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10:00
I sort-a half remember seeing this ~2 weeks ago. I don't remember whether I just gave up or found the cause. Grrrrr
@MarkGarcia No, that's copy elision.
It's not a better example.
^ Woot for epic demonstruction skills
Seems like aggregate structs are becoming more and more problematic in C++11.
@melak47 Ah. See. Puny brain forgetting about those silly hand-holding workarounds:
Nov 28 at 10:36, by sehe
Damn. ICE went away only after physically removing the build directories. A Clean wasn't enough
@MarkGarcia They always were. But yeah. I'm starting to move away from them for production code.
@sehe o.O
10:07
Oh, and what I actually wanted to try was assignment :) coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/daac7873df75bf63
@R.MartinhoFernandes WTF
I really hope it's a bug. If these are the rules, this is ridiculous. foo has two movable members, yet it's a brick.
Xeo
Xeo
Hm... is there an easy way with Hg to squash commits?
@R.MartinhoFernandes the weird thing is that compiler error refers to the deleted copy constr of unique_ptr
@R.MartinhoFernandes clang agrees :E
> note: copy assignment operator of 'foo' is implicitly deleted because field 'p' has a deleted copy assignment operator
10:11
But it's clearly move assignment.
@melak47 His paste uses clang.
Xeo
Xeo
The question is why is the move assignment operator neither declared nor deleted?
I'm posting it.
and why it propagates from with_copy to foo
Xeo
Xeo
@TemplateRex Deletion propagates, but "not being declared" wouldn't, I'd think.
10:12
You lot been following the 'pacman guy'? It's just embarrassing to watch :(
in one of those "everything is shit" moods :S
Xeo
Xeo
Oh noez, no clang-bot in #llvm anymore :(
@MartinJames I also feel sad for him. :(
-6
Q: Pac-Man Game Urgent If ANyone Can Help Me I'll be Thnxfull to hIm

Shani Mughal#include<iostream.h> int main() { cout<<"Help ME Please.............."; return 0; } Hi guys, I know after reading my post you will dislike it. But Please Read my Full Problem Then Decide what i'm saying.I seriously Need Help of a Good Programmer Being a student I'm Just the beginner in ...

10:13
@MartinJames epic beard sample machine?
@Xeo so any aggregate of arbitrary UDT (with user-provided CopyC's ) should implicitly generate move constructors?
@thecoshman oh, that's just rubbish
@TemplateRex Yes, with memberwise move.
@sehe ... what part of it?
Xeo
Xeo
(which would degenerate to copies for with_copy)
10:14
@R.MartinhoFernandes that would make sense, and g++ does it and clang won't, is that the problem here?
are move assignment operators also generated?
I think it highly likely any number of people on SO could code this quickly, however, it cheapens the degree you are taking, and programmers as a whole, if we do the work for you and you get a grade based on that. Perhaps you should consult tutors/professors and ask for some intensive 1-on-1, or re-consider being a programmer. I shall have to bow out of this one. — GMasucci 15 mins ago
@Xeo However, the compiler seems to think that it can't move because with_copy doesn't have a move ctor.
nice
@TemplateRex Right.
10:16
@Griwes I do not. :p
@thecoshman I was just getting with the vibe
@R.MartinhoFernandes defaulting the move assignment operator on with_copy seems to work?
> Urgent If ANyone Can Help Me I'll be Thnxfull to hIm
rofl.
why did Flexo delete that answer?
10:20
I think there's Bjarne's advice to be explicit about implict special member functions. (use =delete or =default explicitly).
someone post the suicide hotline, I sense this guy is desperate
@DeadMG Reassuring, right. I mean, sometimes I don't answer because I wonder whether the OP would be properly thnxful
@jalf Too bad.
@TemplateRex he is. But then again, some of them just have no scruples. They seem to have learned that it is ok to completely put all dignity aside when nagging to get what you want. It's something that I recognize from some parenting styles
@sehe what 'vibe'?
10:22
@thecoshman Oh snap. You're shit too!
@sehe what are you on about?
@thecoshman About your inability to just follow simple reply-links and remember your own scribblings at the same time.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Nope.
btw, anyone here using QtCreator?
10:24
@sehe I still, yet again, fail to understand what the hell you are on about.
Guys, whats a good book for learning how parallel processes work? Something comprehensive, but for a beginner too?
@TemplateRex I do.
@GamesBrainiac inter-process communication?
@MarkGarcia I tried it out this weekend, switching from Eclipse-CDT (which was crashing insanely often lately), so far I like it
@StackedCrooked The whole thing, everything from forks, threads, mutexes, semaphores
10:26
@melak47 I'm not trying to fix it.
@MartinJames gawd
@thecoshman That's good. That's your choice. I don't feel responsible and, on my part, have decided to leave things this way :)
I learned basics of multithreading by reading the boost.thread documentation.
And by experimenting with it.
@TemplateRex The file navigation needs some time to get used to. Though it's so wonderful that I haven't yet encountered a crash or any significant lags.
10:27
@Griwes, that book is not really an introduction (it is very good IMO)
i'll box your face
@Griwes TBF that doesn't really explain how things work. Instead it focuses on how those things are reflected in the language and libraries since c++11
@sehe and I have grown tired of trying to understand you.
@StackedCrooked Yikes, I've never even used a boost library :P
@TemplateRex It is a good book. The only one which explains C++ memory model afaik.
10:27
@MarkGarcia yes, it's very quick and snappy. But I use it as a glorified multi-document editor, just running Cmake/ninja under the hood
@thecoshman So much is apparent. That doesn't always mean you need to blame others. Check your own entry message :/ (the one I linked to, apart from replying to it in the first place)
@GamesBrainiac Today you could read the C++11 thread, mutex, etc.. documentation.
Honestly, the later chapters of the book made my head hurt.
@StackedCrooked False. Java Concurrency In Practice explains it too.
AFAIK is never false
unless you are lying
10:28
@StackedCrooked I could, but lets have a look at what @Griwes posted.
@GamesBrainiac It's the same. It just goes a little further.
@sehe ... what ever.
@StackedCrooked There's a university research group somewhere that came up with the foundations. They have some nice publications. Apparently, they're very readable (I didn't)
@R.MartinhoFernandes Btw, Java Concurrency explains the C++ memory model?
@MarkGarcia Honestly, those last chapters made me slightly disappointed (they were mainly glossing over things that you will run into when actually developing concurrent programs/libraries)
10:30
@StackedCrooked All right then, thanks for that. I'll stick to books :P
@TemplateRex It's a pain to use it's Run CMake interface. Same here, I'm using CMake GUI to set variables. After you've set variables and generate makefiles, you can directly edit and build CMakeLists.txt in the IDE.
@StackedCrooked The theory is the same. Cf. OS-es all have mutexen/spinlocks/monitors etc.
@sehe a very good introduction would be to read Herb Sutter's columns Effective Concurrency
@TemplateRex Maybe CC @GamesBrainiac
@TemplateRex starred :D
10:32
@MarkGarcia why is it a pain? I have some GLOB_RECURSE in my CMAkeLists.txt and rarely have to rerun it. SImply Ctr+B and build is done
Mmm. My BsBuild is still ICE-ing
(And no, there's no cake. That was a lie)
I think
SO should consider having paid-for premium questions
Xeo
Xeo
You just want a job.
@DeadMG do you accept rupees from desperate Shani? :-)
Zing
10:33
lol
0
Q: Why is the move constructor neither declared nor deleted?

R. Martinho FernandesConsider the following classes struct with_copy { with_copy() = default; with_copy(with_copy const&) {} with_copy& operator=(with_copy const&) { return *this; } }; struct foo { with_copy c; std::unique_ptr<int> p; }; Does with_copy have a copy constructor? Yes. It was exp...

@Xeo haha
@R.MartinhoFernandes explicitly defined -> user-provided? hm?
@TemplateRex If you ever need to set the CMake command line like -DBOOST_ROOT=<some path> (which I don't set in the environment) plus all other required by Find*, it's much better if I have CMake gui opened.
@MarkGarcia why would you have exotic boost paths?
is the chat loading continuously for you guys too?
10:35
@TemplateRex Oh. Windows.
anyone uses wordpress?
If by continuosly you mean "smooth", yes.
Disable hats. Hats are buggy
@Telkitty NOBODY!!!!!111
@Telkitty Well, I have a wordpress blog
@sehe I mean that the chrome tab has a blue worm that keeps chasing his tail
@MarkGarcia CMake will generally find Boost on Windows. In any case, I'm just saying that in my projects the CMakeLists is generally pretty stable after the initial setup
10:36
but I've always tried very hard to avoid actually learning much about it. It's PHP :/
@Jefffrey Ew. Use a clean browser
My wordpress blog is spammed with comments, irrelevant comments ... spammy comments
Hahaha. How is that related to WP.
Also: karma
13000+ of them
10:37
Find and install a handful spam filter plugins?
@Telkitty That is a big number
I did
@Telkitty Wow. Disable comments.
worked for a few months
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes So foo is an Unstoppable Force of love?
@Xeo Doubt I'd make enough to make a serious difference to my finances. But I'd just like to have something to throw in the face of all of those "URGENT" people.
10:37
Nov 28 at 3:53, by Mark Garcia
I don't hate CMake. Until I deal with the build cache...
@Telkitty Really well, too!
Xeo
Xeo
@DeadMG The hyphenated rivals
@sehe did that too, worked for a few more months
but now something is broken and I ended up with 13000+ spams
@Telkitty Wait. Are you saying you're getting phantom comments on a non-existent comment facility?!?! That's one hell of a XSS :/
@DeadMG I thought about that a couple days ago. There have been some meta posts about it. I think that the premium questions would have to have downvoting disabled.
10:39
@Telkitty You've been P0wned. I'd assume your entire server to be compromised. Somehow "they" enabled comments where you disabled them? GAME OVER
I meant I disabled comments and the spams stopped for a few months ...
how are hats buggy?
24 mins ago, by sehe
I think it highly likely any number of people on SO could code this quickly, however, it cheapens the degree you are taking, and programmers as a whole, if we do the work for you and you get a grade based on that. Perhaps you should consult tutors/professors and ask for some intensive 1-on-1, or re-consider being a programmer. I shall have to bow out of this one. — GMasucci 15 mins ago
Have you no scruples?
@Jefffrey Talk to your milliner.
@sehe :/ ... mean
10:40
> it cheapens the degree you are taking, and programmers as a whole
@Telkitty Realism is mean
@Jefffrey Enable them to find out (FTR I mean in chat)
oh please
I'd not answer such a question even if you paid me.
unless it was a lot of moneys.
even then I'd think twice.
@DeadMG about asking for more?
you telling me your blog has never been spammed?
10:42
oh no, I'm sure I could go with that response right off the bat :P
Dammit, Msbuild. Stop ICE-ing!
@DeadMG Nor would I. Quite apart from the squeaky, annoying pleading, I haven't written a console app in decades.
@Telkitty Mine was never spammed.
@DeadMG It does. I personally think it's horrendous. I mean, legitimate business, ok. But spoiled brats buying their way through college...
10:43
too many online enemies ... :'(
Because an implicitly deleted move constructor is not declared, /9. — DyP 2 mins ago
WTF
How would you represent IPv6 header as a C++ struct? (The first 3 fields are annoying.)
Why did they make all these fucked up nonsense?
Q_Q
This is such a convoluted way of being broken.
@sehe No, I completely agree with him (and you) that I'm not going to be paid to do someone else's coursework.
Good :)
10:44
@DeadMG Yes. They're easy to spot, though. "Write my pacman game" vs "Authentication problems in distributed servers".
@Telkitty Mine hasn't. I get like a spam comment per week or so
@StackedCrooked Just do the bit representation? I mean, the rest is just serialization formats
@sehe economists have a nice though experiment to determine if you are following education for intrinsic value or for the signalling value only. Here it goes: would you prefer A) attending Harvard (substitute your own favorite) for 4 years, but without getting a degree and without being allowed to ever tell anyone; or B) getting a degree but without being allowed to ever attend a single class?
I'll just use one uint32_t for the first 3 fields.
@StackedCrooked Oh I forget you're actually doing the IPV6 stack. Disregard my comment :0
@TemplateRex That's a pretty extreme experiment. It's not obvious at all :)
10:47
@sehe for an MBA maybe not, but say MIT Computer Science?
although I agree that MOOCs will change the equation
I don't think there's any difference. MOOCs are likely by definition for the motivated
@sehe I have them enabled... I'm not noticing anything vOv
@TemplateRex I think so too. My university is pretty bad, so I decided to seek instruction elsewhere. I started off with MITx's introduction to computer science, and it really helped me find my footing.
I mean things like edx and coursera have been of great help
@Jefffrey You will notice soon. I said something similar about 30 seconds before the chat broke for the first time for me.
10:50
oh wait
they give you a place to start, and you can learn more advanced stuff by asking others or reading books or just practicing yourself.
maybe that's why it keeps loading
@TemplateRex Honestly, I prefer learning by myself, and asking for help or advice when I need it. I find it a lot less intrusive than the current modus operandi.
> C++ Advanced Options indicate that you have chosen to use "C:\$Recycle.Bin\S-1-5-21-3257244935-1655460582-683679196-1001" as your 'Fallback Location'.
That's right :3
what? :p
'pacman guy' V0.1:
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/20261197/i-want-to-move-a-character-using-keyboard-keys-left-right-down-up-i-am-just-a
> but i am not satisfied
Let's hope that's language barrier
> __int128 is not treated as an extended integer type, because changing intmax_t would be an ABI-incompatible change.
Hmm, this is wrong, no?
Does it count as an ABI breaking change if you need to recompile the clients for it to break?
it would break even if you only recompiled the library.
11:01
Oh, true.
Meh, whoever uses intmax_t in interfaces doesn't care about the ABI.
I kinda agree.
gvim needs detachable tabs.
vim is actually quite pretty
Xeo
Xeo
11:17
vim is however pretty you want it to be
@Xeo Not if I want it to be tabs-spread-across-multiple-monitors pretty.
Xeo
Xeo
Shirley there's an extension for that
There's an awkward thingy that uses the client/server functionality.
Xeo
Xeo
ew
sounds nasty
But it's awkward because things like history or even any options you set are not shared.
11:20
OMG DoS from the spams ...
It merely switches to the right instance if you :e <file-open-in-another-instance>.
can't stop them ... even though they aren't appearing because I disallowed that
I got an idea! I am moving the blog directory to some far far away place on the server ...
Fuck.
My first task when I started this job was to fix a bug in Eigen.
Now I ran into another bug.
... caused by my fix.
Xeo
Xeo
lol
VS2013 again redeeming some of it's dignity in my book ^
11:24
@R.MartinhoFernandes by everyone doughnuts and break the news
"Wait, didn't I fix something like this before?"
*checks diff*
"Oh... not quite what I'd call 'fix'"
I mean, that's pretty decent interface
@sehe sexy :D
@sehe wrong shade of blue, burn it!
@sehe What is all the red?
Xeo
Xeo
11:25
@sehe "pretty decent"?
@R.MartinhoFernandes It's highlighting for the hotspot
@Xeo In terms of UX. Yes.
Xeo
Xeo
I think that looks awesome, but I haven't dealt with tools in that direction yet.
@Xeo The 'light red' shades are my statistics accumulators. Yay for Boost Accumulators
@Xeo I have used the profiler with C# before. It sucked a bit (mainly because of Web projects of course, but also strong naming and instrumenting bite. Badly.)
oh I got thinking the other day, is there a C++ equivalent to something like a JEE container? Some sort of 'simple' server that runs constantly that you can deploy applications too? I am sure you could do it, but the limitations imposed would make it not that good.
This here was my 20s effort at sampling profiler. Pretty neat. I used cachegrind on linux till now. And iperf/oprofile sometimes.
@thecoshman lol. Get away satan! Do you like templates? There's ATL server components with COM+ activation!
11:28
haha, moved blog directory away, now spammers are the ones getting deny of service ...
@sehe yeah, COM...
> "services"
@sehe now now, let's not go point out how they have still won
Is it possible to write an allocator that works in both C++03 and C++11, with possibly one construct function #ifdefed for C++11? (don't care about other functions for this exercise)
11:31
@thecoshman that too. I was amused that "accepting spam" being described as the "service"
@thecoshman you have a website I can donate to the spammers?
Wait, I guess I was #ifdefing the wrong one.
Xeo
Xeo
Didn't C++11 simply relax the requirements? Meaning an allocator for C++03 should work fine, I think.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Mmm. If someone would answer this, I'd say it's Boost Allocator and or the Adobe library (?)
@Xeo Not really. (Learned the hard way)
11:32
I did not 'accept' spams ... if I have accepted any comments, then they aren't spams ...
@Telkitty how exactly are they 'spamming' you?
crap, I bit1
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes Any breaking change?
@thecoshman I got 13000+ irrelevant comments in 3 months time ...
@Xeo C++03 requires construct(pointer, T const&), which means you get copies for types with implicit conversions.
@Telkitty yeah. go fighting semantics :)
11:33
In the past 30 mins, I have received further 42 spams
@Telkitty that's what you get for not stopping the problem when it first raised it's ugly head.
I did ... twice ...
i.e. alloc<std::string>(p, "foo"); creates a temp and then copies.
then for some reason it restarted and got worse ...
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes Oh, and C++11 perfect-forwards?
11:34
Ah, wait, I removed the C++11 variadic overload because it was wrong and thought allocator_traits would deal with everything fine.
@Xeo Yes.
I wasn't paying attention until yesterday when I received an email telling me I have used 75% of the bandwidth for the month ...
I can just add it back but correctly.
Xeo
Xeo
that creates a problem only if you expect a copy, I guess?
@Xeo It creates a problem if a type is not copyable?
Xeo
Xeo
Wait, so how would you even make it work for C++03?
11:36
C++03 overload + #ifdefed perfect forwarding.
That was what was there before, but the perfect forwarding overload was wrong, so I simply removed it because allocator_traits. That fixed the old bug. Simplest thing that could I work, I thought.
Hmm, cloning this is taking forever.
Hmmm, I guess I can also do #ifdefed C++03 overload, i.e. no construct at all for C++11.
@Xeo Which solution would you prefer?
(Also, it was the fault of implicit conversions again!)
Oh ffs.
libstdc++ hash tables don't use allocator_traits.
ARSGDFHDF.
Too many bugs.
Also, ugh, Eigen's internal headers don't #include anything at all. (Yet they use stuff from std::)
'Jade Rabbit' - funny name for a spacecraft. I wonder if they painted it green?
@LightnessRacesinOrbit amazing
@sehe Yeah - LRIO 'system call' is becoming a thing..
@R.MartinhoFernandes It's called "Eigen" for that! Bring your "eigen" include directives!
12:06
aRRHDFfgjf
Boost's unordered set is buggy too?
WTF
1926 Call Of The Wilderness
1994/1998 Booti Call/Booty Call
2020 System Call
2033 syscall
3113 jmp 0x0000ff8e
(wait, why is there a boost unordered_set here?)
@R.MartinhoFernandes ufff. The main thing is that it uses boost::hash, not std::hash. It still uses std::equals<> IIRC
@sehe But the std one can do that too.
(And since this one uses eigen's allocator, we need to type out all the type parameters anyway.)
@sehe LOL .. also, ps dumps in comments should not be allowed after 12:00 - I just can't take it.
12:16
^W works in most browsers.
Stay safe!
Ok. So while chasing this accidental compilation failure (our class should not have that implicit conversion), I uncovered a bug in Eigen (that I introduced :S), a bug in libstdc++, and a bug in boost.
Gosh.
I'm going for lunch and then come back for bug filing duty. Later.
Xeo
Xeo
Where the latter two are C++11-nonconformance?
I know C++ is not C, but can I ask something about C/ptrace here?
> Qt Online Installer for Linux 64-bit (22 MB) (Info)
22 MB because the "thin" online installer program also is a GUI app which contains Qt?
@R.MartinhoFernandes you'll probably find a bug in your lunch too.
@thecoshman thats why he goes to lunch first
12:53
'Ultimate Disaster III - The Day the Coffee Ran Out', starring Martin G. James as a panic-stricken software developer who gets involved in a high-speed car-chase to Tesco.
9
BFN
@thecoshman No bugs in my lunch.
@R.MartinhoFernandes ... wait until you try to release it
JBL
JBL
@MartinJames Ewww Tesco
hello
12:58
I'm picturing Martin in panic running down to the garage and driving his Fiesta like a madman.
It's funny.
I think I'm having a major brainfart. MSVC's stdlib is bugchecking on my strict weak ordering? However, I'm seriously confused how it would be wrong:
                std::partial_sort(first, middle, last,
                        [&](std::string const& a, std::string const& b) { return descending != (accessor(a) < accessor(b)); });
(note: descending is a const bool) (Also, accessor is a std::function<uintmax_t(id)>)

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