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12:00
7 mins ago, by Luc Danton
I don't feel like double banging though.
@LucDanton It's an implementation detail, it doesn't really matter. Just use engaged(front()) from now on and all is well.
lol
@chris Summary: more ideas? > static_cast > double-bang > ... > C-style cast.
@FredOverflow Stills begs the question of 'how do I write the implementation detail'.
I'm already writing an implementation detail.
I say static_cast is the cleanest. Now use that and get on with your life ;)
"Range woes or how I stopped worrying and learned to love double bang"
12:03
When exactly do explicit conversions to bool fire automatically? if and conditional expressions? Anywhere else?
Xeo
Xeo
How well do you guys think such an unary postfix operator? would be received?
@Xeo I missed the discussion, what would the semantics of expr? be?
Badly.
It returns true, unless it's a Sunday.
@Xeo By whom? Users? Yes, why not. Standards committee? LOL U MAD?
Xeo
Xeo
12:04
@FredOverflow Invoke a contextual conversion to bool.
@KonradRudolph My thoughts exactly.
@Xeo Put it on the asylum.
Xeo
Xeo
68
Q: Is the safe-bool idiom obsolete in C++11?

XeoThis answer of @R. Martinho Fernandes shows, that the safe-bool idiom is apperently deprecated in C++11, as it can be replaced by a simple explicit operator bool() const; according to the standard quote in the answer §4 [conv] p3: An expression e can be implicitly converted to a type T if ...

@Xeo Well, if it allows me to write the following, I'm all for it:
auto wtf = make_optional(42);
if (wtf???) { /* ... */ }
Xeo
Xeo
lol
If it's defined for bools
Which I guess wouldn't make much sense.
12:10
It would make sense for templates where you don't know the type.
Xeo
Xeo
I'm trying to think of a possible ambiguity with ?: and labels, though
For that reason alone, we have const void, which also doesn't make much sense on its own :)
Labels cannot be in the middle of expressions.
FWIW idiomatic Scheme has predicates looking like (empty? foo), i.e. you name your predicates and other queries with a final ?.
@Xeo A label cannot begin in the middle of an expression.
12:11
@Xeo and in wich context would that be useful? Are there palces where contextual conversions are not supported but needed?
Xeo
Xeo
@FredOverflow Meh, but not references to void
@ArneMertz return some_obj?; mainly, I guess
@LucDanton It's the -P thing in Lisp
(emptyp foo)
C++ has pointers to void, but no references to void? Me so sad :(
Lisp has great naming conventions.
12:11
(pairp etrator)
Ruby does ? too.
@CatPlusPlus How do you feel about C++'s is_foo vs some_vector.empty()?
@Xeo I guess since automaitc return type deduction will emerge with C++14, we're going to return bool(som_obj); anyways - because we will often have declared that function with auto return type.
@ArneMertz I'm afraid automatic return types are going to be heavily overused and abused.
12:19
No, they won't.
Implicit conversions will.
Pro tips: (a) include the code that truggers the problem. (b) switch to en_US locale before posting compiler errors — sehe 26 secs ago
@FredOverflow Abused how?
Type inference is good.
I like looking at a function signature and immediately see the return type.
@sehe Hey, I think I get it!
@FredOverflow That depends on the definition of bad usage. And many have said the same about auto variable types. But if you stick to some conventions it will make the code clear and less redundant.
12:22
@R.MartinhoFernandes Me too :/
Because it's not as obvious as it is in local variable type inference.
@FredOverflow If it's not, then the function might be too long :)
or the function has a bad name
essentially, it should be as obvious as local variable inference
Well, we'll see. Maybe I was wrong.
But I have noticed in old Scala code of mine that I am always thankful if my defs (functions definitions) have an explicit return type, even if it's "not necessary" and "obvious from context".
@FredOverflow That's a biased observation.
Xeo
Xeo
> In Elementfunktion
12:25
Would you have trouble if they weren't there?
Xeo
Xeo
WTF "Elementfunktion"?!
@Xeo Yeah, WTF. Why does a compiler vendor implement messages like "Fehler: xxx ist geschützt" when the language itself clearly writes that as protected: anyways
I think as with variables the kind of return type should be obvious, while the actual type should be unimportant
@R.MartinhoFernandes It took me longer to understand the code without the explicit return types.
@Xeo "member function"
@FredOverflow How do you know? They were there already.
12:25
@Xeo late-80'S German translation for member function
Xeo
Xeo
ugh
ITT robot teaches German to Xeo.
:P
@R.MartinhoFernandes No, it was old code of mine where about 50% of the defs had no explicit return types.
"ITT robot teaches Xeo German" - FTFY
(see what I did there?)
I'm fucking lost in a sea of parens because I don't have access to decltype(auto).
12:26
Because when I first learned Scala, I thought explicit typing was bad :)
@LucDanton Ist es geschützt?
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton My condolences.
@FredOverflow well, maybe when you first learned Scala, you were not that experienced in writing clear functions ;) Although it could be that it's not that easy to read when you are more used to imperative programming.
Wich could lead to the conclusion that comparing explicit typing in Scala and explicit typing in C++ is futile anyways ;)
1
Q: C++11 variadic template parameters notation in UML

g-makulikDoes anyone know how to model C++11 variadic template parameters correctly in UML 2.2? I've seen a number of UML profile models as a result from web-search, that seem to describe the construct of 'any number of optional template parameters'. Or do I just confuse this with the fact that any usual ...

room topic changed to Lounge<FUBAR++>: Zugriff ist geschützt [c++] [c++11] [c++-faq] [no-questions]
ouch
the pain
make it stop
12:34
is this a fucked up German lounge now
user1804599
Use var whenever you can no matter what.
Hi I've been trying to implement a class using copy-and-swap idiom, but I keep getting this error: "more than one instance of function matches the argument list" that doesn't really make sense, can someone give me a hint what I'm doing wrong? Here's my simplified code:
struct S {

friend void fn(S& s) { }

S() {
fn(*this);
}
};
> Let's first establish what the purpose of code is in the first place. For this article, the purpose of code is to create value by solving a business problem.
Die
user1804599
@Oleksiy Rule of zero.
12:36
Why on earth are you invoking copy-and-swap from your default constructor?
@LightnessRacesinOrbit lol, what
I'm just trying to call a friend function from a constructor
@FredOverflow The fact that Lippert has to spend two paragraphs explaining that by "business problem" he doesn't necessarily mean banking, suggests to me that he ought not to have used the work "business" in the first place? Why did he? Because he's in a corporation, and that's the terminology. It's retarded.
@not-rightfold That sounds too radical to work in practice.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit I think it's worth pointing out the difference between coding for fun and coding for a living.
12:39
@FredOverflow I don't see why either is relevant to the topic under discussion. It just didn't need to be brought up.
He never mentions the distinction again, after the preamble.
@Oleksiy How's that related to copy-and-swap. It's clear the simplified code you provided is worthless: you simplified to the point it doesn't show anything meaningful.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit "Given that the overarching purpose is assumed to be solving business problems, what makes good code?"
@FredOverflow That's not mentioning the distinction. That's repeating the term which was disambiguated using a description of the distinction (and with some hand-wavy logic which essentially said "ignore the distinction").
@R.MartinhoFernandes apparently #include <vector> was the problem :/ As soon as I removed it it worked
He could just have picked a different term that doesn't have the word "business" in it, and be done with it.
12:42
@Oleksiy I... just... but...
@Oleksiy Then your function was not called fn.
@Oleksiy If including vector breaks your code, you have a serious problem.
@Oleksiy What's the real name of the friend function?
It was probably called swap and you forgot that there exists a function swap already.
Thanks for not showing us a worthwhile example of your problem.
Xeo
Xeo
Also, using namespace std;?
309
Q: Why is "using namespace std;" considered bad practice?

ManaI've been told by others on numerous occasions that my teacher was wrong in saying that we should have using namespace std; in our programs, and that std::cout and std::cin are more proper. However, they would always be vague as to why this is a bad practice. Why is using namespace std; consider...

Here's today's lesson: #includeing <vector> is wrong if you are just trying to call a friend function from a constructor of a class with that uses copy-and-swap.
4
Right?
Someone is awful silent
no I'm not.
12:45
wait
@Oleksiy What IDE/editor is that?
VS 2012.
visual studio 2013 preview
no, not 2012
oh, you're using the Preview?
Xeo
Xeo
Don't trust Intellisense.
Just hit F7
12:46
fuck that then, go back to 2012.
also, ignore Intellisense.
Dude gets shot in the leg in a modern warfare skirmish. His mates administer morphine and he doesn't feel pain anymore. Apparently the lack of morphine was the problem :/ As soon as they administered it it worked
lol
Ok, so is this a bug with Visual Studio or what?
ah never mind, removing #include <vector> didn't actually solve anything. still the same error
dude, you're compiling with the Preview.
stop doing that.
The thick plottens
8
12:50
@Oleksiy looks like a compiler bug to me
I wonder how they managed to fuck that one up.
No C++11 features on it.
Oh wait, is there something like std::fn? I only know of std::mem_fn...
There shouldn't be.
Nope, no std::fn. I tried with a few different names and still the same error
Xeo
Xeo
Is it an actual compiler error or just Intellisense flipping out?
12:53
Can you compile the program with F7? Is it just Intellisense that's complaining?
it compiles...............
but there is an error.
Also, why are you defining a friend function inside a struct? Not that it's impossible, it's just... weird.
Can you run it?
yeah it runs, but the error doesn't go away
@FredOverflow I do that all the time.
it's ok
12:56
@R.MartinhoFernandes Why not make it a static member function?
yeah it makes sense for me to define friend functions inside a class
@Oleksiy Oh. False alarm, then. It's just InsaniSense ballsing up, as usual.
@FredOverflow ADL doesn't work for those.
Xeo
Xeo
@Oleksiy Who'd have thunk.
@FredOverflow Calling syntax + ADL semantics.
12:56
Note that Intellisense shares a suffix with nonsense.
I wonder whether Intellisense is balking because of the inline def
Xeo
Xeo
@LightnessRacesinOrbit As if Intellisense needs a reason to go bonkers.
a<b<c<d<e>>>> g;
a<b<c<d<e>>>>::f(g);
// vs
f(g);
@LightnessRacesinOrbit It's balking because it's IntelliSense.
Yes, I got that part
Also, @Oleksiy, apologies for assuming incompetence.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit To make sure you did: IntelliSense sucks.
13:00
@LightnessRacesinOrbit it's ok! thanks for your help everyone. I'm glad I can include vector without any fear :D
Xeo
Xeo
That sounds so wrong
meeting time
It does?
Yuck. friend
In Qt Creator you can define macros for the project config. These do not affect the actual build. There I define QT_CREATOR and then in the code I can wrap Intellisense-breaking parts with #ifndef QT_CREATOR
13:12
Certain code however still manages to break it.
But that only happened once.
@Xeo is_constructable? I would have expected better from you.
Laborious tasks - simple solutions
2
Curse you raw string literals. Screwing up my indentation...
@chris Y U NO NO HOW USE RAW STRING LITERALS
13:21
@thecoshman I'm starting to think "" "" might be better for this.
@thecoshman That's one I can appreciate
I love the gif on that one
Then I still have to put \ns at the end, too.
@chris Watchadoin.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Command-line help thing.
Do you put static variable definitions before the rest of the class implementation, or after?
13:24
@chris why not """ """?
@Pawnguy7 I don't remember the last time I needed that.
@R.MartinhoFernandes failing :P
@Pawnguy7 I think before. Not sure.
@Pawnguy7 I'm not sufficiently moronic to use static variables, so my coding guidelines do not include petty styling for them.
@FredOverflow yup I do that too. operator<< etc.
Oh well, it's a function that returns the raw string anyway, so it's not like I have code around it.
Oops, I started writing int main in a header.
lol
0
Q: Return Variable as a Class Object - C++

One Byte Per HourI Have Created a String Class Using A Character Array . I Actually To Need Place That Array Instead of Class Object . Here's An Easy Example . I Want To Print A as an Integer , Not B as a Class Object Which Isn't Possible . #include <iostream> class T { int A ; public : T ( ) { ...

Capitals on every word.
Every unneeded one confirms his idiocy.
"of", "as", and two "a"s were left lowercase.
But a third "a" was capitalized...
13:33
It's not song a title.
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes Huh?
Hello
I actually don't know how to overload an operator , any easier ways ? — One Byte Per Hour 34 secs ago
@OneBytePerHour Could you please just help us help you. FWIW. My editor allowed me to fix things. Cheers. — sehe 7 secs ago
@chris " ," - lol
If you'd spend two seconds looking it up, you'd see it's not hard...
13:35
Excellent. But my appreciation for C++ is rapidly descending into loathing. Can anyone but language lawyers keep track of this semantic nightmare when applying for default methods, etc., and noexcept qualifiers (for certain STD requirements, etc)? — Brett Hale 38 mins ago
Or look at the answers as they come.
Let's not check stuff from now on on our own, just ask on :stackoverflow: stackoverflow.com/questions/18445441/…
I want to make a randomized list based on an initial list, both of which will have all the elements. Each will only have each element once. My plan was to make a copy, and for the number of elements it has, remove one from the copy, and add it to the list being generated.
@Rapptz Morning.
Should I used vector or list?
13:36
Even though it's noon here.
@Pawnguy7 or list is like saying or false
@Pawnguy7 Usually vector.
@StackedCrooked It's 9:36 AM here.
@Pawnguy7 Copy it and use std::random_shuffle.
Although, I suppose if you only resize downwards, it isn't as bad?
@Pawnguy7 This is answered very simply by "don't use list"
You know when you need it, if you don't know that you need it, you don't need it.
2
Lists are rarely what you want.
13:38
@Pawnguy7 vector is fast even for removing items
you almost never need std::list.
What you actually want is a set.
for very large amounts of data, and if contiguity is not a requirement, deque is often a better choice
Unless you use MSVC hohoho
yeah... unless you use MSVC.
13:39
My only experience with deque is with GCC.
It's broken in MSVC.
MSVC std::deque is legendary for being basically utterly broken.
Does it not meet the requirements on MSVC?
it meets the requirements, it's just unusably slow.
@StackedCrooked It meets the requirements in a... Hell++-y way.
13:41
How can they break it so badly?
@StackedCrooked Simple- inner array size.
You know, like a big "fuck you, this is valid, I don't care, deal with it".
if you think of deque as vector<unique_ptr<array<T, N>>>
then you can utterly fuck the structure by setting N to a miniscule value.
So the "chunks" are very small.
it's not "very small"
try "16 bytes or 1 T, whichever is bigger.".
13:42
@StackedCrooked It's ridiculously small. For objects larger than 16 bytes, they're chunks of 1 object.
How silly.
Xeo
Xeo
It's basically a random-indexable list at that point.
Random shuffle seems to be what I want to do.
There should be a reasoning behind that that once sounded reasonable.
#define _DEQUESIZ	(sizeof (value_type) <= 1 ? 16 \
	: sizeof (value_type) <= 2 ? 8 \
	: sizeof (value_type) <= 4 ? 4 \
	: sizeof (value_type) <= 8 ? 2 \
	: 1)	/* elements per block (a power of 2) */
13:43
@R.MartinhoFernandes Nice reserved identifier.
@klmr and now please provide userdefined literals for German "Hack0r" kids: `condition??! !!!1111einseinself`
@chris It's from the stdlib, so it's fine...
Xeo
Xeo
@chris Hint: It's from the implementation.
@chris It's MSVC's implementation (ergo, they're allowed)
@Rapptz Compelled would be a better way to put it.
13:43
@ArneMertz Go right ahead. ;-)
@Rapptz I think they're required.
Oh, I didn't even see the deque part.
I read it as some foreign language thing lol
'the quality of connection between two pears' - wait till you have to connect an Apple to a Tulip — sehe 22 secs ago
yes, the stdlib could not define identifiers outside of that space, else they would conflict with legal user programs.
Ah yeah, required would have been better.
13:45
one of the reasons why C++ stdlib code is so fucking unreadable.
@CatPlusPlus, Lol, I just saw the newbie message :)
@DeadMG It is surprising how two underscores manage to hamper the readability of the stdlib. Not to mention the fucked up GNU coding style for GCC.
@Xeo __omg __my __eyes
Xeo
Xeo
__also __not __with __reading __this
n__o p__rob__lem
13:46
Me neither
__mein _Gott
someone has underscored this conversation
And now it's p_underscored.
____________________________________________________________
(it wasn't me)
@KonradRudolph I got error: exponent has no digits oO
not sure what to make of this
13:51
lol
e as a suffix on numbers makes it a float given in scientific notation.
uhm
meh
damn
I am guessing unique_ptr cannot be copied?
@Pawnguy7 Yep.
Only moved
@R.MartinhoFernandes so a new kind of most vexing parse with literal suffixes -.-
13:54
@Rapptz That's what happens when your language is shitty and broken.
Also _M_best_prefix_ever
@ArneMertz Not really, that 111ident stuff was never going to work.
@ArneMertz trigraphs ?!
the literal suffix is irrelevant in this case.
Hrm... for the generators, it is a list of unique_ptr. But I want to have a copy of this list (that is randomized). Not sure how to do that, unless I had like a pointer to a unique_ptr, but that seems messy.
make_unique(*old_unique)
Or value_ptr.
13:56
@Pawnguy7 You can't copy a list of unique_ptr.
@A.H. yeah, see the tweet linked by Konrad above ;)
@ArneMertz UDLs must start with _.
that's kinda the point of unique_ptr.
@KonradRudolph no idea, don't think stackoverflow.com.au is owned by SE, probably a prank site ...
@R.MartinhoFernandes is it a must or a should ?
13:57
@A.H. Must.
@R.MartinhoFernandes yeah, gcc only warns about it, though - and then happily misparses the expression ;)
@A.H. Certainly a must.
All other identifiers are reserved for the implementation in that context.
@ArneMertz It's not misparsed at all.
you simply used it in a context where it's impossible for it to be lexed correctly without the underscore.
@DeadMG well, depends. If it accepts the non-underscored operator it should parse its invocation correctly imo
@DeadMG not impossible. it just has to parse the trailing identifier completely without breaking off after the first letter (if it's an e)
13:59
@ArneMertz Which is completely non-Standard and never, ever going to happen.
and might well break all manner of existing strange-looking code.

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