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20:00
wow
that box-sizing thing is cool
@Pawnguy7 gotta tell you that CSS3 is really making stuff easier
user3010322
@EtiennedeMartel It's all fun and games until someone runs into a sliding door.
@BartekBanachewicz Coliru's been using it from the beginning.
Using non-standard syntax though (moz-box etc..)
Because I was used to XUL's box layout.
@DeadMG just... if something can be move-constructed. Imagine it is being constructed in a function, taking the thing it moves on. If the function takes a &, you cannot move anymore. So, I was thinking, why ever & when you can &&? (in this hypothetical function)
@BartekBanachewicz as opposed to?
@Pawnguy7 only const& prevents move
@Pawnguy7 CSS2?
20:04
Doesn't the reference collapse?
collapse to what?
non-reference? no
@BartekBanachewicz all I remember of CSS was looking up properties on w3schools.
@StackedCrooked && to &, at which point you couldn't use it with something taking &&.
user3010322
All I remember of CSS was terror as my website changed from browser to browser.
@Pawnguy7 just use std::move again and it magically becomes a && again.
unless it is const&.
afaik
I was wondering. Exceptions are also used to signal that an operation has left or is going to leave the object in some invalid state (in respect to its invariants), right?
20:07
@Pawnguy7 if you used w3schools no shit it was horrible
To be honest, I still am not quite sure how std::move works.
@Jefffrey exceptions simply mean that you don't know how to deal with an error at the current scope
user3010322
@Jefffrey Yep.
@BartekBanachewicz for documentation, or for tutorials?
@Jefffrey Not necessarily, an exception can leave the object in the state it had before the operation started
user3010322
20:08
Forgot to isntall the November CTp on this computer..
@Pawnguy7 Because that's just more effort. You have to think about the semantics of each T individually. Whereas taking T by value is basically optimal for virtually every T.
user3010322
@melak47 Almost there, finding all the bugs that are making it so it's invoking the copy constructor!
An exception can occur in a stateless function.
user3010322
I WILL TAME THIS CODE.
"It's simpler", "yep", and "not necessarily". Hmm.
user1804599
20:08
Hmm.
@Pawnguy7 std::move doesn't move shit
user1804599
If I mix a mixin into A, what is A? A mixinee?
@Pawnguy7 It casts unconditionally to T&& to let the overloading make the move.
I get that it does not directly move something.
Well.
@Pawnguy7 both
20:09
@rightfold A is the party.
user3010322
std::move(), much like std::forward<>(), is a type transformer and does no work except in maybe a few niche cases.
If you use move on something that is not &&, what do you get?
@Pawnguy7 a r-value reference
You get &&.
20:10
Couldn't that... break things?
Every C++ feature can break things.
Like.
user3010322
const& Tit mytits;
Tit yourtits{ std::move( mytits ); } // Because mytits are const, yourtits does not steal mytits. It makes a copy and stores that in a temporary &&. This is one of the niche cases, IIRC
In some implementation is literally just static_casts the value to a magic && value.
If I go A a; something(std::move(a)).
Is a valid anymore?
20:11
nope, I mean yes.
it's in an valid "empty" state.
@ThePhD You saw the same video I did, didn't you?
bloody fuck! it seems that whitespace matters in VC++
user3010322
@Abyx :O Where at?
Is it... magic?
Magic does not exist.
20:12
Almost.
user3010322
@Pawnguy7 It's not magic. It's just manipulation.
Well.
@Pawnguy7 It's in a valid but unspecified state (which means you can safely call anything that has no precondition, like vector::clear, but nothing else).
@StackedCrooked Friendship exists, and friendship is magic. Therefore, magic exists. QED.
ah I see :P
I copied and pasted the Catch single header in MSVS, and it reformatted it - removed leading whitespace. And that reformatting broke Catch
20:12
Isn't the point of reference collapsing to not move on lvalues?
user3010322
@EtiennedeMartel Friendship is also manly.
user3010322
@Abyx It might have tripped up a template or something.
@Pawnguy7 The point of reference collapsing is avoiding T&&&&...
user3010322
r-value of an r-value of T.
Why does & and && become &?
20:14
I dunno what exactly happened, but somehow it broke the code. maybe it was line endings
user3010322
@Pawnguy7 It doesn't?
Well, my question about exceptions was: why would a copy throw an exception? The question arose from the fact that if an object is passed to the copy constructor, there would just be a copy of a valid object (the one passed) to another, leaving both in a valid state. Then I remembered that std::vector throws std::bad_alloc if there's not enough space (or something like that), and I realized that was a stupid question.
FF seized up. I closed it with TM. Waited a bit, restart, no go. TM shows FF process stck with only one thread. Close, reboot. Obviously, this behavior has nothing whatsoever to do with the Flash plugin crashes I've been having continually, Adobe sw being so great an' all.
user3010322
Tits&& mytits;
typedef std::add_ref<decltype( mytits )>::type ultra_referenced_tits; // still Tits&&
@ThePhD It does.
20:16
template<typename T> void foo(T& t) { foo<T&>(t); } // collapses until compiler crash
user3010322
@DeadMG Shrug.
@Pawnguy7 So that when I take T&&, the compiler can substitute [const] U& for an lvalue and the argument will collapse to [const] U&, enabling perfect forwarding.
What you have to take from this is that it's always tits.
all the fucking tits.
Why would you want to move on an lvalue?
Never mind, I can think of something.
user3010322
20:18
Oh god
Isn't that kind of dangerous?
user3010322
optional<T&>
user3010322
I sure hope this is possible @__@
@ThePhD optional<reference_wrapper<T>> ?
Oh wait, you cannot do this with const, you said.
user3010322
20:19
@Borgleader That looks ugly as fuck.
user3010322
No, I want optional<T&>
user3010322
It shouldn't be too hard to implement.
@Pawnguy7 Not really.
// what do you expect the output of this program (or compiler output) to be?
#include <iostream>
template<typename T> int foo(T& t) {
return foo<T&>(t);
}

int main() {
int n = 1;
std::cout << foo(n);
}
@DeadMG read below
20:21
@StackedCrooked Infinite recursion.
user3010322
		optional<TValue&> try_get_value ( const TKey& key ) {
			ulword index;
			if ( try_get_index( key, index ) ) {
				return items[ index ];
			}
			if ( indices.TryGetValue( *defaultkey, index ) ) {
				return items[ index ];
			}
			return nullopt;
		}
user3010322
^ This looks liek
user3010322
it should work.
francis@Mac ~/tmp :( $ g++ -O3 -Wall -Wextra -Werror main.cpp
francis@Mac ~/tmp $ ./a.out
1437252736francis@Mac ~/tmp $ ./a.out
1420938368francis@Mac ~/tmp $ ./a.out
1448995968francis@Mac ~/tmp $ ./a.out
1455606912francis@Mac ~/tmp $ 7
@ThePhD It won't.
20:21
^ It keeps printing different numbers.
user3010322
@StackedCrooked That's creepy.
@sbi oh, you may ever so mildly interested to here that I finally got a knife sharpener. Frankly, I am angry that I was not shouted at earlier to get one. Knife is now so sharp, I can near enough drop tomatoes in half over the blade! I also may have removed a very thin sliver of finger skin without even feeling it...
user3010322
@DeadMG It won't? =[
Xeo
Xeo
Oh wow, Audiosurf for 99ct on Humble Store
20:22
Can I move a const object?
FUCK ADOBE TILL IT BLEEDS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Hi.
user3010322
Nope.
@ThePhD The core language's rules w.r.t references mean that you can't just treat them like any other type. You need to explicitly specialize optional<T&>- typically implemented with T*.
@Pawnguy7 Not a chance.
Bjarne actually replied to my email.
user3010322
20:23
@Rapptz WHY ARE YOU HERE GO DO YOUR PAPER. D:<
@Rapptz o_o
@Rapptz I heard he's actually pretty good about that.
@Xeo god damn it, more money to spend I guess
@Rapptz Cool! :)
Xeo
Xeo
wait
not anymore
wtf
20:24
what's he like? Professional, snarky, rude, polite, laissez-faire...?
@Rapptz What did you say?
And what did he say?
I forgot the honorific so I thought he'd be like my professors and snark at me for that but he didn't
user3010322
Honorific?
Dr.
20:25
@xeo you realise the store does daily deals...
Honorific... you forgot to call him Bjarne-sama?
-sama
lol yeah
user3010322
Bjarne-kuuun~
more like Stroustrup-sama
Lmao.
20:25
Bjarne-chan
Time to ask my art friends to draw up a chibi Bjarne-chan.
jesus fuck
zch
zch
Why would you use his name in email anyway? He knows it.
The email was why Concepts Lite had weird casing.
20:26
want to play BF3? Nope. Download new browser plugin ... download new Origin... fuck.
user3010322
Lol
@DeadMG Wait, if it is const it has to be an lvalue anyway. Hrm.
user3010322
You would e-mail him about that.
user3010322
YOU WOULD.
@zch introduction
20:26
@Pawnguy7 No it doesn't.
you can have cv-qualified rvalues of user-defined type.
zch
zch
@Rapptz, boilerplate? bleh
it was even considered idiomatic at one point.
Xeo
Xeo
@Rapptz So what did he say?
Like.
@Rapptz What was his response? inb4 AUTO-REPLY I am currently out of the office, but I will attempt to respond to your email in a timely fashion.
20:27
He said he doesn't like ThisCase or this_cass.
So if he had the choice he'd use This_case
If I have a Thing thing or a const Thing thing, if I pass it to something taking &&, either way I will get a const &, right?
@Rapptz He wrote that he thinks camel-case is butt ugly in one of his books.
@Rapptz Seriously? That's the fucking uglied shit ever.
@Pawnguy7 Right (assuming that it's deduced T&& and not, say, Thing&&).
@Pawnguy7 No you'll get an F. Now get back to your studies.
@DeadMG so are most things using templates.
20:29
Mobile chat sucks
@DeadMG He always uses this style in his books.
@DeadMG Wouldn't Thing and T be synonymous in examples? Or is this something different?
@Pawnguy7 No. Reference collapsing and perfect forwarding are powered by type deduction.
if you have Thing&&, it will only ever be one and exactly one thing- Thing&&.
T&& is perfect forwarding because T can be Thing, or Thing& or const Thing&.
user3010322
Oh wait I should lrn2read
20:31
Sigh.
not unless you were to explicitly specify it for some reason.
How long does it take for these things to make sense :\
user3010322
Why are you so hung up on these semantics anyways?
@DeadMG He'll always get a const&?
oh, er, no.
the result is as cv-qualified as the source.
20:31
phew
@Pawnguy7 Lots of people struggle with rvalue references.
@DeadMG Not sure, I kind of suck as templates too.
And everybody uses them together :\
After I kinda figured out what foo(T&&) means I no longer understand what foo(int&&) means.
foo(int&& n); // n has a name therefore it's an lvalue-ref?
however, how is it different from int&?
@Pawnguy7 Rvalue refs have two main uses, and one of them is worthless without a template.
@StackedCrooked It can only be passed an rvalue, but the name n itself is an lvalue.
@DeadMG this is true
20:34
@DeadMG I see.
user3010322
An implicit conversion
user3010322
from optional<T> to T
user3010322
Would be bad or good, in your eyes?
Hm, it seems int&& mostly exists for the purpose of overloading..
what the fuck no shoot yourself right now.
20:34
I also probably am bad at overloading operators, but mostly because I never do it.
@StackedCrooked Yep, that's rvalue ref's purpose.
user3010322
So it's not a good idea,
Aaaaah..!
user3010322
it's a great idea?
the missing piece
20:35
@Rapptz coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/d0c406c419c6ae89 "\d{4,5}" is twice as fast as "\d\d\d\d\d?". Still ~300x slower than strstr.
Oh.
And I don't know most of the standard library, that was it.
mmm
is there a type_trait
Well, I have recovered my machine. Thank you Adobe for the most miserable, virulent heap of utter shit ever to ooze forth onto the web in the guise of professional software.
for removing cv and reference qualifiers only?
decay_t also remove pointerness and stuff
No. Just make your own.
20:39
basically i want a type_trait that does what auto var = expr;
Coliru is bad on mobile too :(
@Rapptz is then std::remove_cv_t<std::remove_reference_t<T>>; enough for that?
or does auto do more things?
Thats good enough.
We call that Unqualified
Still not certain how this container of references works either.
@Rapptz are you using mobile version?
20:41
@pawn it doesn't.
Yeah I'm on mobile. It's horrible
user3010322
@MooingDuck That's a pretty significant difference. 0.0
user3010322
I thought regex would be quick.
Maybe vc++ regex sucks.
user3010322
That'd be a shame.
Give a man a game engine and he delivers a game. Teach a man to make a game engine and he never delivers anything.
5
lol
user3010322
20:45
GCC has regex now but still.
@borg that's true
@Borgleader yep
@BartekBanachewicz ok, what were you saying about CSS3?
I thought it had... transitions or something.
Not really sure what else.
@Pawnguy7 box-sizing!
@thephd it'll probably suck too
user3010322
20:48
@Rapptz =[
user3010322
My FileSystemWatcher takes regex.
I noticed no one uses regex
user3010322
Probably for good reason.
lol
> background:url(data:image/png;base64,iVBORw0KGgoAAAANSUhEUgAAAAoAAAAKCAYAAACNMs‌​+9AAAAR0lEQVQYGWP8eIT/PwMBwG/zkYGJgBoGkCKgYfgVwhSBDMNpIrIinArRFWFViE0RhkJcilAU4lM‌​EV0hIEUghIxD/B4UTIQAAse8e1cQS0lsAAAAASUVORK5CYII=) ;
that's kinda cool
@BartekBanachewicz I do seem to recall I had many alignment issues
user3010322
20:53
?
user3010322
What schema is that?
Are you using the canvas 2D API?
@Pawnguy7 no, WebGL
@ThePhD schema? that's CSS
user3010322
I meant the data.
Cascading Style Schema.
20:54
@ThePhD that's a PNG?
user3010322
It has an MIME tag, the specification, and then the base64 encoded data.
@BartekBanachewicz Plan on having images?
@Pawnguy7 well, prolly
user3010322
That comes bundled in CSS?
user3010322
That's pretty nice of web browsers.
20:55
Anyway, I will be stuck with the 2D api if I made something.
Though I guess it draws rectangles so I am set, hm?

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