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22:00
and I'm gonna have a hard enough time sleeping as it is
user3010322
It'll be hard alright~~~
:DDDD
jesus
user3010322
I'm convinced almost anything can be made to sound sexual.
THE GOOSE
user1804599
22:00
mozes
is loose?
@DeadMG Hence why I listed it second after ‘post-mortem’? First you inspect the core dump, then you try to replicate.
@ThePhD yeah, because there is porn with almost anything
user3010322
That Rule 34 thing might be true.
22:01
no, if I terminate the process and lose my user's data, then first, everybody stops using my program, then I inspect the core dump and then I try to replicate.
user1804599
Don’t save user data on crash.
user1804599
Save it with a timer.
proost!
Hopefully you don't overwrite the old legitimate data with the new corrupt data that caused the program to crash.
maybe I'll save two separate copies.
(also, the user's data might well not be the problematic cause)
22:03
Keeeeel it.
If you're crashing, then the data might already be lost
anyway
user1804599
Never do anything but terminating when in corrupted state.
all I'm saying is that if it's my program, I need to make that choice for myself.
@DeadMG Or it might.
22:04
as a library developer, it's a super bad idea to go terminating the program without asking me what to do first.
user1804599
Corrupted state = terminate.
@DeadMG That’s an altogether different line of discussion, why bring it up now?
user1804599
As a library developer, you should make sure you don’t enter such a state, rather than giving every user endless debugging fun.
or let OS ask the user and let him decide what to do
I think I'm sick.
Ell
Ell
22:06
@rightfold what about recover?
@DeadMG Not everything has a ‘me’.
Also, forgot to buy tea.
user1804599
@Ell You cannot recover from corrupted state.
Ell
Ell
@rightfold by definition?
guys can i ask a question?
user1804599
22:06
Your recovery mechanism most likely needs to access some state, which may be corrupted.
@LucDanton No, but if there is a "me" and you terminated the "me"'s program without asking him, then "me" is going to be super fucking pissed off.
Also, it's stlll today so I can still go out to buy tea.
by "in corrupted state you can't be sure of anything you do, even recovering"
nothing is more annoying than random program termination.
@viron Only one. Sadly you already asked one.
22:07
@viron you already did
so guys can i ask 2 question :D
user1804599
One thing is, having my data screwed up followed by random program termination.
@viron That was the second one.
@viron that's the second one
22:07
that's the second question
Trollers :(
I'm out to replenish my tea supply.
@rightfold If the program is reliable enough to detect that there was a problem, then it's still reliable to at least a basic extent. Else, if there's such a problem, why bother detecting it? You can't even rely on std::terminate to terminate the program.
your own suggestions only make sense given some degree of program reliability.
you're entering a shaky philosophical ground
user1804599
IOW there are no options.
user1804599
22:09
Just assume the state is correct at all times.
on the contrary.
I think abort would be the thing, not terminate
if the program is fucked, you can't do anything, and that's that.
what if the corrupted state is not the program's fault but there is something wrong with OS ?
user1804599
@BartoszKP let’s not write software at all.
22:09
what if it's a hardware issue and memory gets corrupted randomly?
nothing makes sense
but there are plenty of cases where the program cannot continue but isn't actually fucked yet.
@rightfold exactly!
That was horrible.
user1804599
Escape immediately.
@R.MartinhoFernandes it was good : D
22:10
@R.MartinhoFernandes I didn't get it anyway.
huh.
lol robot made a "just a tip" joke
I haven't heard of the genre before :)
(anyway, he said "Just the tip")
yet I'm getting drunk so my opinion on sth being a good joke might be somewhat biased ;0
22:13
someone said it's looking like IRC...i think it's more like 4chan now
not even close
^ yeah
well, we're getting there
18 secs ago, by Rapptz
not even close
user1804599
My testicle feels like a testicle.
22:15
;U
@rightfold how do you know? have you tried someone else's before? :O
I just stumbled on this meta post from before my time:
82
Q: Mysterious Butt

theChrisKentI was attempting to answer a question today on SO and include some screenshots to help illustrate what I was talking about. Everything was fine until I went to upload my fourth image. Here is what the post screen looked like before I selected to upload: Once I pressed the Image button I got t...

2
Oh, are the people clamoring for a Result<T> (Andrei style?) arguing for an ErrorT SomeException monad?
user1804599
@CatPlusPlus I requested wiki account.
user1804599
22:21
@AdamS hi.
Is there a website where you can enter an equation or number and get if it's a number a floating point can store without imprecision?
@Mysticial LOL
@rightfold very nice pre-emptive strike!
@Adam S how about running that equation on floating point and arbitrary precision arithmetic and comparing results?
for arbitrary precision i think you can force wolfram to give quite a few digits
@Mysticial butts
@AdamS Have you tried: chat.stackoverflow.com/rooms/10/loungec - just post any number you are unsure of
22:29
@theChrisKent: Thanks. Do you also have the URL of the butt image? I'm asking purely for scientific reasons. — balpha May 3 '11 at 19:19
aha
user1804599
> Welcome to Lounge<C++>! We hope you will contribute much and well. You will probably want to read the help pages. Again, welcome and have fun! Cat Plus Plus (talk) 22:23, 30 December 2013 (UTC)
@AdamS I always found the notion "precise" a bit questionable in terms of floating point representations. What does it mean? So what if you have 1.5 - is that precise, or an approximation of the value 1.500001 that I actually had in mind?
You can't tell unless I also communicate the intended value.
"Frying the chicken in its own eggs", as the saying goes.
user1804599
@CatPlusPlus do you want to integrate Lounge<Chat> with ejabberd?
22:37
Ahaha it autoposts that
@rightfold Dunno what I want with LC
user1804599
Do you abandon Lounge<Chat>?
@AdamS Not a web site, but a method: compute the number as a fraction. Do a prime factorization of the denominator. If it's of the from 2^N, (where N isn't too immense or tiny) it can be represented precisely. Otherwise, it can't.
I'm not very motivated
user1804599
I am.
We talked about XMPP originally, but then there was this whole "let's do XMPP later" bit vOv
user1804599
22:39
Though I’m not very sure how XMPP deals with chat rooms.
user1804599
I know you can have one-to-one chats.
XMPP deals with packet routing at its core
There's a MUC extension
@Cat have you made any progress on auth?
user1804599
Ah, cool.
I thought about it some more, does that count? (no)
When I got to actual code writing I just stopped and my attention kinda drifted elsewhere
I'm just not having fun, I need a long break (haha i cant i do this shit for living)
user1804599
22:43
I’m going to play with XMPP in Scala.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I haven't forgotten about UCD stuff either, I have a bit written already; I suck, I know :(
user3010322
UCD?
user3010322
You're doing stuff with UCD?
@CatPlusPlus Hey, don't fret it, dude. Take a rest.
user3010322
Can I help? :D
22:51
Hell, I'll push the bit I have committed
It's kinda not very helpful. Oh well
user3010322
What part of the UCD are ya'll messing with, by the way? o.o
user3010322
What paaaart.
And also codepage tables
user3010322
Ooh! I haven't done codepages just yet.
user3010322
22:54
I'm just assuming all data is UTF8 at the moment. >.>
user3010322
Aside from data that's some other variant of Unicode (16 or 32).
user3010322
Unicode is all that existed~ Unicode is all that ever existed~
What is Unicode 32
user3010322
UTF16/UTF32
user3010322
I was too lazy to add UTF
user3010322
22:56
Too many :keys:
user3010322
Where'sit pushed?
user3010322
Github? Bitbucket?
Git? Hg?
@TemplateRex This was originally how I made my GUI library thing.
sbi
sbi
@R.MartinhoFernandes What's this? Are you putting on weight?
@Xeo Um. You removed what?
@ThePhD Yes
user3010322
23:05
Sbi survived Christmas!
sbi
sbi
@thecoshman Buying a sharpener for a bad knife is like buying 8GB of RAM for a 386 running Windows 3.1.
obtw
I lost 85 pounds now.
sbi
sbi
@ThePhD Of course. I do have a lot of experience in doing so.
user3010322
Is that due to exercise or starvation or some strange combination of both?
definitely starvation.
user3010322
23:06
@sbi You'll have to teach me sometime.
it was only about 79 pounds on Christmas Day.
@ThePhD He lost his wallet with 85 pounds in it.
people make that joke every time :P
user3010322
Uggggh I hate banks.
user3010322
Have to verify my address, have to make sure I live where I say I do,
23:07
I also despise banks.
user3010322
what the hell do they care, as long as I put money in their goddamn system? D:
it's to catch tax evaders, criminals, stuff like that.
sbi
sbi
@ThePhD I have to?
@sbi No. I don't do that. If I did I might have to exercise or something. ;)
user1804599
I want to go to work.
user1804599
23:07
Fuck home.
@ThePhD They don't actually care. They're mostly required to do such things because governments want to track you and your money.
user3010322
@sbi Well, uh. Not have to. Just give me pointers, maybe. Sometime. In the distant future.
so then
sbi
sbi
@R.MartinhoFernandes No, you don't. As you well know I have put on weight and a do not exercise.
user3010322
@JerryCoffin Banks should have Wormhole accounts, opened in a fourth dimension. :c
23:08
is it true that you'll be here more often now that you won the fight for your apartment?
sbi
sbi
@ThePhD Smart pointers, huh?
@ThePhD Most people settle for Swiss bank accounts.
user3010322
@sbi Yeah. It'd seem like the RAIIght thing to do. :D
user3010322
@JerryCoffin Do Swiss citizens consider Swiss Bank Accounts "offshore" or "good" ?
@ThePhD I don't think I know enough Swiss citizens to answer that.
23:10
@JerryCoffin Switizens?
sbi
sbi
@DeadMG I dunno. Who said this? They seem to have a much better grasp about what's going to happen to me in the next year than I have myself. As for "having won": I won a battle. (Albeit a very important one, which I hope will be deciding.) War is still upon me.
nobody said it, I merely speculated it.
@DeadMG You can't just take Paris back. You need to push back all the way to Berlin.
Or something.
You can't just stop eating, you need to see a more competent doctor and find an actual cure?
@DeadMG ...or, in the case of the Dutch Chocolate makers, Sweetizens.
user1804599
23:13
Chocolate is good stuff.
user1804599
Well, real chocolate.
user1804599
Not that Kit Kat crap.
Ell
Ell
Kit Kat is nice chocolate too
What do you mean Kit Kat? Android is in Java, not chocolate.
user1804599
Boulanger.
user3010322
23:14
Milk Chocolate best chocolate.
sbi
sbi
@DeadMG Mostly I am here over xmas/new year because I have some time to myself. (I will have to get used to that concept again.)
The kids are now with their mothers (or were in bed when I dropped in earlier), I can sleep in (and for long enough a time that even the small kids' rhythm can be shifted an hour or two), and since I have two weeks of vacation I have enough time to do lots of those things you always wanted to do but never got around doing, so I don't have a bad conscious wasting my precious spare time on you
@R.MartinhoFernandes What's that mean?
@rightfold Mmm...Nuehaus and Pierre Marcolini. Bliss.
@sbi Silly WW2 reference.
sbi
sbi
@R.MartinhoFernandes Oh, are you that old? I wasn't even born back then.
user3010322
Hm.
user3010322
23:17
I have a std::vector<byte>. I want to tell it to add x amount of bytes to the end. Would telling it resize( vec.size() + bytes_i_need ) be suitable? Or is there some other way I'm missing?
v.insert(v.end(), x, default_value);
user3010322
@Rapptz Uh.
user3010322
Oh. I didn't know that overload existed.
user3010322
But that also initializes everything with a default value, which makes me sad. =[
so does resize
you're SOL if you don't want to initialise it.
user3010322
23:21
Not with unitialized_allocator ~~
pretty sure it doesn't initialise it through the allocator
user3010322
It does!
could be wrong though
user3010322
It calls allocator.construct
you know
user3010322
23:22
I filled it in with a no-op
this has never, ever happened before, but I just realized that ThePhD actually came up with a better solution than me.
user3010322
o.0
user3010322
Wat.
sbi
sbi
@ThePhD A vector is a container of objects. Of course those objects are initialized. Otherwise it'd be a container of raw memory.
@DeadMG Define "better".
23:25
same problem, but his solution was less messy and involved changing much less code without (amazingly) any ridiculously bad side effects that rendered it completely unusable.
sbi
sbi
@DeadMG He's making a std::vector containing uninitialized memory. I wouldn't exactly call that "less messy" or "free of side effects".
me neither.
sbi
sbi
Oh. And here I thought you just did exactly that.
nah
if you accept in advance that you want a vector of uninitialized memory, then his solution to achieve it was better than mine.
I was recently in a debate where I called some guy a moron for re-rolling std::vector and this was one of his motivations
sbi
sbi
"If you accept in advance that you want UB, then his solution is just fine."
23:29
@sbi Yes, but the intent in both cases seems to be to create a vector that doesn't initialize its contents. So, the only real question is who accomplished that goal more cleanly, not whether the goal itself is good or produces clean results.
@sbi Only UB for non-PODs.
sbi
sbi
@JerryCoffin No. The real question is: "Given that he wants uninitialized memory, which std lib feature should he use for that?"
@DeadMG Does copying the vector do the right thing?
@sbi I don't think that's accurate. He apparently wants uninitialized memory with a vector-like interface.
sbi
sbi
@DeadMG Really. And what's with accessing uninitialized floating point values? In the 90s there was talk in c.l.c++.m that this might trigger a hardware exception on some platforms.
23:32
reading uninitialized values is still UB.
If all you want is to allocate raw memory, then ::operator new is pretty clearly the "right" answer--but that doesn't provide what either seems to want.
I am, of course, still a proponent of the suggestion that you don't need this.
user3010322
There's uninitialized_allocator<T> and unsafe_uninitialized_allocator<T>
What
I don't even.
user3010322
23:33
unsafe is for when you want to have a UB party. unintialized_allocator uses type traits to make sure it's trivially default constructible.
@LucDanton You'd probably replace allocator::construct and allocator::construct(..., const T&) separately.
I'll just stand back and pretend nothing is going on.
user3010322
@DeadMG One is an empty overload, the other is a templated variadic with 1 extra parameter
That should have been ‘what happens if the vector is copied’ rather.
user3010322
@R.MartinhoFernandes It's not bad, I made sure it's safe!
23:34
@ThePhD Whatever.
Also, why is the ground made of stars?
user3010322
Seriously, I did!!
@LucDanton Pretty sure it calls allocator::construct(std::move(originalelem));
@ThePhD ... miss the point./
user3010322
u.u
pretty typical though
ThePhD has the barest bones of a slightly good idea, and then goes and cocks up the implementation to give you piles and piles of UB
user3010322
23:35
template <class U>
void construct( U* ) {
static_assert( std::has_trivial_default_constructor<U>::value,
"This allocator can only be used with trivally default constructible types" );
}

template <class U, class A0, class... Args>
void construct( U* up, A0&& a0, Args&&... args ) {
::new(up)U( std::forward<A0>( a0 ), std::forward<Args>( args )... );
}
user3010322
That's not UB!
user3010322
I use static_assert to give you a proper empty constructor
user3010322
And then I cover the case of copies and other emplacements
user3010322
It's the right way to do it!
sbi
sbi
23:35
The link under this topic in the newbie hints is dead. Also, in the paragraph just above that, it says "...not matter what your local time..." rather than "no matter what..."
@ThePhD By reading uninitialised values.
user3010322
It's your job, obviously, to fill it in.
...
Turns out that the stars were actually rocks.
Wait, wrong room.
user3010322
After doing std::vector<byte, uninitialized_allocator<byte>>, you've gone out of your way to have an uninitialized vector. If you don't understand by the time you're done with typing that monster out you're supposed to fill in the values yourself, you shouldn't be using the class.
You said all that was needed right there. You have no excuse now.
23:38
Hmm, this is a fine poutine.
normally, I'd say "You should really provide a range of values to initialize it with".
I'm sometimes very happy with google. "Bjrarne wiki" leads me to Dr. Stroustrups wiki. first entry.
but then I'd be like, "That would involve fucking around with iterators".
so meh
really I'd have less sympathy for the uninitialization people if ranges weren't so horribly unusable.
user3010322
WTB std::begin_memory( my_obj ) and std::end_memory( my_obj );
... how would ranges help in this situation?
Why do you guys always bring up ranges?
user3010322
23:39
That way I could just pass it to the vector outright.
user3010322
@Rapptz If the goal is to fill in the vector with types, the only constructor it has to do that is with 2 iterators.
sbi
sbi
@Rapptz There's a whole range of reasons for that (which I won't iterate now).
15
@ThePhD That sounds so wrong. (Also, there are iterators for uninitialised memory in the standard library; no, they won't work for you because your use case is wrong)
@sbi Hmm star or mark as offensive ..
user3010322
@R.MartinhoFernandes I don't see how my use case is wrong.
23:41
@Rapptz Actually these days I’m waiting for an opportunity to bring up pipes.
@ScarletAmaranth C++ didn't exist before 1983.
@ThePhD You already explained above.
sbi
sbi
@CaptainGiraffe Do you really want me to answer that?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Rock stars, are they?
@FredOverflow that's kinda the point, it was C with classes then, or is 1980 even before that?
@Rapptz Because you could simply set arbitrary initial values by passing in an appropriate range.
23:42
@ScarletAmaranth Before
@sbi I found it so funny, I laughed it to a star. Thank you you clever bastard.
whereas with iterators, you can set arbitrary initial values by... passing it appropriate iterators.
and nobody wants to do that.
First standard was in 1998
@ScarletAmaranth C with classes started in 1979.
user3010322
@R.MartinhoFernandes Uninitialized, resizable storage is not part of the standard. So I need another way to make it happen.
23:43
fair enough :) well, I am hitting the sack, have a jolly good night
@ThePhD "You have an uninitialised vector. You should now understand that it isn't really usable until initialised."
user3010322
So initialize it with some values, which is your job.
Then use reserve and insert.
Or reserve and push_back.
Or reserve and back_inserter.
user1804599
Chrome sometimes suddenly decides to use a serif font where usually a sans-serif font is used.
user3010322
Last I checked, reserved values must still be default constructed.
user1804599
23:44
Can anyone reproduce?
@ThePhD Check again.
@ScarletAmaranth First version of CPre was working in October 1979.
@FredOverflow :All we have is Bjarnes own macros for that. I don't think that constitutes a language.
@JerryCoffin Why no delete in here?
sbi
sbi
Anyway, I guess I should go to bed. I somewhat overdid the last few nights, and I don't want to be tired tomorrow night.
23:49
@rightfold I have a penis, two testicles, and no reason to believe they don't function.
sbi
sbi
@DeadMG I have proof mine do. Multiple proof. Smart look
@CaptainGiraffe Was C with classes based solely on macros?
@FredOverflow Yes, that is what I understand, up until 81-ish, it was all C macros.
> At first, the class, derived class, strong typing, inlining, and default argument features were added to C via Stroustrup's "C with Classes" to C compiler, Cpre.
sbi
sbi
@CaptainGiraffe From what I know he wrote cfront immediately.
23:51
Doesn't sound like a macro system at all.
How do you get strong typing with macros? :)
@FredOverflow You don't. Lets get Bjarne to answer that. !!
user3010322
@R.MartinhoFernandes Alright, that makes sense for when you're working purely with a C++ API. I'll remember that.
user3010322
However, that doesn't invalidate the need to have an uninitialized allocator. Especially when working with things that expect a pre-allocated buffer that the call will fill in.
user3010322
See: every C API ever.
yes, but initializing the buffer has no downsides.
except performance so I guess that you totally profiled and proved that it was a performance bottleneck huh
23:54
zing
Oo 2014 tomorrow ... 2013 seems to be moving very fast ...
user3010322
Yes. Especially in the case of loading several images, from WebP to PNG.
@DeadMG All his program does is not-initialise memory, so initialising it has a significant cost.
2
@Telkitty you're just dizzy
& old :'( ... old = slow = time seems faster
23:55
2013 was long.
@ThePhD You profiled especially in that case?
long year = 2013;
2
This was the slowest year I've ever experienced. D:
@MohammadAliBaydoun About 25% of years are significantly longer than 2013
user3010322
@R.MartinhoFernandes The original motivation for unitialized_allocator was for my image data.
23:56
@sehe You're longer ~ ♥
Why does that need a vector interface btw?
^ money question
@EtiennedeMartel oh god
I thought (byte*, size) would be all the interface you'd ever need for raw image data.
@bamboon not yet
23:57
that's how SFML does it
:v
@Rapptz ha ha. ha.
FTR not following the discussion and drunk
thumbs up
@Rapptz SFYL
user1804599
Syphilis.
Add that to the random name list.
(Don't)
user3010322
23:59
std::vector<byte, uninitialized_allocator<byte>> data( streamlength );
stream.Read( data.data( ), data.size( ) );
int width, height;
int error = WebPGetInfo( data.data( ), data.size(), &width, &height );
if ( error == 0 )
	throw ErrorCodeException( "Incompatible WebP image data", error );

std::unique_ptr<byte[], decltype( &free )> decoded( WebPDecodeRGBA( data.data( ), data.size(), &width, &height ), &free );
if ( decoded == null )
	throw Exception( "Failed to decode WebP RGBA data" );

std::vector<byte, uninitialized_allocator<byte>> bytes( sz );

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