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13:03
there is also a cool video about hydrophobic spray in case you're interested ;0
@DavidHeffernan That's not the user's choice, but the choice of application's designer. I think it's OK that you want to make your application look the way YOU want. If you want to involve user in determining the looks of the application, then it's a whole another level - implementing themes etc. — BartoszKP 11 secs ago
They say there is no such thing as a "dumb question".
Sadly, I won't have time to answer this
user1804599
13:18
@sehe How many polar bears does it take to change a light bulb?
oh fuck me! both Qt Creator and CMake are awful. CMake can't handle UTF8 signature (BOM) and Qt Creator always saves CMakeLists with that signature and has no option to remove it o_O
>using CMake
well there's your problem
well suggest another build system then
@Abyx huh? Some of my coworkers are using QTCreator with CMake, and they haven't had any problems
and another IDE, probably
13:22
I use ninja with my Qt Creator :v
@Abyx options → text editor → behaviour → file encodings
@rightfold Would probably be faster with cartesian bears.
@Darklighter or that
Emacs+SCons ftw ;0
@Rapptz our qtcreator users use CMake to generate Ninja files
13:23
but I'm old
@Darklighter oh great.
@Abyx keep if present should be the standard there
it is for me
btw ninja is great, so much better than make
@Darklighter And even more better than msbuild
13:26
@ThePhD hmmm, why not?
I like Qt Creator, outside of the 2 major bugs I wish were fixed.
me too, it doesn’t feel like a complete IDE yet, although more and more features become available
@Rapptz yep and ninja calls cmake
I don't use CMake period.
@Rapptz what do you use then?
13:28
I made my own thing
ah
does it work? I mean is it production-ready?
I don't get why this is marked as fixed
and also it it better than all-other-make?
@Abyx It works for me. Don't think anyone's tried it.
Am I the only one who doesn't get auto completion when I use auto?
@Rapptz it works for me in QtCreator300
13:32
guess it's a for(auto&& i : v) issue
double angle brackets still broken :v
most annoying bug known to man
template<typename T, typename V = std::hash<T>>
                                            // <-- cursor position when you press enter
i use the clang code model, which works better in most cases, but has also some regressions
user1804599
EXPLAIN ANALYZE is cool.
mm, why is everyone integrating Lua and other stuff in their engines, C++ is just fine for scripting gameplay :P
user1804599
TIL about external sorting.
why 23 degrees feels so warm!
13:44
Hmm...
@Telkitty C or F ? :0
Any reason why I'd use malloc for an array of pointers over new T* [size] ? I mean ,there shouldn't be a difference right?
user1804599
Because you use std::vector<T*> or std::unique_ptr<T*[]>.
any reason why you'd use either of them over std::vector?
I know, this is a theoretical arguments between idiot pedants.
The 'exercise' we're debating is to implement something like std::vector without calling the constructor on all elements in the first place.
That is, creating a lazy_vector of n elements should not call the constructor n times. This is stupid and theoretical.
13:47
we've already had this discussion
user1804599
new is safer.
user1804599
You cannot fuck up the sizeof.
@Rapptz no, this isn't anything practical (and for anything practical I'd never reinvent containers like that...)
not you and I, but the room
@rightfold Depends on what you define as "change". Crushing is a change too, I guess, so 1 polar bear would be more than enough
13:49
anyway, time to go.
@Rapptz ah, if you can find a link to that discussion I'd rather read it before I waste anyone's time.
Does calling new on a pointer array do anything to the array? I never pondered about this sort of thing in the past tbh, I mean, pointers don't have constructors that are run like that do they?
I mean, is there any reason it should be slower/faster? Hmm...
Dec 30 '13 at 23:21, by Rapptz
you're SOL if you don't want to initialise it.
just relevant to your lazy_vector thing
Ha. It starts to look like google has learned to come up with the most recent Boost doc links first these days
@Rapptz thanks, and sorry for being annoying like that, I hate it when people jump to the JS room with over theoretical questions like this one rather than checking the spec.
user1804599
@BenjaminGruenbaum T*p{}; initialises p to the null pointer.
13:51
I find the cpp spec so hard to navigate compared to ECMAScript, Java or C#
user1804599
But new T*[N] won’t do that, AFAIK.
the C++ standard is pretty
@Rapptz I didn't blame the standard, I blame myself.
well organised and neat, clickable TOC, etc.
user1804599
The C# spec was nice until ECMA didn’t publish it anymore.
13:52
@BartoszKP degrees celsius
user1804599
Because now it’s a fucking Word document instead of a PDF.
@rightfold hmm, so there shouldn't be any reason to prefer malloc to new ?
@rightfold wat
I know what this lounge got: femmephobia - fear of anything feminine
user1804599
@BenjaminGruenbaum Only ever use malloc when you need to pass the pointer to an API that applies free to it.
Ell
Ell
13:53
@Telkitty Why?
you have to cast malloc in C++ which is error prone
@rightfold yeah, my friend said I should use malloc for this rather than new T*[..] since new T*[..] would do something n times (for each pointer) but that sounded strange to me.
Are you still whining about that belly dancer?
@Ell half of the times I post a feminine picture - be that a pink buttercream cake, a barbie or a woman that could be on the cover of a rogue magazine, it's moved to the bin
99
Q: In what cases do I use malloc vs new?

Ralph BurgessI see in C++ there are multiple ways to allocate and free data and I understand that when you call malloc you should call free and when you use the new operator you should pair with delete and it is a mistake to mix the two (e.g. Calling free() on something that was created with the new operator)...

13:54
I read that, yeah.
did you even check SO before asking here btw?
okay
@Telkitty And... how often does it happen with "masculine" pictures?
malloc vs new has a lot of results.
seriously? this isn't my first or 100th time here :P I just rarely ask stuff.
@Telkitty what's a feminine picture?
user1804599
13:55
malloc requires a lot of boilerplate too.
@Telkitty jumping to conclusions are we
@jalf almost zero times
user1804599
You need to cast the result, then check whether it returned nullptr and if so you should throw std::bad_alloc.
Lemme try the spec.
user1804599
If you need to use malloc, write a wrapper.
13:56
denial ...
@rightfold this entire code is a wrapper, but I get what you mean.
@Telkitty I think you really want to say, that pictures you usually find amusing are not amusing to others. And vice-versa perhaps. Adding "feminism-like" notions to it is a bit paranoiac ;-0
malloc doesn't work with non-PODs iirc
user1804599
template<typename T>
T* safer_malloc(std::size_t count) {
    auto result = reinterpret_cast<T*>(::malloc(sizeof(T) * count));
    if (result == nullptr) throw std::bad_alloc();
    return result;
}
@Telkitty You mistake Ozphobia for femmephobia :)
13:57
:DD
@MartinJames My Aussie magpie pictures were never deleted ...
I'm in the spec, which is over 1300 pages long. I'm trying to find out where to look, but I'm really not sure.
@Telkitty when I've seen "similar but male" images here, I've called for them to be binned too. The problem is not what I want to look at or like looking at (I didn't personally have a problem with the belly dancer at all), but what I want to appear unprompted on my work PC's monitor. And I certainly do not want to see naked men there any more than naked women
@BartoszKP but deletion? ... one would not usually delete things they do not find intimidating or annoying
@Telkitty well you have a little tendency of flooding sometimes ; ) you know Puppy, easily gets angry
13:58
@rightfold needs static_assert(std::is_pod<T>(), "Must be POD");
(less so, in fact)
I'm in 5.3.4 page 108 now by the way.
Have you considered that this chat room just might not be the right place to post pictures in general, regardless of their content?
@Telkitty was it you who posted the owls? I replied awwww and stared them.
On average I post 1-2 pictures a day
that's definitely not excessive
user784668
14:00
If there's a call to foo::bar(arg) in some code, is it at all possible that it'll call ::hack::foo::bar due to ADL?
you have a pretty precise measurements for all activity here I see ;0
@Fanael yes
@Telkitty ... yes it is?
At least to us spoilsports who visit the chat from work
jalf have you been here lately?
@Fanael why would that be a problem?
14:01
@Telkitty TBH, I don't mind the odd picture of Oz wildlife that pop up occasionally, (as long as they are not in black and white:).
@Rapptz Yes...? Not as much in the holidays, but yes?
how don't you notice it?
@Telkitty consider avoiding oneboxing also
how is 1-2 images per day "excessive" when they're almost common place
@Rapptz Have you heard of the word "subjective"?
I'm not saying that it is excessive by some golden universal standard
Just that pretty much any time I see a picture oneboxed here, it clutters up the chat and I personally would rather have just seen a simple link posted
The fact that there are more images posted than I'd like to see doesn't in any way change that.
14:05
@Rapptz it looks like it's not often that someone posts more than 1 picture a day though
@BartoszKP that's only from 1 image hosting site
well, that one image hosting site it basically what reddit runs on
which is basically the source of most images posted here :)
Ell
Ell
@Telkitty just don't onebox stuff, just post a non oneboxed link
3
@Rapptz I think in this discussion we should count only the oneboxing ones, as they only can be annoying enough to be deleted
Hmm, I'm in 18.6.1.2 in the spec and I don't see where it even says that in new T[..] it calls the default constructor (or rather no parameter constructor) for each T
14:06
@Rapptz Yes? That is certainly an interesting fact. I'm not sure I see how it is relevant, though.
I have not disputed that images are posted here
All the picture stuff - we have a userscript that removes the oneboxes and images from chat if anyone is interested.
That was not a reply to you. Sorry, should have used the reply button.
Just that 99% of them I'd rather see as links than oneboxed
Anyway.
we'll ask whether you like the picture or not before oneboxing it next time, @jalf
14:07
2
Q: Chat Message Remover

Doorknob of SnowScript See a chat message you don't want on your screen? An annoying image or animated GIF? Now you can remove it! This is a simple script that I made. It will allow you to click a chat message to remove it. That's all! Here's the code: javascript:function f(){$('.content').each(function(i){$(...

@Ell Yeah, pretty much that. @Telkitty if you'd linked to the one before, I'd probably have starred it. I thought it was a cool picture. I just want to be able to control when images appear on my screen
@BenjaminGruenbaum 18.6.1.2 talks about operator new[], which is a memory allocation function, nothing more.
return malloc(size); is a fully conforming implementation of operator new[].
but let me point out again, I'm not speaking for anyone else and this is my 100% subjective opinion.
@Griwes Ah, any help on finding what I'm looking for? I want to see if calling new T*[..] has any overhead (that is, does something to T pointers) or if it's "as fast" as malloc (again, theoretical discussion)
@BenjaminGruenbaum (18.6.1.2.1 even tells you that and links to section you want to see!)
14:10
@Griwes 5.3.4 ?
Yes.
That just throws me back to new that's where I got to 18.6.1.2 from
Again: 18.6.1.2 has nothing to do with calling the constructors.
I got to 18.6.1.2 from following step 8 in 5.3.4
It simply talks about memory allocation mechanism used by new expression.
14:11
Which part specifies calling the constructors?
I am pretty sure that you didn't read the entire 5.3.4 if you keep asking that question.
new auto(1); // allocated type is int
auto x = new auto(’a’); // allocated type is char, x is of type char*
whoa
s/didn't read/didn't understand
@Griwes que
@BenjaminGruenbaum Do you seriously want me to look through 5.3.4 for you?
@Rapptz 5.3.4.2 [example]
huh, well damn.
14:12
5.3.4.2 talks about the auto specifier. I'm asking about array allocation.
(At least in n3690 :D)
int main() {
    auto x = new auto(1);
}
this compiles.
Yeah, I didn't know that either :)
why wouldn't it, 1 is an integer
14:13
I am just surprised new auto is a thing.
yeah that
no one cares that 1 is an integer
user784668
So, I learned something fun, but I'm still unsure about the array allocation. Where does it specify that the constructor is called for each element created?
14:13
compiler does, obviously
@Fanael Hm, I got it off STL. So it's second-hand info.
VS2013 Nov CTP compiles the following:
auto main() {
auto x = new auto(1);
}
Might be a rule involving T being more greedy than an explicit A.
@BenjaminGruenbaum I think there is something in 5.3.4.17.
> error: '::main' must return 'int'
14:16
anyway, I really should go now. It's 9:15 AM.
adios.
@Jefffrey want a screenshot?
(It doesn't mention array explicitly, though.)
The example in .12 is actually pretty good
14:16
@ScarletAmaranth no, I trust you
Xeo
Xeo
@Fanael ADL only happens for unqualified calls
main.cpp:1:1: error: 'main' must return 'int'
auto main() {
^
on Clang w/ Coliru :v
screenshot inc
user784668
@Xeo yeah, I see it now in the standard
Xeo
Xeo
@Rapptz non-templates are always preferred over templates if they match equally otherwise
14:17
MSVC-ism.
@Xeo Really?
@Rapptz -std=c++1y?
user784668
@Rapptz Really.
@Griwes Yes
:P
Now add return 0;.
described completely in 3.7.4 according to where I came from, lemme check that part
14:18
@Griwes Still same error.
error: cannot initialize return object of type 'auto' with an rvalue of type 'int'
    return 0;
           ^
wot
Sounds like a defect, IMHO.
wat
clang version 3.5 (trunk 198075)
Target: x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu
Thread model: posix
@BenjaminGruenbaum Again: I am pretty sure that 3.7.4 only talks about ctors.
Did you look at 5.3.4.17?
I think main can't be auto main because the signature is explicitly specified.
14:20
@BenjaminGruenbaum ...wat?
2 mins ago, by Rapptz
MSVC-ism.
Xeo
Xeo
Just because MSVC compiles something doesn't mean it's correct.
@BenjaminGruenbaum auto main() -> int works fine :v
I have never said it's correct
I said it compiled it
@BenjaminGruenbaum auto foo() { return 0; } also has int () signature...
14:21
@Griwes the funny thing is I didn't need to say return 0; :)
(Because, obviously, auto isn't a magical thingy that exists outside of the type system.)
@ScarletAmaranth return 0; is implicit in global function called main :P
@ScarletAmaranth but main has implicit return 0
I think it explicitly asks for int main() or int main(int argc, char* argv[]) but you may be right.
If this is actually forbidden by the standard, I would call it a defect.
That is, auto main() while having the same semantics is not supposed to work.
14:22
yeah, but it looks broken
@ScarletAmaranth stay away from it like a plague
@BenjaminGruenbaum auto foo() { return 0; } is the exact same thing as int foo() { return 0; }.
Now, have you looked at 5.3.4.17 already?
I know, which is why I said they have the same semantics but different syntax.
@Griwes Yeah, I have.
If the syntax matters in this particular case, the standard is broken.
I'm still not sure, what "access and ambiguity control" means.
14:23
(Not that anyone would actually use auto main(), since it is longer than int main()...)
@Griwes 3.6.1 part 2 specifies that the implementation must allow int and that the return type is int , so auto main is not forbidden from what I understand.
@Griwes Alf would disagree
@BenjaminGruenbaum Mkay, which version of the standard are you looking at? :D
@Griwes 2012 draft.
@Griwes auto main() -> int {} is sexy and standard compliant
14:25
@BenjaminGruenbaum Document number, please.
ISO/IEC N3337
I DEMAND WEEKEND! NOW!
@BenjaminGruenbaum Go grab n3690 :D
From 2012-01-16
JBL
JBL
14:25
@jalf Oh yes, please ;_;
@Griwes where from :)?
Ah, great xD
But seriously, googling for "n3690" gives you that immediately.
@Griwes omg one more character
can't type it noooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
14:26
It's also under "latest publicly available draft" on WG21 website.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit It buys you nothing and is longer, so you'd have to be insane to prefer it. Or something.
@Griwes Yes I agree but quibbling over it for that reason seems silly
Ah wow this is way better.
Thanks @Griwes .
But since you hate everything about auto, I am withdrawing from this discussion :D
i have n3797
1
Q: What's the use of const union members? Aren't they quite pointless?

Lightness Races in OrbitIn the comments to this answer, Koushik raised a very valid point. Take the following: union T { int x; const int y; }; Since only one member may be "active" at any one time (made active by writing to it), and y cannot be written to after initialisation, isn't this rather pointless? I...

14:28
@BenjaminGruenbaum :D
It is always better to use the same document version when talking paragraph numbers.
I feel like an idiot now ^_^
user784668
Is std a reserved namespace name, or is it just ::std that's special?
Wow this is way better. Section 8.5 of the new draft is clear and to the point.
Hmm, I still don't see any reference to pointers in 8.5.7 though.
@Fanael You cannot add new things to ::std - I think this is the only special thing about it.
@BenjaminGruenbaum There are three cases there.
Is a pointer a (cv-qualified) class type?
14:32
Is a pointer an array type?
I see them. Arrays, class type and refernece type.
Both answers are "no", hence the last, "otherwise" clause is in effect.
"Reference"?
int[] != int*
Ah, I read it wrong again -_- Thanks a lot.
14:33
I see "class type", "array type" and "other types".
Xeo
Xeo
@Fanael You can do evil stuff like namespace foo{ namespace std{ /* lalala */ } } using namespace foo;
Yeah, sorry again. Thanks for the help.
user784668
@Xeo Yeah, that's why I'm asking.
If you ever need any help with anything web related let me know :)
user1804599
@Xeo That’s pretty cool.
14:37
@BenjaminGruenbaum With anything web related? Can you annihilate all currently used web technologies and create something sane from the ground up?
@Griwes I probably can, but no one will use it. I think the world is coming to understand that HTML and CSS are not well fit for the modern web and people are building pretty decent transpilers that let you use modern JS and limit you from using the really shitty parts of JS. So you kind of get a much better language.
I think we're at least 5 years from a 'decent' web though to be fair.
@BenjaminGruenbaum Hence the "annihilate" part.
As in, unexist them!
hah :)
I guess I can mail Al Gore and ask him to shut off the internet.
@BenjaminGruenbaum We'd need completely redesigned protocols, content description languages and shit.
I decided to do something useful today, but now I'm staring at Boost.Spirit again.
so much for productivity.
14:39
@Griwes oh yeah, stuff like BGP is completely broken.
(Seriously, how long until we get binary, non-stateless web protocol?)
@Borgleader correct.
It's coming.
Also I don't get the #1312 XKCD tooltip
> non-stateless
that's stateful
I know.
14:40
WebSockets got (are getting?) full duplex binary support. It's not a great protocol but it's acceptable.
Fine, then.
Xeo
Xeo
@BartekBanachewicz If it's never needed (called for), it's never evaluated - that's what laziness is. :P
@BenjaminGruenbaum I want a binary, stateful and sane HTTP. That's what I meant.
14:41
@Xeo ohlol
@Griwes HTTP 2.0 has support for binary data and duplex data. I'd like more but it's a good start and WebSockets kind of solve that problem.
how was your holiday?
I started 2014 by eating raw meat while wearing my top hat and watching fireworks
@BartekBanachewicz sounds fun.
that's basically how I'd like the whole year to look like
Ell
Ell
@BartekBanachewicz raw meat? yack
14:43
@BenjaminGruenbaum Is it stateful?
(I.e. does it annihilate those silly SESSID thingies?)
@Griwes hah, WebSockets are stateful and HTTP 2 statefulness is still debated (as in, people are saying WebSockets already solve that and I tend to agree.
Steak tartare is a meat dish made from finely chopped or minced raw beef or horse meat. It is often served with onions, capers and seasonings (the latter typically incorporating fresh ground pepper and Worcestershire sauce), sometimes with a raw egg yolk, and often on rye bread. The name tartare is sometimes generalized to other raw meat or fish dishes. Although less common than the completely raw variety, there is a version served in France of steak tartare called tartare aller-retour. It is a mound of mostly raw steak tartare that is lightly seared on one side of the patty. Histo...
So yeah, those silly things like SESSID and hacks like cookies should be a thing of the past.
@BenjaminGruenbaum We need a single thing that fixes all that bullshit.
14:45
it's chopped up so it isn't not like eating a rare steak
Not numerous different protocols.
@Griwes right, and that thing is web sockets.
"Web" and "sockets" in a single sentence triggers two alarms in my brain.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit well, the link is to an answer, innit?
14:46
It seems like the a reasonable solution to the problem of statelessness.
@BenjaminGruenbaum It uses "web" (which triggers an alarm) and "socket" (which triggers an alarm in most cases)? :D
@BartekBanachewicz I had it how I liked it
meanwhile, all those answers are wrong
is there a better SSH client than putty for Windows? I currently just restore my KDE VM each time I need a decent shell into my server.
Seems a bit like overkill though.
14:47
@BartekBanachewicz :D
I found other proper images but they didn't look nearly as cheesy
user784668
@LightnessRacesinOrbit so write a correct one?
huh. is std::is_trivially_assignable (and friends) really unimplemented in gcc 4.9/clang 3.4?
@Fanael I don't have one.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit nice question by the way.
14:49
@Fanael The answers are wrong because they make false assumptions about how to use unions. I know how to use unions, but I still don't have an answer to the core question.
Ell
Ell
@BartekBanachewicz yack, like I said ;)
user784668
@LightnessRacesinOrbit I know why they're wrong, you don't have to tell me.
Ell
Ell
It looks like the most distasteful food to eat
that is eaten still
5 mins ago, by Bartek Banachewicz
it's chopped up so it isn't not like eating a rare steak
14:50
@Fanael I figured I didn't, but you misunderstood my first comment. This was the best way to clarify it.
user784668
@sehe from libstdc++: /// is_trivially_assignable (still unimplemented)
JBL
JBL
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Those just encourage me to never use unions haha!
Ell
Ell
@BartekBanachewicz Still :P
@Ell try it first :)
Ell
Ell
14:51
I should at some point
we don't really have it in england much
if you do it yourself remember to buy the best meat you can find
@LightnessRacesinOrbit then I'll stick to my VM :-p
however it takes shitload of time
my friend spent a few hours with a knife
Ell
Ell
anyway I have a mock driving test to attend :) bye all
@Fanael dang
14:52
@Ell GL
@BartekBanachewicz at which point you probably have some serious bacteria growth going on
@Collin eh, I ate it and I'm alive :P
seems dangerous to be working something raw for 5 hours unrefridgerated then eating it
@Collin I hope you always have some serious bacteria growth going on. About 50% of your mass is foreign organisms.
Xeo
Xeo
@BartekBanachewicz Let's see for how long. It has only been 3 days. :P
14:56
yes yes, but we're talking about food safety
s/mass/cells/
s/foreign organisms/bacteria
@Collin you refrigerate it after preparing.
it's not going to kill all of the bacteria, but then again, human body can handle them just fine.
right, but you just spent 5 hours handling it raw outside the refrigerator, putting it back in the fridge doesn't kill that bacteria
hey, I like a rare steak myself
but I probably wouldn't leave it out for 5 hours before cooking it
@Collin if the hypothetical ones get there because of kitchen warmth, lowering the temperature should get rid of them
...no
that's not how bacteria work
the fridge keeps them from reproducing, it doesn't kill them
14:59
@BartekBanachewicz bacteria don't die of cold temperatures.
orite, my bad.
They encapsulate themselves and awaken when things get warmer again.

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