@DeadMG Well in my case the semantics are straightforward, my variant represents an AST node (expression), and its value would be true if the evaluated node is truthy
@AndyProwl I wonder if it'll make it in, async/await and generators are two things I really miss in C++ but I admit they're rather complicated to coordinate across implementations well and they're very high level (although that shouldn't be a problem with the current mindset)
@ScarletAmaranth Indeed, the proposal for async/resumable does mention generators and yeild but only as a "further generalization with troublesome aspects"
@DeadMG Well, of course not. But thanks to the wonders of template metaprogramming this is a non-issue. The operator bool() would only exist once you implement the necessary visitor (and/or all the types of the variant implement that operator)
@KonradRudolph So... just implement the visitor outside the variant, call it with apply_visitor, and there's no need for any changes to variant itself at all.
@KonradRudolph I wasn't aware that variant had any operators implemented for it except =. But I'd also hazard that most of them are implemented as free functions rather than members. The Boost docs do not mention any operators other than = as far as I can tell.
@R.MartinhoFernandes "Distracted"? I'm simply baffled by how every time I ask a question and suggest a possible answer, you spend 100% of your response time going "hur, you're wrong" "you're confused" "you're distracted" rather than simply actually answering the question and telling what the real situation is.
I already admitted I don't know the answer, by virtue of asking the question. I don't need to be constantly berated about that.
C++03, even though published 4 years after C99, uses the C90 preprocessor. C++11 updates to the C99 preprocessor. C11 came after C++11 and AFAIK its additions are minimal, but not required in C++11. C++14 will still use the C99 standard as its basis. @Lightness Is this better?
@KonradRudolph I’ve rolled my own variant and I wouldn’t dream of adding operators. Although that’s more to do with the state of the language than as a philosophical objection. IOW I’d do it if the 1k lines of code didn’t already make my skin crawl.
@R.MartinhoFernandes because Peter Norwig recently did it in Python, somebody tried replicating his feat in C++. And while his code is certainly interesting, it does all the usual horrible mistakes
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Well I’m going further than that – much further. I’ve banned classic for even when I really have to iterate over integral ranges
@KonradRudolph I've found that I probably use classic for loops more than range-based ones. Mostly because when I need to use for loops, I need the iterators to write an algorithm.
@Jefffrey Wikipedia puts it this way "Additionally, elements that are logically related all change predictably and uniformly, and are thus kept in sync."
@gnzlbg If close() fails, you cannot clean it up anyway. The problem is not the nature of exceptions and destructors. It's the nature of that particular resource.
@W4lker I'm pretty sure you can combine the edge properties. After all that's the entire reason that properties are tagged (edge_index_t and edge_weight_t being the tags). I'd read the documentation for you if I had the time :) — sehe21 secs ago
@gnzlbg If close() fails, you cannot clean it up anyway. The problem is not the nature of exceptions and destructors. It's the nature of that particular resource.
@gnzlbg Depends on the abstract model of file you’re dealing with. For the most part with C++ streams the close is one attempt and that’s it. For C I think you can in fact retry in some situations (should check the man page).
@LucDanton @R.MartinhoFernandes anyways thanks for the discussion, my mental model of exceptions expanded today and I freaked out a bit, i'll sleep over it :P
I bet million funbux that if you told them that, they'd be all like "WELL WE WANTED TO SHOCK PEOPLE blah blah" and yeah you're shocking me with your inability to form a coherent thought