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21:00
@StackedCrooked he was here 24/12, not that I know him, just noticed.
user3010322
@DietmarKühl O_O
user3010322
Ahem Good Evening, sir.
user3010322
I, uh.
@ThePhD: yeah, I rarely stay here....
user3010322
@DietmarKühl Welll, before you go and disappear to do amazing things,
21:01
oh gods
But we're so cool.
please don't enter iostream rants
lol
user3010322
I've just started working on a "replacement" (redesign, might be a better word) of io streams. I'm trying to start with the binary aspect of it, while working out how to better do things like formatting and such (for the text aspect of it).
@ThePhD: huh? I guess, I'm missing the humor...
21:03
April 1st 2011: same people, same characters. Only @CatPlusPlus was a little less cynical back then.
@DeadMG: I don't mind complaints about IOStreams. In most cases they are just down to some misunderstanding anyway (and if they are not, they are down to bad implementations...)
@DietmarKühl OIC.
user3010322
@DietmarKühl I'm trying to basically write a more user-friendly variant of <iostream>. I've begun documenting my troubles here. The library is, uh, really just made, so I've got no code in there yet. I'm trying to get at what would make a better abstraction that would better fit the principals of C++ and C++11. I want to design what the interface would look like and how it would behave, and my current goal is to
@DietmarKühl He has a really gigantic rant.
user3010322
implement it as close to the OS as possible (well, not too close: nobody wants to deal with kernel drivers).
21:05
There are certainly some issues which can be done better with C++11, though. For example, variadic could be used to deal with better formatting.
user3010322
@DietmarKühl Yes! And I think having RAII-based formatting (so that formatting only persists for a specific scope) would be great additions as well.
no, no it would not.
you're still making the same basic mistake- mixing formatting and I/O.
> 4 hours later…
Those were the days
user3010322
@DeadMG No, because formatting will come from a specific reader/writer combination.
I just realized that was the day I talked about my singleton idea.
21:06
no still bad, still very very bad.
That didn't end well.
string formatting and I/O are completely separate concerns.
@DeadMG: I/O and formatting are alrady separated: stream buffers vs. locales.
INITCOMMONCONTROLSEX
@DietmarKühl That's more of an implementation detail. You still do std::cout << std::hex << 16;.
21:07
There's like 3 people who understand C++ locales
@LightnessRacesinOrbit OK
j/k
And there's like 10 who even know they exist
user3010322
I'm still trying to wrap my head around how codecvt works. >.<
I only remember that std::locale("") throws on Mac (which may be legit)
21:08
@DeadMG: the stream is merely holding things together and I think it is quite reasonable to create the units rather than having to create multiple objects just to use formatted I/O with a file.
It’s protected knowledge :v
I always throw up when on Mac
meh why can't we just use a printf function for formatting and streams for IO ?
@DietmarKühl I wouldn't be a fan of creating multiple objects. I'm merely saying that there would be nothing wrong with something like, I dunno, std::hex(16) to create a string which was formatted in that way. Or hell, std::to_string(16, std::hex).
there's no reason to invoke either objects or the stream here.
user3010322
@StackedCrooked It's allowed to. locales are implementation-dependent.
21:09
@Abyx Not type safe, not extensible
Horrible API, like everything in libc
@CatPlusPlus I didn't mean the C printf
Xeo
Xeo
@CatPlusPlus I think he means printf-style
@ThePhD My mistake was that I needed to use std::locale() I think.
Then you already can vOv
Just use Boost.Format or FastFormat
Xeo
Xeo
@StackedCrooked std::locale is always a mistake
21:10
@StackedCrooked RIP Boost.Algorithm.
I only needed it for std::tolower.
Xeo
Xeo
tolower is likely a bad idea :P
@CatPlusPlus Boost.Format is slow.
bah
@DeadMG: well, we don't want to waste too much time and creating a string before inserting is a mistake. However, std::hex(16) could be an object which knows how to format a number in hex.
21:10
tolower and stuff is bad news.
@Abyx What is?
@DietmarKühl Worst comes to worst, you could do an output-iterator style deal. But here I'd favour simplicity, ease of use, and maximal decoupling over the fractional performance you might gain from not creating an intermediate string that the vast majority of people will never need or want.
FastFormat touts being faster than B.F
~slow~
It's even in the name
21:11
std::transform(a.begin(), a.end(), a.begin(),
    std::bind2nd(std::ptr_fun(&std::tolower<char>), std::locale("")));
// ^ example by Johannes
crashes on mac :(
Xeo
Xeo
@StackedCrooked Wow, I didn't even capitalize my "I"s back then.
map toLower as
> locale("") will construct a locale object representing your preferred locale.
Lowering shouldn't have anything to do with locales
It's utter nonsense
user3010322
u.u
21:12
@Xeo yeah you were totally awkward with you "i"s.
:P
user3010322
I just wanted to get his opinion on some iostream stuff, and now the rant is on. u.u
@CatPlusPlus: maybe it shouldn't but it has. There are characters which lower differently in different languages as far as I know.
@CatPlusPlus You need the locale to know the codepage, I believe, which you would need to implement tolower() on codepage-based systems.
@CatPlusPlus it does for single-byte encodings (codepages)
... and, of course, these operations need to operate on strings anyway as some characters expand to multiple characters when capitalized.
21:13
so the real complaint here is that tolower() isn't Unicode-aware, which is true.
I actually don't remember if the Unicode lowercase functionality needs a locale or not.
Even with 8-bit encodings it's terrible API
What you need is encoding, which should be handled by the string itself
Not locale
Xeo
Xeo
Apr 1 '11 at 18:41, by sbi
@Xeo Don't let DeadMG hear that!
Hahaha
we just need real strings, like in Python.
Xeo
Xeo
I forgot he has been sick for so long
Decoded string is unambiguous
21:14
Latest Coliru feeback: "Supercool, but please add rustlang"
lol
Rust is not a rusty language it seems.
@CatPlusPlus: not really. The original idea of string handling in C and C++ was that internally you would process characters. The would be decoded when entering the program and encoded when exiting them and the entire program can be otherwise oblivious of encodings.
Xeo
Xeo
Apr 1 '11 at 18:47, by Xeo
Though I'm not very certain i'll remain in the games industry for long if i can help it.
It's a good idea, but it falls flat in the implementation
Xeo
Xeo
21:15
I should stop going through that transcript
@Xeo are you still in it?
user3010322
@Xeo You don't like games?! D:
@Xeo I hate chicken anyway.
Of course, now people store UTF-8 in std::string of ISO-Latin-1 in another one.
@Xeo I know it's addictive.
Xeo
Xeo
21:16
@StackedCrooked Yea
Unicode or bust
@CatPlusPlus No.
user3010322
@CatPlusPlus Can't help people still using Windows-1252 =[
@DietmarKühl and then they concatenate those strings
@ThePhD It can be decoded into Unicode
Xeo
Xeo
21:17
@StackedCrooked GMan is also rarely here anymore :(
@LucDanton No what
Except that Unicode is entirely messed up: they started out to create a unique representation of characters and ended up with screwing all sorts of things.
yeah.
GMan pops up about 4 times a year.
Probably the most harmful is that a character can consist of multiple codepoints.
@DietmarKühl It's a lot better than the alternative and is basically the defacto standard now.
@DietmarKühl Define "character".
Xeo
Xeo
21:18
@DietmarKühl You should have a discussion with the Robot some time :P
@DeadMG Grapheme?
Lower/uppercasing is not 1-to-1 operation even if you get rid of combining marks
well
Xeo
Xeo
@CatPlusPlus ß -> SS ♥
user3010322
@CatPlusPlus But it's not that hard to handle: you just need a fixed-storage output.
there was some talk about Unicode-aware algorithms at the Bristol meeting butI haven't seen anything come out of this.
21:18
as far as I am aware, there are some languages, like Vietnamese, that basically allow you to stack combining marks indefinitely.
@DietmarKühl I was the one who wrote that paper.
@CatPlusPlus e.g. toLower 'Σ'
Unicode simply models a thing that's already horribly fucked up
Don't let humans do shit, they'll fuck it up
user3010322
u.u
well it's not like we'll have a Unicode2. we have to deal with what we have since it's the standard, de-facto
@DeadMG: I guess, I'm not quite in the position of define what a characters is. However, the u-umlaut in my name is one and it can be presented using one codepoint (u-umlaut) or two codepoints (letter-u and dieresis; or something like that). That's just wrong.
21:20
@LucDanton It has two lower-case forms but I don't see how that's related to locales?
@Xeo also @David Rodríguez
@DietmarKühl Normalisation gets rid of that
@DietmarKühl I'm pretty sure that's just the standard growing pains with compatibility shtick.
Xeo
Xeo
@StackedCrooked Wow, that day was deserted.
21:22
they had u-umlaut to begin with and had to add the combining marks system to handle other languages.
Apr 4 '11 at 3:48, by GMan
6 hours later, a wild GMan appears.
hehe
@CatPlusPlus: I know. However, I don't see any reason why there should be other representations than the normalized one. On the other hand, I have given up on that area getting nice and clean...
Hello there
@CatPlusPlus I thought in some locales it was appropriate to unconditionally lowercase to ‘σ’ but I think I misremembered.
Heh... I would have bought the Blurays... if they werent so ridiculously expensive
21:26
i came across a c++ Function prototype which is defined as double euler1d(double(*)(double, double), double, double, double)
Ell
Ell
this makes me sad
Who the hell wants Blurays few months after season's end
i can understand other types but are confised with first part
It seems like all tina's messages have vanished from chat.
double(*)(double, double)
21:26
68
Q: Trolling homework questions - sorting

VictorI am intending to make this a new category of programming puzzle (let's call it "code-trolling"). So you could expect this to be the first question of the series. The idea of this category is: Suppose that some lazy guy in StackOverflow or elsewhere, asks a homework give-me-dah-codez questio...

Xeo
Xeo
function pointer
She was unpersoned
@AfnanBashir: the first argument is pa pointer to a function return a double and taking two doubles as argument.
@CatPlusPlus sounds like a North Korean experiment
@CatPlusPlus Well I haven't started watching the series so that's not a problem for me (I also managed to avoid spoilers so)
21:27
@StackedCrooked or as Kremlin-watchers used to say during the Cold War: "nothing is more difficult to predict, than the past" :-)
> In Western European languages, the letter 'i' (U+0069) upper cases to a dotless 'I' (U+0049). In Turkish, this letter upper cases to a dotted upper case letter 'İ' (U+0130). Similarly, 'I' (U+0049) lower cases to 'ı' (U+0131), which is a dotless lowercase letter i.
There you go.
@LucDanton: thanks! I thought so. Some of the operations people assume work always the same just don't.
Right, forgot about that crap
so does anyone know if Boost survived the git transition?
its dead jim
21:30
Thanks that makes sense
Ell
Ell
I always used to assume casing was safe
user3010322
Buahaha.
Well, Boost is more than just a bunch of sources, no?
Nothing is safe
Ell
Ell
After hearing robot talk for a bit about unicode I assumed nothing to be safe
user3010322
21:31
After compiling the entire UCD, I can tell you that nothing about text is ever safe.
user3010322
ASCII was ignorant bliss. Welcome to the real world.
Ell
Ell
To be fair I only write programmes for myself so only need ASCII
@StackedCrooked :)
Ell
Ell
Ignorance is bliss
21:32
@StackedCrooked WTF I had to watch 30 seconds of advertisement before I could get to second 1
@Ell: lucky you! Even if I write programs just for myself, ASCII can't even represent my name!
@DietmarKühl I thought it was an ecosystem, so if an entire codebase is moved to a whole new workflow, I expect some major disruption
@AndyProwl Install ABP
yes, and couldn't skip it
Ell
Ell
21:33
@DietmarKühl Ahh, unlucky :P
@AndyProwl I guess that must have been an anticlimax then.
sorry :(
Ell
Ell
To be honest I'm not sure what to make of the whole text handling issue - it seems trying to cater for all languages/writings is a whole task in its self
21:33
@Ell ignorance is bliss :)
Ell
Ell
How can a programmer possibly get it right if they don't know the nuances of foreign language :/
@Rapptz Creating a MySQL database to sort some numbers in Java. That's awesome...
They can't
Welcome to humanity
Ell
Ell
To me it sounds like it's only sensible to restrict yourself to a set of languages
user3010322
^ Which is what a lot of companies do.
21:34
hah.
English or bust
or, you know, just re-use the code from someone who did know what they were doing.
which is what we do in every other case.
Even in an ideal world which doesn’t need compatibility where you can e.g. allocate a TURKISH LOWERCASE DOTTED I as well as a dotless ı (plus matching uppercase versions), I still think locales hold their own.
Code reuse?! IN MY REPOSITORY?!?!
21:35
@Ell: well, I work in a company which presents, e.g., news stories to users in roughly all written languages (at least, that's part of the goal). No single programmer will even be able to read all of them.
user3010322
I only did ucd because Robot's code doesn't like MSVC. :c
Alternatively, "no dependencies hurr", bad licensing, bad compilers, or a thousand other reasons
Programming is not fun
@DietmarKühl how many languages are that?
Must be around 200 or so.
@StackedCrooked 8
user3010322
q_q libmagic is GPL.
user3010322
21:36
Ended up having to write my own libmagic.
user3010322
I'm going to release that stuff with a WTFPL license.
@StackedCrooked: I don't know how many we actually do support. I work in the financial data area rather than the news area.
Use MIT or something like that
user3010322
@CatPlusPlus Or public domain.
user3010322
(CC0 is like public domain, I guess)
21:37
Ahaha you think you can put something in public domain
pat pat
If you consider non-written languages.
user3010322
Well, not exactly Public Domain. Just CC0.
> In pre-contact times, over 300 languages were spoken in North America. Of these, about half have died out completely. All we know of them comes from early word lists or limited grammatical and textual records. But that still leaves about 165 of North America’s indigenous languages spoken at least to some extent today.
That's a lot.
There's like 100 languages in USA and about half of them are English
Dark Souls is 6€ btw
you don't want public domain. You want something which says "this source is free and will stay so", I'd think. Public domain means that anybody can grab the source, modify it, and use a new license.
21:39
Good for them
Allowing sublicensing is kinda the point of liberal licensing
@DietmarKühl as long as they can't steal the ownership
Otherwise you can just use GPL and wonder why nobody wants to use your library
If I could release shit into public domain, I would
I so don't want to participate in this copyright bullshit
@Rapptz More!
Ell
Ell
@CatPlusPlus Other gpl software will use it
I would rather have no license for all my personal code.
21:41
No license means all rights reserved
Because STATE LOOKS AFTER YOU
BE GRATEFUL
Yay
Me so grateful.
Goddamn copyright
pls die
What does all rights reserved mean?
user3010322
Shrug.
That nobody can use your code for anything, until you give them expressed permission
21:42
oh
user3010322
Yep. Gonna make libmagical
So basically nobody, since nobody will bother
If they were to use my code without permission I probably wouldn't go to court.
They don't know that
They can't trust that
Ha, so I have power over them.
21:43
It's not a risk anyone serious will be willing to take
Ell
Ell
@ThePhD why, again?
Because libmagic is GPL
user3010322
@Ell ? What doy ou mean again?
user3010322
Also, what @CatPlusPlus said.
Ell
Ell
21:44
Oh
I need a static_vector
user3010322
Turns out pcompress that Sehe linked here only supports a pretty small cut of files.
user3010322
@Rapptz I already implemented fixed_vector, use it.
CODE REUSE IS FORBIDDEN
@ThePhD where?
Ell
Ell
21:45
Erik Meijer's shirts are whacky
@Rapptz it's in latest boost. writing your own isn't very hard though.
last time I tried I got a lot of segfaults
Also
We have an uneven number of room owners
21:45
the taint of phd causes segfaults?
@ThePhD Pity it's bugged.
user3010322
@DeadMG Aww, what'd I do now? D:
@ThePhD yeah, mine was like that too.
well, you used aligned_storage, but didn't pass an alignment...
user3010322
Shrug.
user3010322
21:46
I guess I can add that if I really need to.
user3010322
It's one extra parameter, and it'd probably be defaulted.
it's unspecified default
by "I can add that if I really need to", you mean, "It's hideously bugged for all types that require >1 alignment".
and also, your push_back functions and friends offer absolutely no protection against writing off the end.
mine had a length check
lemme find it
I remember it being buggy for some reason
also
21:47
still don't know why
I'm not 100% sure about this, but I'm pretty sure that if T's constructor throws an exception, it's undefined whether or not len was incremented beforehand.
user3010322
I'm not going to write a debug variant of fixed_vector.
sequence points and such.
user3010322
Check your shit yourself.
so your push_back might not even be exception safe.
21:48
question
is noexcept(f()) constexpr?
I FUCKED UP
also resize() doesn't construct new objects (or clean up existing ones) like it should be.
21:49
so basically
your implementation is INCREDIBLY BUGGED.
in some of the most basic functionality.
don't ever use
@Rapptz what do you mean?
@Rapptz this was my take. It doesn't have clear and erase methods though.
user1804599
@Rapptz Yeah.
@ThePhD push_back is required to throw an error if you try to push back past the maximum size.
@Rapptz: noexcept(x) is a constexpr.
21:50
neat
@StackedCrooked What does it give you more than std::array?
user1804599
Otherwise you could never do void foo() noexcept(noexcept(f())) { … }.
oh, wait, I do have a clear method
:siren: It is of utmost importance that we make the number of room owners divisible by magical number of TWO. Nominate people.
And it doesn't call ~T()
user1804599
21:50
Me!
noexcept() is another unevaluated context which is done at compile-time.
@CatPlusPlus We could also kick one :P
also maybe I'm just not seeing it, but I don't see a destructor which clears the contents.
Nominate either way
or a copy/move constructor or assignment operators.
user1804599
21:51
I nominate Crowz.
I mean, wtf man, please tell me you don't actually use this class.
@AndyProwl variable size
user1804599
Or Telkitty.
Alternatively let's do a gimmick month and make everyone an owner
user3010322
@DeadMG I use it all the time for basic PoDs and it works.
21:51
@StackedCrooked I see
@ThePhD So basically, you only cover the tiniest possible use cases.
user3010322
@DeadMG Yes.
@DeadMG I only use it for POD types. But apparently I forgot to static_assert this.
with no assertion to check that.
Guess I'll give it a go.
21:52
also, only usable for those use cases basically means worthless.
user3010322
No. I'm not going to static assert it. If I need it to work on other stuff, I'll add the functionality when I need it.
user1804599
@CatPlusPlus Sounds like the C# room.
user3010322
Good Enough Principle.
yeah, but it's not good enough.
it's hideously wrong.
@ThePhD sounds like "Works On My Machine™" principle to me :P
user3010322
21:53
Hold on, let me check for exception safety for the construction of my ints. :|
user1804599
Does it compile? It’s good enough.
user3010322
They might throw.
user3010322
Gotta be careful, now!
user1804599
> Can’t we just code and ship it?!
I say let's make @LightnessRacesinOrbit an owner to have bin/unbin fights between him and puppy
21:54
@ThePhD But you have no protection against it actually not being nothrow.
not to mention some of the more basic errors, like resize() not initializing potential new elements like it is required to.
user3010322
This isn't an STL component. It's a personal internal library. I'm not adding static asserts for something I don't use it for.
@CatPlusPlus how do you nominate?
Use words
you mean, "I'm not adding a single one-line piece of code to ensure that if I use it incorrectly by accident, I will know in advance"?
21:55
@CatPlusPlus wtfpl.net
that would be funny
I mean, come on man, programming 101 here.
@TemplateRex It's not really a proven license
@DeadMG Welcome back
It might still make people uneasy
21:56
@LightnessRacesinOrbit I've been back for hours.
@DeadMG Delayed reaction
@CatPlusPlus so we can keep our hands clean? good idea :)
Lounge<Thunderdome>
Gladiator, are yae ready?
Contestant! Are... yae... ready?
Three! Two! One! Go!
wfiw, the BOost license faq has this: > Why doesn't the copyright message say "All rights reserved"? Devin Smith says "I don't think it belongs in the copyright notice for anything (software, electronic documentation, etc.) that is being licensed. It belongs in books that are sold where, in fact, all rights (e.g., to reproduce the book, etc.) are being reserved in the publisher or author. I think it shouldn't be in the BSD license."
21:57
100 messages moved to bin
All messages moved to bin
Everybody wins
Lounge<C++> renamed to bin
3
Lounge<bin>
Bin<C++>

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