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10:00
@CatPlusPlus poly lambda, return type deduction for reg functions
I understand but it's so blown out of proportion it's silly
@Mikhail A type which can optionally contain an object (aka, it also has a special "empty" state)
I can't not laugh at you guys, it's like a sitcom almost
Good we're all having fun.
2
i need to learn more scala, might come in handy one day
10:00
@jalf for varags?
Didn't you learn about double negatives?
@Rapptz I don't think he didn't
@Rapptz He didn't not teach himself double negatives.
@Rapptz So, two things. It really is minor.
@BoltClock Damn you.
10:01
lol
Actually my grammar is exactly what I mean
@MickLH Why would you try? Just laugh with us.
I am lol
@CatPlusPlus There's also relaxed constexpr and other stuff but yeah, really minor.
@MickLH so your syntax is your semantics. Hmm..
10:02
Maybe you forgot I really meant it when I said your trolling is a waste on me, I've got everything I want in life
We got that part.
@MickLH Then go
Lol why?
We're not "trolling", we're riffing on you, hth
Because it's a waste on you
10:03
@MickLH except you didn't get that question reopened to post your answer.
lol man that's the real sad part
Ahahaha is that what it's started with
getting that desperate to get an emotional rise out of a 21 year old
hahahaha
Get fucked and get out
10:03
I mean damn hahahahaha
<3
hahahahahaha
"AHahahaha I am a sad, sad human being"
I hope I never get everything I want in life.
lol
It would be rather pointless from that point on.
10:05
@MickLH that never was the point here
Apparently knowing how to indent code is not a useful thing
Is Rapptz asleep?
@BoltClock Probably. It's getting close to dawn where he lives.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I hope you want more in life than money and a wife that is just beautiful ;)
I just want money
10:06
@ArneMertz Meh, if I really wanted money, I wouldn't leave it at the ATM when I withdraw it.
(Damn, that still hurts)
What
How
What
@CatPlusPlus I'm bad.
Sep 28 at 2:07, by R. Martinho Fernandes
I just withdrew 40 € and left without the cash.
Xeo
Xeo
At least you didn't leave your EC card in there!
JBL
JBL
Ouch.
Did you pull the money out, or did you leave it in the slot?
10:08
@CatPlusPlus I think I left even before it got out.
Xeo
Xeo
Oh wow
ATMs cancel the transaction if nobody pulls the money out within 30 seconds or whatever
@CatPlusPlus I'm pretty sure it's either not instantaneous or some passers-by took it.
Xeo
Xeo
I'd like to find 40€ in an ATM
Because I went back when I realised it and the balance was missing it.
10:09
Welp
Now you know to not use cash
@TemplateRex My VPS has 512 MB RAM.
Xeo
Xeo
Tell that to @TemplateRex
Sorry, that was the intention.
According to webmin I have 118.77 MB used, 489.27 MB total.
10:12
Also Robot, I revoke your right to make fun of me for using wrong font for a year
Webmin is a piece of shit, don't use it
@R.MartinhoFernandes ouch. when did that happen?
@R.MartinhoFernandes I had that once - I called the bank, they saw on CCTV that I left it at the ATM, and the ATM pulls it back in after a while - so they gave me the money back
webmin is handy
I don't use it for much, just for checking machine status and occasional reboot.
It's crap
How should I interpret that coming from you?
That I know few things about running servers? I don't know, do whatever you want
10:17
I don't mind your input, but it's so ...
like you.
@ArneMertz A few minutes before Sep 28 at 2:07 :P
@CatPlusPlus :( Fair enough.
Good bye Courier New jokes. It was fun while it lasted.
why does it take some people forty minutes to svn commit a file?
the greatest question of our time
Maybe svn is that slow.
:P
@LightnessRacesinOrbit I sense that you're not telling us the whole story buddy.
@StackedCrooked I'm not [not telling you]
@R.MartinhoFernandes It isn't
10:21
I know, but it was too easy a joke.
Padding timesheets, duh
@ArneMertz Well, I wouldn't go to the effort of calling the bank. Not for 40 euros, at least. I just cut my book budget for this month.
Getting the money back would take away the lesson learned factor.
Or something.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I guess it's to late for that call now anyways ;)
I wonder how I should with my compilation cache? It's getting too big.
16511 cached entries already
I think I need an LRU cache, but on the file system..
With upper bound on disk usage.
Make an index.
10:28
How? Not sure what you mean.
Hm, it's only 163 MB, that's not so bad.
"Poonam" I wonder where he's from
I should check out how ccache does it.
You could use a database already and save yourself reinventing the wheel over and over again
10:31
I've been thinking about that lately.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit What tags do you browse now that most of them have gone to shit?
As soon as we have [[deprecated]], let’s apply it to malloc, free, memcpy, new, delete etc. :p
Also regex, dynarray and enum class.
@KonradRudolph Yeah, not gonna happen. I don't think it will even happen to, say, strtok.
I occasionally still use memcpy.
(That's deprecated, right?)
10:34
@R.MartinhoFernandes A man can dream though. But regarding strtok, at least they applied it to gets
@KonradRudolph uhm. new and delete as well? No hand-written smart poitners any more?
@StackedCrooked Why!? What’s wrong with std::copy?
@KonradRudolph Oh, yeah, that's what I meant, gets.
So, they did? Nice.
@ArneMertz You can still do that, just use allocator::allocate`. Oh, hand-written allocators? Use OS functions to request memory ;)
@KonradRudolph uhm. yeah...
10:36
std::copy for binary data is very slow in gcc (or libstdc++) compared to memcpy.
@KonradRudolph operator new?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Hmm, I cannot find it now but I read that recently
With clang there's no difference in speed.
I agree with new and delete, but op new/ op delete are primitives.
@KonradRudolph and why regex and enum class?
10:36
@R.MartinhoFernandes What about that? I wouldn’t deprecate that (although I dislike the syntax, let’s get rid of it)
@ArneMertz Because they SUCK!
@KonradRudolph Allocator::allocate is a counterpart of op new, not new.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I know
Sorry for the confusion
I actually meant using all of allocators, i.e. allocate and construct
@KonradRudolph When I wrote my [[deprecated]] proposal, someone suggested splitting the attribute itself from the application on the stdlib. That's why I thought they wouldn't apply it in the stdlib.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Ah, that’s your proposal? I didn’t even know that
@KonradRudolph No, it isn't. Someone else had filed a similar one a few days before, but didn't make it public, so I never sent mine.
10:39
Ah ok
Oh yeah, I forgot one: deprecate digit separators, they are evil
Seriously, what drugs did the committee take when they decided that digits separators were a good idea?
Eclipse's git integration aint that bad.
Its better than InteliJ's actually.
@KonradRudolph I really wonder how often people use magic numbers like that in their code.
10:42
Why do enum classes suck?
@R.MartinhoFernandes I don’t care. It introduces a breaking change in the compiler, and breaks every single syntax highlighter and lexer of C++ in existence
@Rapptz Because they are too restrictive to be useful, don’t provide the necessary operators for work with bit masks, and fulfil almost no purpose. They could have been designed much better
@Rapptz Can't have scoping with implicit conversions, or explicit conversions without scoping.
@GamesBrainiac Too bad everything else is shit
@R.MartinhoFernandes Elaborate?
@CatPlusPlus True, I hate hitting CTRL + SPACE whenever I want code completion
10:45
@KonradRudolph If you don't want the type safety then just use a regular enum and then you can convert it to an int for your bit masking?
Yes that is the worst thing about Eclipse
@KonradRudolph The fact that they provide scope for the enumerators is not good enough?
@Rapptz But regular enums are also broken since they provide no type safety and no scoping. enum class provides both, but adds a host of additional restrictions which make them unusable in some situations
@StackedCrooked ^
libstdc++ overloads the bitmask operators
overkill, sure.
solvable issue, yes.
@KonradRudolph Can you give an example? (I'm wanting to understand your point.)
10:48
@StackedCrooked "enum classes suck because I can't bitmask with them so they're useless in most cases"
at least that's what I got out of it
I thought it was abusive to use enum for bitmasks.
Waiting for Robot to elaborate on his point though :(
@CatPlusPlus What do you hate most about it?
@StackedCrooked My previous comment was slightly misleading. My actual beef is that enum classes has too many restrictions, not that it has too little. Here’s an example:
4
Q: How to make enum class to work with the 'bit-or' feature?

user1899020I usually use enum with the 'bit-or' or | together to allow an object has some options. How to make enum class to work with the 'bit-or' feature?

@StackedCrooked No.
@GamesBrainiac Eclipse
10:50
@Rapptz In addition, enum classes are simply an anachronism. Look at Java to see what a modern enum class can do. Better yet, look at what Haskell etc. offer with algebraic types. enum classes are essentially algebraic types with lots of unnecessary restrictions.
@Rapptz Sometimes I only want the strong typing and the forced scoping is just noise. Not a big deal, but that's what I see as pain point.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Oh yeah. I agree. Kinda annoying.
I don't really agree with the whole "I can't bitmask" thing though :s
I do agree with Konrad that they're too primitive. Java enums are cool.
Java enums are literally fancy classes :s
C++ enums are fancy ints!
10:52
Yes
well, it can be specified now :)
Well, actually, Konrad's complaint is that they are not-so-fancy.
I've never in my entire life have wanted the need to make functions inside my enums.
but I guess that's just me :P
I like how you can iterate over the values though
That's pretty cool
Would it be possible to design a better Enum as a library feature?
whats up guys
@Rapptz I actually prefer the current state of affairs for bitmasking. Except something like foo::(bar | qux) would be nicer than foo::bar | foo::qux.
10:54
@R.MartinhoFernandes None
frankly
for(auto&& value : my_enum.values()) { ... }
That would me my_enum::values() then.
Hi Tom ;)
@StackedCrooked Yes, you don’t actually need enums at all. But the library will either use lots of macros or force you to write a lot of redundant code
@KonradRudolph And the macros are awkward as fuck to use.
user1804599
10:56
I know an Ekici.
@StackedCrooked In boo you can.
I was thinking something like template<typename T, T...> struct Enum { }; . But I don't see how to get beyond that..
Actually, many new language features in boo are implemented in the library.
What is boo?
10:58
Programming language.
user1804599
@StackedCrooked Boo.
user1804599
The programming language with the ugliest website after PHP.
user1804599
:D
@StackedCrooked Not sure where you’re going with that (CRTP?) … but an enum is essentially just a type with lots of static members which are either thin wrappers around a counter, or pointers.
10:58
It has nice support for metaprogramming.
you can do a lazy man's enum: ios["oct"] | ios["dec"]
Integer representation of enums is incidental and not very useful apart from serialisation
@KonradRudolph Pointers to themselves to guarantee uniqueness!
@KonradRudolph Heh... something like Enum<int, 1, 2, 3> (but I have no idea how to go further...)
user1804599
I like const in Go; type MyEnum int; const ( Foo = MyEnum(iota); Bar; Baz; Qux; ). Or even const ( Foo = 1 << iota; Bar; Baz; Qux; ).
10:59
Shit. It's 7 AM.
@R.MartinhoFernandes For instance (although that makes the type problematic if you want to implement member functions). I was actually thinking of allocating space and pointing to that (and then freeing it in a global object destructor, or just letting it rot).
Anyway. I don't mind enum classes. I don't always have the need to bitmask enums.
@KonradRudolph What's the problem?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Well if they point to self their type would have to be void* unless you venture into UB-land, no?
@StackedCrooked I can think of a way using constexpr but I think at that point you're basically gaining nothing imo.
11:01
@Rapptz robor has a thing for enabling specific bitwise operators on specific enum classes, too :)
@KonradRudolph Since you only want it is for identity, no need for UB: int x = reinterpret_cast<int>(&x); has an unspecified value, but it's not UB.
@R.MartinhoFernandes But then you cannot implement member functions on it, see previous comment (and you throw out type safety)
(And the value is guaranteed unique because it has to be reversible)
@KonradRudolph Then just use this.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Hmm?
The identity of the values is this.
11:07
@R.MartinhoFernandes Ah. Well, yes. That works.
It's actually even cheaper like that.
You can have 257 different values and they each use 0-1 byte.
257?
How queer.
@MustafaEkici Hi.
Well, you can have more, but that's the minimum interesting number (It's the least number that requires 9 bits).
user1804599
I want to be able to pass arbitrary identifiers as template parameters.
user1804599
11:12
Would be so cool.
I want to be able to say to my computer: "Now implement string concatenation" and it would just write it for me
Then my job would be easy
Yay
user1804599
Why? It’s a solved problem.
it was an example
Erm, std::string::operator+=()
replace that for anything
user1804599
11:13
Use a library that has string concatenation.
@TonyTheLion + is much shorter than "Now implement string concatenation".
you guys
fuck you all
user1804599
Libraries already exist for anything.
I was giving an example
user1804599
11:14
@StackedCrooked But + doesn’t implement string concatenation.
user1804599
It makes use of string concatenation. :D
user1804599
(Unless your language is cool.)
your mother
user1804599
is your daughter
Tony was talking about syntax IIUC.
@not-rightfold and my bitch
user1804599
11:15
@StackedCrooked He wants AppleScript.
user1804599
Or COBOL.
user1804599
I want to try ABAP.
I want to try D one day.
user1804599
I see what you did there. ( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
I tried D once, I wrote five lines of code and found one compiler bug
13
that ended my D experience
11:18
A short story by Tony The Lion.
And you didn't file it!
no, I left that to some other /d/tard to do
user1804599
I tried D once, and I already had an orgasm at “module main;.”
@TonyTheLion You are a horrible person and the scourge of all that is good.
3
11:20
@not-rightfold For me the semicolon causes an interruptus
@R.MartinhoFernandes I'm glad someone realized my true nature.
user1804599
@KonradRudolph semicolons Go away.
user1804599
I wanted to make a visual pun by Googling “colon cut in half,” but I couldn’t find any good pictures.
11:22
Al gore
user1804599
Wat een gore boel.
tis weer al gore
user1804599
goru
> Your Amazon.com order of "A Tour of C++ (C++ In-Depth..." has shipped!
:)
11:24
You're the worst buyer
I like wurst.
I'm finally getting my tour of C++.
I haven't bought a book in years
@StackedCrooked Why did you buy that and not TC++PL4?
@R.MartinhoFernandes I have that one as well.
Isn't that thing like, the first chapter?
11:25
Oh, is that so?
user1804599
Let’s see if I can track the order of my book.
@StackedCrooked I'm pretty sure it is.
Ah well.
user1804599
> Will ship on or about 2013-10-16.
11:27
I mostly buy these books because they look nice.
> The Fourth Edition of The C++ Programming Language attempts that and should become available in a few months. To help people get started with C++11 and with TC++PL4, I summarize C++11 in four chapters, collectively named A Tour of C++. Addison-Wesley graciously allowed me to post drafts of these chapters. I will do so over the next months.
@StackedCrooked Normally, I buy books because I want to read them.
user784668
@TonyTheLion lol
@StackedCrooked Do you break the spines?
I had a look at the C++ subset defined by Sean Parent and Bjarne in The Elements of Programming (by Stepanov). I was surprised that it includes goto.
user784668
11:29
Why?
user784668
goto is useful.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I had to google that.
goto is not very useful.
@StackedCrooked And?
I don't.
11:30
You are awesome
so you judge people by weather they break book spines or not?
Don't judge a book by its broken spine.
I probably have broken the spines of a few manga books though.
Let me check.
You are even worse than Tony. I bet you eat live puppies for breakfast and stream it over the Internet.
Apparently I haven't.
You are still awesome.
11:32
goto may be useful. It's just strange that, in 30-odd years of high-level dev, I've never used it for anything, (or even considered using it).
The second hand books I received are in horrible condition though.
Because it's not very useful.
I am considering breaking the spine of 'XML and Web Services', just for the physical exercise.
user1804599
goto is quite useful, if your objective is to confuse people.
I hurt myself opening a coke bottle.
user784668
11:33
@not-rightfold Creating an infinite list is enough to confuse most people.
I have nothing against goto, except that I've never needed it.
@CatPlusPlus Is that buttcoin exchange rates?
user1804599
Gort! Klaatu barada nikto!
Xeo
Xeo
11:35
Apropos breaking spines - Robot, how's the journal going?
Apparently I broke the spine of my lonely planet guide which I took to Japan.
Xeo
Xeo
Too much for you? :P
@StackedCrooked So you do eat puppies.
I'm sorry.
But lonely planet books aren't real books.
They are more like scraps of paper.
user784668
11:37
@R.MartinhoFernandes What if I break human spines?
@StackedCrooked You are not a real person!
More like a bag of flesh held by bones.
How do you find out?
user1804599
@StackedCrooked is it me or does the “minor” revision contain about everything?
@not-rightfold No, those are TSes.
user1804599
Also what happened to MODULES. :<
user1804599
11:39
@CatPlusPlus oohh right
@not-rightfold The were wrapped up and put away.
Xeo
Xeo
@not-rightfold Clang guy still working on them
> a byte is comprised of 8 bits or byte
user1804599
lol
Xeo
Xeo
wtf
user1804599
11:40
@Xeo on a spec or a reference implementation or a toy implementation?
Xeo
Xeo
@not-rightfold Reference implementation in Clang
user1804599
Cool.
@BartekBanachewicz How would you go about drawing stuff then?
user784668
@not-rightfold Toy reference implementation.
> So that is why we should have allowed him to operate? He murdered some people, but not as many people as your average drug dealer, hence the silk road is good and shutting it down was bad?
Xeo
Xeo
11:45
wat
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Can you say "shooting guns" (well, I guess you can if you a thing that launches guns out of it, but)?
Oh, that one was questioning it. But buttcoiners on reddit legit think that hiring an assassin was a good thing
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes You a word.
> The guy DPR put a hit on was going to destroy the lives of 8,000 people. That swift action seems well deserved.
11:48
> The targeted guy was a vendor who was selling to thousands of users and he had their mailing addresses. He threatened to release the mailing addresses unless being paid (500K iirc). The guy was asking for it. If you try to rob any person on earth of 500K or more and he had the option to kill you with a few clicks, 99% of the people will do it.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Technically? No, probably not. Colloquially? Certainly — widespread usage.
You can "fire your weapons" in games, too.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Ok. That's what I feared. Thanks for confirming.
@CatPlusPlus Erm.
user784668
@R.MartinhoFernandes You feared that you can, except a bunch of prescriptive morons will get angry if you do?
11:50
LANGUAGE PURITY IS VERY IMPORTANT
user784668
@CatPlusPlus WHY YOU NOT TALK PROTO-NOSTRATIC THEN
It's important because it makes it an ambiguous expression.
You don't know bullets or guns are flying.
user784668
@R.MartinhoFernandes Ah, right, you're a robot, so it's a problem for you. For humans it's not, their languages are full of ambiguities.
Yes I forgot about the wildly popular gun launchers.
Xeo
Xeo
I'm sure there's a game out there that has that.
sbi
sbi
11:53
So, folks. I now put a 500rep bounty on my question. Care to answer? :)
@Fanael It's not a problem. It's something I can make silly jokes out of or something.
this is personal
sbi
sbi
11:57
@R.MartinhoFernandes Hadn't you heard about this?
user1804599
@R.MartinhoFernandes What about it?
@not-rightfold The note on top.
user1804599
It’s the question that led to the arrest of OP.
@R.MartinhoFernandes lol everything is locked there

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