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10:00
@thecoshman regardless, the condition would evaluate to true or false, which is 1 or 0.
Any decent programmer knows to not write that
if (condition)
statement that will conditionally run; other statement that looks at first glance like it will also conditionally run but actually always runs;
This doesn't apply in C# though. Since you can't implicitly convert from bool to int.
0
Q: Very slow unordered_map clearing

SMartI have this code that optimizes my mesh loaded from obj file: PROFILE("Started optimizations."); vector<float>* vs = new vector<float>(); unordered_map<string, int>* hm = new unordered_map<string, int>(); unordered_map<string, int>::const_iterator it; UINT32 floatsInVertex = vertexSize / sizeof(...

10:00
Optional braces are fucking nonsense
needs closeboats
there's a somewhat legitimate question there
@Rapptz doesn't meet the minimial understanding standard in my book
1 is 1, not true
@ereOn your point is smothered by utter painful lack of formatting. FAIL
10:03
And 0 is 0, not false
@Rapptz If it's ==0, returns 1, otherwise 0.
@sehe SO got rid of the tabs/spaces I added for my example.
3 mins ago, by Rapptz
This doesn't apply in C# though. Since you can't implicitly convert from bool to int.
@TemplateRex what?
It doesn't apply with implicit conversions either. Numbers are not booleans, booleans are not numbers
10:05
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yes. I'm just saying it reminded me of if(cond) { return true; } else { return false; }.
Returning a boolean because it happens to be implicitly castable to integer somewhere along the line is just shit
@thecoshman never mind
@Telkitty see, it's not hard is it.
I was just saying it reminded me of it, not that he should do it.
10:07
That doesn't make semantics irrelevant
alias such=git alias very=git alias wow='git status' $ wow $ such commit $ very push
It's not the same thing, period
Whatever. Stopped caring 5 minutes ago.
I LOVE MEYMEYS
Not run into the ground two months ago at all
Still fresh and funny
@Griwes ...
10:10
I went to sleep at 13 yesterday, got up around 22
And now I'm tired again
I accidentally slipped into a different timezone
or your lazy ass is just not used to being alive?
I will never be used to being alive
then please just kill yourself now. Spare the world of your parasitic presence.
bloo bloo
10:16
@CatPlusPlus trust me, there are two things to best solve this problem: baby magpies and plumb grannies ... but it would be the best if you marry a 220+ pound 60 some year old granny then adopt a bunch of cute, fluffy baby magpies
... I'm tempted to ask how 'bloo bloo' is interpreted as a 'problem'.
You're winning hard if you can make people angry just by existing
@CatPlusPlus not really. and FYI, you do not induce anger. The best emotion you can conjour is pitty.
:allears:
fff ... why delete button is so close to the power button on macbook!!!
10:20
Because Apple is very good at computers
@Telkitty: Because you are using a macbook air for programming
Because you're using a Mac
No need to further qualify that
only for iphone apps ... I generally use my windows PC for everything else
@sehe i slept less than three hours, my perception is probably off
:)
The only mac I've ever owned is used for walking the dog in the rain, (and even that leaks).
The only mac 'computer' I've ever used belonged to the co. I was working at. I used it for a half-hour and then the power supply just turned off on its own, wasting my most recent edits. It refused to work again.
10:27
@MartinJames That's a bit unfair, no ? ;)
@ereOn I thought it was very unfair, yes. IIRC, it ended up in a skip but, unfortunately, I was not the one who got to throw it in:(
@StackedCrooked /why/ I mean, I don't sleep much. But I had roughly 5 hours this night :|
@CatPlusPlus 'Because you' was the correct response.
@MartinJames huh... I'd refuse to work before it broke :P
@sehe IMO 'this' night means the night the is about to happen, whilst your most surely meant 'last' night as in 'the night I just slept through'
I'm not sure I get all the hate for macbooks. Why do you hate those so much ?
The anonymous Wintel boxes, HP Unix and Sparcstations worked 24/7 even when the aircon failed and the temp went up to 44C. The stupid macs were not reliable even at normal office temps. POS.
10:31
@ereOn overpriced crap
@thecoshman: The price is one thing, but if the company pays for it, that's not really a reason.
plus you know, they are different
@sehe I discovered that Startcraft 2 tournament videos are quite exciting to watch and forgot about the time.
I'm sure if I had to work on one for a while, I'd get sued to it. But that there is the problem, I don't want to have to 'get used' to a computer. Conventions are nice. Having to relearn all my ways of working, just because they are different is not something I want. And what do I get out of it, what justification is there for going through the torturous learning curve? Where is the carrot?
so, are dell still some of the best monitors you can get?
^^ I would leave the 'sued' typo in.
10:37
too much effort to find and fix
@thecoshman: I somehow was forced to switch to a macbook pro for my current job. While the first months were a nightmare ("How the hell do I maximize this window ?!"), I really like it now. I still have a Windows desktop computer at home though, but honestly, I don't feel quite as productive on it (especially with the Windows 8 crap)
It's kinda fitting:)
@MartinJames I didn't realize it was a typo and was confused.
Which by the way is also "different" when you think about it.
@ereOn wait... you can actually properly maximise a window on mac?
10:38
You can use Win8 p much the same as Win7
@thecoshman: Somebody made an app for it ;)
Still has annoying bits, but is usable
And yes, shame this isn't by default.
OSX is just shit
@ereOn ¬_¬ ffs
10:39
@CatPlusPlus: the thing I really hate with Windows, is the command line. And no, Powershell may be nice, but I can't get used to it.
I can't say that OSX is shit because I've never used it, (nor have I any plans to, ever).
@thecoshman I never understood the behavior of the (+) button in the Window corner. I use a tool called Divvy which allows me to bind keyboard shortcuts to window positions.
And 2014 we still can't resize a command prompt... that's dumb.
Console window != shell
Also ConEmu
I wouldn't trade my Linux console for anything (Mac OSX console is better than the Windows one, but Linux still has my heart)
10:40
And PowerShell
I rarely ever need CLI
@ereOn do you really mean "the terminal emulator" or what
@ereOn I don't understand why they don't fix that.
because "console" is as vague as it gets
I don't like GUI (yet I'm using a Mac... see how that could be a problem :p)
I don't see how that could be a problem
10:41
@ereOn gnome terminal is one of the few Linux GUI applications that I like.
OSX is a POSIX system
My customers don't use consoles, I don't use consoles.
@MartinJames: Logical fallacy
@R.MartinhoFernandes clicking the maximize button actually generates a random size
user1804599
10:42
I just use everything full screen.
user1804599
vOv
Your customers don't use C++, don't use C++.
OK, that's not 100% true:)
@ereOn actually just don't use C++
I only use C++ on ARM embedded.
10:45
@CatPlusPlus: What do you recommend as a decent CLI toolset on Windows then ?
PowerShell
I tried several softwares, but was never quite satisfied with the result.
That's for the shell itself, but as a terminal emulator ?
I don't even use PS all that much
Mostly just ls -rec | sls
@ereOn ConEmu
FFS Steam just popped up yet another window:((
@CatPlusPlus: Thanks. I'll give it a try. I don't want to lock myself in any OS type but as a CLI addict, I really had hard times working on Windows lately.
10:48
I used to be a CLI addict. I got weaned off it, somewhere in the late 70's.
@MartinJames Yet you have a Vim avatar !
@ereOn the drink silly
@ereOn I hate the vi and all its progeny ever since DEC VAX. It's only good use is for bathtub cleaning.
It's... not a drink.
Do not drink Vim.
WTF is my ISP doing now? I keep getting timeout/retry.
NetDeadDead
10:58
you may be interested in devnull-as-a-service.comWChargin 12 hours ago
I thought this was a joke. Maybe that comment is a joke. Maybe none of it is a joke.
@Rapptz No way.
@Rapptz lol
RFC 6666, black holes? This has to be black network magic! ;) — klingt.net yesterday
lol
85,66% guaranteed uptime (we need some sleep, too)
I love removing code
Especially my code
11:03
¬_¬ insert 'rm -rf /'
$ rm -rf /
rm: it is dangerous to operate recursively on ‘/’
rm: use --no-preserve-root to override this failsafe
$
After the recent CLI/GUI thread/s, I wonder what happens if you try to delete all the top-level folders on drive C:/ with Windows File Explorer ?? Someone try it and report back.
@R.MartinhoFernandes yeah, I knew you could post that with people pointing out the endless problems with it. Need to have root access to, and to make sure we are not using an aliased rm too... sudo /bin/rm -rf --no-preserve-root / ... I think...
lol, a user edited his question after ~ 1 year and unaccepted my answer because it doesn't apply to the edit.
Oh, I think I should make the problem a little bit clearer
Nice..
11:14
@AndyProwl people on SO, I don't understand them, too.
user1804599
@thecoshman which rm; sleep 5; rm foo
@rightfold o_0
¬_¬ can someone write a bot to auto bin her images?
@thecoshman \rm is how you avoid aliases.
11:20
@R.MartinhoFernandes oh right, I assume it's the '\' part that does that for you. General solution?
the more you know :D
\whatever runs whatever ignoring aliases.
Xeo
Xeo
sooo... I think it just took me 5 minutes to put my socks on
Or rather, one of my socks
Xeo
Xeo
Really, my leg's killing me.
It's evil.
Kill it before it kills you!
Xeo
Xeo
I'd really like a peaceful resolution, but talking doesn't seem to help.
@Xeo ... 5 minutes... one sock... ew! I don't want to know when you are 'busy'
Xeo
Xeo
@thecoshman My leg hurts too much :|
11:41
@Xeo have you tried not having a painful leg?
Xeo
Xeo
Yes, negotiations with my leg broke down however.
So now I'm kinda stiffling the revolt with some pain "killers"
(Just some ibuprofen pills)
try drink vOv
do you guys feel that pain killers ever work?
I never feel their effect
@nightcracker depends, which ones?
Is solaris really this fucking retarded, or has work just fucked up the installed stuff that badly?
11:54
Probably both.
(ノಠ益ಠ)ノ彡┻━┻
why are simple tasks never simple?
<rant>
ergh... X11 forwarding
or more, lack of it
Only annoyance I've had with X forwarding is font configuration.
12:16
I cannot use X forwarding
It's always too fucking slow to the point of being unusable
1PM, time to go to sleep I guess
12:29
Goodnight Cat!
@AndyProwl lol
@thecoshman this is the question I ask myself EVERY. FUCKING. DAY. IN. THIS. MOTHERFUCKING. INDUSTRY. WHY WHY WHY?!!!
-1
Q: Java date to C++

yigiteri need to send java date in miliseconds to a c++ application, and construct same date in c++. the java date, is actually the miliseconds since epoch java.util.Date date= new java.util.Date(); // get miliseconds since epoch long ms = date.getTime(); //construct same date java.util.Date date= new...

0
A: Convert epoch value to C++ date

Tony The LionIf you Google "Calculate date from epoch milliseconds" or some such phrase, I am sure you will find the answer you are looking for. In this manner you will save us good SO netizens time and effort of answering silly questions such as the one you have asked. A silly question is defined as one wh...

that is most certainly not an answer
12:34
true, it doesn't answer OP's question, it does however make a valid point
Fuck Java.
Is there really no lexicographical_compare() in Java?
Java has Comparator interfaces iirc.
0
Q: How to seed srand() to avoid collision on a large number of machines?

AufhebenTypically, the seeding of srand() is done by: srand(time(NULL)); In my case, I use random numbers to generate an identifier for my client process at runtime on the network. The process sometimes restarts and generates a new identifier. As the number of clients increases, there's a good chance ...

I suppose "don't use srand" is a good solution?
Host IP + PID would form a unique seed.
(but of course C++11 randomizers should be preferred)
Yesterday I was thinking about references.
I struck me as odd that they have names but not addresses.
IP and PID is a crappy seed
12:44
Which means that they are not objects and forming a local reference to an object should not result in any object code generated.
It might be an identifier, but don't use that as a see
References name objects
They're synonyms
I don't know why it's odd
References don't have names.
Objects can have various names.
Some beginners claim that references can be null because you can create a reference by dereffing a null pointer. Of course that introduces UB.
References are hard links :v
Almost, but not quite, entirely unlike
A statement which does not generate any object code introduces UB.
I guess that's not so unusual. E.g #define new delete is also UB without generating object code.
12:50
Who cares about generated code
UB exists at language level
@R.MartinhoFernandes If it doesn't have a name, then what is it's ..eh "name" called?
T& t; // what is "t" if not a name?
It's a name, but for the referenced object, not the reference itself
I see.
I would make a bad language lawyer.
@StackedCrooked At the start of my C++ days, I thought they wouldn't be implemented as pointers but simple aliases at the compilation stage. Took me a while to realise that this was infeasible.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit I suppose they must be implemented as pointers for function parameters and class members.
12:59
@StackedCrooked Pretty much
Probably a pointer is also required if you have a local reference created from a function call T& t = foo();
I think I also understand why a having a reference member disables the assignment operator. It would lead to unintuitive results.
ITT for circle
0
Q: How do I pause a for cicle to insert some values in Array?

Carlos MartinsAll I want is to hold the FOR circle while the user insert a name in a array. #include <iostream> using namespace std; char nomes[]={}; int numpessoas; int main() { cout << "Quantas pessoas queres registar?\n"; pede: cin >> numpessoas; if (numpessoas < 1) { goto pede; ...

cycle?
Oh, that doesn't make sense.
@TonyTheLion I know right!
Pausing for a cycle would be hard to implement.
13:09
@R.MartinhoFernandes it's a PITA doing it to windows, as you have to remember to start your X server first
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Nice, it's rare to see goto nowadays.
cin << nomes[i];
Daring.
Vlad's right; zero-sized arrays are an extension on certain implementations but they are banned in standard C++ and they do not compile for me. — Lightness Races in Orbit 2 mins ago
@LightnessRacesinOrbit haha, shame on you.
Meths. Not even once. (warning, it's a meth head... seriously, think about this one)
13:14
why post gore photos? we know it exists and it's not very entertaining to look at
@R.MartinhoFernandes It hurt
@thecoshman Oh don't you start
hey folks, wtf does g++ enable extensions by default?
even in MSVC you have to explicitly say so
8.3.4 tells us that arrays do not have zero length
@TemplateRex No you don't. There are plenty of extensions in MSVC that you "just get"
13:17
@LightnessRacesinOrbit wait... 'closed as off topic'?
@thecoshman It's Stack Exchange.. what can I say?
@TemplateRex Too late to change it. AFAIK there's no mainstream compiler that compiles in strict standard mode by default.
@TemplateRex yeah, at least it's easy to turn off.
@TemplateRex Not really. 2 out of like 4 extensions are enabled by default. Like disabling trigraphs and some other nonsense I forget.
@Rapptz binding temps to non-const refs?
can that even be disabled?
13:21
@LightnessRacesinOrbit well, the comments give a reasonable reason, just to spare them from more 'opinions'. But I swear there was a close reason to that effect?
@LightnessRacesinOrbit This one, never mind. Wrong one.
@R.MartinhoFernandes at least Clang has -Weverything, that is a humbling experience
@thecoshman It used to be called "too localised"
It should simply have been left "open" but with an accepted answer, frankly
Ugh.
@TemplateRex That's... something entirely different.
When the /Zc:rvalueCast option is specified, the compiler correctly identifies an rvalue reference type as the result of a cast operation in accordance with the C++11 standard. When the option is not specified, the compiler behavior is the same as in Visual Studio 2012. By default, /Zc:rvalueCast is off
Fucking morons
13:23
Wait.
What's the difference between -Weverything and -Wall?
I wonder if it's possible to implement a user script which automatically bins every message posted by a certain user.
That would be kinda abusive though :)
@Rapptz Former is really all warnings.
Why would I use that?
gcc already has some dumb warnings. I can imagine clang having them too
13:25
IIRC -Weverything is used internally by compiler devs as a debugging help.
0
A: How to avoid to show a float: -0.0

Santhosh Paiyou can try printing out this way using the c ternary operator. printf("%2.1f",(f<0 &&f >-1)?-f:f); here f is an floating point variable and if u get value of f as -0.0001 , the function will print out as 0.0 .

These guys send rockets into space.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit agreed, but whatever.
@Rapptz Yes, at least all those in 4.2, I guess.
Looking at you, -Wswitch.
:|
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Oh, come on.
13:26
@R.MartinhoFernandes No, really, they do!
Oh hey.
TIL.
-Wswitch
Warn whenever a switch statement has an index of enumerated type and lacks a case for one or more of the named codes of that enumeration. (The presence of a default label prevents this warning.) case labels outside the enumeration range also provoke warnings when this option is used (even if there is a default label). This warning is enabled by -Wall.
putting default: break seemed dumb though
@StackedCrooked I am using it by default now for clang, with -Wno-c++98-compat and a few others explicitly disabled
@Rapptz I don't think that's a dumb warning.
It is dumb. I used an API that had an enum for all keys in the keyboard and I got like 40 warnings.
at least now I know I can do default: break to stop it. :d
@Rapptz I always liked this one
@Rapptz Yes, which is why it is not "dumb".
It's very useful for enumerations that you think you may extend at some point
13:32
yep
I usually put a default case which contains something like assert(!"Invalid enumerator");. But maybe that's a bad idea because it disables the warning.
Note
Clang does not automatically use PCH files for headers that are directly included within a source file.
that's weird
I should code that median cut thing
omg @sehe 100k <3 <3 <3
also
Is that me, or is he being a dick?
The question from lhf seems to indicate the decompiler to use. Remove answer? — owlstead 56 mins ago
user3010322
@R.MartinhoFernandes Awake?
@BartekBanachewicz he's a young and naive Mitläufer
13:44
@StackedCrooked nah, I still don't get it
user3010322
@CatPlusPlus True enough, the idea behind it was that you could avoid unnecessary check calls against the currently bound state. It doesn't work for everything (VAOs in particular), but DSA makes the code faster and cleaner by avoiding excessive querying of state and just letting you modify an object on the graphics card with a single call.
@R.MartinhoFernandes look at you not hitting / when pressing enter </mock>
Oh gosh, et tu?
@R.MartinhoFernandes he's a new OGL prodigy here, I guess
we should send him to @Nicol
user3010322
I'm serious. u.u
13:45
so am I
user3010322
DSA is actually helpful.... when it's implemented.
DSA! DSA! DSA! ...
user3010322
So far Intel isn't helping by not implementing it. u.u
user3010322
@BartekBanachewicz Use your influence to change their minds!
13:47
@ThePhD Let's just say I also got this idea.
what the hell? fucking DSA again?!
But I can't tell you more than "wait for GL 5 and pray", sorry.
8
A: C++11 inheriting constructors and access modifiers

Kerrek SBAccording to 12.9/4, "Inheriting constructors", when saying using X::X, A constructor so declared has the same access as the corresponding constructor in X. So the inherited constructor is also protected.

Worth remembering. Maybe.
user3010322
Ah. Well, sorry for necro'ing a thread/topic/idea/thing. :c
... probably not
13:48
Wait what's so special about constructors? The same thing doesn't apply to regular functions... — Mehrdad 4 hours ago
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Slightly surprised, but it does make sense if I think about it.
inb4 "you lied no candy there"
we need a new room topic
So... VertexArrayVertexAttribOffset is what replaces VertexAttribPointer?
I see that they are hellbent in improving naming.
@R.MartinhoFernandes yup. "Offset" makes more sense anyway.
13:51
@BartekBanachewicz you should have a convention regarding the order of header includes and consistently adhere to it
Ah, well, that code is commented out.
@R.MartinhoFernandes clearly VertexArrayVertexAttributeOffset is what it should be.
@StackedCrooked I probably would clean that when preparing a PR to master. Blame IDEs for not having tools for that.
@StackedCrooked also that
@thecoshman No enough Vertex.
@BartekBanachewicz I only need a tool to remove unused includes. My convention prevents me from messing up the order.
@StackedCrooked I don't have one. :<
13:53
@R.MartinhoFernandes what about VertexArraySomethingAttributeOffset if a need arises?
VertexArrayVertexAttributeOffsetVertexData
@BartekBanachewicz woah... haven't touched that in a while :P
EnableVertexArrayAttrib vs EnableVertexAttribArray seems great.
@thecoshman I don't remember when was last time I wrote any C++ vOv
@BartekBanachewicz same
@R.MartinhoFernandes whistles
user3010322
13:54
OTH, I one thing I don't like about OpenGL is it naming scheme. u.u
@Rapptz Mine are grouped in from to top bottom: application level, my libraries, 3rdparty, libraries, boost, stl. within each group I sort alphabetically.
user3010322
I know it's spec is a c-based binding, buuut...
@ThePhD it's not
urgh
The basic idea is to prevent hidden dependencies.
@StackedCrooked Mine is "what comes to mind first?"
13:55
@StackedCrooked I do the same.
user3010322
Oh!
@StackedCrooked The basic idea is to throw the "#include" thing away.
user3010322
I was gonna show Robot how I did DXDR crap.
and replace it with actual fucking module system
yeah do that
13:55
Not too strict about the alphabetic second-level order, but the first-level order, definitely.
lel I sense Backpack++ incoming /cc @Cat, I hope you get the terrible joke
I don't see much of a benefit.
IMO anyway
Maybe one day I'll see it though
@Rapptz searching a sorted list is faster :)
@Rapptz Putting your own project headers first is so they don't work just by accident because you #included something they need before.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I have a few exceptions to the alphabetic rule: sometimes I have a config.h must come first. A cpp file must include its corresponding header before the rest (but after config.h).
@Rapptz It's a way to detect missing includes in your headers.
13:57
@R.MartinhoFernandes I take advantage of that though (iff I know they'll never change)
Not sure what that means. You mean you depend on #include order?
Like I can imagine my meta headers will have cstddef, type_traits, and tuple included.
import qualified <3
13:59
Wait, I think you might have misunderstood me.
(yeah prolly not related)
user3010322
@R.MartinhoFernandes You're added to the repo! Now you can view da linkies. Try not to wander, it may be bad for your health: github.com/ThePhD/Furrovine/blob/master/Furrovine%2B%2B/…
You mean you do #include <mymeta> and then don't bother adding #include <type_traits>?

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