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00:14
@EtiennedeMartel Coming from Mr Poutine
@EtiennedeMartel looks good i think
@Rapptz I have never heard of poutine before.
@StackedCrooked Seriously? I'm always banging on about it in the Lounge.
00:32
@StackedCrooked Did you watch it yet?
:P :P :P
I don't like the term "salt", this one for those curious
dont go to kripp's chat
The salt emote is used a billion times a day
the term by itself is annoying for some reason
maybe it's the users
ill go with its the users
some people go like "come back when you're not so SALTY"
00:49
hi
take a shower & go back, maybe you will be less salty ... I mean ...
@sudorm-rfTelkitty not if you take a shower of sea water
01:15
@Rapptz you're salting my game homie
night
@R.MartinhoFernandes Ooo the purpose of the bootstrap rule isn’t so much to allow the user to reconfigure on demand, but to tell ninja how to rebuild the ninja file. Because it uses the ninja file as a dependency to everything, because it is awesome.
01:54
@ScarletAmaranth What's your excuse for being up at 02:54?
@MartinJames well, I woke up ~30 minutes ago :) my sleep schedule is non-existent
I think there is definitely some correlation between this lounge and sleeping disorder ...
@ScarletAmaranth Heh - sounds familiar. I played cards in the afternoon, drunk beer and then fell asleep till 22:00:)
@sudorm-rfTelkitty So, what's your excuse for being up at... oh, hang on, you don't need one:)
@MartinJames yeah, it's annoying to say the least, but slightly better than what I usually roll with, sleeping since 8am to 4pm
I've done so much shifts and other strange hours over the years, I have no body clock at all. I feel tired, I sleep. When I wake up, I get up and start doing stuff.
02:00
yeah, pretty much really, except for when the society expects me to exist at certain point of a day, then it becomes a problem
Yes - It is very difficult to suddenly be woken up by a phone call and be expected to answer some tech. query immediately with the only two brain cells that are functioning correctly.
that's not a problem for me as I have usually 4 brain cells functioning correctly at any point of time, so 50% is usually sufficient
Anyway, I'm now going to fix the problem with my office CANBUS network. That means crawling under the desks/benches where the routers, hubs and spiders live. If I never post again, something lurking in the darkness has eaten me.
@MartinJames O_o ... I will prey to the Goddess of hacking for your safety from the cookie monsters ...
I might need to get into 6am - 10pm routine soon. That's the period for construction works even though I am only supervising.
02:09
Truly, there are things under there that should never see the light of day. There is one Labgear hub that has been lost for three years.
Need to be responsible for the house in my own backyard
OK, I'M GOIN' IN!
good luck!
come back safe!
& not smelly :')
02:57
Hello, Lounge!
moo!
How's it going?
well, I thought I would release a minor update to my Android app...but I can't push to my repo from where I'm at ;-(
I got so many video games over the last 7 months I'm set for years
also two new consoles
gamecube and wii
but.. the Wii comes with a gamecube
03:12
no, the first few generations of wii game with gamecube cpus
later generations did not
Right. I forgot they removed the gamecube stuff in 2012.
which I was very sad to discover
You could have probably found an older one
The older models are more expensive on ebay than the newer ones =/
I didn't know they'd removed the gamecube bits until after I recieved this one as a gift
I just made some potatoe skins and they came out pretty mediocre
03:36
video games are always a good way to waste some time
bah sleep fail
@DeadMG Sleep never fails, though I sometimes fail to sleep.
@MooingDuck you can eat the rest of the potato, too, you know :)
@melak47 But if you left the rest of the potato there, you wouldn't have room for the sour cream and bacon. Are you actually suggesting that somebody could eat a potato in a way that was...healthy?
@JerryCoffin nah, I'm not crazy! :)
03:48
@melak47 Not crazy, or just not that crazy?
@JerryCoffin how would I know, for sure?
@melak47 Hanging out here, you're obviously at least a little crazy. This was just a test to see whether you realize it or not (you seem to be mostly failing).
my crazy counter could've overflown :)
tried to go to bed over two hours ago
I ate that mince pie, and combining that with lying down was a bad move.
user3010322
04:06
Hm.
I don't know how popular it is in here but the Game of Thrones trailer is out.
user3010322
I wonder if it's possible to cast an T arr[n] to a std::array<T, n> ...
ITT: Derpstorm derps
user3010322
It's not a derp. :c
it's entirely a derp.
there's no purpose in T arr[n] over std::array so just use that.
user3010322
04:08
Eh, but making a std::array is such an ass sometimes. :c
user3010322
Oh!
user3010322
I know!
user3010322
array_view ~
user3010322
Can make from C-array or std::array or anything else that has a fixed size, yeah~
... or anything of dynamic size, really.
user3010322
04:10
Well, no, in this case I want the size to be compile-time.
user3010322
I already have a dynamic-size version (buffer_view)
that's totally not excessively confusing
user3010322
I don't know what else I would call it?
user3010322
array_view -> std::array<T, n>
buffer_view -> std::unique_ptr<T[]>
vector_view -> std::vector<T>
vector_view? seriously?
user3010322
04:12
vector_view has push_back and friends, since it also keeps track of the max capacity.
... and the purpose of using that over templating on the container is?
user3010322
I don't think I really use it, though.
user3010322
I remember I used it somewhere important...
user3010322
Can't quite remember where...
user3010322
Hm. Nope, I must have removed the usage to something else. Guess it's just hanging around, because why not?
user3010322
04:15
But yeah, buffer_view covers std::vector and std::array and std::unique_ptr<T[]> and T*, but it keeps the length at runtime. I want a compile-time version, I guess.
user3010322
So I'll only really have those 2 for use: array_view and buffer_view.
user3010322
I mean, it's better than casting T[n] to std::array<T, n> :P
so I guess that something normal like a pair of iterators is out the question then
user3010322
A pair of iterators can't really have a compile-time size to 'em.
@ThePhD I've got an array_ref which is effectively a T*/size_t pair
04:19
well that's not really true.
You have such an obsession for views it's ridiculous.
I mean, where does N come from?
user3010322
I don't have an obsession. D:
user3010322
I wrote a few of them when I needed 'em, and phased out the ones that weren't necessary. :c
A while back you were complaining about constructing std::strings from command line arguments and how much better string_view would have been
04:20
protip: they're pretty much not necessary at all
user3010322
buffer_view takes care of all my buffer-based needs.
iterator pair?
user3010322
@Rapptz Well, string_view just saves allocation and construction time. That's about it.
user3010322
@DeadMG T* and size_t pair, like what @MooingDuck has :D
...
but why would you want that instead of an iterator pair.
04:21
@DeadMG specifically because it's not a template, I can instantiate a single function and use it with every datastructure that I actually use
the iterator pair actually works with things.
user3010322
In cases where .data() is necessary.
user3010322
Like with most graphics systems
user3010322
that require a buffer to stuff
well IDK about OGL but DX doesn't.
er, most of the time, anyway.
04:22
@MooingDuck In your case a T*, T* pair instead of a T*, size pair.
it's actually been a while for me
@DeadMG You need to get out more:)
user3010322
DX requires everything you give to it to be a contiguous buffer, from memory mapping to updating a subresource.
@MartinJames oh shut up
user3010322
It... doesn't really have anything iterator-based.
04:22
@LucDanton eh, I suppose. There isn't a whole lot of difference really, since I had it encapsulated
user3010322
I'm pretty sure OpenGL is the same way.
Ye, same information in different forms. But only for random-access iterators.
@ThePhD Not for memory mapping.
I'm looking at the ID3D11DeviceContext::Map function interface and documentation right now, and there is no apparent benefit in storing your own data in contiguous containers (at least in terms of interface).
user3010322
Well, you can T* target_iterator = static_cast<T*>( MappedData.pRes ); to get a pointer, and then
user3010322
std::copy( first_iterator, last_iterator, target_iterator );
user3010322
04:29
So that could work with a iterator interface, but
well, exactly, and first_iterator and last_iterator can be any iterators.
user3010322
For 1. having it in a template means it has to be in a header, which means it's exposed to the user (you're losing any kind of gain from making it so the user doesn't have to include windows.h or d3d11.h by including it for them)
any_iterator?
user3010322
And 2. If someone gives you a std::set of data (for whatever reason) or a std::unordered_map, it'll be orders of magnitudes slower since it won't be able to just memcpy if possible.
oh noes, in some hypothetical scenario, some hypothetical performance loss might occur.
which the user can trivially detect and fix if it's actually important.
user3010322
04:31
My primary beef is not really 2 (that's just a side effect of allowing it), it's 1.
user3010322
I'm doing my best to hide the implementation.
and you're exposing the fact that you can only work with buffers.
rather than hiding this fact by providing a generic interface.
user3010322
I either eat one or the other. vOv
again, any_iterator?
user3010322
I don't know how any_iterator would... work?
04:33
well, that's not really your problem since Boost implemented it for you
user3010322
So I just give std::copy(any_it_1, any_it_2, target_it) and it'll know what to do?
yep
user3010322
Or do I need to cast it to a real iterator when I get inside the function?
any_iterator is a real iterator.
user3010322
Oh. So it's just use type-erasure to get the job done. How does it pull information out of it, though?
user3010322
04:35
Does it just cast to whatever (in this case) target_it is asking for?
no, it's any_iterator<T>, where T is the value type.
user3010322
... But then it's still templated. D:
user3010322
What has that accomplished? D:
array_view would require the same parameter.
and so would buffer_view.
unless you want to rewrite array_view for an array_view of float, an array_view of int, etc.
even then that wouldn't really solve the problem.
if you want to take a T*, size pair, you need to know T.
user3010322
Oh. Anything that's templated I end up boiling down to a base case of void* and std::size_t bytesize function.
04:39
@Code-Guru wuss ... can't even handle an Android app, wait until you have to deal with Apple or Windows Phone >_<
user3010322
That's why I take buffer_view, because I cast the T* data to a void* and then the size_t to its equivalent size in bytes.
user3010322
Oooh, that actually revealed a few places that were flawed in my API design.
user3010322
Places where I'm still doing the TContainer, TContainer::value_type business.
user3010322
buffer_view, all the time!
Mmmh, class final { looks really weird with syntax highlighting.
04:46
guess I should have expected the "Everything must always be a shitty C datatype" thing.
user3010322
vOv
user3010322
The GPU only deals with a serialized version of the data.
user3010322
In the end, what gets shipped to it is bytes: if the bytes don't represent what you want, it'll never work out.
that's true
but I'm not seeing how it's a really useful abstraction.
if you're going to offer that kind of interface I may as well go to OGL/DX directly myself
user3010322
Well, not entirely. It takes care of a lot of other things for you, but there's really no way around not having a type system on the gpu. Shrug.
user3010322
04:53
I have no idea if things like CUDA or AMP provide a type system to do GPU Programming in, but even then you'd have to call deserialize( stuff ) on all the different stuffs you get on the other side.
AMP does some deserialization automagically
but not much
@ThePhD Which is fine because they are a template, so they know what type to interpret the bytes as, which means the bytes always match what you expect.
user3010322
DX/OGL do it too, with things like auto-normalization or pre-expanding of certain bit packs (e.g. R8G8B8A8 -> four 32 bit RGBA floats, normalized by the unsigned byte value of ( color_value / 255.0f ))
user3010322
@DeadMG I guess so? But in the end, it's just better not too build too high of an abstraction over the GPU, when the Shader Programming / GPGPU world has very strict guidelines about how stuff goes in and what comes out.
if there are very strict guidelines then you want a high abstraction to ensure they are followed.
04:59
Mmmh, this may be esoteric but does something like template<…> decltype(auto) foo(T t) { return t.bar(); } template<…> decltype(auto) foo(T t) { return t.qux(); } involve a redefinition? In the pre-C++1y olden days the late return type (-> decltype(return-expression)) ensured those were two different function templates. /cc @Xeo @JohannesSchaublitb
Thus begins my foray into ‘C++1y sucks’ territory.
The language, that is. We already knew for the library.
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton Interesting question. Alas, I haven't been paying much attention to how a deduced return type translates exactly,
Incidentally anyone knows how to contact Johannes, if that’s appropriate? The chat didn’t suggest his name, so am I right to think he won’t get a mention?
user3010322
IIRC, decltype(auto) does absolutely no decaying.
@Xeo Timely! Do I have powers to summon you?
Xeo
Xeo
I've had very few thoughts about C++ and it's standardisation lately, come to think of it...
user3010322
05:02
@Xeo Is it all just Haskell in your brain, now?
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton I think he'll still get it
@ThePhD Not even that, neceasarily
@LucDanton been playing a game and heard the pling
user3010322
Well, what have you been up to?
@Xeo Me too, and I like it that way. A lot of it is due to the nature of the ‘bugfix’ release of C++1y (and accompanying TRs) though.
Xeo
Xeo
Dunno, not much
@Xeo I hope I spelt (mangled, really) it right :(
Xeo
Xeo
05:04
I have to say, though, 2 weeks of vacation are really bad for my motivation
especially with a week of sickness-leave attached
Winding off is important though. Don’t become a workaholic.
Xeo
Xeo
the constant interaction with people over those 2 weeks probably also did something to that end
What, the sickness? Unfortunate.
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton I wasn't beforw. I'd even say I've slacked off way too much
@LucDanton having no motivation / energy
05:06
@Xeo I was implying you were e.g. exchanging bodily fluids with aforementioned people, you sensual beast.
Xeo
Xeo
If only it was that :/ Also, the "sickness" isn't one as such - my leg simply hurts really bad when sitting
which is kinda bad when sitting all day for the job, heh
@Xeo What did you do to it?
Xeo
Xeo
I have no idea ;_; and the doc doesn't either
come back when it's been that way for three years
user3010322
Make one of those standing desks.
user3010322
05:13
Or have a lying-down desk.
user3010322
Bring a mat to work or something.
user3010322
Probably more appropriate to stand up, though.
Oh dear, spot the mistake: foo and [bar] or [] + [qux, baz].
@LucDanton I'm pretty sure that's legal JavaScript (which undoubtedly produces NaN as the result). Also undoubtedly legal Perl, though I've no idea what result it would produce. The most obvious mistake there would be using Perl or JS at all (a mistake of which I doubt you're guilty in this case, however).
user3010322
There's no such thing as a const constructor, is there?
05:24
Ya it’s Python. Which (re)uses + for list concatenation.
morning guise
@Jefffrey I'm in my late-evening-to-night guise at the moment.
user3010322
I'm on my Midnight Veil.
@JerryCoffin good late-evening-to-night then
@Jefffrey Thanks. And a fine morning to you as well!
05:26
anybody wants to discuss MVC applied to games for 5 minutes?
user3010322
No.
user3010322
Because it's a horrible idea.
Well... everything else works except one little aspect of the design that I cannot just work out
@ThePhD Oh come on. Games aren't such a terrible thing. Admittedly, you might think so from the majority, but every couple of decades or so, somebody comes up with one worth playing...
user3010322
CaveStory <3
05:27
@JerryCoffin I would be really curious to know which you think is the last one
@R.MartinhoFernandes How come you use -Wfatal-errors still? It cuts e.g. overload resolution candidates for me.
@ThePhD Ok, then.
I cribbed your flags in the process of moving to ninja in case the situation had improved, but I feel like I’m missing something.
@Jefffrey You shouldn't take my comments so seriously. To answer the question: I'm not sure. The game I play most (twisting words to something...orthogonal to their original meaning) has been around for centuries...
@JerryCoffin hmm... I'm afraid to ask the next question. Sorry.
05:32
ritual human sacrifice
also cockfighting
@Xeo Super interesting. Not only does decltype(auto) appear to lead to redefinitions sometimes, I also get ambiguous resolution. Not sure what to think here… /cc @JohannesSchaublitb
@Jefffrey Oh, don't be afraid. I hardly ever do any serious flaming over somebody just asking a question. Why, it's been, like, weeks since I did anything like that.
@JerryCoffin I would be asking what's the game you play the most, but I'm almost sure you are going to answer something that has something to do with phallic things. So, nevermind.
@ThePhD no, but I'd often thought it'd be neat
user3010322
@MooingDuck I'm really hurting for one a lot of the time.
user3010322
05:38
Being able to know that what you're constructing is const can help you carry through lots of semantics.
user3010322
Such as whether it's safe to const_cast something for an internal pointer.
@Feeds related, Outlook on my computer at work decided it's going to be picky about when it sends/receives mail to avoid costing me minutes on my phone plan.
IT has yet to figure out why my Outlook decided it's running on a mobile phone.
@Jefffrey Nah. I already mentioned the game I play most. Actual computer games: I did recently play a game of Jewels 2 (currently on their global leaderboard as the sixth highest score in the history of the game).
I should probably add: that game lasted from sometime in (I think) July until a couple of days ago when my son decided to abort it for me.
children, eh, who'd have em
@DeadMG Me. Probably best thing I've ever done was have kids.
user3010322
05:46
I've got a lot to fix before I can have kids.
@ThePhD You have plenty of time (I didn't have any children until I was well past 40).
user3010322
Good to know.
user3010322
Also, I just thought: why don't they have std::make_unique<T>( unique_ptr<T>&, ... );
user3010322
You can automatically deduce the type of T that way.
Xeo
Xeo
ew
user3010322
05:58
std::unique_ptr<std::pair<int, int>> arf;
std::make_unique( arf, 1, 2 );
// Or
arf = std::make_unique<std::pair<int, int>>( 1, 2 );
user3010322
Personally, I do like the first version over the second version
user3010322
It's useful in the situation where the std::make_unique is not going immediately to the auto.
user3010322
I actually like the syntax a whole lot.
user3010322
I'm gonna add it to my engine. :D
user3010322
template <typename T, typename... Tn>
void make_unique( std::unique_ptr<T>& p, Tn&&... argn ) {
	p = make_unique<T>( std::forward<Tn>( argn )... );
}
user3010322
06:01
Kinky ~
user3010322
In fact, I'll put it in the std:: namespace.
user3010322
Give STL some extra hell. :D
I finished my zoidberg emblem ^_^ but there's stupid artifacts around the eyes ._.
user3010322
Dem Artifacts.
@ThePhD or write a make_mything(...)
06:02
@ThePhD It won't give him a second's notice. User-defined overloads in std:: are illegal.
user3010322
True.
user3010322
But they can't stop me~
user3010322
namespace std {

	template <typename T, typename... Tn>
	void make_unique( unique_ptr<T>& p, Tn&&... argn ) {
		p = make_unique<T>( std::forward<Tn>( argn )... );
	}

}
@ThePhD True -- they're merely "ill formed", not actually "illegal". Unfortunately for you, there's no C++ Police to stop you from doing things you'll regret later.
user3010322
@JerryCoffin There's no way I'll regret this decision. It's actually one of the better ones I've come up with!
06:07
Please send payment.
user3010322
There's really only one way I can see this overload causing trouble
user3010322
and that's with std::unique_ptr<std::unique_ptr<T>>
@ThePhD Creating it is at least harmless. Putting it into std...not so harmless.
user3010322
But double-nesting unique_ptr's isn't very common. In fact, I daresay it's a horrible idea.
user3010322
@JerryCoffin Okay, fine, I'll keep it in my own namespace. :c
06:09
@blackbee: Hint: != is a comparison. It doesn't assign anything to its left operand.
it'll come up all the time in template code.
i know that b=!a is 0 because maybe b=!10 will be 0 .. because thats what c does.. or maybe i ama wrong.. but what is with c!=!a ? how is it evaluated to 5? @JerryCoffin
user3010322
Has anyone solved the problem of getting a deleter using make_unique ?
user3010322
Or an allocator, for that matter?
Xeo
Xeo
ask Luc
but really, it's easy
named parameter, or like allocators, std::allocator_arg_t
06:12
or just a differently named function.
Xeo
Xeo
something like deleter_arg_t
user3010322
I had 3 different named functions (make_unique_allocator, make_unique_deleter, make_unique).
Xeo
Xeo
or that, doesn't lend itself nicely to forwarding though
or mixing, for that matter
user3010322
I only recently introduced deleter_arg_t into my library, so I guess I can go the allocator_arg_t route.
@blackbee See previous hint. c!=!a does not assign a value to c at all. It compares c to the logical negative of a, producing a result that is then ignored, so it's effectively doing nothing at all.
Xeo
Xeo
06:13
named params are nice for those
@ThePhD std has one
user3010322
It has allocator_arg, but not deleter_arg, I thought?
Xeo
Xeo
I meant allocator_arg_t
user3010322
Ah, okay.
user3010322
So yeah, I need deleter_arg then.
> I read in a C++ book that malloc() & free() are liabrary functions, and thus are outside the control of the compiler.
user3010322
06:15
Why is make_unique<T[N]> forbidden, again?
lolwat
user3010322
@Jefffrey He's right, IIRC.
because array types are shit.
@JerryCoffin i see.. i find these questions difficult to solve. i mean, "find the o/p of the program" type questions... but the question given are not even used in real lyf scenarios... how do i get to solve those questions??
user3010322
A C Compiler doesn't have to provide malloc.
user3010322
06:16
or free.
user3010322
The HP20b calculator I worked on didn't have malloc or free at all.
@blackbee Know and apply the syntax of the language, I guess.
user3010322
It also didn't have memcpy, memset, or anything like that.
@ThePhD I think it has something to do with the fact that the constructed std::unique_ptr is constructed with the default deallocator which will delete, not delete[] the stored pointer.
user3010322
Which was hilarious, because the compiler generated calls to these functions implicitly, all the time.
06:18
nope.
user3010322
@Jefffrey make_unique<T[]> without the size n will work.
completely the opposite of that.
user3010322
It's the T[n] they don't allow.
@Jefffrey They're usually implemented in the standard library, but I doubt there's any direct requirement to that effect. If it wanted to, a compiler could undoubtedly generate code to allocate and release memory.
user3010322
Still not sure why.
06:18
the problem is the type system for C arrays, which does not support any useful functions.
i guess i have to learn by heart a lot of things now, although i donot find difficulty in writing programs..
right
today I've been wrong every single time I've stated something, both here and on SO
I can already tell that today is not a good day at 7 am
@blackbee Probably. Doesn't help that the code is clearly intended specifically to mislead the unwary by doing things you'd never do in real code.
user3010322
Hm.
user3010322
Technically, deleter_arg_t and allocator_arg_t can appear anywhere in the list, right?
user3010322
06:21
It's just that the argument after it has to be a deleter or an allocator.
Xeo
Xeo
convention is beginning
user3010322
So you could do 1, 2, deleter_arg, sexy_delete{}, 3, 4 if you wanted to?
user3010322
@Xeo Is it required to happen at the beginning, though?
user3010322
Or should you just expect it to happen anywhere?
Xeo
Xeo
I specifically said "convention"
user3010322
06:22
Hm.
Xeo
Xeo
And I mean in all the std functions
user3010322
Does the standard library take it as convention when it does it?
Xeo
Xeo
the parameters matter
user3010322
Ah.
user3010322
So to not be a rebel I should probably only support having it at teh beginning.
user3010322
06:23
I mean, it's less code to write. vOv
user3010322
Yaay!
user3010322
make_unique( myunique, args );
user3010322
♬~
user3010322
This is actually saving me a lot of typing in a lot of places, :O
@DeadMG :(
morning
06:33
morning
It's too early to think yet
user3010322
@TonyTheLion トーニせんぱい!
@ThePhD hi
user3010322
@TonyTheLion Just eat a big, warm breakfast. That should get your mind going. :D
@ThePhD I don't have a big warm breakfast here, I only have pasteries
user3010322
06:35
Well, light a pastry on fire and eat it.
I need coffee
How you been ThePhd?
and puppy, do I dare ask how you are?
irritated
I ate a mince pie and it's been kicking me awake all night
damn
that sucks
what sucks worse is that I got a doc's appointment at half ten so I can't just go to bed
user3010322
@TonyTheLion Pretty okay. Shit's getting stirred up again, and now we're on our guard.
user3010322
06:41
Finally going back to school in a week.
@DeadMG oh
@ThePhD shit's getting stirred up?? Are you using cowboy_cast again? :P
user3010322
@DeadMG Well, like 2 more hours, right?
@ThePhD 4
@ThePhD 2 hrs can seem like an eternity if you're tired
user3010322
Oh. Welllll then.
user3010322
06:43
@TonyTheLion No, but I'm dealing with a person who's mind is in a perpetual state of UB.
oh I see
user3010322
I really need a decent name for this ptr type I have. =[
user3010322
It works exactly like unique_ptr but allows for &myptr so it can work with com/c-style functions. D:
user3010322
But all I can think of is ptr, but that's a bad name!!
Ugh overloaded &
user3010322
06:47
@CatPlusPlus A necessary evil.
user3010322
For the good of the syntax~
Just have get()
And then you can call it unique_ptr and stop using it
user3010322
I have a ptrptr( my_unique/my_ptr/my_shared_ptr/my_handle )
user3010322
So I technically don't need it.
user3010322
06:49
It's just a syntax niceity, because in the end &myunique conveys exactly what I need and has the lifetime duration that I would want (same as my_c_func( stuff, ptrptr( myunique ) ), but less typing).
user3010322
The temporary's construction and destruction both gets and then resets the pointer of my_unique at the end of the function expression, which is very helpful.
ptrptr?? Seriously?
user3010322
Yah.
user3010322
It's exactly what it means: T**
user3010322
06:51
For those COM and OpenGL and other c-libary-style functions.
user3010322
@Xeo I lol'd.
user3010322
That is pretty snarky, though, haha.

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