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07:00
@Rapptz Hey! That's like how you broke my func_info thingy. Now it's your turn to ache. :P
Well my function thing breaks just like std::bind breaks so I don't feel as bad.
@MarkGarcia I only knew how to break it because I experienced the same breaking months ago :P
I'm just sharing experiences!
Oh dear, I tried to fix one bug now everything is broken
@Telkitty猫咪咪 Story of some point of our lives.
I know ... I know ... :'(
07:18
hi
is there a con to function objects/functors outside of "more code to write" and possible increased memory usage.
Hi
@Rapptz why increased memory usage?
@jalf I put "possible" because I wasn't sure, I don't think so personally but :s
the only downsides are the extra few lines of code, and in some cases, the loss of locality (say, converting a loop into a std algorithm and a functor, effectively moves the loop body to... somewhere else, far away from the loop itself), which can hurt readability a bit
sbi
sbi
If anyone needs some rep on TMP, I just posted a question:
0
Q: How to create static strings from types at compile time

sbiI have a bunch of types that have a name. (They have more features, but for the sake of this discussion only the name is relevant.) These types and their names are setup at compile-time using a macro: #define DEFINE_FOO(Foo_) \ struct Foo_ : public foo_base<Foo_> { ...

Thanks for looking!
07:21
performance-wise, there should be zero memory cost, and you're only making the function easier to inline for the compiler
> I have a bunch of types that have a name
@Rapptz Not necessarily a con, but there are cases where it is better to have handler classes which you override handler methods, rather than having individual function objects.
What a coincidence! So do I ;)
well for what I'm doing it seems like function objects are a lot better than regular functions but it feels like I might be stepping in the wrong direction.
so what makes you feel it's the wrong direction?
um, because for ease of use I provide the constructed object.
constexpr functor f and the like
07:23
@BoltClock'saUnicorn - getting seven upvotes for your comment: really pesimistic dudes are passing through... Quite a grim message... — Shai 1 min ago
ahaha
@sbi I think when making a TMP question on SO you should specify C++03 (I think you can't use C++11 at work) because a lot of people would answer in C++11 from what I've noticed since it's a lot easier.
2 messages moved to Java
6
lol there's a java room
I never noticed it on the front page
it looks active too.
@Rapptz those shit filters for your eyes must be working well
@Rapptz easier, and that is what C++ is.
07:30
Still not sure if what I'm doing is dumb :(
The reason I decided to go with functor over functions is because they'll be passed around a lot
@sbi My solution is too trivial, and I doubt if it really answers you question.
@Mysticial attay boy! :D
private static int MAX_LIZARD_EAT_TIME = 5;
lol
Oo .. a parcel, I forgot I bought this ... :|
5 more parcels to come ...
need to stop online shopping >_<
07:47
you bought product?
"oh, we have some issues with that there thing you need to use, I'll call a meeting in three days times so we can talk about it" NO! Do not waste the next three days, if you know what issues you need to discus tell me now so we can get the fucking resolved! (╯°□°)╯︵ ┻━┻
My mum bought $15.42 worth of chicken manure, since she has spent so much on shit, I thought the best gift for her birthday next month is whole lots of seeds (she enjoy plant things).
thus 5 parcels
all seeds
hope they don't get quarantined :/
@Telkitty猫咪咪 very much depends, yes. 5 parcels might be well above the import regulations for seeds
@Telkitty猫咪咪 How much shit is worth $15.42?
2
user1804599
07:55
WTF CODEIGNITER.
Hm that's not bad I guess
user1804599
Y u no bind parameter.
user1804599
Oh god.
user1804599
Instead of giving an error, it simply removes the question mark from the query when you don’t give it enough arguments.
user1804599
Congrats, CodeIgniter team. You’re doing a great job.
07:57
@sehe Australia customs is notorious ... most probably because it seems every new specie imported here becomes a infestation ...
0
A: Trying to write a java code to authenticate Graph API

kabelo boitshwareloWrite a program that constructs a graph with N(you can read from keyboard) vertices and maximum and minimum edge degree of 4 and 1 respectively. Vertices are randomly connected. Construct the graph in an adjacency matrix. Write another method that obtains the edge degree of a given vertex and its...

With a "THANKS IN ADVANCE" at the end
@rightfold typedef strong_numerical_typedef<float>::type angle;
@BoltClock aww, aren't newbies cute.
user1804599
@BartekBanachewicz yay! :D
or, make it more funkish with using angle = Invoke<strong_numerical_typedef<float>>;
08:02
strong_numerical_typedef?
@Rapptz I've just invented that
I've made a strong typedef but how does this differ?
What makes it numerical?
hm, dunno really.
anyway add this to "should be in std::" list
it should just be a language feature, not a library component.
@Telkitty猫咪咪 (it's very easy to commit significant economic crime using a tiny amount of seeds; the seed development business is very advanced and extremely important for global food availability - people could be seriously concerned)
user1804599
08:04
I like how F# has units.
explicit using angle = float; explicit typedef float angle;
hm that syntax isn't so bad actually :P
someone should propose it
user1804599
Problem is.
user1804599
How do you deal with constructors?
what do you mean?
you mean with regular classes?
user1804599
T has a ctor T(T const&) and you do explicit using U = T;.
user1804599
08:07
Then you can construct U(T()) but not U(U()).
how does D deal with it?
I realised while asking Bartek about the numerical thing that I haven't seen strong typedefs used outside of the fundamental types
user1804599
Does D have strong typedefs?
Yeah
boost::fusion::zip takes a Sequence const& (see: http://www.boost.org/doc/libs/1_51_0/libs/fusion/doc/html/fusion/algorithm/transformation/functions/zip.html).

I need to use "zip" to mutate sequences, are there any alternatives?
Xeo
Xeo
@sehe I got my wording from Zygoloid (aka Richard Smith) :)
08:09
In particular, im trying to implement swap by zipping two sequences, and thus i need to be able to mutate them
@not-rightfold typedef is a strong typedef while alias isn't.
@Xeo ?! I hope they implement the standard too :/
user1804599
@Rapptz typedef is deprecated.
user1804599
It has become a library feature.
user1804599
Which is wonderfully well-documented. dlang.org/phobos/std_typecons.html#Typedef
Xeo
Xeo
08:11
@Rapptz []f :D
@Xeo lol. What do you think of my problem?
@Rapptz that might be because only the fundamental types have builtin implicit often nonsensical conversions allowed between them
Xeo
Xeo
@sehe Huh?
user1804599
Go has strong typedefs but no constructors so it’s a problem there. :P
@Xeo D.
08:12
@gnzlbg free your mind. There's no mutation.
Xeo
Xeo
@Rapptz Sorry, just catching up. Only noticed it because it was close to a ping I got.
user1804599
I like how ctors are done in Go.
Xeo
Xeo
@Rapptz Stealth message rerouted my reply
user1804599
Just functions. vOv
@Rapptz btw IIRC explicit is not a global keyword, is it?
user1804599
08:15
I’m going to fork Go to add generics.
I used explicit because it shows semantics and already exists since the C++ standard doesn't like adding new keywords.
I kinda wish explicit was used more than just operators and constructors.
@Bartek please elaborate :D

I want to implements a swap for 2 fusion maps, zipping them and swapping the elements seemed like the best way to do it... but zipping them transform lvalue references into const lvalue references.
I have no idea how you'd define swap between two maps.
@gnzlbg well that might be just C++ being painfully poor at FP
bf::for_each(bf::zip(a, b), [](auto i) { swap(bf::at_c<0>(i), bf::at_c<1>(i)); });
oh that's C++14
08:17
its a 1 liner
but zip takes my maps a and b by const& :(
how is that a bad thing?
@gnzlbg zip(Sequence1 const& seq1, Sequence2 const& seq2, ... SequenceN const& seqN);
well swaping const& doesnt make sense
there's no nonconst overload
you're not swapping const&?
zip(a, b) would return a new (non-const) object
08:20
yep but the references of my maps are transformed to const& and I guess its because it takes the sequences by const&
do you have sequences of references?
yes
i have a map of references
why
Xeo
Xeo
@gnzlbg bf::zip(std::ref(a), std::ref(b))
Might work
since const is not transitive through references.
08:21
because im implementing a writable zip iterator for using it with sort :/
I think I'm just going to go through my emulating functors as functions thing
I don't see many downsides besides adding maybe 2-3 extra lines or code.
Xeo
Xeo
@Rapptz wrt functors vs functions?
yeah
Xeo
Xeo
not much you can do until C++14 / []my_proposal
well I started writing functors and then doing constexpr functor etc and it works okay
08:23
@Xeo but bf::zip(Seq0 const&, Seq1 const&, ...)
I also think I know how to solve my combinatorial explosion from yesterday
Xeo
Xeo
@gnzlbg So it gets a const-ref to the std::reference_wrapper
12 hours ago, by Bartek Banachewicz
data Source = Value Int | SrcRegister String | SrcMemory Address
data Destination = DstRegister String | DstMemory Address

mov :: Source -> Destination -> Machine -> Machine
mov = ?
Xeo
Xeo
Although I guess it might be problematic for that thing to then get the iterators... hm
mov msrc mdst m = do
    src <- checkSrc msrc
    dst <- checkDst mdst
    adjust src dst m
    return ()
08:25
yes, but then std::reference wrapper is not a bf::map, so it has no category, so bf::for_each doesn't know what to do there :/
i'll just write my own bf::zip_non_const, that might work :/
user1804599
@BartekBanachewicz call that Immediate, not Value. :P
@not-rightfold why?
user1804599
Because the manual also calls it immediate operands.
user1804599
You’re writing x86 emulator, right?
08:27
right.
user1804599
Cool.
I admit I thought it would be easier.
so far I've dumped left for later lenses for simple Maps and the above
Can you zip on a separate line, and pass the new variable to for_each?
user1804599
@BartekBanachewicz How do you deal with displacement? E.g. movq (%ebx, %ecx, 4), %eax.
@Rapptz For maximum WTF-ness leave the types unnamed: constexpr struct { /* call op */ } definitively_a_function {};!
08:33
@LucDanton Good idea!
Xeo
Xeo
@BartekBanachewicz Doesn't adjust take a function as the first argument?
user1804599
Or what’s it called. Effective address. :v
@Xeo maybe I've flipped that, but in general I've thought that I could do destination checking in a way that bind will return a function taking a Machine and a new value.
your gravatar like, changed half-way.
so it would be more like adjust (dst m) srcVal m
@Rapptz I've just updated it.
08:36
when I run the app in debug mode, everything seems to be fine again :/
> Internal compiler error: Error reporting routines re-entered.
Good start to my day.
Xeo
Xeo
Well done
Oh, I was wondering about the huge stacktrace. I'm using a snapshot.
Xeo
Xeo
@BartekBanachewicz FWIW, I'm not sure what exponential explosion you were referring to
(I likely went to sleep before that yesterday)
@Xeo I've reposted it a few dozen messages ago
I mean, my limited knowledge allows me to do
mov (Immediate val) = ...
mov (SrcRegister reg) = ...
but if the destination can change too, I end up with
mov (Immediate val) (DstRegister dstr) = ...
mov (Immediate val) (DstMemory dstm) = ...
mov (SrcRegister reg) (DstRegister dstr)  = ...
mov (SrcRegister reg) (DstMemory dstm)  = ...
Xeo
Xeo
08:39
ah
Mmmh I need a protocol to disable a default, so to speak. That is, I want range::peek_front(r) to defer to range::front(r) most of the time (that's the default), to spare implementers the chore of implementing an oftentimes identical operation. But not all ranges should be peekable, in which case range::peek_front must fail.
@Xeo so I thought I'll use do notation to change them to some sort of common denominator, which would change source to a simple value, and destination to a (Value -> Machine -> Machine)
> I use boost fromework
lol, what an odd typo
user1804599
This use of LEA is funny. goo.gl/7OeHQg
Xeo
Xeo
@BartekBanachewicz That feels like abuse and really wrong
08:41
@not-rightfold No, it's not "funny", it's the intended use.
Xeo
Xeo
What's wrong with simple let bindings and transformation functions?
user1804599
@Griwes It’s not.
user1804599
The intended use is address calculations.
The intended use is to use ModR/M to do calculations.
08:42
@Xeo I thought that, for example, dstMemory might lay outside emulator range. So it would return Nothing instead
@Rapptz I think there's a concept to designate how a language groups closely 'related' vowel sounds, but I can't seem to remember what it is.
It's pretty common, as it saves bytes.
so if either srcCheck or dstCheck failed, the whole mov would fail
Xeo
Xeo
@BartekBanachewicz Shouldn't your machine fail, then?
x86 doesn't need to have, say, add dest, src1, src2 thanks to lea.
08:43
@Xeo Damn, I am not sure what should be performing the checks now :/
@BartekBanachewicz Does the instruction decoder and executor need to care about "outside memory"?
template<typename T, typename = typename T::no_peeking>
void peek_front(overload_set<0>, T&) = delete;
Just call memory controller's "read" or "write" and let it deal with that.
@Griwes I want to be able to handle out-of-range exceptions.
Ideally, I'd like it to be able to aid in debugging asm assignments for my uni, but that's long-term.
My point is, the CPU doesn't care about it, so neither should your instruction executor. It's memory controller's job.
08:44
I see.
Looks like my Machine should get a bit more complicated.
CPU calls MMU, MMU calls physical memory manager.
They should all be independent.
And then there's segmentation...
But that's probably MMU's job, too (I never cared too much about where segmentation is done).
Well I'm willing to make it simpler for now, because I'm struggling enough with the implementation.
Proper modularization does make things simpler :P
okey, so what should mov really do if I want to read or write from memory?
It should move.
:D
mmu->read(address_operand, segment); or mmu->write(address_operand, segment);
08:49
@Griwes remember I can't mutate anything :)
@ScottW that's correct.
@ScottW I was bored with the old one
@BartekBanachewicz read does not mutate, write must mutate.
What are you writing this in, btw? :D
24 mins ago, by Bartek Banachewicz
mov msrc mdst m = do
    src <- checkSrc msrc
    dst <- checkDst mdst
    adjust src dst m
    return ()
that should make it rather obvious
Hmm, or rather memory_controller->read(mmu->linear(segment, address_operand));
Eh, I'll go with deleting. Amazingly enough the ICE seems harmless: it only triggers when the compiler is complaining about ill-formed code (which was the point of deleting). So this time it really seems an error was triggered when re-entering error reporting routines.
Well, I don't think that those calls are that hard to write in Haskell, but then again, I got almost nowhere when trying to learn it last time.
08:53
data Machine = { registers :: Data.Map String Int, memory :: Memory } it is then, I guess
I have no idea what it means.
That's probably why I tend to write C++.
:D
@Griwes I agree that record syntax is kinda meh
O_o
look at all those constructors
Bad link?
oh the #type part is extraneous from when I clicked it in SO.
09:01
@Rapptz A lot of projects like to stuff in a union { /* everything we're likely to use */ };.
Types are hard. Let's go typecasing!
user1804599
09:13
Does anyone here have a watch? I’m considering buying one.
> -175 User was removed
called it
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Naughty, naughty...
~/local/include/boost/coroutine/v2$ ls
detail  pull_corotuine.hpp  push_coroutine.hpp
wtf
Xeo
Xeo
corotuine, lol
I don't think it's included from anywhere (I was wondering how you'd have the typo for the file and all includes).
> #ifndef BOOST_COROUTINES_V2_PULL_COROUTINE_H
I'm not sure the whole v2/ subdir was supposed to ship: boost/coroutine/coroutine.hpp conditionally include one of v1/coroutine.hpp or v2/coroutine.hpp but the latter doesn't seem to exist.
how do i branched in my favourite source control ;_;
> template< typename Signature, int arity = function_traits< Signature >::arity > class coroutine;
And this is why I warn against template template parameters!
09:36
why are relational operators for optional so fubar
@Rapptz It's fixed now.
you mean they stuck with only two operators?
No. The usual bunch is present.
what'd they decide on?
Everything is done in terms of the underlying == and <.
09:37
okay.
All that's arguably missing is an std::less specialization to handle e.g. set<optional<int*>>.
Xeo
Xeo
They have mixed relops, though, right? :/
hai all
hows life?
@ScottW Glad you're still alive! :D
@BoltClock I've been seeing you more recently... Did they send a mod to watch over us? :P
can you still do optional<bool>?
@Xeo Ye. Can't be helped with the implicit conversion.
09:39
@GamesBrainiac No they abducted me
@Rapptz Think so.
@BoltClock When did we abduct ponies?
mm..
Xeo
Xeo
BoltClop?
I have work in 3 hours
09:39
Oh man, a simple class representing a damned book for my Java assignment takes 100 lines :F
Java, why you Comparator?
@Xeo Is that a problem?
Because I have to :F
Bleh.
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton Dunno, maybe I should stop thinking of none as "a missing value" and instead think of it as "another value outside of the values for T" (remembering the Monoid Maybe comment from the Haskell documentation)
@ScottW Stop giving bad advice. I know its a thing in the Lounge to get people to drop out of school/uni, but at the end of the day that isn't really advisable.
> Nothing < Just 3
True
09:42
lol
user1804599
@ScottW How expensive was it?
@ScottW Heh, I was just saying. I'm not mad.
@Xeo I tend to see those two ideas as really the same thing: an extra, distinct value that represents 'missing'.
FTR I think Monoid m => Monoid (Maybe m) is somewhat contentious because it should really be a semigroup constraint. I.e. something which doesn't have an mempty, which the Nothing constructor then provides.
> error| reference to 'finite' is ambiguous
uh
> /usr/include/x86_64-linux-gnu/bits/mathcalls.h|205 col 1| note: candidates are: int finite(double)
so I hear you guys made a mess in here
I understand, don't worry about it
Uh, java doesn't have pairs.
God, I do not believe how people are able to work with this language.
09:51
@ScottW I got an Omega watch :P
@ScottW except pairs
@BartekBanachewicz and sanity
user1804599
class Pair<T, U> {
    public T first;
    public U second;

    public Pair() { }
    public Pair(T f, U s) { first = f; second = s; }
}
user1804599
vOv
@Griwes It's rotten to the core.
09:53
@Griwes that's because someone thought that Perl's eq is a great idea and forbid operator overloading
@not-rightfold Exactly! It's this simple, so it should be just slapped in some of standard hea-- modules and be done with it.
user1804599
Noo.
user1804599
If it was standard it would have getFirst(), getSecond(), setFirst(T) and setSecond(U)!
ahahah
now show me n-tuple
user1804599
setFirst(T) throws IOException
09:55
@BartekBanachewicz I am so glad Java isn't more retarded than it is and allows overloading -.-"
user1804599
@BartekBanachewicz Perl’s eq is nice.
I would probably kill myself if my getters and setters would need to have get and set in their names - it is bad enough they do exist :F
@Griwes combination of Java and C could be called Cava (Polish pun intended)
...
@not-rightfold as much as barbed wire in your throat
09:56
anybody has info why back_inserter is slow, I remember STL saying it but I need some reference
@NoSenseEtAl does your profiler tell you that it's slow?
@ScottW oh god
@NoSenseEtAl Lack of .reserve() before using it?
user1804599
N-tuples are easy. Just switch to Scala.
N-tuples are easy. Just use variadic templates.
09:58
@BartekBanachewicz I suck, so I dont profile... @Griwes I was thinking how nice would it be if it had .reserve so the stl algs could call that on it... and then it would call reserve on vector/deque
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Just messing with ya
@NoSenseEtAl Just reserve beforehand.
@BoltClock Just didn't get it. I was serial upvoted and predicted that the votes would be reversed the following day through either reversal or simple user deletion, and I was right! Not naughty at all
Or do .insert() instead of whatever you are doing with back_inserter().
09:59
:D
(,) is the only real tuple
We should make TelKitty a mod, so that SO can finally die the rejuvenating death it needs for us all to move on

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