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scala takes forever to compile :(
i's cold
07:12
so cold the t key doesn't work
you'd assume so, but no
eeny
I saw the proposal for adding an overload to std::to_string which accepts an std::string and simply returns it.
This makes me wonder. What would the right implementation be?
the best you could do is just return arg;.
07:17
const std::string& to_string(const std::string& s) { return s; } // dangerous if called with rvalue?
also doesn't meet the interface of the other to_string overloads.
if I had std::string&& ref = std::to_string(x), say.
why would you need it, again?
So it should return std::string by value at least.
@Jefffrey If you have a template parameter and you want to convert it to a string, then you should be able to just pass it to to_string, but this breaks if it's already a string.
whereas clearly, the program should not break if you try to convert a string to a string.
I am having a headache ... I don't usually have headaches :'(
07:20
it will pass, hold on
So: std::string to_string(std::string s) { return s; }
Currently at a restaurant waiting for my friends ... they just arrived ...
@StackedCrooked I think const reference for the argument is ok
@Jefffrey It would be correct. But that would force a copy.
yes
07:22
WOHOO, no longer does my lightning ruin anti-aliasing... now that its 8:30 am, time to go to sleep : - /
as per usual here, since you need a value, take by value.
:13593472 Explicitly banned for function arguments.
:13593472 RVO is impossible.
(also would be illegal anyway if the function took const std::string&).
@DeadMG Even if function arguments are taken by value?
(turns out, vectors don't normalize themselves even if one wills it very badly)
07:23
@StackedCrooked Yes.
I believe there's some other circumstance where it's explicitly banned for some reason
So above to_string implementation won't use RVO and a copy is made?
move.
Right, a non-elided move.
07:25
right.
that's about the best you can do.
That's ok.
I believe there are proposals for relaxing the elision rules.
user1804599
@GamesBrainiac Use SBT with ~compile so it won’t have to restart the JVM for every compilation.
I love clients changing requirements
user1804599
~compile watches file system and rebuilds automatically if something changes.
07:32
Scala is meh
user1804599
Scala has terrible syntax.
user1804599
Almost as bad as Ruby’s.
seeking in youtube videos seems to be heavily penalized
user1804599
YouTube is pretty terrible at playing videos.
user1804599
I don’t understand how they cannot make a player that works.
07:33
seeking backward can cause a hang of 10 seconds
@rightfold I don't mind it much, its definitely not as clean as Python's but its not bad if you don't mind curly braces.
user1804599
Having five hundred different call syntaxes is really nice.
@rightfold Just stick to one :P
user1804599
Not idiomatic!
The expression "in particular" is confusing when used in a talk about particle physics.
user1804599
07:37
0
Q: Decorator and Singleton design pattern Integration

DAroraI created a decorator design pattern. I used the classic example for pizza where I applied the decorator design pattern. How can I combine the decorator and singleton design pattern to create and integrate the two ?

user1804599
lol :v
So a singleton wasn't ugly enough that it had to be decorated?
user1804599
What is decoration anyway? Is it a fancy word for composition?
user1804599
Oh, it’s a weird mix of composition and subtyping. Welp.
I really don't understand what the big deal is with singletons.
07:41
well
the whole "OO" thing is hard
and people use singletons to avoid it, essentially.
@rightfold decorotor pattern = extra layer of indirection. composite pattern = using trees.
adapter pattern = extra layer of indirection. strategy pattern = extra layer of indirection.
etc..
These patterns have patterns.
08:00
A pattern of patterns is simply a pattern. It's called pattern collapsing.
Ell
Ell
I like the visitor pattern
JBL
JBL
Good morning !
@Ell you are a visitor pattern. a green visitor
JBL
JBL
@GamesBrainiac The problem with singletons is exactly when you don't understand what the big deal is.
@JBL lies. mornings can't be good.
JBL
JBL
08:13
@Abyx Alright. Public transports were shitty today. As usual.
user1804599
@GamesBrainiac it’s only really a problem when they’re mutable.
user1804599
And there you have it: global mutable state.
Ell
Ell
And then the lord made singletons; and it was bad.
JBL
JBL
@Ell Thechnically, "the Lord" is a singleton. One instance, present everywhere.
just another reason to reject deities :P
08:27
@rightfold Yikes. Glad I haven't really dived into design patterns :P
the important thing is
I'm fuckin' cold
@JBL Unfortunately it doesn't tell you much
@DeadMG Get a heater
JBL
JBL
08:43
@TonyTheLion The awesome part is the real time visualization of wind on earth's surface. I remember visiting a labo during my highschool years, they said this was quite unfeasible at that time and that they'd dream of that.
user1804599
> IndexSizeError: Index or size was negative, or greater than the allowed value.
user1804599
Nice. Works great.
JBL
JBL
Your browser sucks :P
(Well, which browser doesn't suck anyway...?)
@JBL yea that is kind of cool :)
JBL
JBL
@TonyTheLion Oh, and practically, that's a good way of planning your sailing world tour :D
user1804599
08:55
LOL @ PostgreSQL documentation.
user1804599
> The first century starts at 0001-01-01 00:00:00 AD, although they did not know it at the time. This definition applies to all Gregorian calendar countries. There is no century number 0, you go from -1 century to 1 century. If you disagree with this, please write your complaint to: Pope, Cathedral Saint-Peter of Roma, Vatican.
anybody know anything about Database indices?
user1804599
A little bit.
is there any rules for adding them?
user1804599
Add them if they solve a bottleneck.
09:00
very helpful
user1804599
You question was very clear.
I'm so fucking terrible at shaving
So much pain
user1804599
If you find that you look up by a set of fields very often then you can consider adding an index to that set of fields to make lookup faster at the cost of slower inserts and deletes and more disk usage.
user1804599
Different DBMSes offer different kinds of indexing methods. PostgreSQL has binary trees, hash tables, 2D stuff and others.
Using MS SQL here
but that's helpful
09:06
@JBL Love that wind visualiser. What's going on with that line of windlessness about 8 degrees north of the equator, stretching west from the Americas? O_o
user1804599
Beware that PostgreSQL hash tables suck, though. They have annoying caveats. (Which is a pity; hash tables in general are nice.)
user1804599
Don’t know about SQL Server.
In relational databases, a condition (or predicate) in a query is said to be sargable if the DBMS engine can take advantage of an index to speed up the execution of the query. The term is derived from a contraction of Search ARGument ABLE. A query failing to be sargable is known as Non-Sargable query and has an effect in query time, so one of the steps in query optimization is convert them to be sargable. The typical situation that will make a sql query non-sargable is to include in the WHERE clause a function operating on a column value. Note that the WHERE clause is not the only clause...
TIL
user1804599
You pretty much always want indices on UNIQUE fields (including primary keys).
user1804599
09:09
Otherwise your inserts will be slow as a dog. :F
JBL
JBL
@user1158692 Dunno, I'm no climate expert. :)
@JBL do you reckon it's global warming?
user1804599
Global warming is a myth.
Since STL map is a tree, is it possible to do this?
map<string, int> m; m["start*"]
I mean wildcard search at the end
or if you have map<vector<x>, y>
@rightfold Must be the intertropical convergence zone then - commonly known as the doldrums.
09:11
to search just by one element
user1804599
@RokKralj No.
user1804599
Use std::binary_search.
user1804599
Also prefix trees.
find_if is O(n), not O(log n)
that should be better
@rightfold UNIQUE/PRIMARY is already an index
user1804599
09:13
Only works with map, not with unordered_map!
user1804599
@CatPlusPlus lol TIL.
but I want to find a range.
a subtree that starts with a string "start"
user1804599
2 mins ago, by Rok Kralj
to search just by one element
user1804599
But yeah if you want to find all elements starting with "start", use a prefix tree, not std::map.
by that i meant if i have map<vector<x>, y> m
I want to search m[["first_element", *]]
09:14
map being a tree is incidental
JBL
JBL
@user1158692 Uh, I reckon it's a windmap. I leave the interpretation to the expert, in fact.
So, the standard doesn't specify it's a tree
could it be a hash?
user1804599
Ugh.
user1804599
How do I answer a phone call in Android?
11
Press the butan
Sometimes slide the butan
user1804599
09:16
I did, but it didn’t have any effect.
user1804599
Oh well. It stopped ringing anyway.
user1804599
Most unintuitive UI of the year award goes to HTC.
@CatPlusPlus ohhhhhhhh butans
user1804599
Butane stinks.
@rightfold Y U ANDROID?
user1804599
09:22
COLLEAGUE Y U ANDROID
Like there's another option.
ANDROID, Y U TERRIBLE?
user1804599
@RokKralj Symbian. vOv
user1804599
Screw smart phones.
user1804599
If I want Internet I turn on my desktop computer or laptop.
09:23
I my opinion, HTC sense is better than what samsung has
user1804599
I won’t downgrade to a smartphone until my phone stops functioning.
TIL Intel stands for Integrated Electronics
@TonyTheLion I never knew that! Thanks.
JBL
JBL
I wonder if Jolla's phone will actually be good or not.
09:33
TIL also learned that in 2010 Intel acquired McAfee
It's -1 degree outside. I don't like it. Fucking winter
Pretty decent.
TIL that if you opt out of Amazon emails, you get a confirmation email.
user1804599
09:49
@CatPlusPlus It’s not winter.
user1804599
It’s autumn.
Today I learned nothing.
user1804599
I have hair on my fingers.
Today you learned something.
I have hair on my keyboard.
TBH, the mouse is looking a bit furry too.
user1804599
I have hair on my teeth.
09:59
@rightfold What, or who, are you eating?
user1804599
I’m eating you.
JBL
JBL
Ugh. I need to reinterpret a const void* as a const char*.
Horrible things ensues.
Is it a const char* to start with?
static_cast works just fine.
JBL
JBL
No, a const void*
Oh crap.
It must have come from somewhere - voids don't suddenly appear from nowhere.
4
JBL
JBL
10:01
Thought static_cast<const anything> wouldn't work.
@MartinJames I start with a const void* to a blob's data, in fact.
I should have guessed that a DB was involved :(
You stored your blob - you must know what it is, so if it's a gob of chars, yes, cast it. The blob must have a length/size property, or a read method that returns eof, or something?
JBL
JBL
@MartinJames I'm discovering the joys of writing binary data to files. Should be fun (until the crash at runtime, of course).
user1804599
@JBL static_cast<const char*>(my_ptr_to_const_void)
JBL
JBL
10:06
@rightfold Yep, I did that. (Thanks anyway)
I thought casting things with const qualifiers would need const_cast but heh, I might just be completely ignorant w.r.t. casts.
Not if you're not casting away the const!
JBL
JBL
Yep, exactly.
user1804599
@JBL You only need const_cast when casting away constness or volatility. Which is often very bad but sometimes necessary. :D
JBL
JBL
At least that means I don't write that much casts. Which may be a good thing IMHO.
does sizeof(void) == infinite (but said in a booming Brian Blessed voice)? ;-)
JBL
JBL
10:11
@rightfold I remember that textbook case where you'd implement two overloads of operator[], one const and one non-const, and make the non-const call the const one to avoid code duplication. That needed such casts and seemed reasonable.
@JBL Effective C++
Meh, it's not. It's noisy as fuck.
JBL
JBL
@chris Exactly.
user1804599
MACROS.
user1804599
I also prefer to use const_cast when adding constness or volatility, for clarity.
user1804599
10:12
But that is also rarely necessary.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I agree
Which means you're right!
More often than not, just repeating the single statement is shorter and doesn't include a bunch of ugly casting.
NEVER use const_cast!! (Except where it's appropriate.)
user1804599
NEVER cast!! (Except where it’s appropriate.)
And while the duplication is annoying, I don't think it's a maintenance nightmare. Not any less than the messy cast crap.
JBL
JBL
10:14
@R.MartinhoFernandes Well, that seemed reasonable, as long as avoiding code duplication seems relevant.
"Always remember never to say 'always' or 'never'"
JBL
JBL
NEVER! (Except where it is.)
user1804599
Can you do void foo() const(some_boolean) a la noexcept?
Never use C++
> I always wanted to live where I could watch foreign trains.
10:15
Except always!
@rightfold No
user1804599
@CatPlusPlus Meh.
@rightfold 'NEVER cast!!' Try telling that to my dog. I gotta vacuum up my office, again. Chocolate hair everywhere :(
(Err, just remembered I'm a C# dev now...)
The City and the City is unbelievably good and you should all go read it.
10:21
@R.MartinhoFernandes 'The twin cities are composed of crosshatched, alter, and total areas.' - is this book written in some graphics-oriented language?
Will it run on my kindle?
@MartinJames lol
OK, I'll get it, but it better not need any plugins.
The cities in question are psychological.
Fake cities
Fities
@R.MartinhoFernandes The synopsis reminds me of the work of Roland C. Wagner. Who I'm really upset to learn passed away just last year.
user1804599
10:26
I want clang 3.4.
robot
user1804599
Time to install clang 3.4.
I was thinking that maybe it would be possible to have concepts where Wide types must explicitly implement them (possibly through concept map), and C++ types implicitly implement them if they support the syntax.
Sharp Cities...?
True Cities?
@LucDanton Hmm, never heard of him. Miéville doesn't write humour, though.
He somehow manages to take such a nonsensical idea and keep it interesting and believable all throughout the book, constructing a powerful metaphor out of it.
@DeadMG That sounds awkward. From the usage side, not implementation.
10:30
hmm
@R.MartinhoFernandes I remember you saying a while ago you'd bought the book and were waiting to read it
Nice to see that you have
well, one of my main concerns with concepts over say a SFINAE-like thing is that it wouldn't properly interoperate with C++.
but I figure that if C++ types can implicitly implement them if they meet the interface requirements, then it should be relatively smooth sailing
what awkwardness did you have in mind?
Having two groups of types that behave in opposite ways.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit So far it was definitely the best one out of that batch.
I guess I could make the same argument for std::string vs const char*.
(ignoring the whole, interface bloat, non-Unicode, etc thing)
I figure that, if you're in a function whose argument is a concept, like f(Range(codepoint) x) or something, then the concept dictates the behaviour, so you don't have to care where the argument came from.
Today @codinghorror favorited one of my tweets. Life = Semi-complete.
Actually, not nearly complete, but hey! it's a step forward, that's for sure
10:36
and if you're passing a type, then you should know where it came from.
I guess it might not be as strong a divide as say value vs reference types in .NET, but it still irks me. (And without usage experience I'm not sure if I can point to convincing issues with it)
@Jefffrey Next step: dying?
well I also ran into a couple other roadblocks.
@R.MartinhoFernandes nope, I'll keep that one for last
let's say for a moment that I have, Vector(T) is-a Range(T)
so I have f(Range(T) arg) and you can pass a Vector(T) and it's all dandy.
but how do you implement the concept map?
a Vector(T) doesn't carry an iterator state within it that the concept map's function implementations can use.
so if the argument is Vector(T) then where does the extra state go?
I don't think concept maps were to be stateful.
10:41
no, me neither
but if they're not stateful, that seriously limits the transformations you can perform with them
Making them stateful brings up lifetime issues.
@R.MartinhoFernandes It's more light hearted than 'haha funny'. FWIW the French language article says à tendance souvent humoristique. In any case from leafing through a preview it appears the similarities don't extend beyond the plot and setting. The writing style and mood seem different.
Eh, I might just need some reading for the train trip.
well
the way that I see it, lifetime issues are already invoked.
user1804599
Hmm.
10:45
Concept maps, as designed for C++, were compile-time transformations.
if I have a Vector(T) and I pass it to a function expecting Range(T), does the function receive a deep copy?
user1804599
I want to both build LLVM and cook an egg. Fortunate coincidence.
@DeadMG Oh, I was ignoring that because I thought it was about the design of the concept maps in general and not of Range in particular.
well, it kinda is about the design in general.
because what it comes down to is, if I have f(Range(T) arg), then what is arg?
I would have two constructors Range(FwdIt b, FwdIt e, Copy) and Range(FwdIt b, FwdIt e, Ref). With Copy and Ref as tag types.
user1804599
10:47
Cooked eggs are better.
user1804599
Scrambled with pepper, salt and bacon.
@DeadMG How's pass by-val/by-ref in Wide? By reference as default?
val.
Well, then it would be the original object passed by value.
I considered pass-by-ref by default, but there are other places like local variables where val should really be the default.
user1804599
10:48
In Dutch “koken” means cooking by putting it in boiling water.
and having deduction have different semantics in different situations, I felt wasn't worth it.
I really think that concepts should not change what gets passed. It should always be the original object.
user1804599
Gefrituurd.
well
@ScottW hey what's cookin' ?
10:49
They only define the interface that is available/required.
that's what I had in mind originally too- that the concept was essentially just a filter saying "Yes- accept this T, no, reject this other T".
@Xeo I surfed to this from the other prelude
but
I'm learning about IPv6.
now I don't know what to do for my ranges because a Vector(T) is-a Range(T) but that requires extra state.
10:50
But i think that those library creators shouldn't work in the void; Haskell 2014 should make use of all those efforts
Yeah, that's why I don't think containers should be ranges.
plus, you get the problem of things like, for example
f(Range(T) arg) { return function(decltype(arg) other) { ... }; }.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Interesting suggestion.
but I think I run into the inherent problem that now, I'll have to overload lots of functions for Range(T) or Container(T).
actually
maybe it would be just a few.
my chaining operator could do virtually all of the work there.
the range algorithms themselves would only have to handle Range(T).
Yay, my RAM has arrived.
I think I decided that Xeo was right
10:56
and I will have to drop the whole, "function returning anonymous type" thing as a primary polymorphic type mechanic.
Also my uni doesn't have that Pierce book
:(
I liked the idea of having so few keywords and I liked the idea of my features naturally assembling to perform the more complex task
but it just doesn't seem to be capable of the more complex features
so
first things first is to introduce a primitive concept, the Type, which I will use to identify types.

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