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11:01
@thecoshman I think so
@LightnessRacesinOrbit well sure, I could do with question to flag, may as well get that badge :P
@sehe done ಠ_ಠ
maybe sometimes life is as easy as pie, but some other times you get a piece of cake ... occasionally it turns out to be a tuna in a barrel which you would like to shoot
which means life is not only easy but also interesting & full of surprises ... imagine you have to eat cake all the times ... you would be sick of it in a week.
but spice it up with pies and seafood - it would be awesome!
> My IP is 127.0.0.1 can they track that?
:D
11:11
lol
it was a joke comment here
ooooh, I need to install blender on my VM in order for unity to be able to use raw .blend files. That sort of makes sense I guess. I thought unity was able to just read the .blend files himself.
@Jefffrey TBH I'm not against. I don't see how it can do harm. Yes there is the thing with proxies, but that's there even if we write auto or auto&& explicitly. And IMO it should be solved with the auto conversion operator which Herb once proposed
@Jefffrey I like it a lot
11:15
are you guys serious?
@Jefffrey what's not to like? less typing, efficient, not error-prone
Yes. What's the problem with providing syntactic sugar? In C++ you always have to know what you're doing. This is not done to simplify a newbie's life and make it easier for them to get by without knowing what's going on. It's for simplifying an experienced programmer's life by saving him syntactic noise.
NOT ERROR PRONE????
How the heck is this not error prone?
and how is for(auto elem: range) not error-prone? hm?
Less typing? What do you save? 5-6characters?
11:17
Yes
@TemplateRex OMG keystrokes.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit wow, there is so much speculation there. We think it is heading this way, we think it is full of rats which we think are just eating each other to keep alive
@TemplateRex it obeys to the rules of "here I'm declaring a variable"?
@R.MartinhoFernandes It's not just less to type, it's less to read.
11:17
Here I apply my anti-auto argument, but it's the only argument I have against. In terms of syntax I have surprisingly little problem with it, even though it totally breaks the introduce-by-declaration convention.
@R.MartinhoFernandes your point being?
1 word less to read?
@AndyProwl This would be the first place in the language where you declare a variable by just name dropping it.
Why would I want more syntactic noise than I need?
@thecoshman We think Devon is in the UK
@R.MartinhoFernandes inb4
11:18
@R.MartinhoFernandes Lambda capture allows the same
@LightnessRacesinOrbit and lambda capture inits do the same
@TemplateRex Not really
for (x : vector) is just confusing
the fuck is x?
@LightnessRacesinOrbit best news of today
@AndyProwl It doesn't declare new variables.
11:18
where have you declared it?
Lambda capture inits name existing variables; they do not construct new ones (or, when they do, they do so indirectly)
@Jefffrey a vector element, don't be obtuse
@LightnessRacesinOrbit ... side note: isn't there some people in Devon or Cornwall who think they should be allowed to be their own country?
The member thingy is an implementation detail.
@Jefffrey an element?
@Jefffrey who cares?
11:19
@BartekBanachewicz Why not? It introduces a new name
@thecoshman Probably
> could now crash into the shore of Devon, Cornwall, Ireland or Scotland.
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes generalized lambda capture?
so basically they have no idea where it is.
And that has an associated type
11:19
Cornwall was independent
@Xeo Oh well :S
@DeadMG or where it is heading, or what is on it
@DeadMG France, Denmark, India, or Antartica
(Yeah generalized lambda capture is what I meant)
@LightnessRacesinOrbit some time ago though
11:19
Now I'm slowly going to leave.
@thecoshman Well, yes.
Walking back... veeeery slowly.
@Jefffrey You always have one foot out the door
for (λx . vector)
btw, does anyone know why they didn't use var instead of auto?
11:20
@TemplateRex Why would they consider var?
Xeo
Xeo
@TemplateRex they don't like new keywords
(also fuck solving the or exercise)
I have to try it again
Xeo
Xeo
and why 'var'?
@DeadMG i mean before c++11, to follow C# notation
... right, but why would they want to follow C# notation?
@LightnessRacesinOrbit I'm not sure I correctly understand every face of that message
because it's shorter to type?
I think they'd rather avoid following C# notation even though there wasn't any other reason to prefer auto over var
Xeo
Xeo
@BartekBanachewicz what exercise?
ER MAH GERD
ONE WHOLE CHARACTER
MY LIFE, IT'S OVER!!
11:21
lol
Xeo
Xeo
1 min ago, by Xeo
@TemplateRex they don't like new keywords
^ That
var can also be typed with one hand ;-)
Xeo
Xeo
really don't like them
Yeah look at static
11:22
@TemplateRex That's not an argument
@Xeo implement "or" in untyped λ-calculus
@LightnessRacesinOrbit it was tongue in cheek
@TemplateRex My tongue is always between my cheeks
Xeo
Xeo
@BartekBanachewicz I assume all I get is lambdas and applicaton?
@Xeo yep
test = \t. \a. \b. t a b
tru = \x. \y. x
fls = \x. \y. y
11:24
in any case, I quite like STL's proposal and don't see why people hate it, it's not that it will deprecate the other syntactic forms
I also don't see why people hate it.
it's a pretty trivial change.
auto return types are much more confusing
@TemplateRex Oh, huh, it's STL. Well, I disagree with the proposal then because he can't spell his own name
Xeo
Xeo
they're also much awesomer
obviously, it's spelt "C++ Standard Library", that peasant.
11:25
@LightnessRacesinOrbit wut? should he apply for a name change to Stephan T. Library?
@DeadMG I'd guess: (a) consistency arguments; (b) "fewer keystrokes is an offensive rationale for change" arguments; (c) "making things foolproof is an offensive rationale for change" arguments
@TemplateRex Stephen T. D. Library
@Xeo but they mess with the order of declaration inside classes
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Pity that all of those arguments are bullshit.
@TemplateRex How so?
@DeadMG Not really, but okay
well, let's see.
Xeo
Xeo
11:26
having declaration order matter in the first place sucks
consistency is only valuable if you're being consistent with something worth having; consistency with a crock of shit is worthless.
People like you are the reason C++ is a steaming mound of convoluted and miswired rules
it's always better to improve something than just stick with what you have that's broken.
not that I think that for(auto&& elem : range) is actively broken
you cannot do class X { auto fun() { return helper(); }; unless helper() has been seen before
but consistency alone is not a reason to justify not creating improvements.
11:27
@DeadMG Declaration syntax for the entire rest of the language is pretty well ingrained. I wouldn't call it "a crock of shit".
whereas without auto return types, you can
@LightnessRacesinOrbit I would replace it all if I could.
@DeadMG No, not always. Though I'm getting really pedantic now.
and in this case, you can.
Xeo
Xeo
11:27
@TemplateRex but you can't get a dependent return type without it
so I see little reason not to fix what can be fixed.
Xeo
Xeo
really, where is your complaint
you don't evdn need auto for that problem
If by "fixing" it then you introduce new uglinesses then, no, it shouldn't be done. Just saying it's not an automatic thing. You do have to hear the contrary arguments.
@Xeo I know, and I like auto return types, but they require a lot of discipline to get it right
especially in templated code
Xeo
Xeo
decltype(helper()), pow
same problem
11:28
it doesn't introduce any new uglinesses
@Xeo and now you have the return type dependent on the name of the implementation, ugh
@DeadMG IMO it does (as discussed above), but the opinions we hold there are irrelevant. The important thing is that both of our opinions do need to be considered before you "just fix it"
@LightnessRacesinOrbit It doesn't matter. It doesn't matter if you think the new syntax is ugly. That's a syntax-specific argument, not a consistency argument.
Xeo
Xeo
helper still has to be known, is what I'm getting at
that's got nothing to do with auto-return
arguing that it shouldn't be done because that would be inconsistent is irrelevant to saying that it shouldn't be done because the new idea is bad.
11:29
@DeadMG A lack of consistency is a new ugliness. When I said "ugliness" I didn't necessarily mean my code will be less pretty.
two completely orthogonal arguments.
@DeadMG What?
No idea what you're going on about now
@Xeo sure, but I like writing auto for its brevity (even though many would not consider that a good argument), and decltype is just... meh ugly to look at
That the new syntax would be inconsistent is an argument for the new idea being bad, which in turn is an argument for not implementing it.
no, they're two very different things.
inconsistent does certainly not mean bad.
11:30
I didn't say it did
I said an argument can be made for that, whether you and I agree with it or not
and I said "That argument is full of shit".
which is the argument I'm making right now.
Well done
Anyway, yes, I don't want to see it. Reading that code my first instinct would be "huh, where did I declare elem?" before I realise that that is not what's going on. It doesn't fit with the way C++ is read. It would thus make the language more messy and have yet another internal inconsistency. Therefore, I do not support it.
btw, another point by STL is that for(auto&& elem : range) exposes the implementation, and for(elem : range) does not leak that abstraction
But it's a shame because if C++ had syntaces already "sort of like that" then it'd be a good feature
on the scale of inconsistencies in C++, this one would not be a serious offender
11:32
@TemplateRex Meh, I don't think it's a big abstraction
Xeo
Xeo
@LightnessRacesinOrbit generalized lambda capture
@Xeo I already addressed that (as did Robot). Lambdas do not do this.
Yes they do
@LightnessRacesinOrbit it is for CS 101
@DeadMG I agree. But that is not a reason to throw out this argument against making another one.
Xeo
Xeo
11:33
[x = 5]{} certainly introduces a new name with implicit deduction
[x = std::move(whatever)] () { std::cout << x; }
@TemplateRex Shouldn't be learning C++ in CS101
@Xeo The expression capture stuff?
@LightnessRacesinOrbit I disagree.
@DeadMG Sorry to hear that
Perhaps you confuse CS for software engineering courses
Xeo
Xeo
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Generalized lambda capture, that's what that is
15 mins ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
@Xeo Oh well :S
11:35
@Xeo a yes or a no will do :)
in order for that to be possible, software engineering courses would have to meaningfully exist.
which as far as I can tell, they do not.
I also think that for regular variables, implicit auto should be possible. I am not convinced by the "typos make that dangerous" argument
at least not in this country.
@DeadMG There are three at my university, and they get it just about right (running alongside two CS courses). Try not to make sweeping statements
@Xeo I think it's or = \a. \b. a tru b
11:35
well, that's great for your university, I guess.
meanwhile in the rest of the country
Xeo
Xeo
@TemplateRex I totally am convinced by that. Python does that, and I don't like it
@TemplateRex uh-oh
@Xeo I think it's viable as long as you separate initialization from assignment.
@TemplateRex back to BASICs?
I don't get why people want to transform C++. At this point don't you have to say "er, make a new language instead of tangling the paradigms of this one?"
11:36
@Xeo how can it go wrong unless you have way too many names in scope?
@LightnessRacesinOrbit I am :P
@TemplateRex ask BASIC programmers.
Xeo
Xeo
@DeadMG which is not the case in C++
(or python)
which stinks
@DeadMG At that point surely you then have a new declaration syntax with mandated type deduction and mandated initialisation? And that really is a new language
11:37
@Xeo True, but if you were to introduce implicit-auto, you could do something like what Wide did and use a new syntax element for initialization.
@DeadMG You shot wide of the mark there
@LightnessRacesinOrbit It's just a tiny bit of new syntax, it's far from a new language.
Xeo
Xeo
good luck convincing the committee. I'd like that, but the chances?
speaking as the guy actually building an aforementioned new language.
@DeadMG no, it's a paradigm shift. that's huge.
11:37
that paradigm shift occurred in C++11.
@Xeo if you always directly initialize variables, how can it go wrong?
this kind of thing is just moving it along a bit further.
@DeadMG Yes indeed, it started there, and I disliked it :( That's basically what I'm talking about
Yep
well, everyone else liked it and wants it to go further :P
> everyone else
you gotta stop making shit up
Xeo
Xeo
11:38
@TemplateRex Murphy
well, the Committee, whose job is to represent the major users, seems quite happy with it.
it's difficult to define what the userbase as a whole thinks except by the opinions of the representatives they send to WG21.
typos messing up your code are a sign of a) too short and meaningless variable names AND/OR b) too many names in scope. Both are anti-patterns
Prelude> test (or fls fls) 1 2
2
Prelude> test (or tru fls) 1 2
1
Prelude> test (or fls tru) 1 2
1
Prelude> test (or tru tru) 1 2
1
fuck yeah
it's a small step for me and small step for humanity but who cares
> pop duo Daryl Dragon and Toni Tennille divorced after 39 years of marriage. Their biggest hit was "Love will keep us together".
:D
Divorce is supposed to be not funny, but..
Xeo
Xeo
@TemplateRex what
a typo can always happen
11:41
@TemplateRex I'm sure you never make typos.
@Xeo but a single typo mapping one variable to another is just bad style
short variable names are OK for variables with short scope though
Xeo
Xeo
implicit declaration just makes it worse
@AndyProwl and short scope should not have many variables, so then the error is easy to spot
Xeo
Xeo
@TemplateRex erm, it's the implicit declaration that is the problem
which you seem to have wanted
11:42
@Xeo canonical example?
2
Q: Does C++ create default Constructor/Destructor for pure virtual class?

user1911091Do C++ compilers generate the default functions like Constructor/Destructor/Copy-Constructor... for this "class"? Class ImyInterface { void myInterfaceFunction() = 0; } I mean it is not possible to instantiate this "class", so i think no default functions are generated. Otherwise, people a...

Xeo
Xeo
with that, a typo in assignment transforms from an error to a new variable
Anyway as other noticed the problem would be solved by using a different syntax for initialization
Which IMO would be just good
@AndyProwl hence the range-for and lambda-capture
countre = 0; // oops, new variable introduced
11:42
counter := 0
@TemplateRex I do agree with that.
Xeo
Xeo
@AndyProwl yeah, I'd be okay with requiring new init syntax for deduction
The fact that initialization and assignment use the same = syntax is IMO not a good thing
Xeo
Xeo
not only in your opinion
@StackedCrooked and how would it break your code? compiler can warn about unused variable
that's not fair!
Xeo
Xeo
11:44
@TemplateRex riiight
@AndyProwl I quite concur.
@AndyProwl True. That said, my old boss used to insist on () for initialisation for primitives, and I just couldn't get into it, even though I totally agreed the rationale was sound.
(as is evidenced by the fact that I changed that in my own language).
I think my view was that it was a fault in the language that we couldn't fix by simply writing uglier and less "typical" code.
@DeadMG Not surprised :P Btw I also like the fact of making value categories explicit in the language
11:45
I think I need to write my own language.
hmm...
personally
I simply purged default-construction from virtually all types.
I shall call it... Narrow.
@TemplateRex playerPositionVector.vectorXCoordinate
@AndyProwl That work is not completed yet.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit assuming that was C++03, what did the syntax actually look like? (not int i(); I assume)
11:46
@StackedCrooked int i = int();?
or I personally would have used always_initialized<int> i;.
Xeo
Xeo
wrappers kinda suck in C++, though
I agree.
@DeadMG Maybe for member variables (C++03). Otherwise int i = 0; seems fine to me.
11:47
@StackedCrooked C++03 and int i(0);
lol, why didn't I think of that
@DeadMG that looks nice.
I still prefer int i = 0 stylistically. Can't really explain why, frankly.
i mean fuck purrformance when setting ints to 0, really
@LightnessRacesinOrbit because it's similar to let i = 0 :P
@DeadMG downside is that you need to implement a lot of operators in order to make it behave as int
11:49
@BartekBanachewicz that may be part of it but I think there's more going on in my head
@StackedCrooked I quite agree.
ok I can't be bothered to make my own language
wow that was quick
use Idris
oh wait, don't use it because strict
@LightnessRacesinOrbit I do too. I think it gets more to the heart of the problem.
well, except the part where you still wasted your time writing int.
     (         !       (          !   (  n : Nat  !
data !---------! where !----------! ; !-----------!
     ! Nat : * )       !zero : Nat)   !suc n : Nat)
11:50
practically every single piece of C++ code I ever wrote now is full of auto for practically every variable.
it's just so much better.
type inference is a good thing in general
user3010322
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Don't worry! I'll be making my own language -- on Uni time, too!
@Xeo Does Haskell even have return type inference? I always assumed that it did but it suddenly occurs to me that I've never actually seen it.
@DeadMG of course
@ThePhD "Enter any text- the behaviour is undefined. Credit please."
11:53
@DeadMG My language will probably not have type deduction at all
I like writing types.
return type would be determined by input types I think
@LightnessRacesinOrbit There is something so wrong with you.
@DeadMG I've written enough Javascript to know that having the compiler make up types for you is not a good thing
@LightnessRacesinOrbit type-nerd
Javascript's type problems have nothing to do with inference
11:54
@DeadMG Loosely related. There are similarities when you come to use them.
it's hideously weak and dynamic.
and in combination, those two are a killer.
In particular, the pitfalls for the programmer are by-and-large the same.
there's nothing wrong with inference in a strong static system.
@DeadMG It's ok in a few places
I think there's no point in exaggerating either direction (always using type inference, never use type inference). Haskell for example has strong type inference capabilities, but it is suggested as good practice to provide type declarations for functions.
11:54
C++'s inference never allowed you to coerce a string to an integer.
and nor would Wide's or Haskell's.
has the := init form ever been proposed?
@TemplateRex Don't think so
@DeadMG No, but it does allow you to not notice at all that you have a string when you thought you have an integer
Xeo
Xeo
@DeadMG sure
(bad example; replace with at-least-partially interface-compatible types)
@TemplateRex ooh tasty
11:55
hmm
I'd argue that that's mostly down to lack of concepts.
Xeo
Xeo
or rather, there is nothing to deduce, really, when you provide type signatures
@DeadMG I'll give you that
if they're concept-compatible then you shouldn't need to care which you have.
@DeadMG Arguably.
but
not having concepts leads to so many other problems
11:56
Yeah we're sort of veering into "totally a different kettle of fish" territory
agreed.
Xeo
Xeo
@DeadMG which is nice in Haskell - no operation without an associated type class for many things
I'm still a bit confused with the notion of "the type variable requires the function to have varying type as well"
Anyway, I like the "be precise and specific and clear in your code" paradigm and mandating writing out types gives you all of that.
so does writing out every instruction in assembly.
11:57
@LightnessRacesinOrbit and clear names and type inference also give you that
did Bjarne invent function prototypes?
and manually aligning all your instructions with varying-size nops
@DeadMG That's a strawman / slippery-slope argument and you know it
@StackedCrooked no
LongAndDescriptiveType x = init_value; vs auto long_and_descriptive_name = init_value;
@TemplateRex Not with guaranteed immediate rejection of broken code, no, they don't. (Granted, implicit conversions break this too but I'm pretending they don't exist)
11:58
@LightnessRacesinOrbit C prototypes were borrowed from C++. So I suppose Bjarne borrowed them from another language then?
> Since it says "any type", it means exactly that: you are claiming your function is prepared to handle any type the caller wishes to specify. It is not "soft", nor "variable" in the sense you intend: it is a hard requirement that your function must be prepared to handle whatever type the caller wants there.
ooooooh
click
@StackedCrooked They.. what?
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Eh, I dunno. It's unquestionable that if you programmed in assembly, you'd know to a much higher degree of precision the program. But I didn't mean it as a serious argument anyway, it was just a joke.
@DeadMG I know ;)
personally
11:59
@LightnessRacesinOrbit what part is unclear? :(
@StackedCrooked It's not unclear I just think it's a total crock of shit

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