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Xeo
Xeo
20:03
@ThePhD Problem is that result_of<F(Args...)> will cause a hard failure if F is not callable with Args..., IIRC
Oh.
Xeo
Xeo
(With indirect substitution failures being hard errors and everything.)
Well then.
Xeo
Xeo
> Void<decltype(std::declval<Function>()(std::declval<Args>()...))>::type
@Rapptz YOU DON'T HAVE A CURRY TEST. D:<
Xeo
Xeo
20:04
Wat
does anyone happen to know that as a student in a university, do I have the legal access to an IEEE standard?
Xeo
Xeo
Your code is borken
Either Void<...> or typename Void<...>::type
:( don't make fun of my code
Xeo
Xeo
And since it's VS, the typename one it is.
I'm not making fun, I'm just trying to write more tests. D:
20:05
What's wrong with my Void thing?
Xeo
Xeo
If you have ::type, you need typename for a template.
(Yes, VS sucks.)
Oh I'm not using MSVC, he is. (That's my code he wants to port to MSVC..)
Xeo
Xeo
Oh, is your code originally without the ::type after Void<...>?
Yes
Xeo
Xeo
@ThePhD you suck
20:08
What the hell.
Second that
wait
I'm trying to do MSVC a favor here, and I suck? D:
phD in general suck, but "ThePhD" is okay by me.
template<typename Function, typename... Args>
struct result_of_impl<Function( Args... ),
^ so it's just that part, the Void part is fine.
20:09
@Rapptz You're a horrible monster.
heheh
Xeo
Xeo
@ThePhD You sure?
That part looks just fine.
C++ clearly needs #define <
@Xeo That's the thing the compiler complains about first, without me instantiating a single thing
1>type_traits.hpp(131): error C2143: syntax error : missing ')' before '...'
Xeo
Xeo
oh, lol
Sure, variadics still suck
20:14
is that the preview or CTP?
Preview
hey can I do using f = char[2]?
Xeo
Xeo
ya
cool
._____.
Lia will never work for MSVC, at least not as it's built right now.
20:15
I've been doing using f = struct { char stuff[2]; }
Guess I'll let this one dust over. =/
should save some typing
Why is MSVC so bad?
Xeo
Xeo
What is Lia anyways?
something silly I wrote in my free time
Xeo
Xeo
You said that earlier.
user1804599
20:17
Lia is a friend of my mom.
just list comprehensions
Xeo
Xeo
oh, I see
with an implementation of currying I have
iunno if it's any good though but it works
Xeo
Xeo
Woah, already way past 10pm
Time for Kanji
trailing return type sucks
Xeo
Xeo
20:21
-std=c++1y
@Rapptz At least C++1y has deduction.
And GCC 4.8.1 has that implemented.
@Xeo ThePhD is already crying about my code not working in MSVC
Xeo
Xeo
fuck MSVC
@Xeo Ergh, no, he'll get all kinds of diseases if he does that.
20:45
Does anyone know how "documented namespaces" look in Doxygen?
I AM SO CONFUSED, why isn't that 99%?
nevermind, rollover
lol
174516356 * 100 is pretty big, use a bigger data type
@MooingDuck That was quick.
@rightfold C? What happened to your principles?
@EtiennedeMartel well, I knew if GCC was doing it as well it must be some C integer math thing. Didn't take long from there :/
though it did take a moment
@rightfold is such a whore.
20:54
ohai
Cost of transfering biofuels from planet surface -> 7k isk. Market value of said biofuels: 10k isk
PROFIT MARGINS :3 ... not
user1804599
@EtiennedeMartel I'm not, you fool!
21:15
I still want to know why MSVC accepts a function named default when not compiling with /Za.
What on earth would drive such an odd extension?
even C had default as a keyword, so it's more likely a case of bad lexing.
@DeadMG It's funny because with compiler extensions, it works, and without, it doesn't.
I'm going to guess that it's either a bug, or intentional backwards compatibility with code written against a prior bug.
user1804599
Damn.
user1804599
21:20
I was wondering why I was getting two HTTP requests every time when I refreshed the page. Turned out to be /favicon.ico. :V
if I rename a file in Windows am I guaranteed that it hit the disk (is "flushed")?
13
A: Control flow does not enter loop, how is this possible?

jrokYour loop's condition is: i >= 16; You said it to loop while i is greater than or equal to 16. It never is, because you've initialized it to 1.

Proof that simple answers that the masses can understand get voted highly :p
My most voted answer is proof that :P
Not to mention my highest is doing something like case 1: case 2: in a switch.
Ell
Ell
Hi guys
user1804599
21:29
@Ell Hi guy
grump
Ell
Ell
@not-rightfold you're getting me confused. I'm elliot.
user1804599
@Ell Confused? You're not sure whether you're a guy or a girl?
Ell
Ell
I'm a guy.
But my name isn't Guy
Guys. Cmon.
user1804599
Would there be an advantage in connecting RAM to CPU using glass fiber?
21:31
@DeadMG grump
user1804599
@TonyTheLion sbi
btw tony
btw DeadMG
user1804599
btw Tony and DeadMG
did you send my phone number to your old employer?
21:32
no, I just gave them your email
k
cheers
> So I pay for a jaffle, and then you're going to throw it at me?

Kind of like that, yep.
win.
I am embaressed =s
user1804599
@Hobbyist Warum?
21:38
@not-rightfold
sufficiently large values of 1
is there some sort of Windows sandbox I can test my app in where I can slow down and/or modify harddrive/network IO?
try a VM?
@MooingDuck i don't think so
Ell
Ell
21:56
VM is all I can think of
user1804599
@MooingDuck Mock it or use a VM.
22:15
60 minutes lost due to passing the time member of the wrong object.
user1804599
Is that a pun?
I wish
I was passing uninitialized memory to my input validation routine >.<
user1804599
You are using a bad programming language.
I'm so cockfucking sick.
user1804599
@DeadMG Yup, cum is full of STDs.
22:22
Get a new job. Your bosses are idiots. — C Johnson 2 days ago
I've been testing this new code to load our old files from 1993, but I kept getting this error saying the file was corrupted. Turns out the file is corrupted >.< Somebody overwrote some of the data with "trailing zeros"
user1804599
@Mysticial Agree.
user1804599
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
user1804599
Xeo~
Xeo
Xeo
22:29
Alright, time for sleepz.
@Xeo That's interesting.
night
Post that as an answer, I'll even upvote it.
Xeo
Xeo
Btw I like that std::tuple_cat only relies on the tuple-interface.
I don't know how the array part works
Oh nvm, I get it.
Xeo
Xeo
22:31
std::array supports the tuple-interface (std::tuple_element, std::tuple_size, std::get)
It goes through std::get and friends.
Xeo
Xeo
External interfaces, yay~
I still say post it as an answer
user1804599
Awesome! Can we come too? MT @Sunith_DB8R Any dealers in Vaughan wanna make a 20sac chop? Come to Keele/Langstaff Mr. Lube, need a spliff.
user1804599
lol dat retweet
22:32
@Mysticial the access is meant to be supervised, and there is no access to the outside world. — andy256 1 min ago
Xeo
Xeo
Nah, the other guy already mentioned it and I got my gold badge vOv
^^ Google Glass. :)
@Xeo The answer is completely different lol
He's saying to iterate through every type and concatenate them.
Xeo
Xeo
> This solution might be inefficient but for the list you can just iterate through turning them into tuples and using tuple_cat
(I think he meant "array" not "list" there.)
lol the new answer
Xeo
Xeo
22:34
ew, manual appending
> I suggest you first make an array to tuple type function and then just cat it with the other tuple you already have.
Xeo
Xeo
I have to admit, feels a bit nasty to rely on tuple_cat here, with it not being a meta-function and all.
result_of::tuple_cat would be way cooler (I guess @Luc has that?)
Eh.. it's close enough.
Now someone posted it as an answer.
Xeo
Xeo
awww
Tsk tsk.
Xeo
Xeo
22:39
also, lolz, I'm the top user for with 191 upvotes and 30 answers.
I'm top 3 for
Xeo
Xeo
Maybe I should rep-whore that tag
I added it to my OR'd tag search at work, atleast.
There aren't many questions to "rep-whore"
if any at all..
Xeo
Xeo
That being the problem
which sucks :(
user1804599
22:42
What is decltype(auto)?
user1804599
Is it still needed with auto return type?
Xeo
Xeo
yes
decltype-semantics for deduced return type
user1804599
Orite. :P
Xeo
Xeo
auto is always a value, auto&& always a reference, and you need something that can be either.
tbh, I'm starting to understand the need for garbage collection in functional languages for example. Takes away the pain of having to deal with ownership and lifetimes (which is a real bitch for lazy-evaluated ranges I found).
@Xeo but but ~~purrformance~~
user1804599
22:45
IMO the benefits of GC outweigh the benefits of automatic resource management for non-memory resources.
user1804599
A hybrid may be nice.
GC itself doesn't make non-memory resource management hard.
OOP and retained state does.
Xeo
Xeo
It's really tempting to just throw shared_ptrs all over the place for the range stuff.
In Haskell scopes form naturally from bracket calls and there's no problem with bubbling the disposal.
user1804599
bracket <3
Xeo
Xeo
22:47
barket?
user1804599
@Xeo bracket (openFile filename) closeFile doSomethingWithFile
user1804599
bracket :: IO a -> (a -> IO b) -> (a -> IO c) -> IO c
withFile
user1804599
withFile is a wrapper. I was giving an example.
Yeah, but you shouldn't use bracket directly.
It's a building block for withX.
user1804599
22:48
I know.
Xeo
Xeo
withFile name mode = bracket (openFile name mode) hClose
Found that
Okay, bed time now. G'night.
@Xeo 'night
user1804599
I've also needed bracket_ once, which is similar.
user1804599
Fuck you, YouTube. I was just about to sleep when you start playing a wonderful song.
23:04
@not-rightfold I agree that a hybrid may well be the best system. GC has some places where it's clearly advantageous. The problem is that GC is very detrimental in places where it's not advantageous, and you really need a graceful degradation.
Ell
Ell
23:15
Where is GC clearly better?
-4
Q: Exceeding unsigned boundary

Assura Theorycraft#include <stdio.h> int main () { unsigned char a=250,b=20, c; c=a+b; printf ("%d\n",c); return 0; } What can I do for it to show 270? Besides declaring c as int.

So basically they're asking for a way to get an unsigned char to store 270.
@Ell There are some concurrency situations where if you have to track the memory, it makes their complexity higher.
also, a lot of exception safety in C++ comes from the need to destroy everything.
faaargh my stummick.
23:30
@DeadMG its acting up again?
more like "still"
@chris lol
minitech is boss
I wish I was that boss when I was 16 >.>
23:56
@chris would using printf like this actually use more than one byte to store c ?

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