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12:00
I didn't know Dead invented Wide. No wonder he put it infront of all the other implementations that use LLVM. cc @DeadMG
Ell
Ell
I never know how many {}s to use with uniform initialization
@Ell java?
Ell
Ell
@GamesBrainiac c++
It persons that I often teamed up with in AoC games ten years ago still asks me if I want to join a game. About every year or two. He's a cool guy I and feel bad that the time diff makes it so hard (he's from Australia).
@Ell You can develop for android using NDK, which uses C++. You might want to try it out if Java becomes too much for a pain.
Ell
Ell
12:06
@GamesBrainiac Yeah, I'll probably just stick with java though
(also, I'm not sure where that came from to be honest xD)
@GamesBrainiac Invent ing.
Ell
Ell
Man, c++ sure is a mess, but I do love it so
@Ell looking them up is good! it's a delay you'll want to avoid. Also, it will give you a lot of routine lookings things up in the docs
there's some real gems on the AntiAntiJokes subreddit.
aaah
12:08
@DeadMG Whats the point of the language?
I was playing L4D2 and my teammates were noob rushers
@Ell Hmm. No, I've never used it. Just saying in case Java becomes to much of an arse.
so I threw a molo into the saferoom and held the door shut
@GamesBrainiac Invented implies that the invention was past-tense. Whereas it's ongoing.
@DeadMG I get it, you're still working on it.
Is it something like Kotlin, but for C++?
I've never heard of Kotlin
and no
12:10
@Ell Scratch the C++ advice, use Kotlin. Will make life a lot easier.
Wide is supposed to be an evolution on C++, kinda like C++ is an evolution on C.
> Kotlin: New programming language for the JVM by JetBrains
@DeadMG why does the Wide code contain Clang references?
i thought Wide is a complete lexer/parser. what does it use Clang for?
I think Wide is a language first.
Does Wide have an IDE? wIDE?
5
12:17
Properties or GTFO.
Ell
Ell
@JohannesSchaub-litb code generation
@FredOverflow +1 Comedy gold.
why do people still use Dev C++ ?
@sehe sounds silly tbh
@A.H. I think Dev C++ is being updated again, isn't it?
Because they see other people that use Dev C++ which makes them think it's the normal thing to do.
12:19
@FredOverflow moar reposts
@FredOverflow "updated"
I see a wide range of possibilities.
@A.H. yup it does. the only mildly interesting things would be "language quotations" but the wiki seems to have zero information on that
Dev-C++ is a free integrated development environment (IDE) distributed under the GNU General Public License for programming in C and C++. MinGW, a free compiler, is bundled with it. The IDE is written in Delphi. The project is hosted by SourceForge. Dev-C++ was originally developed by programmer Colin Laplace. Dev-C++ runs exclusively on Microsoft Windows. Bloodshed Dev-C++ is a full-featured Integrated Development Environment (IDE) for the C and C++ programming languages. It uses the MinGW or TDM-GCC 64bit port of the GCC as its compiler. Dev-C++ can also be used in combination with Cyg...
Stable release 5.4.2 / May 25, 2013; 3 months ago
“Is Css a programming language?” – all answers are wrong
@KonradRudolph yes
12:21
> typename<typename T>
> The IDE is written in Delphi
Took me 30 minutes to realize ._.
WIDE is already an existing IDE of some language IIRC.
Plus, it's ugly IIRC
@MohammadAliBaydoun lol
@JohannesSchaub-litb Parsing C++.
12:23
you're right that Wide in as of itself does not depend on Clang, only LLVM for codegen.
but to power the C++ interoperation features I use Clang.
@sehe Their main business is improving intellisense. Developing a language is a way to gain more insight in how todo that. (I'm just speculating though.)
@DeadMG you have no spec?
@JohannesSchaub-litb It's a work in progress. The spec changes every time I make a decision or see how things pan out.
Is JetBrains a big name in software industry? I know very little about them (being a C++ dev)
@StackedCrooked they're trying to fix issues with java by dropping backwards compatibility. And retaining full JVM interop
12:26
That's not bad.
@StackedCrooked Big. dotTrace, dotCover, IntelliJ, R# etc.
@StackedCrooked It's just not useful :/
I got a free Webstorm licence from them.
Because I could prove that I was using it for an open source project.
> i think we all should believe Konrad Rudolph.
@StackedCrooked Really awesome. Best IDEs for java, Python, PHP and Ruby. Well, thats my opinnion.
oooh yeees. Follow meeee. Drink the kool-aid.
12:27
Uhoh. I'm sure that is a thing. Oh I forgot their AppCode/Python lines
@FredOverflow I think I heard someone forked it
@GamesBrainiac Yep, I get it already, you can stop pinging now :)
@sehe They also have a Ruby line cc @StackedCrooked -> You might be interested.
@StackedCrooked Sowwy
I used RubyMine trial.
@KonradRudolph i like your surname more
12:28
@StackedCrooked also coming soon C++ cross platform IDE
I wonder about that.
but tbh I never thought Dev C++ was any good
@JohannesSchaub-litb I like my middle names more :p
@KonradRudolph What do people mean by this phrase "Don't drink the Kool-Aid" I just see that its cola from Kraft.
@GamesBrainiac It comes from the Jonestown mass suicide where the congregation drank a kool-aid-like drink laced with poison
@GamesBrainiac It essentially means “follow somebody blindly without question”
12:32
kool aid
@KonradRudolph Yes, I got that part. I just didn't know about the massacre.
@GamesBrainiac If you want nightmares, read the Wikipedia article: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jonestown
I think if you are looking for better C++ tools then you need to look in the direction of Clang rather than JetBrains.
lol that will teach me to jump to conclusions completely missed the problem in OP's question
I think all they'd have to do is package Clang in a nice environment with a nice debugger and they'd be on a winner.
12:33
@GamesBrainiac kool aid is used by cults to induct their members
@A.H. not actually
@DeadMG totally just needs a sprinkle of intellisense
ooh and formatting
@A.H. That is the implied meaning, though. Drinking the cool-aid implies joining the cult.
git integration
12:35
mercurial
sure that too
@FredOverflow I have some VS extension. It's far from complete, though.
You know what I hate?
user1804599
@StackedCrooked Me?
@StackedCrooked Java?
12:37
@StackedCrooked JS ?
@not-rightfold No. I think so low of you that feeling hate just isn't worth it.
I hate ListView components.
Ell
Ell
@DeadMG what are comments in wide?
I have //comments and /* comments */.
the only real difference is that I have nested /* /* comments */ */.
@StackedCrooked awwww
no # comments ?
12:39
@GamesBrainiac I feel better now.
user1804599
Kreeft has #-comments because of shebang.
# isn't recognized at all by the Wide lexer.
that's dangerous. you cannot anymore comment out "a/*b" with "/**/"
define "dangerous"
you couldn't have that expression anyway.
12:39
it will break
the lexer would always interpret a/*b as "a", "multiline comment".
why not assume that anything that can't be parsed to be a comment ?
er
for one, the lexer handles comments, not the parser.
Ell
Ell
@A.H. then it's really easy to compile a no-op
@DeadMG Will somebody think of the lexer!?
12:40
for two, that would remove any hope of error recovery.
for three, I just can't imagine how that would possibly be a useful feature.
its a form of error recovery :P
hey syntax error , oh its a comment
how would I know where to begin re-parsing for real?
@DeadMG right, it would not work before at all
litb fail
yep
and if you have a / *b, then you can comment that out with /* */.
@DeadMG what kind of error recovery do you have in mind?
12:42
@A.H. I have some.
it's a very difficult thing to do, though.
Qt Creator is really stupid. It can colorize enums, but only they are defined at namespace scope. It works if you use using namespace, but not using A::B;
I am assuming it requires a lot of backtracking ?
he just throws()
@StackedCrooked probably thinks A is a namespace
12:43
@A.H. Fleeing the country.
the general principle about error recovery that I've used is that the bad token should be accepted by some other rule.
@StackedCrooked lol. That doesn't count. It's a natural reflex given your nationality :/
oh so basically continue error reporting ?
i.e. if you have f(x) { module, then that's obviously not a valid statement.
so I keep going down until I find a rule that will take module.
and then I start again there
my bison parser will simply stop at the first error
12:45
yeah
would it be better if module was ignored and continued parsing 'function body' ? in 'error mode' ofcourse
I've actually been considering authoring my own parser generator
@A.H. No.
user1804599
I've made tabs syntax errors.
it's a lot more likely that you are in the middle of authoring a function above a pre-existing module
rather than that you are a moron, it's a valid function but you just inserted module for fun.
12:48
@not-rightfold or you could make your compiler pretends like it was a successful compile and then output an a.out that does nothing, on tabs
@DeadMG yeah I have to admit that makes way more sense
so right now
my general approach is that the stack of rules is the same as the function stack, and I just go down the stack looking for a function that can take that token
user1804599
@A.H. That's a bad idea.
user1804599
Right now, when the lexer encounters a tab outside of a comment or string literal, it terminates the program.
wow, really?
you suck.
user1804599
I don't. Tabs suck.
user1804599
12:55
I'm making this shit reentrant when it works.
user1804599
Hmm wait you know I'll do that right-away.
libraries that terminate the program are really fucking annoying
both LLVM and Clang have a habit of doing that
user1804599
It's not a library.
a lexer is a library.
a driver is a program.
user1804599
But since it's an interpreter, and I'm going to allow conditional importing of modules, it's a bad idea to terminate the program. It should throw an exception instead.
user1804599
12:57
\t { printf("tabs are not allowed; use four spaces to indent\n"); exit(1); } :P
a library that detect a bug may terminate the program as a sensible reaction IMO
i once wrote a lexer where this is allowed:
if(...)
   foobar
   if(lulz) {
      haha
   }
huh
@JohannesSchaub-litb Nope.
and you could mix spaces with tabs. one tab counted 3 spaces
terminating the program is never a valid reaction unless it's a permanent error like, for example, memory corruption.
you never know what error recovery or reporting the user may or may not want to do.
@DeadMG if there is a bug, it's best not to try to be flexible. it's best to stop immediately
13:00
what, so that I can't even report the error to my user?
if you try to be flexible, throw exceptions or try to call handlers or whatnot, you may just go deeper into the weirdness of the bug consequences and suddenly instead of a lucky successful "abort", you may get something even more cryptic like "illegal machine instruction"
@DeadMG each author should decide for herself how he decides to handle her own bugs
not when you're a library.
only the program designer knows who needs notifying and with what information when a bug occurs.
@DeadMG so how shall the lib handle the error condition?
well, the only reasonable response in the general case is to throw an exception.
IMO, throwing an exception is bad, because it is dead code
since the throw is never reached
13:03
why wouldn't the throw be reached?
if the throw could be reached, it better be fixed so that it is not reached anymore
otherwise, it is by definition not a bug
well, it should be fixed, but it obviously hasn't been yet.
the question is how you act before it has been fixed.
IMO, you should only terminate if you know that cleanup is impossible.
I would say that I should only not terminate if I know that cleanup is possible
I used to be an advocate of terminating
but after actually attempting to use a library with that philosophy, I've definitely turned against it.
how am I going to write my VS extension if Clang terminates the extension and possibly even VS itself if there is a problem?
you're going to lose your unsaved user changes.
LLVM has that policy. I have been hitting it multiple times that it aborts and terminates
13:07
yeah, and it's incredibly fucking annoying.
especially when they just pipe some error to console, as if every person runs it in a fucking terminal.
developers should always run things in a terminal
er, no.
the program I am testing does not run in a terminal.
so why would I run in a terminal?
to see the error output or debug output
however you can also install sysinternals
it will show you the terminal output I think
the error or debug output should not always go to the terminal.
just throw a fucking exception so I can decide where is the best place for it to go
user1804599
C is fun.
13:11
Good Guy Chrome: crashes, saves my previously entered text so I don’t have to re-type it.
@DeadMG the exception will also terminate the program
unless you put catches everywhere
user1804599
@JohannesSchaub-litb You can prevent it.
@JohannesSchaub-litb Maybe. Maybe instead, I will simply report the error, clean up all Clang's state, and drop it. Or maybe I will tell VS to save the user's file and then let the program terminate.
In OOP a good refactoring is when you can move pieces of code from the derived classes up to base class. I like to think that this reasoning will lead to eventually pushing it all to the other side and end up as multiple inheritance.
the point is, only I know what environment I am in and what is the best outcome for errors
13:13
Watching Space Brothers! :)
@DeadMG what do you mean by "the users file" ?
@JohannesSchaub-litb Well, if I am in a VS extension, then the user has a file open, and he is making changes to it, and I am analyzing them live. If that analysis terminates the process, he has lost all his changes.
user1804599
@StackedCrooked Not related to OOP at all.
@DeadMG if there is a bug, it is best to not execute more code anymore. because once an invariant is broken, any single instruction further executed may crash your entire program entirely (by trying to write into RO memory, by dereferencing null/arbitrary pointers, etc...). any more code you invoke will just make things more severe
Not it's actually about your mom.
user1804599
13:15
OOP is about message passing and that's all there is to it.
@StackedCrooked That was cheap.
@JohannesSchaub-litb That's not true at all. You can't be worse than the process terminates and the user loses his data.
there is no outcome worse than exit() in this scenario.
@GamesBrainiac Glad I didn't waste my money on it :)
user1804599
@StackedCrooked It's about the grandmother of your brother?
and not all broken invariants lead to memory errors or other crashes, many just lead to bad output.
by a long way I'd suggest that many or most lead to bad output or nonsensical results rather than crashes.
13:17
Just realised how many regulars here made it to the top page of most successful rep whores >_<
I wonder what shows up when you get to 1 million reps
even if all invariants lead to crashes eventually, I'd much rather take a chance and try to save the user's changes, even if I crash in the process, because the outcome of "Crash and lose user's changes" is the worst possible outcome.
1m or something?
@not-rightfold Now I'm reminded of this again.
@GamesBrainiac Oh just wonderful. You?
user1804599
@DeadMG Thank you for reminding me of invariants.
13:18
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Not too shabby. You still writing things using PHP?
Ell
Ell
Hmm. I need some large files to test my wide.vim on!
user1804599
I knew I was missing a keyword.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit i so missed you
4
lol
'"—All You Zombies—"' is a science fiction short story by Robert A. Heinlein. It was written in one day, July 11, 1958, and first published in the March 1959 issue of Fantasy and Science Fiction magazine after being rejected by Playboy. The story involves a number of paradoxes caused by time travel. In 1980, it was nominated for the Balrog Award for short fiction. '"—All You Zombies—"' further develops themes explored by the author in a previous work: "By His Bootstraps", published some 18 years earlier. Some of the same elements also appear later in The Cat Who Walks Through Wall...
@GamesBrainiac Occasionally.
@JohannesSchaub-litb <3
user1804599
Just realised.
user1804599
13:28
Due to automatic semicolon insertion my parser requires { to be on the same line.
user1804599
This is good.
{ on the same line as what?
user1804599
Well
user1804599
if foo
{ # illegal
if foo { # legal
user1804599
13:30
Semicolons are inserted between identifiers and newlines.
user1804599
And if foo ; { } is illegal.
and if foo; is?
> For a limited time one may purchase a lifetime^ nsa.org account for the bargain price of $100. This account includes email, shell and a personal url of your choosing
user1804599
@melak47 No; braces are required around if bodies.
awesome!
user1804599
13:31
So…
user1804599
@KonradRudolph lol .org
I am sorely tempted, to be honest
Ell
Ell
@KonradRudolph wtf
I hate how http://nsa.gov and http://nasa.gov don't work, whereas http://www.nsa.gov and http://www.nasa.gov do.
@not-rightfold You realise that this tweet looks retarded, right? :p
Yes, I know, Twitter’s fault
user1804599
13:34
I also hate how Twitter omits “.www”.
user1804599
FUCK.
@KonradRudolph asm.org xD
user1804599
org.asm.ic
What is ".www"?
user1804599
Also, I think I'm going to forbid semicolons.
user1804599
13:36
So you must insert a newline between statements.
user1804599
Well, except for this:
just forbid more than 1 semicolon if you must..
user1804599
if foo { bar()
}
user1804599
But if you do this, you're just a moron.
empty expression statements are weird
13:38
@not-rightfold oh please do, they annoy the fuck out of me
and entirely unnecessary
rather, C should have made "{}" the "null statement", and not ";" (banning the latter)
Ell
Ell
Hmm I need a vim guru
user1804599
@KonradRudolph end-of-statement tokens are currently inserted after various tokens if followed by a newline. It's not possible to insert them manually (eos_possible)‌​.
user1804599
This was the easiest way I could think of of doing it.
I like how your lexer printfs and exits in order to perform diagnostics. That's really neat.
13:41
@not-rightfold Wow, you use old school tools
user1804599
And it implies nice things like requiring opening braces to be on the same lines.
Yes, I generally like your style enforcing, including the banning of tabs
Don't you need an else clause in the def for \n?
@KonradRudolph Ugh. The banning of tabs is a backwards step.
user1804599
@LightnessRacesinOrbit No.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit No.
user1804599
13:42
Newlines are ignored.
@not-rightfold Does it auto-return something else, then, as a fallback? I've never used YY.
@KonradRudolph Yes.
user1804599
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Not returning in a Flex action means that it ignores the token.
Banning tabs is certainly arbitrary – there are good arguments for and against. But banning one of them is, IMO, good practice
It's so sad that supposedly enlightened and experienced developers could still hold on so callously to the mess that is "some number of spaces that I feel like today"-based indentation semantics.
@KonradRudolph Yes I wish he'd ban leading spaces.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit That’s a pretty simplistic reductio ad absurdum
13:43
(That would break some edge case alignments, I concede.)
@KonradRudolph It need be no more complicated in this instance.
Space indentation is to tab indentation what <font> and <b> are to CSS. lern2semantic!
Ell
Ell
my preferred style is leading tabs for indentation + leading spaces for alignment
user1804599
My preferred style is to have tabs be syntax errors.
Also shut up about tabs.
Ell
Ell
we already had :3
@BartekBanachewicz am I correct in saying "up" is wherever you want it to be in opengl?
13:50
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Then you’re flat out wrong
Ell
Ell
@DeadMG does wide have single quotes as well as double quotes?
(I'm asking these questions because I'm writing a vim syntax file)
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Not really. Tabs are similarly un-semantic, just at a slightly coarser level. What you semantically really want is one indentation per line, of varying length
I will bin this entire discussion.
Ell
Ell
@CatPlusPlus cos you don't like it?
user1804599
@CatPlusPlus Ok. :3
user1804599
13:51
@Ell Because it's a repost.
Because we've been over this a thousand times and it's retarded every time.
Don't bin this. This is who we are.
3
It's a binned topic.
@KonradRudolph I agree with that. In its absence, though, a sequence of "indentation characters" where one character represents one level of indentation feels pretty neat and semantic to me. Tabs can be that character, since we shall not use them for anything else.
eh
the core issue is control.
13:54
It's certainly a ton better than just dumping x spaces to represent y indentations, where x can be anything and has no evident relation to y
if you use tabs, then you control the indentation in your own projects and editors, but if you put the code somewhere you don't control, you lose control over the indentation.
Pastebin's 8-space tabs are a good example of how this can go terribly wrong.
@DeadMG The programmer has no right to control over how his code "looks". The viewer may also choose font family, font size, colour, boldness, spacing between characters... why do you think you should choose indentation block width for him?
if you use spaces, you take control of the indentation everywhere, so other people have no choice but to accept what you've chosen
@LightnessRacesinOrbit So far so good. But there are practical reasons against using it despite its theoretical superiority. One being that HTML for whatever fucked-up reason doesn’t preserve spaces tabs. Another is that some languages idiomatically indent not by fixed width but by matching to the surrounding. Case in point: R
> The programmer has no right to control over how his code "looks"
13:56
@LightnessRacesinOrbit At the most fundamental level, because services we can't control (e.g. web services like Pastebin) make choices that make it unreadable.
I think it's time for a license that forbids reformatting! :p
they don't choose to render code in Comic Sans, but 8-space tabs are nearly as bad.
Correction, HTML can preserve tabs, but you cannot control their display width
if every single renderer gave you a choice as to how wide tabs should be
then I would absolutely use tabs no question.
but when you have to use services that force their choice on you and that choice is untenable
@DeadMG Fix the services; don't break the code. A good example is IE -- remember when web devs wrote myriad workarounds for IE's broken CSS? Now we're stuck with them, because the existence of the workarounds gave IE no incentive to fix the root cause.
13:57
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Well, that's great, but I don't own those services and I can't control other people using them, so I have absolutely no power whatsoever to fix them and I need to use them between "now" and "some arbitrary point in the future when it might be fixed".
yes, in an ideal world, such services wouldn't exist and I wouldn't need to use them; but that world is not this one.

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