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03:00
That's why it's so tough to use lambdas as handlers. :(
Sort of, those are never move-only. To close over those with move-only data you need to go out of your way with e.g. std::bind.
Plus if you capture IO objects (move-only) in lambdas, sigh, just hope the library optimizes the storage all with moves.
@LucDanton Well, the only observable difference (assuming that you treat the act of copying itself as non-observable, which is generally mandated by Standard due to RVO and such) would be if you used target() to mutate the functor after insertion.
C++11 capture is by copy only.
so whilst the semantics are different, I wouldn't really describe it as "altogether", more like, "In some very niche cases". I've never used target() or found anyone else who suggested it should be used in that way.
03:02
@LucDanton I'm using -std=c++1y. :P
Living in the future!
@ThePhD Show new code.
@LucDanton Yeah. Though there's so much frustration working with libraries.
@DeadMG [i]() mutable { return i++; }
@MarkGarcia Well I don't have my own variant and optional by accident (and tonight my own type-erasure). Although I don't have my own Asio...
@LucDanton Good point.
03:03
@DeadMG What's the point. ._. It'll never work when I ask it to parse C++ style code
@ThePhD I see. Why bother breathing, then? You'll never parse C++ code either.
@DeadMG If only you'd ask, I would have told you directly :p I'm not in need of a reason, I'm in need of names!
I would probably go for unique_function
the parallel with unique_ptr is nice.
Ye. any and unique_any for the 'generic' versions it is then.
@LucDanton Y'know, on second thoughts, I'm not actually sure that is legal.
I don't recall the exact wording for this, but isn't there that stuff about how const functions must be safe for concurrent calls the moment they touch the Standard library?
03:06
Oh boy. Let's not poke std::function too much shall we?
lol
Still though, the lambda closure object itself is fine. The mutable in a lambda expression prevents const, and a const closure object, although useless, still respects everything we usually expect.
it doesn't really change the point anyway, since you could just use an atomic operation.
(The std::function quip referring to its operator() which is const.)
> R operator()(ArgTypes...) const;
Doesn't that look great?
Is this a real thing? My idiocy of the UK is showing.
03:09
I assume it is. Death & taxes.
yeah, it's a real thing.
wot
@Rapptz Seems like a contradiction. "lists" "without"...
the government get very snippy about TV licences
they are notorious
@Rapptz DeadMG finances Doctor Who and Top Gear for all of us.
03:10
@LucDanton lol
We have TV license fees, too.
Oh yeah, and QI.
I've never met anyone who'd pay that.
Like, ever.
well
you don't have to pay a licence fee to consume the recorded content on the BBC's website for free, so
it's kinda dumb to pay to watch live when you can just watch later for nothing.
not to mention the additional expense of getting a TV
-4
Q: what does ** or *** mean?

NewI would be thankful if anyone can help me about two questions. First, What does below code mean? offset[0] = (*iter)->point[0] - (int)((*iter)->point[0]); what is the difference between these two terms? (*iter)->point[0] and (int)((*iter)->point[0]) Second, what does two or three pointer si...

03:11
plus the fact that the BBC very rarely produces anything worth watching
^^ wow... down in real time
saw it at 0 on the home page.
-4 when I clicked through
@DeadMG An artefact of the paying model not keeping up with things (i.e. the Interwebs), but not altogether insane.
the licence fee is insane.
It's saner than making public television less accessible.
that presumes that public television is a good thing.
03:14
£145.50 colour / £49.00 monochrome
holy shit
as far as I can see, the BBC wastes the vast majority of it's licence fee on minority-appeal entertainment programs.
Is licence = British, license = US???
not that I would do away with the BBC altogether
@DeadMG I don't think so. Anything public money finances has better be available to, well, the public. The more forms, the better.
FAILURES
FAILURES EVERYWHEERE
._.
Oh wel.
I wonder if GCC would be easier to work with.
03:15
@Mysticial Find a dictionary to advise you on the matter.
@LucDanton Right. But the content produced isn't in the interests of the public.
is it a one-time fee?
@ThePhD Absolutely not.
@Rapptz Annual.
145.5 pounds for a year?
yep.
03:16
well damn
students are the biggest non-payers because you have to have a licence for each individual student room in a dormitory.
@DeadMG Another matter altogether.
@DeadMG That have a TV set, right? Or how do the rules work?
@LucDanton Right.
@Rapptz Steven Fry though!
but the TV licencing people assume by default that you have a TV set and are using it to watch live TV.
03:17
@Mysticial Do crate keys drop randomly like other items in TF2?
as in, they will actively threaten and harass every single household that doesn't have a licence.
@Borgleader nope, you have to buy them or trade for them.
That's how they make money.
Oh I see.
Though I've picked up a couple from server give-aways.
Here in the US we just do a small tax and they get a budget, like all our other public programs.
03:18
But the point is that they're valuable.
@LucDanton Well, not really. If you did pay for a licence fee, then why should your money be spent on supporting a non-fee-payer like me?
@Mysticial Server admins just randomly gave keys to players?
@Rapptz And then they ask for donations?
@LucDanton Yeah they ask for donations.
@Borgleader No. Usually some rich guy will give a use a very expensive item that gives all the players on the server an item.
03:19
At least PBS does.
@DeadMG This is all I got. I'm... pretty much done. I never thought clang would be this... difficult.
@Mysticial Oh that's cool.
Part of me thinks its VS2013 Preview's fault.
But it's LLVM that's throwing the error.
dude, seriously.
(Same line: clang::ParseAST)
03:19
@ThePhD What is Furroflect?
you've been compiling with the Preview this whole fuckin' time?
@DeadMG Yeah.
I have a problem with my code 101: Don't use a fucking pre-release compiler.
Disagree.
I have a problem with my code: let's find a more bleeding edge snapshot!
lol
03:20
I used a snapshot of GCC before with no issues :)
but also, I noticed that you failed to initialize the refcount pointers like I did.
@LucDanton And hope the compiler supports UB!
...?
I've initialized all the important ones.
None of them are null
@MarkGarcia Some later snapshots undo that though D:
03:22
@Rapptz Because all improvements are bug fixes? :P
I only see an initializer for preprocessor options in your Compiler constructor
I need to go to the doctor soon
@Rapptz You're ill?
Nah. I feel like I have frequent urination and it's bugging me.
It's a symptom of prostate problems, diabetes, etc.
Might as well find out what it is.
I'm not even old. :( so I hope it's nothing.
=/ Those are all relatively serious, I hope it's not that
03:26
Must have been a typo. In either case, it is there and it's still not running correctly.
@Rapptz In my experience, I urinate more often just because I'm not wearing anything.
... I should build clang with VS 2012 CTP as a DLL, and then link against that.
Maybe that'll work better.
@DeadMG That's pretty weird.
really?
I never noticed before.
@ThePhD I think the CTP is worse than the preview.
03:28
nah
I use the CTP
Hurray, type-erasure everywhere.
@DeadMG Is it possible for you to take my code and see if it compiles/runs on your machine?
probably
strip it so it only depends on LLVM and Clang.
03:45
Should have no other dependencies
Kewl, I can a.unique() an any<...> to get the coressponding unique_any<...>.
@ThePhD You missed quite a few, and quite a few includes too.
Wow -Wswitch is annoying.
Not my fault this library's enum is so large.
How do I disable it :( is there -Wno-switch? These 24 warnings make me uneasy
There should be.
Aw fuck, -> doesn't propagate value category for e.g. std::unique_ptr.
04:01
Yeah -Wno-switch worked.
@ThePhD Alright. I fixed a bug with ownership of clang::TargetInfo, and now it compiles and executes without error.
Wat.
here's what I got.
you did misread the TargetOptions utility function.
the key part of that was that I newed up clang::TargetInfo but never deleted it or assigned it any ownership, and that's because Clang steals the ownership.
although in any trivial sample, I doubt that it would actually be the source of the error.
perhaps local conditions on your machine, like the file you're trying to find not existing and Clang doesn't notice until it's too late?
I certainly get an explicit failure when the file does not exist
anyway, that code is perfectly good on my machine, so if it doesn't work for you, then investigate your machine's specific conditions, and try #llvm at, say, 3-9pm GMT, you should have better luck then.
I'm off to bed now
or at least, attempting to be off to bed now
nighty
04:18
night
@DeadMG 'night
@Mysticial I've been lurking the anime room, there seem to be an unusually high amount of mods in there
G'night.
or maybe theyre just more active/chatty
@Borgleader That's because if you're a mod on any one SE site, you're a mod on all the chat.SE rooms.
I know, but the lounge is a pretty active room and most of the time there are no mods
SO or otherwise
04:20
There's only like 16 mods on SO for the > 1 million users. There's over 300 mods total on chat.SE for a smaller user base.
o.O oh damn
so needs more mods :P
lol
it workses
congratses
show uses?
04:28
decltype(auto) fun(range::any_forward_range<int> r)
{ return range::map([](int i) { return i * (i + 1); }, std::move(r)); }
@Borgleader where's the anime room
Is MSVC2012's thread implementation usable? or is it buggy?
@LucDanton Why should you use std::move?
@LucDanton How are your ranges turning out?
@MarkGarcia Notice param is taken by value.
04:30
Oh.
yesterday, by Luc Danton
And now I'm pretty sure I ended with the range library I originally thought of, despite @R.MartinhoFernandes best efforts to hinder me.
I'm starting to like it.
Jelly.
Although due to some of the tradeoffs in the design I've grown to accept that it's not going to be always fun to use.
inb4 boost::dantonranges
04:32
I couldn't do ranges without turning to iterators.
@LucDanton Isn't that what they said about iterators before? :)
I really, really started as far away from iterators as I could be, and the result is nothing like it.
too much backwards compatibility for me to just toss out :S
so I decided to drop ranges instead
Well, I meant the "fun to use" part.
04:33
@MarkGarcia Sure, but the only 'benefit' of the trade-offs that were originally made that I can think of is retrofitting pointers.
@Rapptz I must admit that <algorithm> has a lot of functionality these days...
the other alternative would be to make "proper" ranges and rewrite the algorithms themselves but.. that's not very fun.
So do you not provide begin and end?
Compatibility with iterators should be outside of the range structures, IMHO.
@Rapptz Well there are some to make for(auto&& item: r) work but it's more of an experiment. You could easily burn yourself trying to use that actually.
@MarkGarcia Easier said than done :)
@Borgleader I haven't seen any obvious bugs (though I haven't really pushed it very hard either).
04:37
E.g.: auto r = sudo_make_me_a_range(); for(auto&& item: r) eat(item); for(auto&& item: r) digest(item); is bad.
@Rapptz Well, anything displacing the current convention has always been hard. :)
@JerryCoffin Cool :)
@LucDanton How does that work? Doesn't range-based for require operator* and operator++?
I just want to play around with it, see if I can make a threadpool or something
@Rapptz Compatibility layer.
That is, begin/end return iterators. (For range-for they don't have to but there are other compatibility benefits, like container construction.)
04:39
Interesting.
@Borgleader I should probably add that for some things, the 2013 preview is pretty clearly better though -- 2012 has quite a few hacks (e.g., macros to simulate variadic templates) that do work, at least for simple tasks, but with the 2013 preview you get real variadic templates, which gives quite a bit faster compilation, etc.
26 col 5 error| static assertion failed: Concept violation
||      static_assert( And<Concepts...>(), "Concept violation" );
Good thing I put concept checking in my code to catch errors.
@JerryCoffin Ah ok, but I probably won't need those. For what I have in mind tasks will probably all have the same signature anyway.
Gee, no unit test for range/composite/reverse and it has a bug, how surprising.
@Chemistpp
:c
also i found people speaking about Einstein's field equations on 4chan
that was funny
04:54
Hai
@Ell
@EiyrioüvonKauyf
I was in new york
:[
i'll be living in Pittsburgh-ish area the next few years
yay .. -.-"
@Chemistpp what's in NY o-O ... well that's of interest to you haha
@EiyrioüvonKauyf Friend got married. Well, gf's friend. She was the maid of honor. Iwas a side kick
ic ic
free food ;)
yeah, for sure
why are friends important? free food :D
04:56
it was tasty too
cool
where are you from o-o like usuallly
Indiana
well, I grew up in Michigan. Moved to Iowa for 5 years
Indiana for 1 ish
04:57
now hoping to move to Oxford
yeah i think i only like the coasts
yeah, Iowa wasn't much fun
pretty lame
I'm in a pretty cool city in Indiana
but I have to sleep now. Too long of a ride. I"ll be on tomorrow :)
adios
i'll be sleeping till noon tmrw haha
one week break :3
05:05
I don't like it when questions showing genuine help get closed without comments. :s
0
Q: Is there a C++ date/time library?

John FitzpatrickNow, I have to admit, writing my own C++ functions to figure out if it is a leap year, or what the last day of the week was for the previous month is kind of fun, like solving Sudoku puzzles. I don't mind pausing from my sometimes dreary work to solve such puzzles. But I can't help but feel tha...

I felt bad so I left a comment
It's kind of a "I should've googled it but came here instead" question though, imo anyway
So.. what?
Now someone downvoted him.
@Borgleader Comments are free help.
@Rapptz Minimum effort? I'm not saying he didn't google, but his question made it seem like he didn't.
Also I didn't downvote, I just VTCed because it doesn't fit SO guidelines.
05:11
@Rapptz really
Damn, doing all this type-erasure has me interested in Boost.TypeErasure and lattices.
Besides I didn't actually know one so... I couldn't have made a useful comment.
@EiyrioüvonKauyf ?_?
@LucDanton needs more Lattice Theory :P
Instructor shoots student in Ohio gun safety class
August 12, 2013 22:03 GMT LANCASTER, Ohio --
Police say an instructor at a central Ohio gun safety class has accidentally shot a student. The Columbus Dispatch reports 73-year-old Terry J. Dunlap Sr. was demonstrating a handgun at a training facility on Saturday when he fired a bullet that ricocheted off a desk and into the right arm of 26-year-old Michael Piemonte.
The student says the .38-caliber bullet hit him between his elbow and armpit. He says many of the students in the class were nurses who helped stabilize him before he was transp
05:21
That's sadly ironic
took x ray for the 12th time this year
....
@Rapptz i have nothing to say
also i think everyone should take a driving test every 10 years
:[
why? i had a 60 year old lady try to drive straight into me and another one try to change into my lane while she was staring me in the eye
I will be dead from mouth cancer for sure now ... dentist reckon still long way to full recovery
@Telkitty猫咪咪 what happened ?
so going to be stuck with a half of a missing tooth for the next few months
05:28
Wow. There's an s suffix for std::string in C++14.
pretty useless
@EiyrioüvonKauyf mountain biking accident 2-3 months ago
the std::chrono::seconds though? Not so much.
1s == std::chrono::seconds(1).
@Telkitty猫咪咪 sounds fun :O. well the biking
@Rapptz Yeah. I think it's not such a good idea to overuse suffixes.
05:31
I'm saying it's useful
std::string's suffix is useless
There's already an implicit conversion from const char* to std::string so most of its uses are pretty limiting.
Though with Herb's auto s = "string"s; style, it's more consistent.
"hello, " + "world!"
@LucDanton Haven't thought of that.
@LucDanton Just remove the + sign.
Long term, could also help get rid of the char const * overloads for things like fstream, if you can just specify "filename"s.
05:34
@Rapptz Still very useful in formatting stuff.
@Rapptz Oh please. The examples are limitless. int main(int argc, char** argv) { std::cout << "Hello, I'm " + argv[0] << '\n'; }
s/"Hello, I'm "/"Hello, I'm "s/
@LucDanton pfft! Not that easily.
'Replace the + with << hurrrrr'
see, you did it for me!
05:36
std::ofstream file { "tmp/" + argv[0] };
tl;dr why do you hate beginners
you should pick something other than argv[0]
... why?
argv[0] for me is always the full path of the program :(
C:\shit\stuff\other dir\mystuff.exe
Unless it's not.
I haven't seen one where it isn't so far actually. I wonder why.
05:43
If you haven't seen it, this is a cool picture. Usain Bolt, lit by a bolt of lighting after winning the 100 meter: resources1.news.com.au/images/2013/08/12/1226695/…
Xeo
Xeo
mornin
evening
@Xeo Hey :)
Morning.
05:45
@JerryCoffin Yow I read that as 'hit by...' the first time around.
Xeo
Xeo
I like it when a plan plays out. Go to bed one hour earlier -> actually get up one hour earlier!
@Rapptz Windows cmd.exe normally puts in a full path. If you spawn something with CreateProcess, you can decide what to pass (including something completely unrelated to its filename, if you want to badly enough).
@Xeo ello
yeah i can never do that
@LucDanton That wouldn't be cool!
:(
i just stayed up all night hehe
06:15
Sadface is sad.
Yeah....
Even DeadMG's code doesn't work. =/
It's probably just VS 2013 Preview @DeadMG
Unless, DeadMG compiled the example he had with VS 2013 Preview?
I think he only uses the CTP, though, so..
@Borgleader I thought it was you who are clueless.
I can see why you would think that ;)
@MarkGarcia Are you trying to strip me of my title as The Clueless One? If you keep trying I'll...I'll...well, I have no idea what I'll do, but you won't like it!
06:30
Can't believe it got closed when I had just finished the answer T_T
When the OP admits he didn't put any effort -> Don't answer, it's going to get closed
:[
someone needs to make better room statuses
@Borgleader well hooking them up might be more of a partial parallel/waterfall problem ;)
06:57
@not-rightfold hehe
@sehe you talk?
TIL bears talk
first cats; then lions; then dogs; and now bears
your polar bear looks like a gorilla face to me :|
1 message moved to bin
Meh
it really does
@sehe: Glad you're here. : ) I would like to make use of my bugging you.
07:05
Ok, just rop a q. Ill be back after shower :)
@sehe K. Let me know if I should move it to main site, too. Basically, I want my parser to quick fail when it detects truly wrong input (rather than just a rule not matching). But I also want to go up my on_error stack to collect diagnostic information, so I can't just throw an exception. All my on_error's have the action "fail", my idea is to just set a flag saying "critical error encountered", then these on_error's can override their action to "rethrow", up to the parse call.
Problem is, I can't seem to get to the error_handler_result variable to change it unless I forgo the use of Phoenix, as it seems to magically transform the three arguments Qi calls my on_error handler with (args, context, and result) into the usual _1, _2, _3, and _4. There is no Phoenix variable for the last argument, I think.
It's simple enough to just grab the args, context, and result into a non-Phoenix functor, then delegate to a Phoenix functor to get my old behavior, plus now I can modify result. But it just kinda sucks to do that, since my handler passed other state into it that now my custom functor has to capture on the side.
Is there a better way? : )
Unrelated but your branch prediction question gets a lot of shitty edits.
No kidding. Add two characters to it to highlight random words? No, fuck off.
07:20
So, for the record, Papers, Please really is a brilliant game
also hi
hello
Xeo
Xeo
Hmm.. do you guys know if the chat feed thing still goes over all old content when you add a feed?
@Xeo The chat feed thing still overlays the chat.
i think this professor's book has quite a few quotes from wikipedia.... well then
07:30
@sehe: Actually, now I need to sleep. : ) See ya.
07:53
I plonked Feeds
after I found out Feeds is the most ignored identity on Stackoverflow chat
I am going to wrote a post on how Stackoverflow can make money
by suggesting Jeff should start pimping the mods out to 50+ yo obese rich ladies
Jeff Atwoods
like feeding the young studs to cougars
I mean like sacrificing the young lambs to Goddesses
that's the details ... thinking abstract
i like feeds :|
i think
it is now 4 am
night

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