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14:00
@not-rightfold lol
user1804599
Fucking weekend.
user1804599
Bored as fuck.
have a conversation with @rightfold
user1804599
lol
MS still hasn't given any meaningful reply to my bug report. pls respond ._.
14:13
@melak47 They are gonna confirm it's a bug and they'll promise to fix it.. Why so urgent?
why is it taking so long to confirm ._.
I suppose they are slacking off.
user1804599
Argh.
user1804599
ThePhD, you idiot, y u two-space indentation.
# TIL about command substitution
cp <(seq 100) 100.txt
lol
-2
Q: What makes most softwares bloated

random_guyI never had an experience of writing a huge project before. I'm wondering why a huge commercial softwares/libraries are usually big, and slow? What makes them bloated? Is it UI, and graphics? Is it backward compatibilities? hardware supports? features? frameworks? Or, the developers are just do...

if ( listeningsocket == null ) {
}
else {
    // Uh oh; did we bind this IP address already on this port?
    // Need to restart
}
lol
That's bad code.
Reminds me of our older code at work.
user1804599
I think he didn't read the contribution guidelines at all.
He knew that he could contribute.
That's one point is his favor.
Does a programming language actually need casts? I’m asking because I cannot really think of any (strongly-typed) language without casts (except maybe Python). But wouldn’t constructors fully suffice?
What if you wanted a byte array in C++ without a cast?
@A.H. “Yo momma” is of course the only correct answer.
@TonyTheLion std::array<char, size>.
14:41
@TonyTheLion Not talking about C++ here, C++ obviously doesn’t support this, but a newly-designed language would (that said, such a cast should arguably be ill-formed anyway)
ah
but char* can be aliased to most anything, no?
@KonradRudolph Not being able to cast is not very useful.
without being badly formed
for example, no dynamic_cast or static_cast for inheritance hierarchies
no explicit casts to bool.
@DeadMG But can’t you always get the same effect with appropriately defined constructors?
14:43
@KonradRudolph No.
@DeadMG Example?
@KonradRudolph whats wrong with char * ?
@KonradRudolph bool.
@A.H. Nothing.
how the fuck are you gonna write a constructor for bool from unique_ptr?
14:44
@DeadMG Other languages have something called a “truthy operator”
mm.. templates? say bool can be constructed by anything that has functions bool is_a_okay() ?
@KonradRudolph That's just special-casing bool.
the basic principle is valid for basically any T- only the author of T can write a converting constructor.
@KonradRudolph If you receive binary data over the network and parts of if are readable text and parts of it are binary. Then a cast from uint_t* to char* or vice versa will be unavoidable. (Not sure if this is a good example..)
@DeadMG Yes, but it’s not a cast, it’s just a normal method / operator
so is the cast operator
14:45
@KonradRudolph It's completely a cast. It's just pretending to be an operator.
1 min ago, by Konrad Rudolph
@A.H. Nothing.
even if you special-case bool, you can get an identical situation with every other type that you don't have the power to alter.
@DeadMG It’s not a cast because not all languages with a truthy operator allow using the cast syntax here
syntax is irrelevant.
@DeadMG Well, for those you use to_xxx methods
@DeadMG No, sorry for not making this clear: I’m specifically asking about syntax
14:46
oh
As in: do we need a cast syntax?
in that case I'm going to bow out because syntax is irrelevant.
@DeadMG Something like concepts.
is_boolable
@KonradRudolph And this truthiness enables explicit conversion? (Not implicit I hope.)
That seems good to me.
0 is not a true integer, old-fashioned mathematicians had it right
@StackedCrooked Implicit in a boolean context (such as if etc). Most such languages have no explicit form for that conversation as far as I know (hence the !!x hack), but in a hypothetical language I can’t think of a reason to forbid a Bool(x) constructor call to get a boolean from a truthy value.
@StackedCrooked Heh. Actually in my hypothetical language, numbers aren’t truthy. There’s no conversion – either implicit or explicit – between booleans and numbers.
14:52
@KonradRudolph That's still dangerous if implicit. Suppose you have an object with can be truthy, but is wrapped in a boost::optional which also has truthiness. If you accidentally pass the optional without deref it's a subtle bug.
@StackedCrooked It’s equivalent to C++11’s explicit bool operator. I think it’s safe.
What is "truthy"?
@TonyTheLion Any object for which the syntax if (x) compiles type-checks.
explicit operator bool, basically.
14:53
Truttig type.
I think the core issue for having a dedicated cast syntax is whether you want "castable" and "explicit conversion" to mean the same thing.
Does an input collection make sense?
for example, consider Base* b; Derived* d(b);.
is that legal, or illegal, and if it's legal, is it a static or dynamic cast?
I find that lifetime is the hardest part to get right in C++.
Especially with the concurrent and async stuff.
14:56
I always found unique_ptr and shared_ptr to be fine
I thought shared_ptr wasn't thread safe?
dafuq you smoking
it always has been
: O
I remember reading somewhere its not :<
@DeadMG Excellent point. But a language might not have to distinguish here, in the way that C++ does, between {static,dynamic}_cast. But I can’t see how to solve this better.
I find that shared + weak pointers are really a requirement when doing multithreaded async stuff.
14:58
@A.H. It’s as thread safe as normal pointers – which means, not much ;)
@KonradRudolph Java and C# have a similar dynamic
@DeadMG Be careful with that statement. People might misunderstand it.
@DeadMG So do C# and VB, FWIW
@KonradRudolph reference counting is thread safe, thats what matters. For me atleast
std is also thread safe according to a specific definition.
15:00
@A.H. I agree, it’s just that there was a recent SO question where somebody had misunderstood this to mean that every operation on the pointee is magically synchronised.
@StackedCrooked Have you considered using external ownership?
@DeadMG like a god object?
no.
@DeadMG This. Many (not all, but surprisingly many) use-cases can be solved by having a master thread maintain the data in synchronised, statically allocated data structures that the slave threads have access to
I have now a design where I don't really feel good about. The ownership is internal. But the user is given weak_ptr.
15:03
someone who is responsible for the resources and gives raw pointers to the threads?
@A.H. Basically.
@A.H. Yes, essentially
@DeadMG Oh screw this. You take over :D
I do something like this for my complex tree structures with Wide.
I have one memory arena, and everything goes in there, and I just give out raw pointers to it
then later I destroy it all at once
I have a "free list" for expired sessions, which is a circular buffer.
Not sure if good or sloppy.
user1804599
15:07
Hmm.
the malloc implementation probably does something very similar.
user1804599
If I have a string 'foo bar' in Bash, how can I put foo in variable a and bar in variable b?
usually, doing better than new involves restricting the interface somehow
1
A: Garbage collector example doesn't hold

Narendra PathaiIt's entirely possible that an object never gets garbage collected (and thus finalize is never called). This can happen when the object never becomes eligible for gc (because it's reachable through the entire lifetime of the JVM) or when no garbage collection actually runs between the time the ...

The problem was that the TCP state machine triggers a post-mortem notification after entering the closed state which led to deref of a deleted object. Pushing dead sessions on a dead-list fixed it and seemed like a safe way to prevent similar problems in the future.
But that's more like a hack than a solution..
15:11
yes, that really is more of a hack than a solution.
frankly, if all the pointers are internal and you don't expose owning pointers to the user, you could certainly consider a custom garbage collection scheme
It has very simple ownership rules which are respected. (Protocol owns its sessions. Protocol stack owns the protols. User owns the protocol stack.)
@DeadMG Pointers are an inside joke......
it's clearly not very simple or you wouldn't have an access-after-delete bug
But unless you have a formal verification system I think it's good to put some extra safety measures in place.
user1804599
Yay Lounge<Chat> builds.
15:14
oh
but, I did do something similar myself once.
I had a kind of fake-delete that simply put the object on a list of things to be deleted
and then in the next tick, I deleted them.
that was a simulation
I also added runtime detection of race conditions. Which was triggered more a few time.
user1804599
 % mono LoungeChat.Server.Console/bin/Debug/LoungeChat.Server.Console.exe

Unhandled Exception:
Castle.MicroKernel.ComponentNotFoundException: No component for supporting the service LoungeChat.Server.Services.ILog was found
user1804599
@CatPlusPlus this normal?
Since there are no locks, each protocol stack has one thread which is allowed to access it.
However, since there are many entry points it's easy to goof up.
@DeadMG Yep, in the next tick they get deleted.
Next incoming packet, rather than next tick.
yeah, but I ended up removing that interface in favour of on-destruction callbacks
so when the object was really deleted immediately, every object that needed to know could simply subscribe a callback and handle the fact that it was just deleted.
15:23
I find that I often need to take a step back and see if there is a fundamental problem that needs to be fixed, rather than fixing a specific bug.
but then, I didn't have any situations where objects could be deleted concurrently
It wasn't even concurrent in my case.
Linux dsnt have any good screen recording software. This sucks.
Ell
Ell
Hmm I wonder what the best android Graphics lib is
It was the same stack trace.
15:24
@Ell I'm not an android developer, but I'm guessing that if you asked one, they would say "well, 'best' according to which criteria?"
fair enough
But events can be nasty when destroying objects.
at least i you asked a sane, competent android developer
@jalf Those things exist?
@GamesBrainiac make one, go full OSS
15:26
@A.H. There is Kazam, but its not really featured. You can record, and thats it.
@DeadMG that is my assumption! Since I'm not the one needing an android graphics lib, I don't care if the assumption is true ;)
fair play.
lol
On which planet is "block the thread for 10 seconds" a useful workaround? — jalf 17 mins ago
@Ell Do you want 2d or 3d?
@A.H. Textile manufacture.
15:30
haha
ah crap.
the V key on my keyboard doesn't work properly
so in my commit logs I'm talking about LLVM and about 90% of the time it comes up as LLM.
haha, those are going to be some interesting commits
user784668
That sucks.
user784668
Poor visual mode.
@DeadMG Happend with my W key while I was playing Assassin's Creed. Really sucks.
@Fanael Yo! :D Hows it goin?
Ell
Ell
15:36
2d
@Ell Then why not use the default one android comes with? What do you want to do in specific?
Ell
Ell
Android only comes with raw opengl no?
my definition of best is nicest to code with (at the minute)
@Ell Nope, it has more than that. Check your SDK. Also, ask the java room, this here is a C++ room.
@Ell It's Java.
@GamesBrainiac this is a C++ room ?
15:45
not particularly
@A.H. For the time being. Wait till Etienne. Then its oficially Lounge<Shroedinger>
Ell
Ell
15:58
@DeadMG yeah that's the problem :/
How often is cr used without lf?
basically never afaik
So is the situation just one of backwards compatibility?
MacOS9 used that. Don't use that.
16:09
@A.H. I've never claimed to be anything besides evil
@A.H. CC @refp -> Totally, he looks like the devil himself. All he needs are cute little horns. And a fluffy little tail.
@CatPlusPlus Yeah, we should use OS X! I'm so happy you agree with me for once :)
@GamesBrainiac now you are being racist.. "the devil gotta be black since there are scorching flames down below".
@refp I am racist. Deal with it. :P
I only deal heavy drugs (and white women).
anyhow.. any interesting c++ questions this evening?
16:12
@refp What about brown ones?
@GamesBrainiac why would I trade my sisters? I'm not that evil.
@refp Don't you get tired of C++, I mean you've been doing it for years.
@refp You're supposed to italicize it you dummy. Get with the program.
@GamesBrainiac c++11 hasn't been out "for years", also; don't you get tired of breathing, you've been doing it since you were born?
step your game up, "maan".
@refp Now you're a llama?
@refp I said C++ has.
@GamesBrainiac bold is a better way to emphasize something, italic has other uses.
16:14
@refp I'll take your word for it. Wait, no I wont.
I need mango juice.
congratulations @GamesBrainiac, you are now the only person on my ignore list.
@refp Now now.
anyone know if we can export multiple things to Sconscript files in scons ?
@StackedCrooked I'm not sure what you mean by that but now I'm hungry
@A.H. you eat scones, if you'd like to eat multiple types of scones.. be my guest
Can't find mango juice, so, I'm eating chocolate moose now.
@ShuklaSannidhya I friggin love your avatar. I shall copy it now.
16:21
"To avoid these problems, the standard in effect says that dependent base classes of class templates just aren't searched for names unless the names are already dependent for some other reason." This is incorrect. The Standard explicitly says that even if the name is dependent, it will not be searched in the dependent base class. — Johannes Schaub - litb 58 secs ago
@GamesBrainiac It's github's octocat.
@ShuklaSannidhya Me know, but I love how you obamafied it.
@GamesBrainiac Wait what? I didn't... Github did...
Grr, after a structural refactoring I always might as well throw away my git history, it’s complete crap
Ell
Ell
16:29
time to write heightmap thing for the 50th time
@JohannesSchaub-litb You tell em!
@StackedCrooked it says that the unqualified name will not be looked in the dependent base class "neither in the definition context nor in the instantiation context"
@StackedCrooked that the name is dependent is not sufficient, but only necessary for it to work. it is just easier to explain it that way, but unfortunately it is not completely correct!
I am not smart enough to participate in the "higher" discussions so I can only offer my shouts of support :)
I've been thinking that many people here get motivation for programming from the desire to implement a correct system. My motivation has always been for making cool stuff that I can show people. Not that I don't take pride in good design. But it's a different mindset.
Luc mentioned he wants to implement a once and for a good solution.
Ell
Ell
16:39
I think it is a different mindset
I like creating a "correct" system
Me too. But my designs are always heavily influenced by the application I'm writing it for.
FUCK YOU SCONS, god damn piece of shit
@refp what where scones again ? ;p
@A.H. some people eat them.. put if it's a piece of shit I wouldn't recommend it
I don't understand why so many people struggle with the build system.
its definitely being a piece of shit right now
@StackedCrooked new things
16:42
It's something I just set up and then mostly forget about
can't be bothered to actually read documentation
mostly trial and error
@BartekBanachewicz you are an scons expert right? mind a quick look ?
@GamesBrainiac *Schrödinger. (misspellings of names bug my inner OCD)
@A.H. not expert, but I can see what I can do
@BartekBanachewicz much appreciated here is the gist
I was planning on making various forms of input. Does it make sense for there to be a collection of them?
16:49
@A.H. and what is the problem?
@BartekBanachewicz AttributeError: 'File' object has no attribute 'split':
that's a python error, no?
I guess , I haven't started learning python yet
If I had to guess I would say its from concatenating the stuff returned from make_package
Ell
Ell
@BartekBanachewicz have you used PNG loading with oglplus before?
Ell
Ell
16:59
@BartekBanachewicz have you used PNG loading with oglplus before?
Oops sorry if that sent twice
damn
I was hungry and I ate.
Ell
Ell
man I've done nothing today
I can't do anythin
@A.H. Always entire traceback.
@CatPlusPlus my bad here it is
@ScottW At least you can eat without horrible side effects
17:11
@A.H. Problem is in SConscript. Return() takes a string.
@CatPlusPlus :O you can tell that? awesome
Space Brothers is out! :D
30 minutes of Mutta, here I come! :D
@CatPlusPlus thanks man ! got it working
@ScottW s/foods// for me
user1804599
Yay segmentation fault.
17:18
@ScottW Its okay Scott. We're all here for you. The nice ones atleast.
@ScottW Muhahahahahha black cat purring
Ladies and gentlement, I present to you, rightfold's next avatar -> octodex.github.com/twenty-percent-cooler-octocat
user1804599
lol
user1804599
@GamesBrainiac No; using an octocat is silly.
@not-rightfold Aww come one. It would totally suit you. It would be a PonyPuss
user1804599
No.
17:24
O.o
using unused = void;
user1804599
@KonradRudolph (unused)foo;
@not-rightfold Exactly.
with C++11 you can now also say void f(unused); to denote a parameter-less function
or perhaps it should be using empty = void; for that
presumably before you could have just typedef void unused;.
lol @KonradRudolph
user1804599
17:26
void should've been std::tuple<>.
@JohannesSchaub-litb jiff wouldn’t load properly … but we all know what it would have been anyway
@not-rightfold Mate, take a break from Haskell, it’s highly addictive
user1804599
Time to write a parser.
again?
didn't you already write like, six?
@DeadMG You actually kept count?
17:30
it was a guesstimate
@ScottW I get very similarly-worded letters :p
@DeadMG liar
@GamesBrainiac perhaps he counts them on his wall
@JohannesSchaub-litb Probably talks to his dog about it too. Which is totally fine. Lounge<C++> loves diversity. We have all kinds of nut-cases. He posts his dog's pics on SO.
17:32
didn't know he has a dog
@ScottW It's actually Tony the Lion courting you ;)
Ell
Ell
Fuck it, I'll use std::vector<std::vector<double>>
@Borgleader You're right. Tony did confess his feelings at one point.
@GamesBrainiac i thought it's a cat
17:34
@JohannesSchaub-litb I thought it was a guy with a big nose, who's doing an aristotle pose or something.
argh
what the fuck kind of webcomic archive puts the "next" button at the top of the page rather than the bottom?
@Ell Why did you need to use boost?
i recommend to fix it with firebug
By the way, is there an etiquette about replying to unsolicited job offers on LinkedIn? I always just ignore them …
Ell
Ell
@Tuntuni for multidimensional array
17:36
@KonradRudolph There is, and you're doing just fine.
Ell
Ell
Okay it turns out I needed to dynamically allocate the multiarray :3
WTF
C++14 defines an enable_if_t?
holy underscores
Haskell is just so sexy. You can literally write good haskell code with notepad. No syntax highlight required.
ino
17:38
@KonradRudolph haha!
Ell
Ell
@GamesBrainiac haskell is gross
@KonradRudolph you mean holy _dunder_s
I clearly prefer R.Martinho’s idea of using PascalCase for that …
@Ell If Haskell is gross, then C++ is beyond recognition.
Hey
Ell
Ell
17:39
Hi
@GamesBrainiac I much prefer c++ syntax to haskell :3
Man working on saturdays is lame
@Ell And I prefer almost anything (except php and java) over C++.
Add perl to that too.
gifs dude
I got Kit Kat again! :D
are animated gifs forbidden in here?
17:43
@JohannesSchaub-litb Well, what else do you expect from puppy? He's dead.
Ell
Ell
yah
There was this one guy who downvoted my answer cuz it had a gif in it
Can someone recommend a good SIP client?
Request for comment
Is the following implementation for enum class flag operators OK?
6
A: How to make enum class to work with the 'bit-or' feature?

Konrad RudolphYou need to overload the operators for your enum class and implement them by casting to the underlying type: enum class foo : unsigned { bar = 1, baz = 2 }; foo operator |(foo a, foo b) { return static_cast<foo>(static_cast<unsigned>(a) | static_cast<unsigned>(b)); } … of course t...

@KonradRudolph wow i fail. i wanted to propose +lhs | +rhs in a comment, but then I recalled that it is forbidden for scoped enumerations
@KonradRudolph although it seems to me that op+ should work for scoped enumerations and should return the enum value with the type of the enum.
just a feeling..
17:52
@JohannesSchaub-litb I agree, I’m not a fan of enum classes anyway … they provide scope, and they should have left it at that. All the rest is rather counter-productive in my opinion

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