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12:00
@R.MartinhoFernandes well, it is nice that you can change the return type, and not break everything, assuming interface has nothing removed. But at the same time, that is a bad thing. Like everything, use it sensibly
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Let's face it: he's buying the product in order to not be of sound mind. What does that make of his current state of mind?
@thecoshman not that I know. That was kind of my point :p
@jalf
@R.MartinhoFernandes o_0 you don't drink it to get drunk
@thecoshman I don't know what people mean when they talk about changing APIs, but I don't like my breaking changes to go away silently.
I want a semantic-aware diff tool.
12:03
Let's make one!
I'm working on it
@thecoshman would be cool if thats an actual tag
@R.MartinhoFernandes lounge project?
@R.MartinhoFernandes well, say you wanted to change the name of a class returned from a factory method. If all that changed was the name of class, and client is only ever referring to it as auto you don't ~break anything~. Still, I agree that such changes should probably not 'jsut work'
@A.H. oh great, now it is going to fail
I saw that on cppreference.com one can automatically create links to standard classes and functions by typing something like {{c|std::unordered_map}}. Do you think that it would be worthwhile to have similar feature here on SO?
I'm actually working on a tool that can remove unnecessary #includes .. but to do that it has to effectively perform a semantic-aware diff
12:06
@jons34yp you mean to link to cppreference?
@A.H. Yes, but not necessarily to cppreference though.
@thecoshman Meh, every other IDE can handle renames.
@R.MartinhoFernandes you are assuming people use an actual IDE
@R.MartinhoFernandes oh, you mean clients can just rename their own code...
@willj just look for repeated header guards ?
12:09
wait... not sure if I have too much bass in this music... or their is some sort of ground works going on
@willj that's not a diff tool
why does it need to diff?
@thecoshman If you shipped it, a rename is a breaking change. So what.
@A.H. I wish it was that simple :)
I might be using the type name elsewhere, so my code will break no matter what.
@willj can't you just follow all the includes draw a graph and detect loops?
kinda like deadlock detection
@R.MartinhoFernandes but if there code was using 'auto' then it would be fine
12:11
I still have no answers(
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 ...

@thecoshman It would also be "fine" if the change actually changed semantics.
@thecoshman After it figures out that an #include is unnecessary (e.g. your code will compile exactly the same way if it was not there) it's a good idea to do a semantic-diff to double check that the result was correct.
(i.e. claiming auto is harmless if you make harmless changes isn't much)
@R.MartinhoFernandes oh yeah, just changing the name of a class is a stupid thing IMO
without that, I wouldn't trust the tool.
12:12
@willj why? it has already found that it can still compile with that include removed
@willj That's a bad idea.
Some headers provide stuff that they don't provide.
@thecoshman Compiling without errors doesn't mean that the result is the same as before.
@R.MartinhoFernandes huh?
@Qwerty patience. Repeatedly begging for an answer in this chat won't help you much ;-)
Yes, that sentence sounds fucked up, meaning it carries across my point perfectly.
12:14
@R.MartinhoFernandes It's possible (but somewhat complex) to detect headers that have an indirect effect on the result - as you describe.
@willj how is diffing the code going to help? all it will say is 'you remove X includelines'
@ArneMertz why not? there are new arrived loungers. may be one of them is genius)
@R.MartinhoFernandes excellent reasoning ;p
@A.H. See coliru.stacked-crooked.com/…. Compiles, but is missing #includes.
@willj It's not.
@willj Unless you write a program that reads documentation, you cannot.
@Qwerty none of us appreciate link spam ಠ_ಠ
12:15
@R.MartinhoFernandes yes but thats not what the tool does (as far as I can tell)
Correct, not missing #includes (not even <initializer_list>) coliru.stacked-crooked.com/…
@Qwerty yeah, but many of them don't feel oliged to follow spammed lnks
@A.H. Well, if it keeps removing headers while it compiles, it would erroneously remove a #include <utility> there.
And if it looks recursively into the headers, it will keep a <initializer_list> in my second example, even though it isn't needed.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I'm not that familiar with C++11 yet, which header is missing?
@willj <utility> for std::move.
12:18
@R.MartinhoFernandes I thought it would just remove repeated includes , keeping only one.
@R.MartinhoFernandes And if it was included, the result would be different?
I don't see anything wrong with a class explicitly including a header that was implicitly included via another one
sure it does not need that extra header, but so what?
@willj The point is that if you don't put #include <utility> the program is not portable. <vector> is not supposed to include a definition of move.
it's one damn line
@Qwerty you are talking about buffering a file, if your question is 'is it possible?' then yes of course
12:19
libstdc++ does it, but that's incidental, not intended.
However, <vector> proving a definition of initializer_list is intended, not incidental.
@thecoshman makes things clearer and preprocessor takes care of it
@R.MartinhoFernandes You would indeed have to run it against a reference 'compliant' stub of all the standard libraries to get a correct detection of whether you can remove standard headers.
Your program cannot tell intended from incidental apart. That's what I'm getting at.
@thecoshman where is spam? It is one of questions that can be answered in Lounge <C++> or you can continue gabing about nonsense ;)
@A.H. makes it clearer by not saying what headers your code directly needs?
12:21
@A.H. my question was if I need 2 buffers or 1. because it is input-output stream
Can I mix SFINAE for expressions and decltype auto?

http://stackoverflow.com/questions/18510847/sfinae-for-expressions-and-decltypeauto
no I mean the other way @cosh
but detecting unnecessary std #includes is less important than unnecessary #includes of headers within my program. I can ignore std stuff and still get useful results.
@Qwerty no, it will not be answered here.
@Qwerty doesn't matter you buffer X bytes in memory in an array
12:22
@A.H. that it is clearer to have the extra includes, even though you strictly do not need them?
read and write to it
@thecoshman For one, it pollutes the namespaces. #includeing extra headers can change semantics.
@thecoshman of course (IMO)
Actually, forget whatever point I was trying to make before.
@thecoshman perhaps it will not be answered here, but it can be answered because it is mentioned here
12:23
@R.MartinhoFernandes surely not if they have proper guards
@R.MartinhoFernandes I am on about ones that are already included by another header. That header is already included... what is the harm in including it directly as well?
#includeing extra headers can change semantics. i.e. you have two programs that compile, but they behave differently because one #includes more stuff.
@A.H. Surely yes.
@Qwerty no it will not, we do not like link spam ಠ_ಠ
C++ is that fucked up.
user1804599
I always include everything the headers I need and I don't care about confusing implicit includes.
12:23
@R.MartinhoFernandes they are not extra they are repeated
user1804599
I actually wish that the compiler gave errors if I depend on implicit includes. (Perhaps there's a flag for it?)
@Qwerty A quick learner! I like it. He noticed we prefer gabing to chattering
@A.H. What do you mean by repeated? Like #include <vector> #include <vector>?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Indeed. Add the preprocessor and #ifndef X #define X #endif and everything gets even more fun
@willj No, it's not about that.
12:24
@not-rightfold perhaps at preprocessor level ?
I'm talking about headers that are completely idempotent.
user1804599
Whatever. "Toolchain."
@not-rightfold yeah, I think I would like that too
(i.e. headers guards and all that shizzle)
@Qwerty Maybe. We usually notice it by what they post.
12:25
@R.MartinhoFernandes like #include "something.hpp" which include vector and then also including vector where you included something.hpp. If that makes any sense
@R.MartinhoFernandes Me too - change the visible overload set and the semantics change
@A.H. But my point if that, even if "something.hpp" doesn't include "somethingelse.hpp", your code can compile both with somethingelse.hpp and without it and have different semantics.
@A.H. IMO, if your class directly uses std::vector you should explicitly include vector, even if it is already included via some other header.
In order to do this properly you need a significant chunk of a compiler.
That's why the tool has to be semantic-aware - at a minimum, it has to check that the result of all name lookups is the same with or without the removed code.
12:27
well the output (assembly )may be different but I doubt the behaviour of the program will be , after all you didn't use the code
user1804599
Also headers that change semantics if included multiple times are retarded and lack #pragma once.
@A.H. The problem is that #including somethingelse.hpp may end up using it instead of what was being used before.
@R.MartinhoFernandes so which case is @willj working on ?
I love when my diff tools take 30 minutes to produce output.
@R.MartinhoFernandes ah right
12:28
ADL and overload resolution and implicit conversions fuck up all that.
@A.H. The one which requires a complete parser ;)
user1804599
And the conclusion of the day is once again that C++ is an inconvenient clusterfuck.
The answer used to be DDE. I sincerely hope for your case that there are easier methods these days, because DDE was little fun. Back in 1998 — sehe 26 secs ago
@willj oh good luck with that :P
@A.H. thank you for answering. I feel that one buffer is enough.
12:29
@CatPlusPlus what does your diff tool compare?
@sehe Oh gawd no you can use COM
@R.MartinhoFernandes But that won't give you push semantics, I suppose. Is there an event source interface these days for cell mutations? (Perhaps there is one for sheet recalc)
@A.H. Ta! I'm almost done with the parser ;). Template instantiation, ADL, implicit conversions, overload resolution, all that crap. Takes a while but it's fun (if you're a masochist)
course I probably should be using libclang
user1804599
@sehe Multiple inputs.
@sehe C++ semantically.
12:31
"inputs"
I love programmers who appreciate cloudy language
@CatPlusPlus Well, makes sense (gccxml through an xml diff tool?! o.O)
OK, it's a Java question, but..
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/18511087/baggage-in-airplan
@CatPlusPlus There's no reason (in theory) it needs to take longer than it takes to compile.. but C++ takes too long to compile in the first place. Someone should fix that.
@willj I think in theory it should take less
@MartinJames deleted :<
@A.H. Well, it had accumulated -10 :)
I hate buffered streams)) I did inputstream, I did outputstream. And I don't imagine how to unit them in one class
12:38
I have this commit in repo:
:q!
:1
:q
This is commit message.
3
user1804599
LOL
user1804599
By whom? By you?
guys, may you advise me an useful book for designing classes?
"designing classes" sounds like java
12:40
"Ambiguity for the Oblivious"
user1804599
@NikiC Why are you implying there is any design involved?
Hunk 1 : Lines 1 - 4
<<<<<<< Updated upstream
Ugh
user1804599
LOL
@not-rightfold good point
@CatPlusPlus yeah... git likes to spam your files with obscure 'merge' comments
12:41
@not-rightfold are you kidding me? School???
2 mins ago, by thecoshman
"Ambiguity for the Oblivious"
@not-rightfold I am sorry. Is it for programmers?
@Qwerty have you considered finding out?
@jalf not yes
not yet
@thecoshman That's when you run mergetool and resolve the conflicts.
12:44
name of this book is long and frightening
Not commit the damn markers.
Perhaps you could come back once you've accepted that you can't reliably count on others to do your research for you for free?
Anybody here us VS 2012?
@Pawnguy7 me
12:44
@Pawnguy7 yep
I have a rather noob question, I think.
You can turn on the dark theme.
Cat, OS X devolpers dosn't think that binary obfruscation is the awnser in security :3
@CatPlusPlus except git mergetool whilst it should run through all of the files that need merging, reports nothing does
Not that noob question :D
12:45
lol
I made something that I wanted to show a friend. They, however, do not have the VS libraries. What is the most minimal thing they would need to run it?
VS libraries.
@not-rightfold I am not sure that this book for programmers. Is it not clear from annotation. But thanks for answer
It is*
@Pawnguy7 Something called "Visual C++ Redistributable 20xx" or something, where xx is your version.
Well, the other option is to build and fix?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Convenient
12:48
@Qwerty fail to just edit your post one more time! I dare you!
@Pawnguy7 you can link with the static runtime libs, then it'll *just work*(tm)
I am hesitant to rebuild the libraries.
Might not be a bad idea though.
Afaik, the license currently allows you to just distribute the msvcr libs with your product, without having to run the redist installer
@Qwerty I like head first design patterns , It uses Java though so I am skeptical
they've changed it a couple of times
12:49
@thecoshman I make grammatical mistakes and I am ashamed))
One thing I don't get is why the redistributable isn't packed in Windows updates or something.
anyway, msvcr110.dll for release builds, iirc
@Qwerty then edit your post
@Pawnguy7 static link ftw
@R.MartinhoFernandes because they are ashamed of VS?
12:50
@thecoshman I like vs :x
Because the system doesn't need them.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I think the reason is mainly political. It is not a windows component, and once it is distributed through Win Update, it becomes the Windows team's headache to support it and ensure the right versions are always available to wherever needed
It's not really an update, it's a new component.
also I guess, versioning paranoia. It is not enough to have the latest version if an application requires a specific version. So should WinUpdate just throw every version at the user?
@Pawnguy7 cant you just instruct them to download the redistributable ?
12:51
but yeah, it does seem stoopid
That was what I tried, but apparently it didn't work.
@jalf Most systems I use end up like that anyway :|
Or I don't understand what it is, one of the two.
@Pawnguy7 huh?
And I don't use VS for C++ outside of work.
12:52
You should know better than to report errors in the form "it didn't work"
:)
@A.H. By the way I read "Code Complete". I found a little about designing classes.
Specifically, they said it claimed it is missing the MVCP100.dll, or whatever it is.
Is that not correct?
@Pawnguy7 so throw mvcp100.dll at them :p
@Pawnguy7 tell them to use the shotgun approach and install MSVS
@thecoshman edit? and what did I do? * (star) means edit
12:53
100 is VS2010, by the way
2012 has version 110
@Pawnguy7 Looks like the wrong version.
Erm, 110 I mean.
So I guess you depend on a library which links against vs2010
ah
I don't recite DLL names well from memory.
@Qwerty ಠ_ಠ no it does not... woah? what did I just do! Crap, I did it again. I actually edited my post! This is fucking magical! Look at go it just keeps on growing! NOW LEARN
12:54
@Pawnguy7 you didn't consider making a note of the dll name? :p
@thecoshman do it again !
It was whatever somebody said up a bit.
wow coshman the wizard
protip: "it didn't work", and "I am missing a dll, but I can't remember which one" are not helpful error reports :)
@jalf MS is so bad at this "version numbers" thing.
12:55
@Pawnguy7 well, I would expect msvcr110.dll and msvcp110.dll
@A.H. (╯°□°)╯︵ ┻━┻ pirate!
One is the C runtime, the other is C++
you typically need both (and both are included in the redist package)
@jalf shouldn't the redistributable cover everything ?
yes
If the version number was 100, then you'll need the 2010 redist package as well
@Pawnguy7 have you considered using a libs folder and rpath ?
12:56
@thecoshman that's fucking magic!!!!
MSVCP110.dll.
So rather than us trying to guess what's wrong based on what you vaguely remember that a friend told you, how about you go and find out? :p
@thecoshman edit my post!!
Just looked at the picture again. That is it.
Also, the lazy solution: find the file on your own disk, zip it, and send it to them :)
12:57
@thecoshman and I believe that you are hacker
Don't tempt me. I will bulk edit your posts
> NOW LEARN
@Pawnguy7 could it be a 32bit vs 64bit thing ?
@jalf Did that too.
Or just... read the newbie hints :(
12:57
@Qwerty do not confuse 'hacker' with 'not an idiot'
Nobody has any dreams anymore.
@thecoshman Same thing.
@Pawnguy7 lol, notepad
I told them to do it like this.
@R.MartinhoFernandes ಠ_ಠ
12:58
@Pawnguy7 holyshit you open dlls with notepad?
I don't open them at all.
@R.MartinhoFernandes He has no pride
@Pawnguy7 oh hey, welcome to the heeelarious world of manifests and other crap
I don't know why notepad is default. I am pretty sure it hangs when it opens them.
It also feets.
12:58
@Pawnguy7 That's probably msvcp110.dll.txt with the extension hidden ;)
it expects these dlls to either be installed into winsxs or be in a subdirectory named very precisely with the exact version number etc
user1804599
@Qwerty Yes, school. You know. Where they give classes.
@willj that would be funny
(which likely matches whichever dir you found the file in)
There's a sandbox room for playing with the chat, don't do this here.
12:59
@willj I don't hide extensions.
can't just dump the file in the same dir as the application which needs it
because Microsoft

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