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21:00
lol
user3010322
u.u
@AndyProwl that's intentional
emacs is also a good editor
@harold ops, sorry then :)
user1804599
21:00
IP-onions.
@AndyProwl it's from YGS
shall we do emacs vs vim now?
so wait a second
@ThePhD you have a fixed size array, but you only allocate it dynamically?
Can't have indirections man
perfomranec will suffer
21:02
;)
@Jefffrey Maybe it doesn't fit on the stack and he has to heap allocate it?
@Borgleader std::vector is not good enough?
Too sexy for him.
user1804599
Blogreader.
But I suspect it doesn't do dynamic allocations.
21:05
I mean, with std::vector(n) you basically have the same interface (except maybe that alignment thing)
user1804599
And reserve.
https://gist.github.com/Borgleader/eda5492b6d04bbe29a71
Why does this read operation fail? T_T
It's an array with an internal parameter that tells you how much you have used, with a... std::vector like interface
@Jefffrey also you can technically resize the vector which could be a problem (if it's supposed to not resize)
user3010322
You could just write a small_block_allocator and make a std::array or an arena for the storage on the stack if you wanted to avoid the extra allocations.
21:06
we dont know
maybe it only works in 2012
user3010322
I likeh my fixed_vector, though. :3
@ThePhD Wait, are you saying that he is right and it doesn't really store things in-place?
Also don't call reinterpret-cast-based binary file loading "parsing"
It's so hilariously fragile
@Borgleader if you don't need resizing... don't resize?
(dont do it0
21:07
@Jefffrey What if another stupid programmer does it? :P
idk im just being devils advocate
Not your problem(tm)
@Borgleader than you might have bigger problems than a resized std::vector
Actually it is trivial to make a wrapper over vector that will disable resize
Without reimplementing it
@CatPlusPlus fine I'll call it "loading", I still dont have a clue why the read operation fails.
@Borgleader The world ends and your program dies in the burning fire of a thousand suns.
Oh wait, no, it just proceeds working.
21:08
@Borgleader Me neither (don't do it it is a bad way tm)
also if you have to cover you asses from all the possible ways a bad programmer can screw up, you better just give up and be a farmer
You probably forgot about padding or the data is in different endianness
Farming is crap
Like, literally
@Borgleader Open the file in binary mode.
I thought that only affected line returns?
21:10
Don't you hate it when you get an upvote and then it gets taken away? :D
@Borgleader Which are the numbers 10 and 13, which are not particularly uncommon bytes.
Also what the fuck does "read fails" mean
@ThePhD: Why not putting the public interface first? If I want to find out how to use your class, I have to scroll down N pages before I get to the first public member function
21:11
(ok, N is small, still...)
Write documentation maybe
see you'all later
@CatPlusPlus Well... I called read and got "std::ios_base::failbit set" exception.
Also finding public: isn't exactly a very hard thing to do
Code should be self-documenting
21:12
This is not what this means
It helps minimizing the time it takes to understand it
Why would I be interested in seeing internal implementation first?
Because you're digging in the implementation?
Also seriously this is not an issue at all what the fuck
Just /public:
What's the problem with public?
Not that reading the list of undocumented public functions of a class gives you much insight on how to use it
@TonyTheLion Just talking about the order of public and private interface
21:14
oh right
I always put public at the top and private at the bottom.
That makes sense to me as well
Details should come after
@Borgleader The last one?
@CatPlusPlus especially with C++ stream classes
Public interface is what a type is all about
No, invariants are what types are about
21:15
Types are about what you can do with them
What operations they support
Invariants are an implementation detail, no?
Type theory is what types are about :)
Invariants are not an implementation detail
21:16
@R.MartinhoFernandes No the second, the header was fine and the the key list would fail. It works now :) (it was the binary thing)
I can't tell an invariant from an interface alone though
Indeed, unless the language allows you to express invariants formally. C++ doesn't
which language allows you to express them explicitly?
21:18
@ThePhD FWIW, the largest expansion is 3x, IIRC.
@CatPlusPlus good point
IIRC, D does
also, how would you do it in C#?
There is some package for DbC in C#
21:19
@TonyTheLion AFAIK, Eiffel was the first to support it directly in the language.
(ok, Robot posted it)
@R.MartinhoFernandes Interesting, never heard of that before.
Uses Z3 under the hood AFAIR.
Z3 is kewl.
last time I used it, Code Contracts had some bugs in the IL rewriter
Still wondering about a neat project to do with Z3.
21:20
Contract.Requires( x != null );
// meh contracts for null checking
@JerryCoffin I first heard of Eiffel because a cousin of mine was taught it as the first language at college to learn programming
never really looked into it
@FredOverflow seems a strange use for that
Code Contracts IDE extension requires Visual Studio Ultimate
Eiffel was designed by the guy who invented DbC. In fact I think he designed the language mostly to promote DbC
@TonyTheLion 50% of the contract examples you'll see will be about null checking, I promise.
oh
bad programmers are bad
21:21
No, bad languages are bad.
I thought it was created for the Exposition Universelle of 1900.
In languages that don't have references it's a legitimate usage I think
Contracts are not just for invariant checking
Ugh
It's not about "references"
is it still unable to do any interprocedural analysis?
21:22
C# has references
It has every kind of reference
OK, I meant references in the C++ sense
C# doesn't have "return by reference" ;)
Like, "can't be null"
It also has those
Ok, didn't know that
21:23
But you can only have them as parameters.
Also non-nullability is really an incidental feature of C++ references, not a core thing that makes up a reference
@TonyTheLion It has some good points, but also a few really problematic ones that prevent me from wanting to actually use it. Chiefly, where C++ supports covariant return types, it supports contravariant return types. While there's some theoretical support for that notion, it ends up quite dangerous in real use.
@CatPlusPlus I didn't mean to say that
90
Q: Why doesn't C# support the return of references?

Tom SarduyI have read that .NET supports return of references, but C# doesn't. Is there a special reason? Why I can't do something like: static ref int Max(ref int x, ref int y) { if (x > y) return ref x; else return ref y; }

21:23
@JerryCoffin Ugh.
Just like nullability is not a core thing that makes up a pointer/rebindable reference
Separate concepts
Just pointed out that accepting a reference as a parameter implies that parameter can't be null. If the parameter is a pointer, the fact that null is not an acceptable value must be documented in the function's interface/contract
@JerryCoffin The problem with Eiffel is that it allows covariant parameter types.
Null is shit either way
@FredOverflow What's wrong with that?
21:25
I don't like always having to explicitly check for null.
its annoying
The problem with Eiffel is "what the fuck is Eiffel"
@FredOverflow Was that it? I remember it being something similar to covariant returns, but just enough different to turn out dangerous (even though, as I said, it has some theoretical justification).
@CatPlusPlus pretty much this.
Also weird syntax
@CatPlusPlus That's another problem, but not the only one.
@CatPlusPlus Not all that weird, exactly--just based on Pascal more than C.
21:27
(just wrote the opposite of what I meant to write)
TYPE_NAMES_LIKE_THIS_ARE_IRKSOME_FOR_SOME_REASON
@AndyProwl It breaks type safety in polymorphic uses:
struct Person
{
    virtual void consume(Food&);
};

struct Diabetic : Person
{
    virtual void consume(DiabeticFood&);
};

Person* p = new Diabetic();
p->consume(sugar);
@FredOverflow Indeed, I somehow meant "contravariant"
But really Eiffel does support that?
I would be surprised
What is type safety problem there?
@CatPlusPlus Because it will make a diabetic consume sugar.
21:29
C++ has no type safety anyway.
@AndyProwl yes
That is really fucking dumb explanation
Uh
That's odd. Meyer is the guy who invented DbC, I would expect his language to respect his guidelines
(It is dumb if it's not an error though)
@CatPlusPlus Then read the Wikipedia article.
This is not type safe. By up-casting a CatShelter to an AnimalShelter, one can place a dog in a cat shelter.
21:31
lol
Enough with pointless fucking hierarchies jesus
those names
It's the same reason why a list of oranges is not a list of fruits, because if it were, you could put an apple in a list of oranges.
bad fucking OOP bullshit names
inb4 Java
Also, C# supports covariant containers IIRC
which is more or less the same thing
21:32
every inheritance example must be a whole zoo of animals.. it's like a physical law
inheritance in OOP is flawed
its how they teach kids "OOP"
@AndyProwl What exactly do you mean? In C#, List<Derived> is not a subtype of List<Base>, because that would break type-safety.
I find covariance and contravariance confusing. I can never remember which is which
@FredOverflow I think that something like that is supported but I'm not a C# guy so I can't tell for sure (you get a run-time exception)
21:33
Covariance is the intuitive one, contravariance is the weird one.
binomial nomenclature?
@AndyProwl Well, IEnumerable<Derived> is a subtype of IEnumerable<Base>. Maybe you meant that?
@FredOverflow Perhaps yes, I've only read about it once and it was long ago
Also, IComparer<Base> is a subtype of IComparer<Derived>. Note how the roles are reversed. That's contravariance.
21:36
meanwhile in C#: `object[] array = new string[1]; array[0] = 0;`
compiles fine, runtime error
They inherited that type safety hole from Java.
that compiles really?
I'm disturbed
@harold Right, that's what I meant
Why the fuck does that compile?
because reasons, I'm sure Eric Lippert explained it sometime
21:37
because 0 is like null, in some weird and twisted way?
no, you could put any object there
No, because they rely on the user not adding 0
ah because 0 is an int and because you prolly put any ìnt there
(or 1, or 2)
and 0 automagically becomes int
21:38
object[] array = new string[1]; array[0] = new object(); is still OK
ie. implicit fucking conversions
@TonyTheLion 0 doesn't become int, 0 is int.
@FredOverflow ... or a pointer in a context that calls for pointers.
21:40
@R.MartinhoFernandes In C#? Really?
Oh.
Sorry.
Proceed.
It was added to the CLR because Java requires it and the CLR designers wanted to be able to support Java-like languages
wtf?
21:40
"Java made a mistake, let's copy it"
"It was added because Java is shit and they wanted to support shit-like languages"
@AndyProwl That doesn't justify allowing it in C#, though.
Apparently it does, because they did it
The CLR supports a lot of things C# doesn't.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Right, that's my point
Ah
I see now
OK then, yes. They still shouldn't have allowed it in C#
21:42
MI, refs everywhere, co-/contravariance annotations before C#4, other stuff.
So it's like "we added it to the CLR because Java has it, and we added it to C# because the CLR had it"
@R.MartinhoFernandes Does any CLR language offer MI?
What is MI?
multiple inheritance
21:43
oh
@AndyProwl Yeah, the latter is kinda bad.
The former is not good either, but it has some meaningful purpose.
VM is supposed to be as generic as possible
Most respected names in C++, shoot:
JVM being too tied to Java caused problems in the past
21:46
I'm actually having problems remembering inheritance in C++. I need a quick recap. I have a .cpp file main() which has #include "image.h" and #include "init.h" is main the parent of these two classes? So confused to remember :((
@AaronHall std::swap
@AndyProwl it messes with auto-return types though
@cyberspace009 It seems you are confusing files with classes. #include has nothing to do with inheritance.
@TemplateRex What do you mean?
user406009
@cyberspace009 In C++ files are not directly correlated to classes.
21:47
@cyberspace009 Start over. Neither of those is a class.
3850
Q: The Definitive C++ Book Guide and List

grepsedawkThis question attempts to collect the few pearls among the dozens of bad C++ books that are released every year. Unlike many other programming languages, which are often picked up on the go from tutorials found on the Internet, few are able to quickly pick up C++ without studying a good C++ book...

WTF are those tags.
user1804599
lol
@AndyProwl you cannot wite auto member() { return helper(); } if helper() hasn't been seen yet.
@R.MartinhoFernandes last two edits it seems
It should have the tag
oh wait. omg
21:48
@R.MartinhoFernandes Thanks!!!!!!
We can also include this in Object-Oriented Tag.
.cpp is not a class file
lmao
Need this Tag
.h or header files can be made into class files
There is no such thing as "a class file" in C++.
5
21:49
i mean header file
But header files are not related to inheritance.
So header files can be made into header files?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah, what the hell?
None of the editors have answers in .
@TemplateRex Ah, that's a good point
I'm watching Bjarne, is he highly recommended? channel9.msdn.com/Events/GoingNative/2013/…
21:49
highly recommended for what?
Is he married?
@R.MartinhoFernandes but can you make an inheritance from it?
I think its possible.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Hum. You know, I actually don't know.
@AaronHall He's the inventor of C++, so of course he's "recommended" if you mean if it's recommended to watch his talks.
Well if I have a LaTeX question, I don't go reading Knuth.
21:50
I'm 51 years old. I'm married and have two children; both are now university students.
@AaronHall If you watch his talks and you think "Wow, I never knew C++ code could be so simple", then yes, watching his videos is highly recommended. He doesn't do anything advanced, though. If you want advanced, go watch Andrei's talks.
@AaronHall That's good. Because Knuth invented TeX, not LaTeX.
So yeah, not recommended.
@leemes there's talks? really? Better youtube search it
21:51
@AndyProwl I consider that a defect though, for header only code it seriously limits auto return types.
Andrei who?
@FredOverflow Variadic templates are funadic.
@TemplateRex I also think it's a limitation of C++
@cyberspace009 What do you mean?
too bad you can't do this
auto b() { return a(); }
auto a() { return b(); }
21:51
@AaronHall Alexandrescu
too bad?
That's an infinite type
I thought Bjarne was older than 51
would've been fun, no?
@leemes i thought he made some tech talk about c++. Ya know. code talk.
21:52
@AndyProwl the post you linked is from 2003...
@AndyProwl that was 10 yrs ago
Damn, I read 2013
@AndyProwl Bjarne is getting 63 tomorrow. We should get the cakes ready!
Bjarne Stroustrup (; born 30 December 1950) is a Danish computer scientist, most notable for the creation and development of the widely used C++ programming language. He is currently Professor and holder of the College of Engineering Chair in Computer Science at Texas A&M University. Education Stroustrup has a master's degree in mathematics and computer science (1975) from Aarhus University, Denmark, and a Ph.D. in computer science (1979) from the University of Cambridge, England, where he was a student at Churchill College. His thesis advisor in Cambridge was David Wheeler. Career Strous...
21:53
Bjarne is nice enough to reply to my emails.
@AndyProwl limitations, schlimitations... for all other purposes, the order of declaration matters at namespace scope but not at class scope, so why would it have to for return type deduction?
Now where am I going to pick up C++ best practices?
@AaronHall Read "Effective C++" by Scott Meyers.
Publishing is an investment and books have respectable editors as per publication date so most errata is by misprint. Still I'm sorry that I believe the word bad insults too many respectable editors. Btw, without that para the question still makes complete sense. That para is specifically for insulting aging work. — Chawathe Vipul Jun 30 at 18:42
ahahahahah what the fuck
@Rapptz He replied to mine as well, after two weeks, saying "Thanks" (for pointing out a bad mistake in his book)
21:54
@AndyProwl Can you remember the mistake?
@AndyProwl which mistake?
he replied to me the next day :v
About delegating constructors
mine was about concepts though
@AaronHall amazon
21:54
I am very surprised that the GoF book on Design Patterns didn't make this list. Does anyone know if there is a reason for that? Is this book no longer considered a good reference of patterns? — MadOgre 2 days ago
ahahahaha
I'll give the page number
There is so much wrong in that single comment
Page 503, last paragraph /cc @FredOverflow @TemplateRex
Thanks!
@AndyProwl Which book?
21:56
Cat, I don't get it...
@leemes TCPL 4th edition
@AndyProwl thx
"When using a delegating constructor, the object is not considered constructed until the delegating constructor completes - just completing the delegated-to constructor is not sufficient"
I know of the book, but what's wrong with the question. I'm a bit new to C++
21:56
That is not true (the text I quoted above)
Ok it was actually 1 week not 2
@AndyProwl An object is considered constructed after the first constructor finishes?
user3010322
@AndyProwl GCC's got me whipped: everytime I put free functions and other stuff after the functions that uses them, GCC complains like a whiny bitch (even for template functions who's internals shouldn't actually be called yet (two phase lookup, yay)).
user3010322
In the end, I started doing it for classes too, even thought it doesn't have any such silly restriction. =/
@AaronHall The book is awful, Patterns are overrated, the C++ code in the book is awful.
21:59
cargoculting.pdf is a disease that must be eradicated
sounds about right, but many consider it canonical
@ThePhD OK, I may buy the consistency argument (not completely sure).
@AndyProwl I opened my copy for the first time and... WTWSDVGIKGAKSDGH WTF THE CODE IS IN A PROPORTIONAL FONT WHAT IS WRONG WITH PEOPLE MY EYES IT BURNS MY EYES BURNS BURNS BURNS.
It's canonical Bad Design
I always put mine on top because there are a few gotchas with something not being defined first.
21:59
"many consider it canonical" is consistent with "overrated"
@R.MartinhoFernandes your keyboard is in capslock mode Robot

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