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user1804599
00:00
finally to the rescue!
What are you parsing again
(@both)
user1804599
I’m not parsing. I’m transforming data structures into other data structures.
user1804599
Unless that counts as parsing, in which case the AST is the parsee.
@rightfold Which ones.
user1804599
5 mins ago, by rightfold
The thing that translates the AST to a tree that understands types and always represents a valid program.
00:03
Meh. You're not answering anything
user1804599
@sehe The AST and the tree that understands types and always represents a valid program.
Ell
Ell
"Understands"?
"the AST". "the tree". "valid program". You're not making anything clear
C++ program?
user1804599
Styx program.
AAAAAHBVIOUSLEEEEEY!
Whatever the heck is Styx :)
user1804599
00:04
@Ell Like, function declarations in the AST have no type information, just names.
user1804599
I’m not writing a C++ compiler. I’m not that insane.
Ell
Ell
Oh right
Dec 13 at 22:06, by rightfold
I’m only insane when it comes to software development.
yesterday, by rightfold
I’m getting insane.
user1804599
lol
I say that is not a given then :/
user1804599
00:06
Let’s test the thing!
What. you didn't test it yet?
11 mins ago, by rightfold
I think my semantical analyser workz.
user1804599
Well, “it compiles” is 50% of the test.
user1804599
> think
New code never works. It's like Schrödinger's Cat. Until observed, it actually must simultaneously work and be broken.
user1804599
OMG IT WORKS
00:10
Too few test cases
@rightfold how is that insane
user1804599
@sehe Two is more then enough. :)
@Griwes By being very tedious and arcane :)
@rightfold For throw away software, I agree :/
@sehe Then it's very tedious and arcane, not insane. :P
user1804599
Returning Int, I get no output, indicating success. Returning Isnt, I get styx.hlir.InvalidProgramException: type 'Isnt' does not exist.
00:13
@Griwes Gosh. Smug. [Doing [stuff that is very tedious and arcane] is insane]. See? Separate your levels. No contradiction
@sehe We need levels of "insane", then.
Nope. You need levels of conceptual thought/analysis
Writing an OS to write a C++ compiler for it is insane.
And also irrelevant
Creating a CPU arch to write an OS for it to write a C++ compiler for them is insane.
00:15
Even more irrelevant
Compared to those, writing a C++ compiler is far from "insane".
Compared to boiling the oceans, this conversation is not taking any energy at all
The energy this conversation takes is negligible. So is the level of insany needed to write a C++ compiler.
Interesting. The parrot repeats his own voice.
You can make an analogy, so it must be negligible. Nice reasoning.
Also, way to miss the blatant hyperbola in my reductio ad absurdum. Finally, way to miss the fact that "insane" qualifications are inherently subjective.
Anyways, don't take me seriously. I'm due for bed. And I'm quite tired.
I can make an analogy, so I cannot be trolling. Nice reasoning. :P
user1804599
00:23
styx.hlir.InvalidProgramException: 2 arguments expected but only 1 given
user1804599
I’m just awesome.
hlir?
user1804599
High-level IR.
@Griwes I'm tired, so you must not be trolling :)
@sehe :D
Gah. Spirit X3, y u no have V2's char_ yet :F
user1804599
00:32
Next up: allowing usage before declaration. :|
user3010322
00:53
template <typename Table, typename Key, typename T>
inline bool operator== ( T&& left, const proxy<Table, Key>& right ) {
	return right.get<Decay<T>>( ) == left;
}
user3010322
Does this look like it has anything wrong to anyone?
user3010322
with Decay being
user3010322
template<typename T>
using Decay = typename std::decay<T>::type;
user3010322
Because GCC is complaining a lot.
why does a proxy have operator==.
user3010322
00:55
lua["adouble"] == 9.2
user3010322
Which is really the only use case, but.
user3010322
Shrug.
user3010322
In either case, GCC keeps freaking out over that line
user3010322
and I don't know why.
user3010322
00:57
OH
the source of your bug is elsewhere.
user3010322
BIT SHIFT
user3010322
Mother fuckin'
what?
user3010322
That wasn't it
user3010322
00:58
./sol/proxy.hpp: In function 'bool sol::operator==(T&&, const sol::proxy<Table, Key>&)':
./sol/proxy.hpp:107:28: error: expected primary-expression before '>' token
  return right.get<Decay<T> >( ) == left;
user3010322
u.u
no shit it wasn't
user3010322
I just don't quite get it.
user3010322
What does GCC want from me?
2 mins ago, by Rapptz
the source of your bug is elsewhere.
user3010322
01:00
It compiles and runs fine on MSVC. u.u
that's not exactly reassuring
user3010322
....
user3010322
What
user3010322
What the FUCK
user3010322
WHY WOULD GCC EVER DEFINE AN operator= FOR STD::STRING THAT TAKES A _charT ?!
01:03
because it's required?
basic_string& operator=( CharT ch );
right there, overload #4.
user3010322
Rubs face.
user3010322
But of course, it can't fucking use its brain and FIGURE OUT that a std::string conversion better matches charT.
user3010322
Oh, but retarded-compiler MSVC can. <_>
user3010322
Still haven't figured out why GCC's shitting bricks over the operator== line either.
user3010322
... I don't get it
user3010322
01:07
I just... don't get it.
user3010322
Whatever. I'm sure there's some standard rule I'm fucking up for GCC to behave so retardedly anyhow.
I need rep on gamedev.se to downvote
:|
lame
user1804599
Stinkfist lyrics are so nasty.
user3010322
This....
user3010322
This fucking compiler.
01:10
@Griwes I dunno :)
@ThePhD Arhem. I wasn't here. I just spotted your.... ranty conundrum. How about you add .template get<?
user3010322
@sehe ..... For real?
user3010322
That's the error?
user3010322
template ?
user3010322
In front of a function invocation?
It's the classical case. And also the classical surprise when going from MSVC to a sane compiler (that has 2phase lookup)
Yup. I'd bet a cake on it.
user3010322
01:11
... WHY do I need template there?!
user3010322
That doesn't make ANY sense!
@ThePhD ^^
user3010322
There's NOTHING about the call that's ambigious!
It's not a dependent name, afaics.
plus GCC already gives a sane warning about those.
"did you forget template?" or something to that effect
Your usage of caps is the part that does not make sense. Lemme check the code first. But you could... just try it
user3010322
01:13
I don't mean to get mad at you, it's.. it just doesn't make sense for GCC to enforce that.
user3010322
What does the template buy me? What problem does it solve?
user3010322
Why is it necessary?
Did it actually solve it? The name isn't dependent so it wouldn't make much sense there.
@ThePhD In [this] post, get is most certainly in a dependent context
user3010322
@Rapptz It solves it.
01:14
lol
user3010322
I guess whenever you have the word get it goes nuts and needs to do ADL on everything and its mother.
What's it dependent on though?
@Rapptz It could be just a member variable. I mean, the proxy class could be specialized for any given table so the compiler SHOULDN'T assume that get always be a member function template.
user3010322
I don't even know!
@Rapptz On Table, proxy and the rest! What made you think it wasn't "dependent"?
I think you were confused and "dependent" only applied to typeids
01:15
I'm not
user3010322
But that doesn't make sense: the first phase of two-phase lookup is just to make sure the code looks semantically correct, not actually demand the types to have the functions being called on it.
user3010322
You can only know that at instantiation. If I removed it for a specific partial specialization, it's an error no matter what, so again, it's not buying me anything but a headache.
Which is precisely why you have to tell it
You have to tell your get invocation that .get is a template, not a member variable. This is precisely because of 2phase lookup
@ThePhD t.get<Decay<T>> could be interpreted as t.get < Decay<T>
Actually, I think analysis stops at t.get < Decay (that might have changed in C++11 to allow >> though)
user3010322
01:17
It stops at the second >
user3010322
And says it expected an expression.
Decay<T> is a using statement.
user3010322
Decay<T> resolves to a type
could be std::is_const<T>::value for all you know.
user3010322
t.get < (typename) is an error.
01:18
@Rapptz No difference. The result of a using template alias is still just a typeid
user3010322
rubs face.
user3010322
Well, now there's only one last problem to fix: GCC's idiocy with operator overloads.
@ThePhD That's a
user3010322
@sehe Well, TIL.
Never too late. But you could try to be less shouty about it :/
user3010322
01:19
Sorry. :C
user3010322
It just really frustrated me, because in my head that was a clear case of "you could have figured it out on your own, compiler".
Remember: it's rarely "compiler idiocy". And all things being equal, it's usually MSVC getting things wrong :)
user1804599
Hmm.
@ThePhD It's not that simple. Granted, compilers could go the extra mile once they hit a snag. However, just always coming up with the "helpful suggestion" would - in general - slow down compilation by too much.
user3010322
I guess so.
01:22
ftr, this is the main reason std::get isn't a member function in tuple.
Don't get me wrong, but ... I actually like how you have been ranting about this since 1:53am and I come in at 2:10am and instantaneously spot the fix. Makes me feel better about myself.
11 mins ago, by sehe
It's the classical case. And also the classical surprise when going from MSVC to a sane compiler (that has 2phase lookup)
That certainly helped me realize the fix.
user3010322
I probably wouldn't have ranted if GCC didn't give me the error "expected an expression"
I didn't want to say template because it didn't look dependent to me.
user3010322
Whatever the fuck that means.
@Rapptz I still don't get how you came to that conclusion. It doesn't get (pun intended) more depedent o.O
01:24
TBH I don't know.
user3010322
So, it seems like GCC ranks an implicit conversion to int and then to char the same as an implicit conversion to std::string and then being matched directly to the std::string operator= ...
Especially since I listed the tuple example above which is the same thing
@ThePhD Roughly: a template argument is involved
I guess I'm just too busy reading up on all this gamedev stuff out of boredom
9 mins ago, by sehe
I think you were confused and "dependent" only applied to typeids
I mean 99% of cases "dependent names" require`typename`
01:25
@sehe Not really (again)
It's the only thing in my mind that can explain how you'd miss the glaring dependency there.
user3010322
Question.
user3010322
Am I allowed to return my_type&& ?
don't do that
user3010322
Or is that considered a reference and therefore illegal?
user3010322
01:27
Yep, MSVC warns..
user3010322
I don't understand how GCC can rank a (type) -> std::string conversion the same as a (type) -> int -> char conversion
user3010322
Why does GCC have to ruin all the fun? =/
It doesn't. NLP, son
user3010322
Neurolinguistic Programming?
user3010322
Nerdy Little Ponies?
user3010322
01:30
Not Like Pie?
natural language processing?
@ThePhD The first, obviously
user3010322
Maybe I can cheat.
Don't tell yourself rubbish all the time. It's only feeding into your lizard brain that likes to confirm it's fears.
user3010322
And just provide a const char* conversion.
01:32
You become paralysed or demotivated.
Spill chuck fail
user3010322
Lul.
another 30 degrees day ... we also got massive amount of cicadas around
user3010322
....
Oct 14 '12 at 20:13, by daknøk
lul is Dutch for cock.
01:33
yoyo
user3010322
@sehe It could definitely double as a swear right now.
user3010322
GCC is ranking int -> char -> operator= conversion the same as a const char* -> operator= conversion
user3010322
Again, it's one less step, and the standard fucking says for the compiler to use its brain to choose the best overload.
you go rooster!
gay cock = happy rooster
user3010322
Of course, MSVC works with both a std::string OR a const char* implicit conversion, with an int implicit conversion.
01:35
@statguy Cheers :) I venture that either you come from a functional programming background, or you might like the paradigm :) Using recursion over iteration is paramount in pure functional programming. — sehe 3 secs ago
user3010322
I bet MSVC probably stuck some SFINAE on the char overload, so it could do better matching.
@ThePhD Hm.. that is weird.
user3010322
Dinkumware, king of Stdlib implementations.
Funny.
user3010322
Well.
user3010322
01:36
With this, I'm once again stuck.
user3010322
Albeit THIS time it's not MSVC's fault, it's GCC's fault for not having a better QoI for its library. =l
How'd you enjoy fighting OR?
@ThePhD TBH, I run into this type of thing sometimes. I learned to say silly things like JSON::value v = 1l; instead of just JSON::value v = 1; just to disambiguate things.
That said, it rarely is the compiler's fault
user3010322
I don't want to fight OR ever again.
@ThePhD cough. I still remember I had to manually patch my <string> library because it's COW thingie wasn't thread-safe.
@ThePhD Prove it first
01:38
Why do you always want to shift the blame to GCC?
user3010322
I am proving it by watching MSVC compile my code, run, and select the right overloads. :c
Is it so wrong to blame yourself for once?
It's a good skill to have.
@Rapptz TBH he doesn't. He just always blames the tool that makes him think. Today, that tool is GCC
@Rapptz Also not constructive. Just accept the situation.
And listen to the compiler. Like you would listen to a girlfriend.
user3010322
The compiler is not my girlfriend. It's a thing that's meant to make programs that make sense go whee on my processor. :c
You might have misunderstood.
user1804599
01:40
Shit.
Happens.
user3010322
All the Time.
@rightfold You found the third test case?
user1804599
No.
@ThePhD And hitting the rotary devices.
@rightfold You found out your flight leaves in 32 hours
user3010322
01:41
Hm.
user3010322
Maybe I'll just make the implicit conversion an unsigned long long.
user3010322
Eat it, GCC.
user1804599
But my program halts when the control flow graph contains cycles.
So, that's one missing test case
user1804599
It’s not related to the HLIR but the LLIR.
user3010322
01:42
Can const char* match a char overload?
user1804599
I need to find all outgoing edges of a basic block so I can inline functions.
@ThePhD no
user3010322
Hm.
user3010322
No idea how to fix this.
user1804599
I think I need a directed cyclic graph data structure.
user3010322
It's the same problem if you use std::string in place of const char* too.
user3010322
This would be solved if C++ accepted a char8_t that wasn't a typedef and used that for std::string...
user3010322
At this point, I either junk the std::string conversion, or junk the int conversion.
char, sadly, is neither unsigned char or signed char
One of those epic warts inherited from C
user3010322
Judging by what most people would be using Lua for, std::string is going to be the odd-one out...
user3010322
01:49
I guess I'll just make the std::string conversion explicit.
user3010322
And everybody will just have to use .get for it like good little boys and girls.
@rightfold a graph is just a graph. The data structure usually doesn't change. You just want a DFS that marks visited nodes so you don't enter in cycles?
user3010322
.... Or
user3010322
OR
user3010322
ORRRR
user3010322
01:50
Maybe I can go beyond
inb4 cowboy cast
user1804599
@sehe I’ll see.
user1804599
I’m going to make IR to ECMAScript conversion work first. :v
sounds useful
user1804599
Constant folding should already work, though. :>
01:52
it's constantly folding :)
user3010322
@sehe Not quite cowboy cast, but it didn't work as planned.
@StackedCrooked Holy shit the Attack on Titan is creepy.
:)
it's been referenced in a few other animes already
that's when you know it's a hit :)
what is wrong with it, lol ^^ it doesn't get much creepier really
user3010322
user3010322
01:58
Now, I must make it compile with MSVC.
user3010322
Joy. :>
@ThePhD Well, I'm sure that means something. I, for one, can't see beyond the purr and meow. Sorry

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