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17:00
the c++ police
Seriously, why can't you change it?
user1804599
a coworker implemented it that way, and it creates the three vector rows in a mathematically complex method I cannot touch
@not-rightfold cocosd2-x is c++
@EfEs array or std::array ?
user1804599
17:02
C++ also sucks. :D
@A.H. C-array
you can use templates to stop them from decaying , if thats your problem
5 mins ago, by Ef Es
template <class T>
static bool createObj(const std::vector<T> elements []
@EfEs Then you are gonna need to pass the size as a different member.
template <class T>
static bool createObj(const std::vector<T> elements [], std::size_t size);
And use it as: std::vector<T> position[3]; createObj(position, 3);
You want to work with C-isms? That's what you get.
Since we are on that train, why don't define a nice macro? #define N 3. There you go, now the code is even more easy to edit: std::vector<T> position[N]; createObj(position, N);.
Oh, remember. Don't use const int N = 3 because that's probably too C++-style for your coworker to even understand it.
Apparently I have no idea what dynamic_cast does.
17:11
@Jefffrey he's very c++11, using <memory> and so, it's just this small thing that's driving me nuts
Can we get a language lawyer here:
5
Q: Is left-shifting a negative integer undefined behavior in C++11?

John DiblingIs left-shifting a negative int Undefined Behavior in C++11? The relevant Standard passages here are from 5.8: 2/The value of E1 << E2 is E1 left-shifted E2 bit positions; vacated bits are zero-filled. If E1 has an unsigned type, the value of the result is E1 × 2E2, reduced modulo one mo...

^^ If that's true, I bet a lot of code would "break" as in "UB".
it's implementation defined, probably
I'm willing to bet that it's just an oversight when writing the standard. There's no way a non-overflowing left-shift of a negative integer can be UB.
IB
I can't imagine how much code relies on it. (including my own)
17:15
It's mystical behavior.
because mysticial is not real adjective
I was googling for the behavior of signed integer overflow on GCC and the first hit was a reply by Linus in early 2000's.
> For signed integer arithmetic, you're basically screwed. A compiler is
in theory allowed to do anything at all for signed overflows, so you
cannot portably test the result at all: you have to detect the overflow
before the operation happens.
But -1 << 1 isn't overflowing.
It's just -2.
@StackedCrooked That's kind of a big flaw isn't it?
user1804599
Get out.
@Mysticial Only in two's complement, no?
Woohoo, t-shirt incoming.
17:18
@Borgleader Quoting Linus?
@DeadMG Then that'd be IB instead of UB.
@StackedCrooked No, I mean not being able to check for signed overflows
@Borgleader Depends on what attributes you wanted. But the Standard is way too trigger-happy with UB for integral operations where IB would suffice.
What is it that makes signed integer so special?
17:19
@DeadMG IB?
@StackedCrooked Because unsigned don't really have different implementations between machines.
signed doesn't either anymore, of course- everyone uses two's complement.
user1804599
Indeterminate behaviour. :D
I also seem to recall there was something about loop indices overflowing and how if signed overflow was not UB, some loop optimizations could not be done.
signed should be defined as an interpretation of unsigned
signed should be defined as two's complement.
17:21
Yeah.
but, of course, the Standard caters to machines from 1970 so they don't do this.
Aw, you killed it :\
But if unsigned doesn't have different implementations between machines then why not use unsigned to represent signed.
A sane machine should be defined as:
- CHAR_BIT = a power of two
- arithmetic right-shift
- no padding in any integer
- two's complement
- IEEE floating-point
@StackedCrooked Because some machines don't support that kind of operation.
17:24
@Mysticial So, inadequate for Hell++, then.
@Mysticial Integer padding? first time i hear about that
ISTR there were some with e.g. separate signed and unsigned registers or something like that? Plus, of course, the performance of using the non-native signed representation. And the endless bitching about people from X wanting rep Y and people from Z wanting rep W.
@Mysticial LLVM has CHAR_BIT = 8, arithmetic and logical right shift, no padding in CHAR_BIT-multiple integers, two's complement, and IEEE floating-point.
What is the word again for unsigned "overflowing" back to zero?
rotation or something
er, overflow.
@EtiennedeMartel WCS America finals in Toronto, happening now :3
17:29
"wrap around"
@Borgleader Why do they need to pick the most boring city in Canada?
@Jefffrey Is that Comic Sans?
@Borgleader You mean WCS Koreans-who-didn't-want-to-risk-WCS-Korea
user1804599
@StackedCrooked Watashi ga Motenai no wa Dou Kangaetemo Omaera ga Warui! is indeed fun. Now watching second episode.
I read in an (old) book that TCP Sequence comparison must be implemented as static_cast<int32_t>(a - b) > 0 to test if a > b. But isn't that UB?
@StackedCrooked What's a and b?
17:30
uint32_t
@EtiennedeMartel Yeah... they should do it in montreal. I don't even have classes today =/
@StackedCrooked Then I'm going with no.
unsigned underflow is just as legal as unsigned overflow.
but
@DeadMG Heh, well Polt is managing kicking ass in WCS America AND being a full time studen
17:31
I don't quite remember the rules for if you try to cast to a signed integral value from an unsigned value that's too big.
it's certainly not defined what value you get if that's the case.
so I'm going to go with "The code was written assuming two's complement".
Initial sequence number for a TCP connection is random. Wrap arounds are not uncommon.
well, stuff like this
> return static_cast<int32_t>(lhs.value_ - rhs.value_) > 0;
I would certainly call out.
you need to check the rules for creating a signed integral type from a too-big value.
I see.
Can it be implemented in a portable way?
well, I don't even know the underlying logic.
Xeo
Xeo
@StackedCrooked Why wouldn't you just do lhs < rhs?
17:36
@Xeo I suspect that the number may start at UINT_MAX and then the next sequence number could be 0.
user1804599
static_cast<auto>(expr)
Xeo
Xeo
@DeadMG hm
@StackedCrooked I think you can for unsigned numbers. I think that if overflow, the result must be less than both the arguments. But ask a question/look on SO.
Xeo
Xeo
unsigned numbers have mod 2-arithmetic
Anyone know if an algorithm with O(n^(log_2 n)) complexity? Just popped into my head, curious.
17:45
@Mysticial Hasn't -1 << 1 always been UB?
I'm not gonna worry about it too much. This is the way everyone implements it (because everyone read the same book about tcp). (The book used macros though, eeuw.)
@Rapptz I wouldn't have thought it was. It doesn't overflow.
@Mysticial Well, I searched around and it's UB in C99 too.
At most IB. But I never thought it would be UB.
15
Q: Why does left shift operation invoke Undefined Behaviour when the left side operand has negative value?

Prasoon SauravIn C bitwise left shift operation invokes Undefined Behaviour when the left side operand has negative value. Relevant quote from ISO C99 (6.5.7/4) The result of E1 << E2 is E1 left-shifted E2 bit positions; vacated bits are filled with zeros. If E1 has an unsigned type, the value of ...

also, I think that makes it a duplicate doesn't it?
17:50
Food, sleep. Ta-da.
Do you know COBOL?
Xeo
Xeo
@Mysticial: The wording is clear as day to me, really. Just for another example: "If the second operand of / or % is zero the behavior is undefined."
I think there was an xydc once.
user1804599
@Pawnguy7 I know a very little bit of COBOL.
user1804599
I once wrote a video game in it.
Xeo
Xeo
@Pawnguy7 *xkcd ?
17:52
lol
user1804599
void *xkcd;!
@Xeo yes
@sehe I didn't change anything. Maybe rackspace updated their infrastructure..
user1804599
“xydc” is too pronounceable to be “xkcd.”
Apparently it wasn't one.
I was going for, you can sleep forever unless you know it. I failed.
Does kicking hardware count?
I was searching for 0xFEEEFEEE.
Got youtube video "fefefefe"
I don't, but Google is evil.
Trying to take over the world with terrible search results.
17:57
@ScottW I'm happy to see you on here baby.
@Pawnguy7 Watching the video turns you into undefined behavior.
I'm happy its Friday
Is there a grand list of VS memory magic numbers?
I know of the wikipedia magic number article, but there must be an MS one.
Relevant SO answer:
73
Q: In Visual Studio C++, what are the memory allocation representations?

HidekiAIIn Visual Studio, we've all had "baadf00d", have seen seen "CC" and "CD" when inspecting variables in the debugger in C++ during run-time. From what I understand, "CC" is in DEBUG mode only to indicate when a memory has been new() or alloc() and unitilialized. While "CD" represents delete'd or ...

user1804599
Already at episode four!
Haha.
The series definitely has a "real" factor.
user1804599
It reminds me of myself. :<
me too :D
user1804599
The actual reason I don’t have a driver’s license yet is because I’d have to talk to the instructor. :(
user1804599
18:20
And I’d have to contact the school anyway.
My instructor was an asshole.
user1804599
*shudder*
user1804599
I don’t like talking to people I don’t know well.
yesterday, by R. Martinho Fernandes
@BartekBanachewicz Write a batching iterator? Gosh, no. PTSD.
lol. PTSD
Also, not very effective. If you really want it 8-char batching, then: write it yourself. It's the way of optimization. Make it a chunking loop? foreach(8bytesubranges, consolidate(output))
@not-rightfold That's not really a problem for me as long as it's not smalltalk.
user1804599
18:22
I am bad at formal settings.
user1804599
I’ll occasionally say “jij” instead of “u.”
Does that really matter?
@not-rightfold I don't think you do. I mean, I didn't really talk much. He did, of course :)
I don't think I ever saw anyone offended by that.
user1804599
@sehe I’d have to say hi. :x
18:23
@not-rightfold No. You wouldn't have to.
user1804599
@StackedCrooked a high school teacher once told me to get out because of it.
user1804599
(He was a fucking asshole anyway but hey. :D)
He identifed himself as an asshole.
@not-rightfold And you would
user1804599
18:24
We had a physics teacher who said “u” to students. :D
@StackedCrooked could have been glitch in the matrix
I'm resizing my server instance to 1GB RAM.
It takes a while to complete.
Aw so nice: after more than 2 months, one upvote for this answer
1
A: may be boost ssl handshake function have some memory leak

seheI see no difference on my PC. I fake a little server on port 13: while true; do date | sudo netcat -l -p 13; done I run the program: make && valgrind ./test Output without handshake: sehe@desktop:/tmp$ valgrind ./test ==15878== Memcheck, a memory error detector ==15878== Copyright (C) 200...

user1804599
user1804599
18:32
> 4:3
user1804599
Seriously? :V
user1804599
@ScottW UW WARME BAKKES
Xeo
Xeo
Meh, WataMote. Can't see what people like about that one.
@ScottW They keep getting younger. Why, I remember when some of them were my age...
Chasing them keeps getting more criminal.
user1804599
18:36
Not in the Netherlands!
user1804599
You can date people aged 12 here and nothing will happen. :V
@ScottW When I was in first grade, they were sure old.
@ScottW Now that I have kids in school, I've re-discovered the ability to tell them apart, to at least some degree.
I know a kid when I see one.
user1804599
I like a girl who’s 17.
user1804599
Hence I’m pedophile.
18:42
@ScottW Did you do it in the movies?
In Belgium sex is legally allowed at 14. If the girl is under 16 then the guy must not be more than 4 year older than her.
@ScottW yea
@not-rightfold Aren't you 17 as well?
hue hue hue hue
@EtiennedeMartel nah, he's actually older
user1804599
18:43
@EtiennedeMartel only when I’m in Belgium.
user1804599
@StackedCrooked In the Netherlands pot is legally allowed a 8.
@GamesBrainiac You missed the joke.
user1804599
Hey, I’m 18 now.
user1804599
I can have up to five cannabis plants in my home legally!
room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: Everyone is 17 in Belgium. [c++] [c++11] [c++1y] [no-questions]
user1804599
lol
user1804599
Grijze*
user1804599
Names are almost always capitalised in Dutch.
@not-rightfold If I recall correctly, here in Colorado the limit is 6.
@ScottW Nope--even as a teenager I never particularly wanted to.
@ScottW They're called "personnel" or "staff"
@not-rightfold sounds boring
user1804599
18:51
@sehe onthoud: hoe dichter bij de nul, hoe strakker om de lul.
@ScottW aye sir
> "and nothing happens"
0
A: More SO users are not reading the post before replying or voting

Gabriele PetronellaI think the answer is 8 am in Paris. Wait for the edit...

lol
@ScottW Well, considering how my brother (and roommate) is an avid marijuana smoker, I guess I should start locking my room's door at night.
@not-rightfold Geniaal. Ik zag die "live" (wel, eerste uitzending)
user1804599
Ik niet. :(
user1804599
18:53
@sehe olol
Why do you call yourself "this OP"? This is suspicious... — sasha.sochka 15 mins ago
this original post
context clues..?
Perhaps.
But much clearer is "this question."
@ScottW what exactly is in a text RPG?
Yup, I know and actually in the second block I say this is not the same. But I think this doesn't deserve a minus. — sasha.sochka 2 mins ago
Is there a way to search comments?
19:02
Shall we point out to him how the voting works? ^
@Pawnguy7 Yes, just search in your comments or use Stack Exchange Data Explorer
@sehe I found a nickel :)
^ I don't get it
Xeo
Xeo
Vla-lalala-lala-la-lala-la, vla-lalala-lala-la-la-lala-la-la-laaaa~
-1
A: Dynamic string with Hex value as "\3"

Hans ZCast x to a char and then build a string using stringstream. demo int x = 65; // 'A' stringstream ss; string s; ss << (char) (x & 0xff); ss >> s; return s;

^ what a madness
user1804599
user1804599
19:12
Weeee 50%!
-13
Q: Should Moderator Votes Count For More?

Billjk Possible Duplicate: Add vote weighting for self-nominated Experts I think that moderator votes on questions should count slightly more than non-moderator votes, say: |--------|-------| |<Non-Mod>|<Mod> | |+5------|+6-----| |-2------|-3-----| |________________| I think...

String can push back ints?
Why has no one mentioned the importance of Divisible-by-5 rep?
I think that's the main problem :D
@Pawnguy7 chars.
Could it be... Comic Sans?
Xeo
Xeo
19:16
> Do you like Anime? [Yes] [No]
Question from Youtube
@Xeo If you say [No] I'll delete your account. :)
Xeo
Xeo
lol
@MohammadAliBaydoun Indeed it is. I do think, however, that mods should be trusted enough to be allowed to up-vote their own answers, multiple times if necessary to reflect their quality (to take effect if and only if I ever decide to run, and am elected, as a moderator).
@Abyx I asked due to this.
Perhaps it casts fine to a char, but still misleading.
Xeo
Xeo
@Mysticial Great, I clicked [Yes] and it showed me a Naruto channel. :|
19:19
lol
Do you sometimes use a struct with static methods as an alternative to namespace with free functions?
yes
but with non-static methods.
free functions sucks.
@StackedCrooked often, e.g. for partial ordering of variadic function templates (but it's a necessity)
@StackedCrooked Yes, you cant derive a namespace
19:26
because they tend to became like void foo(Context& ctx, ...); void bar(Context& ctx, ...)
@DavidKron inheritance is bad.
@Abyx std::sin does not have any context
(removed)
@EvgenyPanasyuk I don't commit any std::sins.
19:28
@EvgenyPanasyuk The context are the floating point direction, just as the context for std::sort is the collection.
lol, I thought there was a typo in std::cin
@Abyx No :)
If you dont want to pass any context at all, you should give up function parameters. And thats like.....yeah...
well I don't write sin() too often
@DavidKron wtf do you mean, floating-point direction?
also, the context for std::sort is a range, not a collection.
19:30
@DeadMG yes, sin() takes a directon, often a floating point value
"angle"?
Exactly
right.
everybody just calls that an "angle".
Well, im swedish
"What is your direction of Sin?"
19:32
fair enough.
Here some even use the term "snurra" instead of loop, for snurra etc.
well, I gotta say
say it
maybe this is just bias, but as far as I am aware, practically every serious programmer in the entire world, ever, programs in English.
I do
19:33
Is it possible to program, in other languages :s ?
I don't really think so
@Xeo From Mo-mooo-mooo-mooo-mooo-mooo-mooo-sco--~?
@DeadMG it would be great if it were true =\
@DavidKron Excel does nicely translate worksheet functions. I bet it's turing complete
Thats actually something that i really thought about like, how does chinese do it?
19:34
@DavidKron yeah, but that is terrible:
@DavidKron Like bunnies
but a lot of faggots use identifiers and comments in their native language
you're a faggot
@EvgenyPanasyuk Only bad because of Visual Basic
just like that one ^
19:35
@sehe That is not basic. It is special language for some russian ERP. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1C_Company
@EvgenyPanasyuk is it Laptev's? ah 1C
@EvgenyPanasyuk O. Good. It looks really close to Visual Basic, though
Xeo
Xeo
@sehe No, I meant vla, not Vlad
I dont think i would have such a problem with it if it was not for the fact that you HAVE to mix it with english. I think thats what gives such an inconsistent uggliness
19:36
@Xeo :)
Do you know a more proffesional term for slack?
@DavidKron It's a problem with knowledge sharing and code reuse. Imagine OpenCV being done in Finnish.
user1804599
@DavidKron What do you mean by slack? It's a verb, a noun with various (related) meanings AFAICT
Like in the context of someone in your project starts to slack
19:40
@DavidKron Do you mean "slack" like this?:
"Slack off" might be a more correct term
@DavidKron Someone is not actively involved, pulling his weight, (ab)using room for freewheeling, not aligned with team priorities
Of course, I'm assuming the rest of the team isn't slacking
In Bruges slack means that you can do a leg split.
@EvgenyPanasyuk Mmm. I didn't negotiate the full benefits package, apparently
@sehe I am not sure if it is C++ position. He used char buffer[200]; int basePort = -1; - maybe only for C coders. (2:46)
19:48
200 bytes will be enough for any buffer.
I don't care. I'm sad I didn't know that employers offer those benefits. I mean, I don't care for the gunpoint
@DeadMG Well, she made him overflow his buffer in ~30 seconds, so, safe bet
4
Woa, sfml is seriously overusing the concept of oo
Why would i want my sprites to overload a virtual draw function...Im gonna call it on multiple objects like 60 times a frame...
my buffer was created after UB had already started
user1804599
@sehe pfft.
@not-rightfold you can do better?
user1804599
19:52
I can make my buffer overflow within ten seconds.
@DavidKron If you have many different sprites of diffrerent types then perhaps you should just use heterogeneous container.
user1804599
If I’m really horny.
oh it's 7 minutes til Friday ends.
@DavidKron virtual methods cost less than a microsecond
(in my tests on a high-end server)
user1804599
Not if you change timezones!
19:54
@EvgenyPanasyuk Its not what i do its what sfml does
@not-rightfold oh really what a good idea
user1804599
Speaking of which
user1804599
that retarded summer time is ending this weekend.
I have quite a bit of Friday left.
Isn't that what a tuple is?
This 550$ card, beats a 1000$ GTX Titan!?! dafuq?
Is there a way to get multiple calls to malloc to return consecutive memory on Windows?
@EvgenyPanasyuk the link is broken
@Borgleader I don't see a CUDA benchmark :-)
19:56
@Mikhail Yes, keep trying until you get lucky :P
@EvgenyPanasyuk You mean type erasure right? Yeah im using that for my game objects, however im talking about what sfml does on a library level. I cant change the fact that a sf::sprite derives from a sf::drawable
I dont even call sprite::draw
@StackedCrooked no - tuple is just struct of values. heterogeneous container is bunch of containers, each container for each type.
@Mikhail You'll need to use your own pool allocator.
I tell my render to "render this sprite", rendertarget::draw(sf::sprite)
19:57
@DavidKron No, it is not type erasure - it is pure compile-time thing.
@Mikhail I'll just assume you're trolling
@StackedCrooked virtual call costs ~5-10ns
For me type erasure is compile time aswell tough, i mean, i basically bake in template types into lambdas.
@EvgenyPanasyuk yeah, it was being conservative

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