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Xeo
Xeo
21:00
feels a bit fishy
@TemplateRex wait, was he in chat?
@sehe Vlad was banned for rude comments on SO
is there an easy way to make a strong typedef for int?
Ah. That was partly my doing then
as in using LGTB as profanities
21:01
@Abyx Nope
Xeo
Xeo
@Abyx no
@Abyx class Int { overload all the shit; }; ?
welp I kinda knew it. C++ is such a C++
Xeo
Xeo
because everybody understands 'strong typedef' as something different
@TemplateRex it's not "easy"
21:02
@Abyx it will be in C++ TNG
Xeo
Xeo
lol
cool
where I can find a time machine?
Xeo
Xeo
he's bullshitting
send your requests to STL and he will produce the proposals
@sehe were you baiting Vlad?
@TemplateRex No, flagging, of course. And 1 other comment, as I remember
21:04
btw, there were no papers in the latests mailing by Bjarne, were there? (or only the Concepts Lite)
Why is it so hard to call member function pointers?
My hypothesis is that all simpler syntaxes they tried resulted in ambiguities.
IT WORKED
@EtiennedeMartel why can't you use std::function again?
@BartekBanachewicz Purrformance.
@EtiennedeMartel what
21:07
@EtiennedeMartel I highly doubt that calling a std::function is slower in the general case.
I want to save some typing because I got a bunch of functions that look a lot like each other.
It’s the first mailing of the year, go wild with Ctrl-F.
those two are not related at all or am I asleep/drunk?
So I figured I could just write a function that takes a function pointer and delegate that.
I got a lot of set methods that all take a float, pass that to another function that takes a float, and call another function.
you have to realize that C++ primitives from C aren't meant to be used
they are exhibits in a museum
21:09
std::function is not slower than virtual functions in my tests (they were even ~10% faster). however, in those tests SBO was probably triggered.
Since I only bound the this pointer.
@LucDanton duh, nope, Crt+F str only gave string and stream and restrict
@EtiennedeMartel You could also use non-member function which require the this paremter as the first argument.
@StackedCrooked Which is all you can bind to a PTMF anyway.
damn it
--strict was supposed to compile uncurried functions
@EtiennedeMartel measured or perceived?
21:13
Man who wrote entire book on Google+ has no idea how to stop it from spamming him http://n.mynews.ly/!QB.BFNZp
I seems Google has turned 180 degrees.
They used to be so cool.
@StackedCrooked lol
Making contribution to the industry is a bonus, but being profitable is the first goal for almost all companies
Not saying I approve of stealing.
I don't like that the term "gaming" encompasses Facebook gaming and PC gaming.
user3010322
@EtiennedeMartel Lol, they're trying to copyright "Candy" and "Saga" separately? Or tehe words together?
user3010322
If it's separately buahahahahaha good luck.
21:21
I'm a gamer, and so is my aunty.
Strict.FayFromJs.myAdd(1,2)
3
Strict.FayFromJs.myAdd(1)(2)
3
@StackedCrooked They're still games.
I suppose.
in JavaScript, 42 mins ago, by Benjamin Gruenbaum
It's hilarious. Not to mention you're not particularly experienced with Haskell either. You just like it better because it makes you feel safe because you don't understand the challenges when coding because you've never done so. It's awesome.
yes totally.
kinda like saying that "acting" shouldn't include Hollywood, Bollywood, theatre, and advertisements.
21:23
what can I safely punch around me?
I need to punch something
@StackedCrooked You can be profitable and still give something.
Many companies have done it.
It's not very hard, in fact.
Obviously, this beer-laden argument after sprint review today needed a refutation: coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/b8fc9fff4133111a
damn man
it feels like this gastroscopy has stolen my whole day.
@EtiennedeMartel That's probably right. I spoke too soon.
I need to implement some Wide features.
user1804599
21:24
Hmm.
@StackedCrooked Only @Rapptz can argue with me and be right afterwards. Every single fucking time. It's getting embarassing, come to think of it.
And me :)
@sehe wat
user1804599
Hoera!
@sehe Yeah, but you're supposed to be wise and shit.
21:26
@LucDanton I jokingly said "I would, but sadly C++ doesn't allow you to overload the smooth operator".
Ell
Ell
@deadmg have you started a write up of goals etc yet?
anyone know what causes the Starcraft 2 campaign levels to load so slowly? (I haven't tried the other types of gameplay yet, it may be just as slow there.)
Well, overloading more than one sense of the word achieved.
I know where I want to go, at least for the immediate future.
21:27
@sehe That’s half the source of my confusion. The other half being the choice of values.
it's just that I spent the last 6 hours doing nothing but waiting to see what horrible side effects I'd get from gastroscopy.
@TemplateRex Ikr :) But it's the particular application in this instance that matters
@LucDanton hehe. Checking now whether I'm remembering those lyrics badly
@StackedCrooked Try not running it on a toaster.
is "toaster" slang for old machine, or something?
@StackedCrooked It's slang for Cylon.
21:29
And also slang for toaster
I'm not running it on a toaster.
> "All of us are born with a set of instinctive fears--of falling, of the dark, of lobsters, of falling on lobsters in the dark, or speaking before a Rotary Club, and of the words "Some Assembly Required."
---- Dave Barry
user1804599
I am so confused.
Argh found the error in the job descriptor
upstart is so fucking unhelpful
21:31
@sehe Gotta admit, I am uncertain as to the meaning of this message.
being as it's not in English.
> Een mens lijdt dikwijls het meest
door het lijden dat hij vreest
doch dat nooit op komt dagen.
Zo heeft hij meer te dragen
dan God te dragen geeft.
(Man often suffers most / the suffering he dreads / yet that never presents itself. / Thusly he carries a heavier load / than given unto him by God)
Ell
Ell
@deadmg where is it going in the immediate future?
@DeadMG It's extremely wellknown in Holland. Apparently, it's typically Dutch and the "poet" isn't even known ^
@Ell Tuples.
user1804599
@sehe I don’t know it.
21:34
@DeadMG It's minimally invasive.
@rightfold WAT!? Where were you raised. You barbarian (I must admit, I've never heard the lines after the first tow lines)
It won't have many side effects.
@Rapptz It's minimally invasive into the part of my body that is suffering all the symptoms.
eh Haste has uncommented issues from 5 months old
most of the complications arise from the procedure going bad.
you'll live
user1804599
21:35
Scala y u no allow comma after last argument to function.
@BartekBanachewicz Dat pun.
I'm fairly sure that I'll live
@sehe except it's not funny. At all. :( :( :(
user1804599
Water doet de palen rotten.
Zij die het drinken zijn de zotten.
that doesn't mean that I won't start projectile vomiting in the next five minutes.
21:36
that's not even a side effect
@BartekBanachewicz The best punzhes are brutal
@sehe I sometimes worry a about cancer and stuff. But I'm able to shake those thoughts off quickly.
tell that to my guts
they're insisting the opposite quite loudly.
@Rapptz half of the room likes it :c
Never trust your gut feeling
21:38
TC back up and I now deploy it from WAR, so next upgrade will be faster. Probably.
@Jefffrey Not that I know of.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I don't know what that was but it's now fixed!
Wow, Googling worrying about cancer shows that many people do this.
hmm
to permit trailing commas?
like { 1, 2, }.
21:40
@StackedCrooked People fear for their mortality.
@StackedCrooked googling almost any worry will show that you are not alone
that, and sexual fetishes, of course
"worrying about my stackoverflow rep" doesn't return nearly as much results :)
@StackedCrooked Given that the average rate of cancer is 1 in 3
it's hardly an illogical fear to be afraid of cancer.
Dammit, you are making it worse.
:P
and even more logically
21:42
@DeadMG What?
No it isn't
there are gonna be millions of people in the West who are contracting or dying of cancer every year.
I_CAN_T_HEAR_YOU
I don't think you "catch" cancer
@DeadMG not at StackedCrooked's age
well, you know what I mean.
21:43
I need a port registry for my internal services, I don't know which ones I've taken already argh
huh
cancer is fascinating though
I wrote some new code in the Wide parser, and I haven't made any serious work on that code in months, but it still at least compiled first time.
Cancer is actually my main field of research :D
afaik there are viruses that increase your risk of getting cancer
Xeo
Xeo
21:44
@DeadMG it's borked, obviously
lol
@DeadMG is your parser based on spirit?
well, I think that I really need to code a generator for it.
I forgot to turn on TeamCity email notification :oops:
most of the existing parser generators I've found are quite suboptimal.
but maintaining it by hand is also somewhat of a bitch.
21:45
@doug65536 cervical cancer in particular
but
You have a failing test btw @DeadMG
yes, I know.
but I've got more important things to worry about for now.
21:46
@Rapptz And one, and two, and one, two, three, four...
Does anyone here use the trailing return type style for functions (auto foo() -> int) even when not strictly necessary?
Ell
Ell
@Rapptz May I ask what your degree is?
@AndyProwl no
Ell
Ell
I always think you're a medic, but you're not are you?
TIL about the movie Her. It's about a guy who falls in love with his computer's operating system. Anyone seen it?
21:48
@Ell M.Sci in Biomedical Science
@StackedCrooked Indubitably
@AndyProwl Konrad asked the same thing recently. Alf did it on the google groups for even trivial things like main and he got some real negative results.
@AndyProwl How strict is strict?
@bamboon You mean negative feedback?
If I wrote C++ I'd do that precisely because stupid people get mad
21:49
@AndyProwl only for main, just to screw lightness up
@Rapptz a lot of communist hokey pokey there, and lots of bad facts
@bamboon No! He got negative responses. The results were equivalent to alternative return specs
@AndyProwl Yeah, sorry. Writing tests vs. messaging at the same time.
@AndyProwl I use auto wherever possible (on Clang 3.4), without ->
@LucDanton I don't know, but when I choose a style I like being consistent. So I'd say, really strict.
21:50
@StackedCrooked I'm going to... in the very near future
@bamboon I don't wanna see your tests :<
@Jefffrey lol
@AndyProwl Then yes, I do.
@StackedCrooked Sounds crappy
what parts sound crappy to you?
user1804599
21:52
I need Fortran; my tests fail because 1 ≠ 2.
@AndyProwl one argument for always using auto fun() -> ret is that it makes it easier to batch-transform to fully auto return types, when that becomes availbae on more compilers
The premise
It's about AI really.
@TemplateRex Agreed although I'm working on VS2013 so meh can't afford it. Anyway many times I have to put the definition in a separate file, so I can't use just auto without ->
@Rapptz How ignorant.
21:53
every time I read @TemplateRex I read Template Haskell
You may have issues.
> a question from FIVE YEARS AGO was answered with a pointer to a dead link! [stackoverflow.com/q/21342646/85371]
I wonder. What technical "advantages" does GCC currently have? (over, say, Clang)
user1804599
unzip is nice.
@TemplateRex I kind of liked Herb's point about the fact that there is a style shift towards left-to-right declarations, but it's something I haven't internalized yet, so I'm asking about other people's habits
21:54
@rubenvb It’s available everywhere.
@rubenvb What technical "advantages" does Clang currently have?
@Rapptz toolification.
@rubenvb I've read somewhere that it produces more purrformant code.
@Rapptz Retargetability
21:55
@LucDanton OK, right. It has broader platform support, currently. But one could argue that's rapidly changing.
also, my top secret meeting at work was quite interesting
@rightfold touch pants; unzip pants && rm pants || echo the panting
I've learned a lot about our new tech
inb4 something how drivers still suck
user1804599
@sehe I mean the function.
@StackedCrooked Downloading! :)
21:55
@rubenvb What? I’m answering your question. Was it purely rhetorical and was I supposed to keep quiet?
@BartekBanachewicz drivers still suck
@LucDanton No, I'm continuing the conversation. Is that forbidden in a chat room?
...
It's not forbidden. It's just... hard. And rarely done.
The ‘but one could argue’ was so weird. What do you expect of saying that?
It feels like everyone dislikes GCC.
21:57
someone feeling like helping a b++-noob out with a linker problem?
*c++
I don't really care either way but I see a lot of posts in /r/cpp and isocpp.org about basically how cool Clang is compared to GCC.
Ell
Ell
Yeah I see that too
@Rapptz Because they suck, and for most of the same reasons that VS sucks.
Ell
Ell
though g++ supports many more targets (right?) that clang does
21:58
138
Q: What is an undefined reference/unresolved external symbol error and how do I fix it?

Luchian GrigoreWhat are undefined reference/unresolved external symbol errors? What are common causes and how to fix them? Feel free to edit/add your own.

@G.Bach You probably should learn the difference between "noob" and "newbie" before asking.
@LucDanton either me being told I'm naive (I get that a lot here), or you agreeing or something. Sorry for wanting to talk tonight.
@DeadMG lol
what?
@Griwes I'm quite sure I'm a noob at it as well as a newbie
laptop CPU hitting 95°C while building Boost.
Not good.
21:59
@Rapptz what, you want me to explain to you why gcc sucks?
Must clean out dust or something.
Ell
Ell
@Griwes huh. there is a difference? o.O
@G.Bach @Ell "noob" is someone who can't learn. Newbie is someone new to something.
Ell
Ell
GCC definately doesn't suck
@DeadMG Yes. Particularly "for the same reason VS sucks"
21:59
GCC sucks.
@sehe lol.
@Rapptz most of the same reasons- not all of them.
List them.
@Ell @G.Bach newbie is someone who is new to something. Noob is someone to stupid to learn, to stubborn to learn or one that refuses to learn.
gcc is still slightly faster than clang in a lot of perf tests right?
21:59
ok, fine.

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