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10:00
true
Xeo
Xeo
But you should consider using a std::function instead: it's much more descriptive as a type than a template argument.
@Jefffrey EEEWWWWWWW
@R.MartinhoFernandes oh
TIL
@Xeo what
Xeo
Xeo
@AndyProwl yea
@TonyTheLion A quick scan reveals that error handling is indeed what it gets used for.
10:01
It's T vs std::function<void()>
Xeo
Xeo
@Jefffrey I thought our constant barrage in here on the horribleness of std::function as a parameter would've gotten to you by now
std::function is awesome
never had a problem with it, always used it
Dammit, bad example.
10:05
std::function adds a lot of overhead. This rarely matters, but when it does it does.
I've almost married std::function once
@R.MartinhoFernandes I had no idea that goto was a valid error handling mechanism in C.
std::function allows you to put the code in a source file. That's pretty much the only reason I would use it instead of T. Unless I need run-time dispatch of course.
I suppose one learns something every day
Xeo
Xeo
@StackedCrooked not the point
it's simply the wrong tool
10:06
why
@TonyTheLion It speaks volumes for how much C helps the programmer.
@TonyTheLion Given the lack of destructors or any semblance of a finally construct, it's often close to the only reasonable strategy you have for cleaning up before (for example) exiting a function.
Xeo
Xeo
@Jefffrey it's a container, for storage. it only has a place in parameters in the situations Andy described
10:08
@JerryCoffin That makes sense, and it doesn't make me anymore fond of C.
@martinfernandes Aaaand that's how you switched to ANSI C and function pointers.
The same reason you don't pass every single other argument in a container.
i lol'ed
@R.MartinhoFernandes every other thing does not have have the stupidest and ugliest C syntax as a counterpart
@TonyTheLion Nor should it lead to any fondness for C.
10:10
pass-by-reference, pass-by-value, pass-by-container.
oh, right, templates
@TemplateRex hey there
did anyone read Herb's array_view proposal?
I wonder if one can emulate D's array slices with it
@TemplateRex My boss tasked me with it.
10:13
@R.MartinhoFernandes that's nice, to be in a shop that follows the Standard developments so closely
(We have lots of multidimensional array stuff around our codebase)
Your boss tasks you with reading Standard proposals?
I want to work there
and note that this proposal came out this weekend
so to even have a boss that knows that stuff..
Your boss is an enlightened guy
@TemplateRex Exactly
Yeah, he's cool.
The type of each component in both the index and bounds is ptrdiff_t
I like this bit.
10:15
How do you mark the end of the input in a console? Wasn't it \D or somethign?
Ctrl+D on unix terminals.
Seems they're finally actively going against the silly tradition of using size_t all over like a madman.
They apologized for having done that at GN2013
"We were young back then." or something
"and we needed money"
"we were hungry"
"we just didn't... know..."
10:19
Pretty much everywhere in the proposal where a non-negative number is to be used, the type is not-modulo, yay.
make it better ... "we are hungry, but we are also fat"
@TemplateRex are you really 39, why do I remember you are 18?
time flies
OMG are we living in parallel universes? you became 20 years older in 12 months ...
While I agree that "forward branch to error handling" can be a legitimate use of goto in C, that code was using goto for actual (non-error) control flow (in at least one spot I noticed)
@StackedCrooked often found in time rot?
10:31
goto in C is kinda legit for multiple purposes... cleaning up memory from wherever too for instance
because he obviously can't code for shit ? :)
Wrongness Races in Orbit now :P
10:35
if(0) {
}
else if(int x = 0) {
} // ... that eliteness
@R.MartinhoFernandes that's weird
@R.MartinhoFernandes That's stupid though, imo
0
Q: Need to access variable x with value 5 in else portion

Gauravint main() { int x = 5; if(0) { } else if(int x = 0) { } else { cout << "I want to access variable x with value 5"; } } Here variable x defined in else if will be available in else block also, but if I need to access the variable defined in main then how to go ab...

TIL
yea we saw
@Borgleader Curiosity.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit We were just laughing at you.
@R.MartinhoFernandes oh of course, nevermind
@R.MartinhoFernandes :(
oh, so you were
it's amazing that it isn't considered a redeclaration of x when it's inside the if
Different scope
10:39
is that a compiler bug?
just like int x = 0; { int x = 2; }
@Borgleader not really
@Borgleader it prints 0
I'd always parsed the declaration as having the scope of the following block
oh well
10:40
Scope starts at opening parentheses, ends at closing brace.
lol, imagine that. gcc compiles all the craziness of C++11 and it screws up on that
screws up?
rotates up?
it doesn't seem to screw up
10:43
@AndyProwl it is putting the int x = 0 at the same scope as the int x = 5 - sort of
@doug65536 Why? No, the scope of int x = 0 is that of the conditional statement
3 mins ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
Scope starts at opening parentheses, ends at closing brace.
then why does it print 0
it's visible inside the else
that's part of the conditional statement
10:44
and that's not a redeclaration?
if the cout << x was after the conditional statement, it would print 5
or does it go out of scope after the else block
ah ok, got it
5 mins ago, by Borgleader
just like int x = 0; { int x = 2; }
10:45
@AndyProwl troll code 101
you can remove the braces from the if/else statement like this
@R.MartinhoFernandes that's an oversimplification though in that particular case. it lasts until the end of the if/elseif*/else chain
4
Q: Carrying medicines for a friend

SmitaA friend of mine has asked to carry medicines from India to UK. She is also going to provide me the prescription for those medicines. However, I am a bit reluctant because the prescription that she has provided is under my name as opposed to under her name. She tells me that carrying medicines ...

lol, someone is smuggling meds.
sounds very fishy
@R.MartinhoFernandes maybe an answer that says "put em in a baggie and stuff them up your ass" would be a productive answer too
10:51
normally you can find a list online describing which meds you are allowed to bring in the country
Lacks minimal understanding of the problem being solved. — Borgleader 3 mins ago
I'm so evil ;)
@R.MartinhoFernandes ¬_¬ idiots
@StackedCrooked It has "smuggling" written all over it.
Every single sentence in that question has it.
10:54
So I'm reading the array_view proposal
Assuming the operands are an MxN matrix A and an N-vector B, the result is an MxN matrix C
@R.MartinhoFernandes so much so not even captain obvious feels the need to get up for this one.
Is that correct?
also how did the friend manage to obtain prescriptions under a different name
@AndyProwl Yes?
bribe probably
10:55
@AndyProwl yes... matrix*vector=matrix turns out I am terrible at trivial maths
@thecoshman lol, no.
That doesn't look like C++
Ohh sorry
Wrong window
iirc axb x bxc = axc
10:56
@LightnessRacesinOrbit balls to being c++ or not, doesn't even look interesting.
(the chat just assumed a different look)
(damn)
Apparently @Chets can't see sharp badumtss
ಠ_ಠ
@R.MartinhoFernandes Shouldn't I get an M-vector?
@AndyProwl oooooh, I get wtf you are saying.
11:01
I still don't get wtf they are saying though
@AndyProwl No! It's a naïve algorithm!
;)
I still don't get it
Also why does the chat has this dumb look all of a sudden
@Borgleader good one
OK, fixed the chat
Now I need to fix the maths
@R.MartinhoFernandes agreeing there. I'm happy you didn't start with some limitation of the stackless ones that I wasn't previously aware of. Thanks
11:10
@AndyProwl wat
@Jefffrey Dunno what was going on. I fixed it with some logout/login magic
Looks like a people who doesn't know a mass nouns — sehe 10 secs ago
This "thing" (a code, a homework) gets on my nerves
pls help me,specially on parameters of sort func. help
what a beauty
"people" isn't always a mass noun, though.
It's a weird word.
It has a plural, too.
I know you are right there... but I can't think of an example
last time I checked "people" was a plural
11:14
Seriously, I don't get it
Assuming the operands are an MxN matrix A and an N-vector B, the result is an MxN matrix C
Why?
"These peoples have fought each other for centuries"
@Jefffrey That's why it's weird.
it's not weird, peoples means "nationalities"
(loosely)
Yesterday there was a question with: Person* childrens[5];
@AndyProwl it's correct
I guess children wasn't plural enough
11:15
it's matrix multiplication
it has the weirdest rules
@Jefffrey Isn't it supposed to give me an M-vector?
It's wrong.
14 mins ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
@AndyProwl No! It's a naïve algorithm!
This was a joke.
It's naïve because it's wrong. Or vice-versa.
11:16
So I'm only joke-insensitive, not dumb
phew
well done Herb
@ScarletAmaranth That's why it's weird...
@AndyProwl oh, yeah, you are right
is there an efficient way of building a std::vector with reserved memory?
@Jefffrey The problem is that the example goes on from that assumption
@gnzlbg default-construct + reserve()?
that calls new twice, right?
11:22
@gnzlbg std::vector<T> v(N, defVal);
@gnzlbg Who knows?
thet default construct all objects
For all we know std::vector<T> v; calls new fifty-seven times.
@gnzlbg There's zero objects though
@R.MartinhoFernandes indeed, maybe even if it calls new twice, with opts it get reduced to a single call
11:24
It's implementation-defined and you shouldn't care in normal situations
^ this
lol, a semi decent implementation wouldn't allocate any memory with new in the default constructor... because... there's nothing to allocate... right?
Writing C++ should never be considered a "normal situation"
@Jefffrey what
EASTL does that.
std::vector<T>().data() == nullptr
with libcxx
so i guess default construct + reserve does what i want
11:26
@LightnessRacesinOrbit what what?
@Jefffrey what what? what
Don't start it!
Too lat.
Too long.
@AndyProwl I remember that. Another "TIL" (at the time)
@R.MartinhoFernandes o.o you've used EASTL or you just happen to know that?
11:28
@Borgleader Discussed it a few times here.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Same here. Although I'm still not sure why it needs to behave differently.
@Borgleader It's one of the points I remember they wanted to guarantee.
(Remember: I remember anything)
Meh, no one picked up on it so I can't keep chaining my joke.
I am disappoint.
It probably isn't as funny as it sounds in my head, anyway
@R.MartinhoFernandes Accurately describes 99% of the jokes I make.
Note that std::function is not compatible with ANSI C function pointers and attempting to cast them as such leads to madness (I actually tried this. I’m telling you, don’t try it. But if you figure it out please talk to me).
I think I've read enough.
Xeo
Xeo
11:38
@R.MartinhoFernandes I... uhm... I... what?
wat
lol wat?
Talk to him
It reads like something one particular lounger would write.
poor ThePhD, always getting bashed :D
11:45
@melak47 Pointers, casts, madness, still standing hope that it might be possible somehow. It has everything.
@R.MartinhoFernandes link?
Any boost::optional experts here?
@R.MartinhoFernandes haha golden
11:47
@bamboon you might I'm an optional<expert> :v
Marray (const InitializationSkipping &, ShapeIterator, ShapeIterator, const CoordinateOrder &=defaultOrder, const allocator_type &=allocator_type())
Construct Marray without initialization.
Ok, I've read enough of this one too.
@R.MartinhoFernandes imagine what would happen if we introduced this guy and thephd? :D
Universally, this code needs more jQuery — Tony The Lion 23 secs ago
references
I have a problem with them.
I might need to remove reference collapsing.
11:53
@TonyTheLion lol jQuery xD
I'm sure that would be hilarities.
jQueer
run away
11:55
run, Forest run!
C++03 didn't have reference collapsing, right?
oh ok
template <typename T> void f(T&); f<int&>(x);
11:57
I always thought that was illegal C++03
@Rapptz hey guy. I've made a fork with my thoughts.
personally
I've been trying to devise a system where you can have something like Optional(t.lvalue) without having to specialize.
@R.MartinhoFernandes TIL
also
I decided to cut -> and just roll with ., obviously :P
(FWIW GCC complains)
12:01
Hmmm, maybe it didn't then.
Sux.
@R.MartinhoFernandes rrun?
Xeo
Xeo
it should have
Hey, the “no-questions” and “no-helpdesk” tags are meant seriously here, right?
@poke pretty much
12:01
Alright then.
Type deduction may fail for the following reasons: [...] Attempting to create a reference to a reference type or a reference to void.
14.8.2/2
Xeo
Xeo
did it seriously only have collapsing for cv-qualifiers?
man C++03 sucked.
seems so
Thank you. "One of the biggest issues is the ambiguity if you use both Collections and Collections::Generic namespace" <-- that, and the fact that Intellisense(TM) keeps complaining about covariant returns regardless even after successful compilation :) — sehe 24 secs ago
C++/CLI is funny. It's crazy powerful. And it's rather well done. But it really does combine the "best of both worlds". It's quite the burden on the developer
@Xeo "forming reference to a reference" does ring bells, yes. Is that gone now? Surely collapsing just happens during deduction
12:21
wait, no it doesn't
AWOOGA, TESTCASE FAILURE ALERT
Ah, my Javascript actually at fault phew
if I were a 5 rep newbie I'd have posted that as an utterly pointless SO question with no capitalisation or code - testcases for the win
lol
The correct structure of a large c++ project -> I have about 10 source code files... Yeah... large
I like how google and yahoo now send propagandists around dissing each other
like ex-lovers
fuck my uni
fuck it forever
omg I just spent the last 2 hours debugging something that was a gcc 4.8.1 defect :( works perfectly with 4.7.2
12:34
that doesn't necessarily imply that it's actually a defect
could be UB.
or even IB.
trust me, it is. taking the address of a member of an object, and the pointer to the object is not null, and the result is null
that might well be ub
even if you took the address of a member of an object, and that object's pointer was null, then you would probably not get null back anyway.
anyway fuck my uni forever
fuck this shit
12:36
I know, I would get 00000000 + <offset of member>
terrible assfucking dipshit idiots
You failed or about to fail some subjects, I see ...
@R.MartinhoFernandes Does Haskell have explicit notation for constraining type parameters?
like, forall T in types, result must match callable(T) or something
@DeadMG Num a => a
oh right you plonked me
I have one question - Why are you writing silly code? — Ed Heal 2 mins ago
Haha, someone is grumpy xD
12:44
@BartekBanachewicz u mad? :D
@DeadMG In case you plonked @Bartek as he claims, Num a => a. Not sure if this is what you mean though.
@doug65536 pretty much
I did and it isn't
(not that in this case that would be his fault since I wasn't very clear)
Perhaps existential types is what you're looking for
hm
Scala doesn't look all that bad
val elems = args map Integer.parseInt
println("The sum of my arguments is: " + elems.foldRight(0) (_ + _))
12:48
good morning
There's so many languages I know zero of
Guess I'll have to look into Scala too
I have been playing around with the background in one of my apps
Xeo
Xeo
@DeadMG Then what did you mean?
alright, time to head to work to deliver my out-of-order papers
12:51
@AndyProwl I had a conversation with a coworker about it
apparently it borrows a lot from Haskell
Is it purely functional?
Statically typed?
@AndyProwl It is partially functional ehehehehe
12:51
I'll put it in the stack
actually, in the queue
There's still Erlang before that and the book about types before that
@Bart have you ever used openFrameworks? do you have any opinion on it?
@Purrformance no, what's that?
@Purrformance I see. Dunno, could be interesting.
but you know how usually ogl wrappers turn out
It does seem interesting. I skimmed through the code and it doesn't look pretty, so who knows. Just wondering if someone in here used it before.
12:55
@Purrformance no namespaces
fuck it.
Yes :(
I wonder why
and 80 methods on a mesh class
Also their indendation is completely erratic
yeah forget it
@Bart Alternatively, any good ogl wrapper you'd recommend?
@AndyProwl apparently it has optional lazy evaluation and immutability
@Purrformance OGL+
it's the least terrible
and its author is a reasonable fellow.
wrapping ogl is a dirty business
cue GLDR

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