec are actually fairly decent now)
02:02
Hahaha nullsec, I don't have a corp :P
Hell I'm so broke my main ship is not insured
How much do you have :v
15 mil + items in station
If I have a vector and want to remove an index, is it vector.begin() + index?
I have no will to play this game. It can be really fun, but money-making part is absolutely awful.
I just don't understand how some people can make enough in-game money to support 3 accounts
02:09
It's not that much.
Scamming, wormholes, ratting.
Isnt like one month of PLEX worth like 600 mil? so 3 would be 1.8 billion isk?
Yes. And ratting ticks (every 15 minutes) can get as high as 40M/character.
But you have to be in nullsec for that... the barrier of entry is kinda high
At least that how much we were raking in pre-patch, on blaster ratting Guristas. :v
When I kill shits during missions theyre worth at most 40k :P im stuck on lvl 2 missions for now
02:13
What are you doing L2s in?
Harbinger
I don't think it's that well equipped either
Well, it's a laser ship, so obviously.
So all amarr ships suck then? :P
Heh, no. What are you fighting against?
it has drones too, which came in handy on that one mission where there were web turrets
02:16
Don't fly into missions blind.
Also for money-making, planetary interaction.
Highsec PI probably won't support an account, but still.
Welp I just read the description of the mission I just told you about, I could have warped out much sooner. I stayed and killed everything. The loot + bounties were kinda worth it though
You should have a backlog of missions and do them all as fast as possible.
looks up Planetary Interactions
Also, faction warfare might or might not be profitable still.
You mean pick up more than one at a time?
02:20
Yes.
The more you have in system the better.
Unless they need drastic refitting.
Do you bother to loot ships or not?
argh
fuckin' stomach.
You never get a night off from this do you? =/
not really
it's amazing how cranky you can get when you can never sleep when you're tired
I can imagine somewhat, there are weeks where I wake up multiples a night multiple nights in a row
for no apparent reason
02:33
@Borgleader I tried running a Noctis after my ratting ship, but it's even more tedious than ratting, and really hard to multibox.
IME that's usually temperature.
my body is surprisingly sensitive to it without actually telling me.
Looting is slow, and most of the loot isn't particularly worth it.
@CatPlusPlus I was wondering, because I have a tractor beam on mine. and i usually manage to grab a few wrecks during fight but most times i have to loot the rest after
On the Harbinger?
02:35
Ugh.
Don't.
it has 7 high slots but only 6 turrets
it used to have 7 turret slots
You probably should leave it empty, anyway.
More capacitor/PG/CPU for useful stuff.
Just concentrate on destroying things as fast as possible.
Maybe I should've trained for a carrier instead of a Tengu.
Maybe I'll play this game again one day.
@Borgleader How much DPS do you get?
According to EFT 229
02:45
My Naga used to do around 900. :v
Blaster ratting was bearable thing.
What naming scheme do I use for type-erasing holders? E.g. I'd favour any_function over just function, but what about distinguishing move-only from copyable holders? The function/unique_function scheme somewhat follows e.g. std::function but drops the any_*.
unique_* is somewhat long, too.
@CatPlusPlus Is that a BC too?
I suppose I could have a copyable::any* and adjective::any* scheme :v
@Borgleader Yup. But it's not missioning material, it had a paper tank and was profiled for a specific Guristas anomaly.
02:49
@MarkGarcia Depends.
@LucDanton It's a universal reference.
So if I pass an l-value, T& will be deduced.
So it is. Sometimes storing a reference is appropriate. If a type T is a model of something, then it's not unusual for T& to also be.
@CatPlusPlus What ship class do you recommend getting for L3s ?
BC is fine, AFAIK.
Timer there should store a copy, and MakeTimer just forwards parameters to the Timer constructor (if any), so I think std::remove_reference should be used.
02:51
I've done like one or two L3 missions before moving to nullsec.
My naming scheme is to have foo_type<A, B, C...>, and make_foo as the factory for foo_type<Decay<T>...> and foo as the factory for foo_type<T...>.
@LucDanton I would simply drop unique_function and make function a'la unique_function.
If any of make_foo or foo doesn't make sense, then I don't provide it.
@DeadMG And what do I do if I need copies?
shared_ptr.
That's one further indirection.
02:53
no, I meant, store a shared_ptr internally.
Gah...
Same error the same fucking error..
Sure, then what do I name it.
God, I hate clang. =/
just call it function.
Fuck their 0 documentation and 0 help and 0 support and wandawjkdkwahjd
02:53
@ThePhD #llvm is the support, documentation, and help.
Ah, but we already have function that only requires moveability.
IRC?
yep
I don't have an IRC client. I guess I should go get one.
Then what naming scheme do I use?
02:54
@LucDanton What I mean is, there's no need for a non-only-requires-movability function.
Freenode has a web interface.
the regular function can be that just fine.
there's no need for there to be two different function classes.
@CatPlusPlus OFTC
How can you tell? What if I need copies? What if I don't, and I have a move-only functor?
well, I'm pretty sure that if you only ever move the function, you're not gonna be paying any refcounting overhead for shared_ptr, really.
Ya know, this was a question about the naming scheme. Ergo, this is about naming things I already have and need.
02:55
@LucDanton So std::decay should be the more appropriate one to use, as it also strips cv qualifiers.
yeah, you're right.
@MarkGarcia Depends. E.g. it doesn't deal with std::reference_wrapper.
I would probably go for unique_function, I think (but it's still totally unnecessary to have two different classes).
Hmmm...
02:57
#llvm looks pretty empty.
Guess I'd be better off doing something else.
it's 4am.
@DeadMG Think e.g. networking, I/O and the like. Handles will be involved, and those things are typically move-only. Try to close over a function or anything with those, and you get a move-only functor. Then anything that unduly requires copyable functors sucks (e.g. things involving std::function<Sig>).
@LucDanton Right. But if in the implementation of function you store a shared_ptr to the function object on the heap, and simply copy that pointer when you copy the function, then you don't ever call the function type's copy constructor.
On the other side of things, if you want to store functors that will come and go and you'll need to be copying (e.g. to broadcast them to several threads, can't avoid the copy), then you need a copyable holder.
@DeadMG Yes, and Uruguay is in South America, but that's pretty much irrelevant.
A copyable holder that doesn't copy is different semantics altogether.
@LucDanton Arghhh... That's absolutely my problem with Boost.Asio handlers right now. Though I can sometimes make move-only functions to work, it still require them being CopyConstructible.
02:59
@MarkGarcia Yup.

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