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08:04
Being really polite on a phone call.. end it with: yo talk to you later
ugh
user1804599
I don't see why that isn't polite.
> Bein straight-up polite on a funky-ass beeper call.. end it with: yo rap ta you later
Hey guys, could someone pleeease teach me how to declare a string and use it in an if statement
string s; //declaration
if (s == "meow") // use in if statement
i tried that but it refuses to work in Borland C++
are you sure I can take a string as input?
08:15
More detailed info in chapter 2 of your C++ Testbook of choice.
Uh. Don't use Borland C++. Ever
That's what my school is using
Thats the most fucked up compiler I ever came across
Someone finally understands :D
Then tell your Teacher you want to learn C++, not how to work around a bundle of bugs sold with a C++ sticker on it
Hello!
0
Q: input output stream with buffering

QwertyI wonder how to design a good stream. This stream should support both input and output buffering. Should I use two buffers (one for input, one for output) and synchronize them or one buffer is enough? In my opinion we can do it with one buffer. For example, buffer of 10 bytes. Seek(0) -- pos ...

08:19
My first sentences in daily standup meeting: "What I did yesterday: failed to debug or compile something. What hindered me: Crappy Borland compiler. What I'll do today: curse that fucked up tool until we get something else"
@Qwerty Hi.
@ArneMertz: Yeah, your right. I probably should and maybe even complain to the school authorities about the crap thing.
@Qwerty Someone on SO will read that eventually. If you add a C++ tag, it might even be someone interested in C++ who can help you
Well, anyhoo, I downloaded Code::Blocks into my home PC and coding C++ just got wierd
I had block of code I wanted to run over and over again
does Code::Blocks still come with a 3.x gcc?
so since I didn't know how or even why to use "goto"
08:21
@ArneMertz ok)
I used while(true){do that}
And I don't know, I never checked.
but i don't think so
@Nick find those brain cells that store your memory of goto and erase them with a good shot of Vodka
while is the right thing to do. You'll normally want to add some condition though
user1804599
There is nothing wrong with goto.
user1804599
@Nick Use GCC or clang before continuing no matter what.
@ArneMertz: Firstly, I still have no idea how to use goto, Second, I'm underage. 3rd, I tried adding a boolean that turned false when the input is a certain character but when I used it, the program crashed (in a way)
user1804599
08:26
@DeadMG the bin is hungry.
user1804599
@Nick I don't see how being underage is relevant at all.
@not-rightfold: nobody's going to give me vodka
user1804599
Why not?
@Nick well, than that would be a good question to put it on SO: reduce the code with thath crashing loop to a bare minimum reproducing the problem (see sscce.org), and post the question including the reduced code as a question.
... Because that's the world I live in. Where do you live? K-Pax?
user1804599
08:29
I'M DESPERATE FOR A MESSAGE RELOCATION BUTTON.
@not-rightfold because he's underage, he can't buy vodka, so he cant purge "goto" from his memory
user1804599
Good. goto may come in handy some time and it's good to know it exists.
@ScottW: It was a beautiful film with Kevin Spacey. Everyone should know it
@not-rightfol/d: I've already stated there's no memory of goto to purge... Now, how do I use goto
user1804599
@Nick like this:
@Nick your case is most surely not a case for goto. Maybe more for while and break or continue
user1804599
08:32
foo:
    std::cout << "Hello, world!\n";
    goto foo;
@ScottW: Well, Great Scott. I should go get myself a flux-capacitor then
@not-rightfold sigh what have you done? poisoning an apprentice's mind ;)
@not-rightfold: Is foo supposed to be a function or a class?
What film?
@Nick neither. It's a label
user1804599
08:33
Neither. It's a label.
...=_= I feel like retard when I'm trying to learn a new language
Oh K-Pax?
user1804599
You're an idiot in terms of anything but you'd love to learn
@ScottW Back to the Future had Kevin Spacey?
@Nick it wouldn't be leraning something new if you didn't feel like that ;)
@Rapptz rofl, now you're messing it up completely :D
08:35
@not-rightfold: Your absolutely right
After appearing here I feel myself as an idiot, but there is a hope I'll become smarter%))
So I like stackoverflow)
@Qwerty that's what SO is for =)
I'm still confused
@Rapptz post a question on movies.stackexchange.com then? :)
Ok, a function is defined like the following, is it not?
function some-name(parameter){do stuff};
08:38
@ArneMertz Stackoverflow is for liking it. I agree with you
@ScottW .. I said K-Pax first and then I said Back to the Future and you guys made me seem like a retard
what have I done!!! I think I've signed myself up... to taking a shot of this monster... my god I hope people at work don't care about enough to scrape together that money :'(
vodka??? no thanks!
erm... it's the Vodka side of things I am worried about
=_= Ok, Firstly - no one is a retard. Second - No, Kevin Spacey was not in BTTF. 3rd- I'm hungry (this is relevant to me).
08:40
what is BTTF ?
back to the future
don't send me in google plz
Everytime I see Kevin Spacey I think of him dead in American Beauty.
@thecoshman 'Can be delivered within the UK tomorrow (Friday 30th, Aug)' - where's my cards?
Hey.. they say he's going to die in the first 10 seconds of the movie.
I was actually hoping he wouldn't, but well.. it happened.
08:44
@Qwerty nah, it's for making you feel like an idiot and for giving you hope
@thecoshman RIP
@ArneMertz great mission )
Ok, here's my mad code. Please don't laugh. Just tell me what's wrong with it - gist.github.com/NickKartha/6375709
It's in C++.
It uses using namespace std;
08:48
lol
It doesn't use spaces where it should.
@ScottW: Is it that bad?
It will go into infinite loop on ill-formed input.
yes, that was my problem
But hey, at least it ain't Java!
7
08:49
It doesn't use indentations in a right Python's way...
What?
@Nick then you should test cin for correct input :-)
Using PEP8 with C++?
@ScottW yeah but at least it lets you input something more if the previous input was ok
@ArneMertz: It works when I run it from Code::Blocks. I still haven't figured out how to end the loop
@ArneMertz: As I said, when I stop the loop with a bool that turns false it goes into an infinite loop
08:52
@Nick first of all, I would getline the plain input string and dissect that one into the operator and operands.
unchecked numerical input is very prone to just the kind of problems you encountered
@Nick You can you goto to quit from loop ;)
eh, how do I do that/
use*
goto EXIT
in default block
@Nick well, then show us the code with that bool and we'll tell you whyt went wrong :-)
joke joke joke)))
08:54
@MartinJames actually getting some?
or just set that condition variable to false in the default block
I nearly gave myself laser eye surgery with a barcode scanner when it invoked UB, and I know a man whose monitor caught fire. But I've never seen hard drive erased. It could happen though. — doctorlove 11 mins ago
@Rapptz I like the random pizza order anecdote as well :-)
@ArneMertz: Here's the code with the bool. Beneath it you'll find the current code that works using goto. The one with goto works as intended - gist.github.com/NickKartha/6375709
@Nick Nooo
@Nick don't use goto
@Nick I've just joked
09:03
@Qwerty: XD Well, it the bool doesn't send it into an infinite loop now
So, I don't plan on using goto
but if I had a really complicated navigation system. Then goto would be necessary
@Qwerty: Wait, does goto EXIT; really EXIT the cmd?
@thecoshman 'Success! Your order has been placed ' - the Devils's Tears is on its way :((
@Nick goto increases difficulty of program's logic. All can be done without goto
@CaptainGiraffe Asus MX279H
@Qwerty: Your right :D thank you
Also, could anyone tell me if this is how you define a C++ function:
function some-name(parameter){do stuff};
Also, is this supposed to be in the main() or outside the main()
@Nick well, the while-loop with the condition works, as long as you don't input something crappy. because then cin >> n1 will fail, op will remain what it was and cin will not accept input until you reset it. That's the source of your endless loop
@Nick no, that's actually not how you define it.
return_type name(param1_type param1, param2_type param2)
09:11
@LucDanton How about active = bool(); instead? ;)
Hey, C++ doesn't need false and true literals, we can just use bool() and !bool() instead :)
user1804599
@ScottW And C#!
user1804599
@FredOverflow !bool() :v
@ArneMertz: What's return_type?
void and int?
@Nick it should not, in practice. but it seems you have not learned about functions yet, so its fine
@not-rightfold I already wondered whether ~bool() would call a destructor or something ;)
user1804599
09:12
@ScottW And soon Python!
So, it's
@Nick whatever you want the function to return. can be float, string or some other user-defined type as well. But I guess you are not there, yet
'The potent chillis are infused in large vodka-filled carboys for many weeks before bottling, and the bottlers must wear gas masks and rubber gloves when handling the chillis and final vodka to protect their skin, eyes, noses, and lungs' - I'm looking forward to this - should arrive Tuesday.
@FredOverflow Make only false and require that every subsequent use always needs to be negation of previous one.
@ArneMertz: Will this work - int func(int a, int b, int c){ cout << a+b+c;}
09:14
false, !false, !!false, !!!false
@Nick no, because that function claims to return an int but actually does not return anything
@CatPlusPlus: false, true, false, true?
so, either like this: void func(int a, int b, int c){ cout << a+b+c; }
@Nick In the following example, std::string is the return type, because we want to return a string:
std::string booleans_for_dummies(bool b)
{
    return (b ? "yes" : "no");   // might be easier to parse for beginners with parens
}
or like that: int func(int a, int b, int c){ return a+b+c; }
09:17
If a function has a return type other than void, you can use a function call as part of a bigger expression. For example, func(1, 2, 3) - func(4, 5, 6) works because func returns an int.
@FredOverflow: Cool, that's the ternary operator, right. I've never seen it used outside defining values
You could just as well write if (b) return "yes"; else return "false";
@FredOverflow: Wait a second, could I call functions from the console?
=_= that sounds stupid.
What do you mean?
I mean can I enter sin(20) and expect an answer
user1804599
09:19
@FredOverflow No.
+_+ seems impossible
user1804599
auto foo = bool();
foo.~bool();
user1804599
Would call a destructor if it was valid.
It isn't valid? :(
user1804599
I don't know.
user1804599
09:19
Just ~bool() does bitwise not. Probably with some conversion to int or whatever. Don't know. It's terrible because Booleans are not integers and should not be able to be used in bitwise operations.
It isn't valid, just tried :( But it works with templates!
Xeo
Xeo
needs a typedef, IIRC
template<typename T>
void fuck_you_cpp_i_want_to_destruct()
{
    T a = T();
    a.~T();
} // ouch, a will get destructed again... but I don't care!

int main()
{
    fuck_you_cpp_i_want_to_destruct<bool>();
}
user1804599
Stupid Magento.
user1804599
Magento is so bad I don't even understand how somebody can make this shit.
09:23
What is it?
user1804599
Webshop software.
The one you work on?
user1804599
lolno
user1804599
Then why would I say it?
@Nick I suppose you mess compiling languages with interpreted languages
09:24
@Nick depends on the console, but it's not a C++-thing if it works ;)
@EtiennedeMartel Then how come the plural is ce sont?
@Nick In C/C++ you can pass parameters within console to main function. Only for main() if it console application
@ArneMertz: Well, yeah, I guess so. but I always wanted to make a console thingy that works like that
@Qwerty: What do you mean?
@Nick sin.exe 20
user1804599
ugh
09:28
@Nick You will have to write your own expression parser. Once you feel reasonably comfortable with programming, read this.
@Qwerty: eww, that looks yucky. Ok, I'm never doing that
user1804599
$ cat foo.cpp
#include <iostream>
int main(int argc, char const** argv) {
    std::cout << argv[1] << '\n';
    return 0;
}
$ g++-4.9 foo.cpp -std=c++1y && ./a.out hello
hello
user1804599
It ain't rocket science. I wish it were, though; I could be a rocket scientist.
@FredOverflow: Aww, thank you
@Nick Why not? If you don't want to ask input within cin, you can do it within console or file or network. It is your choice ;)
09:30
Could someone tell me why
case '*' || 'x': cout<<n1*n2; break;
doesn't work in a switch statement
@not-rightfold You could still embrace Lisp and become a Racket scientist!
user1804599
@Nick case '*': case 'x': std::cout << n1 * n2; break;
user1804599
@FredOverflow xD
@not-rightfold Buy KSP.
user1804599
'*' || 'x' evaluates to true because C++ is completely retarded.
09:32
Don't be a dick
I don't want conditionals to automatically unfold all over my fucking function
@not-rightfold make that "because C++ implements retarded legacy features from C"
@Nick You're checking for the case in which your character holds the value of the expression ('*' || 'x'). You're not checking for two possible cases. Use fall-through for that: case '*': case 'x': std::cout << n1 * n2; break;
user1804599
@ArneMertz no.
@ArneMertz retarded by inheritance
@LightnessRacesinOrbit, not-rightfold : Thanks
09:34
@FredOverflow or, more broadly: a bracket scientist
No, the problem is English. People walking around saying "I want this character to be an asterisk or an ex." This is incorrect English. The correct phrase is: "I want this character to be an asterisk, or this character to be an ex." And this translates into C++ perfectly.
85
Q: Should we avoid object creation in Java?

SlamiceI was told by a colleague that in Java object creation is the most expensive operation you could perform. So I can only conclude to create as few objects as possible. This seems somewhat to defeat the purpose of object oriented programming. If we aren't creating objects then we are just writing ...

> I was told by a colleague that in Java object creation is the most expensive operation you could perform.
> Your colleague has no idea what they are talking about. Your most expensive operation would be listening to them, they wasted your time
user1804599
@FredOverflow It's more expensive than reading a thousand GB file into memory.
09:35
@LightnessRacesinOrbit It is so long sounds! I prefer incorrect option)
@not-rightfold memory mapped files?
It so* (without is)
user1804599
@FredOverflow It's more expensive than reading a thousand GB file into memory.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit I don't think "or this character to be an ex" makes a lot of sense.
user1804599
@FredOverflow MongoDB writes to memory-mapped files, ….
user1804599
09:36
> There is no way to avoid Object creation in Java.
user1804599
But… there is! If you avoid Java, you avoid object creation in Java!
JBL
JBL
If only...
OT: I think this guy is an awesome actor: imdb.com/name/nm0002064
DeadMG got owned in that post
user1804599
@FredOverflow That doesn't read the file into memory. It may read parts of it into memory.
09:37
@DeadMG, what are you talking about? There are no extra indirections. And no, you cannot match the proper GC performance with the custom allocators, pools and all that. Please do not come back to this topic unless you're able to prove that you can infer a region-based memory management scheme for any possible program in, say, simple lambda calculus. You cannot compactify manually a custom binary tree coming from runtime-dependant data. — SK-logic May 22 '12 at 8:52
From Revolution TV series and apparently others as well.
@not-rightfold I never really tried to understand memory mapped files. I'll just keep on pretending they don't exist.
Who likes The Big Bang Theory (comedy) ?
@Qwerty: bazinga
@Nick bugaga
09:42
Do I need to else{ } in an if-else statement. My teacher never does it.
user1804599
@FredOverflow It's like lazy block of memory that syncs with a file.
but it looks so neater with braces
user1804599
So if you use mmap on a file of 1 GB, it will only load the pages you access.
@Qwerty I like it but I do not watch it. It is too painful to watch their interactions with women. :)
user1804599
@Nick Always use braces.
user1804599
09:45
Pretend they are required.
@wilx Really so painful? I find it funny)
@Qwerty I honestly feel uncomfortable a lot when anybody makes a fool of him/herself.
@not-rightfold: Oh Thanks. XD
Also, how do I ask for a random number in C++
Is there a rand() function somewhere in some library?
@wilx where there's life there's hope
@Nick It depends on whether you want C++11 solution or C++03 solution.
09:49
@wilx: ... this is embarrassing but I'm looking for a C++98 solution... but I guess 03 will have to do
@Nick It's pretty much the same thing.
The differences between the two are negligible.
@R.MartinhoFernandes: wohooo!
user1804599
@Nick #include <random>
user1804599
You need to choose a source and distribution depending on your needs.
@Qwerty Seasons 1 and 2 were funny.
09:55
not-rightfold: My need is basic natural numbers
@FredOverflow I saw all 6 =) 1 and 2 - the best. And soon we'll see 7th season
user1804599
@Nick Well, for example if you want to use a 64-bit Mersenne Twister random number generator with a uniform integral distribution with a minimum of 0 and a maximum of 100, you would use this:
user1804599
std::mt19937_64 engine(seed);
std::uniform_int_distribution<> dist(0, 100);
std::cout << dist(engine) << '\n';
std::cout << dist(engine) << '\n';
std::cout << dist(engine) << '\n';
I am afraid that all will married and IT jokes will be replaced with family's mode of life ((
We already hane one married couple. Plz no more!
have*
Sorry. Spoiler)
time for lunch
@MartinJames please tell me you have a camera
10:04
> WARNING: DO NOT BUY THIS, IT IS EXACTLY AS DESCRIBED., PURE FIREWATER.
user1804599
Magento takes twelve fucking minutes to alter the parent category of a category.
@thecoshman Of course I have a camera. You want a pic of my Devils tears when it gets here, or a live webcam of me trying it, ('cos that's not gonna happen:)?
@not-rightfold The psuedo-destructor-call syntax ~Blah() is only valid after a class-member-access e.g. blah.~Blah() - in theory it should be valid to say blah.~bool() outside a template
user1804599
No shit.
@MartinJames it doesn't have to be live
@R.MartinhoFernandes or stop being a fanny :P
10:07
@thecoshman You want me to post my own death on YouTube?
user1804599
@MartinJames You don't?
having said that. I'm not sure it's valid to use the name of a fundamental type in a destructor call..
@MartinJames oh, well if you are going to die, best live stream it
@thecoshman I might post a small vid - I want to try it in private first :)
@MartinJames what!
it's the first reaction that we want to see
you're face melting and your unprepared reaction as you shit yourself
10:19
@thecoshman Hmm.. I'll think about it. I have till Tuesday to come up with a suitable test environment.
@MartinJames may I suggest that shower, you can wash away the bodily expulsions whilst simultaneously rinsing your mouth out
god damn it! now I really want some
@thecoshman I was thinking of the field, and maybe a hosepipe.
@thecoshman Let me try it first - I will report here, (or if there is no report, and no further communication, you may assume I died during the test).
@MartinJames ... I don't see how the former and latter relate
@thecoshman Let's just see what happens on Tuesday....
@MartinJames well, sadly I don't have the money to spend on such things... perhaps work people will kill me for my birthday
10:28
@thecoshman I will send you a small sample if I can find suitable glassware - an old minature bottle should do.
..though I'm not sure of the possible legal implications of FedExing chemical weapons.
user1804599
Signals must die.
@not-rightfold No signals on Windows - change OS ;)
user1804599
@MartinJames No lack of drive letters on Windows — let's not change OS ;)
@not-rightfold huh?
on which planet is drive letters a good thing?
It is a completely neutral thing.
10:33
it makes paths more complicated, which is a bad thing
user1804599
@jalf I didn't say it was good. Read again.
@MartinJames I would point how drinking some random liquid sent by some random person over the internet is not that smart... but knowing what you intend to send me sort of nullifies that concern
@not-rightfold in that case, I can't decode whatever you're saying, so I'll take your word for it :)
It makes paths infinitesimally more complicated.
@thecoshman LOL!
10:35
PATH_MAX is more of a problem than drive letters ever were.
@CatPlusPlus How big is that now? I haven't had any problem with path lengths for years.
260ish.
Legacy cruft.
@CatPlusPlus OK, that's too small, yes :(
@CatPlusPlus yes, because it is absolutely trivial to handle that exactly one place in a path can contain a colon, and that you can't use cd on the command line to navigate your file system. I'd say taking a uniform sequence of directories and turning it something that is not a uniform sequence of directories for absolutely no purpose is needlessly complicated
@CatPlusPlus PATH_MAX is fucked up, yes
'you can't use cd on the command line to navigate your file system' ?
10:40
cmd.exe behaviour in this regard is also legacy cruft.
OMG! You can't use cd on the command line to navigate your file system!!
PiotrLegnica@HAL-VAIO :: C:\
> cd z:\

PiotrLegnica@HAL-VAIO :: Z:\
>
OH GOD
IT WORKS
DESPITE DRIVE LETTERS
Wait.. I'm navigating my file system with cd...
If you're using broken and crappy tools, don't be surprised that they're... broken and crappy.
@CatPlusPlus well done, I am so proud of you. Perhaps you could repeat that feat with cmd.exe?
10:44
See above.
@CatPlusPlus So what you're saying is "it's ok to have a leaky and needlessly complex abstraction which provides zero benefit, as long as I can use a non-default tool to work around it?
Yes, I agree completely, because that is a sane position to take
OK, 'cd e:\' does not work.. 'e:' works and folder navigation within one drive works.
It's a single-root system with first-level being mountpoints.
I wouldn't do that, but I also couldn't care less that it's there.
Therefore neutral.
Also you can do mountpoints within a drive.
@MartinJames yep. Note that I never claimed "it is impossible to navigate a file system in the presence of drive letters"
And cmd.exe is shit.
Regardless of drive letters.
10:48
also, for the record, I have no intention of wasting the next half hour satisfying a troll whose sole joy in life is to take any contrary position to anything just to annoy.
@CatPlusPlus There's that too. I doubt that any Lounger will be disputing that.
Yes, this is a troll designed deliberately just to annoy. Fuck you.
Ugh.
Well, you may not that I did not say "drive letters are the worst invention ever created, and are the heralds of the apocalypse". I merely said that they were a net negative. And I cited at least two situations where they add complexity. You may argue that this is only a tiny amount of complexity, but as long as it is non-zero, it supports my claim that they are a net negative
@CatPlusPlus I am aware of that. But if the first level were oranges or teddy bears or anything else, that would also be more complex than the simple solution where "the first level is the exact same as the second, third and Nth level"
But so much cuter.
@CatPlusPlus cmd.exe - is the most powerful utility from all that were ever created
2
11:06
Why are people selling "the API can be modified/refactored without any necesary change in client code" as a benefit of using auto? Q_Q
> By purchasing this bottle, you agree that: 4) I am not inebriated or of unsound mind and am fully able to make a rational decision to purchase this product.
Something tells me that this is not a binding clause.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Hey! I'm totally sober now, and also when I placed my order.
11:22
@R.MartinhoFernandes I haven't yet figured out when auto is a definite win yet, so I'm avoiding using it in case something goes horribly wrong. It already bit me a few times..
11:38
Oh, I am all for using auto all over the place. But it pains me when I see people selling disadvantages as benefits.
11:57
@MartinJames If you're not of sound enough mind to buy the product, you're not of sound enough mind to agree to that clause, legally speaking.
@jalf drive letters add value somewhere?

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